Authors: Monica Dickens
Fooling around with Harry probably also made her feel young, Paul thought. When the stables were finished, Harry had helped Paul to find a wonderful bay horse for himself, half thoroughbred, half quarter horse, and a fine safe but lively brown horse for Lily, and a larger pony for Isobel, who wavered between loving horses more than people, and not riding for days, because losing interest in it was a sign of growing up.
Harry had continued with Lily's training, so that she could now do almost everything with her springy, compact brown horse.
The two of them were very thick.
âHarry may be just a good friend to you,' Paul said once, âbut what does he imagine you are to him? You come on pretty strong.'
âOh well,' Lily said airily. Caught, she was bluffing it out â Paul knew her so well. âI've got to keep my hand in.'
âAt what?'
âMen.'
âWhy?'
âOh â I don't know. To prove something to myself? No, that's awful, darling. I'm sorry. Hate me.'
âI am consumed with love for you.'
âAnd I for you.'
They were. They told and showed each other this often, in many ways.
In May, Harry brought down one of his horses in a trailer. He wanted to take it over to ride at Sandy Neck, the long beach between Sandwich and Barnstable on the north coast of Cape Cod.
âWhat do you say, Lil? Do you want to bring John along and ride with me?'
âI'd love to. But I don't know that I â' Lily looked at Harry and not at Paul. Her face was alive, eyes eager, that lovely mobile mouth open, chin forward, as if to grab at the treat.
âYou go ahead,' Paul said. âYou've always wanted to ride on that beach.'
âYou wouldn't mind? I was going to start typing up addresses for you from that new list you brought.'
âThat can wait. You go, love.'
âAll right then, Harry.'
Harry looked past her at Paul. Paul looked at Harry. The look held years of friendship.
âNo, Lil,' Harry said, as if he were years older than her. âYou go with Paul.' Lily reddened and closed her mouth up tight and looked down, as if she had been chided. âPaul can drive my truck and I'll mind the store and watch out for the girls.'
âBut you came â'
âI'll take Dorado over there on Sunday. You two have fun.'
It was a glorious day. Not a soft spring watercolour day, like May in England, but crisp and vivid, with intense new green, and clouds furling and tumbling high up in a piercingly blue sky. Paul parked the truck and trailer in the sand at the landward side of the low dunes, and they backed the horses out and saddled them, and set off along the sand track that wound along the edge of the great salt marsh.
The bay horse Robin stepped out strongly, neck flexed at just the right angle behind the leaf curve of his ears, black mane sailing out toward the marsh when the sea wind came through gaps in the dunes. Half-way to the end of the Sandy Neck promontory, they passed a cluster of little shacks, facing the marsh, their backs silted up by dune sand. They were all still boarded up, except one which was hung about with coloured floats. The door and shutters were open, and a man and a woman were inside with buckets and brooms, cleaning.
Paul and Lily slowed to a walk.
âLet's make them sell it to us, and live here always,' Lily said. âYou and me.'
âYou'd get sick of me.'
âStop that fake just-an-ordinary-guy stuff. You'd get sick of me first.'
What would it be like to live without the world? Paul wondered. The dream was that it would be easier. Nothing to interfere with love. The reality might be a suffocating strain, the two of you needing people and life and challenge and children to give purpose to your alliance.
Cathy, Isobel, Terry. Three completely different beings who were on earth because of Paul, but following the course of their natures independently, growing the way their genes dictated. His, but miraculously themselves.
The dream vision of him and Lily selfishly marooned gave way to another, in which Terry came wandering along the edge of the marsh in those great hiking boots that were two sizes too big, turning up unexpectedly at a meal time. âOh, hi.' He sat down and picked up a fork, as if he had just been outside for two minutes.
Isobel was reading under yellow lamplight, her swatch of dark hair swung forward over her flawless cheek. This is a great story, Dad. Sit down, I'll read to you.' She read to him now, as he used to love to read to her, in her Massachusetts version of her mother's clear, vivacious voice.
âDaddy, Daddy!' Cathy flew into the shack like a moth, bare feet pattering like wings. âDaddy, c'mere, I found you a sand dollar!', carrying the fragile gritty disc to him unbroken.
The man in the shack stepped suddenly into the doorway and flapped a duster cheerily at them. John jumped sideways, dropped a hind leg down the bank of the bog and only just managed to pull it up and recover himself.
They turned across the end of the dunes where the flat tops of stunted pine trees were blown toward the land, and got off to have something to eat. Lily was already hungry.
âI guess I was wrong about Harry,' Paul said.
âNo,
I
was.'
âDid you really want to come here with him?' It was easier to ask this sitting in a hollow on the coarse dune grass, holding the reins while his horse nipped new leaves off a little bush.
âWell, he slapped me down, didn't he? I asked for that.' Loading the horses into the trailer this morning, Lily had been silent with Harry, following his instructions, instead of kidding him and
laughing. âWhatever it was â and it was nothing, honest â it's over now.'
Paul risked telling her what Isobel said she had seen in the barn.
âPhysical excitement.' Lily was leaning against her horse, eating a sandwich.
âPlaying with fire,'
she declaimed dramatically. âI'm sorry, darling. Harry played the game for fun, but then, as you see, he dropped me on my face. Oh dear, now you won't have any excuse to have old Jeanette down again, to make me jealous.'
Paul groaned. âDon't bring her name into this lovely place. She finally sent me a bill for the work she did on the brochures.'
âToo much?'
âFifteen hundred bucks.'
âThat rat. Why didn't you tell me?'
âIt was my fault for not making a written contract with her.'
âBemused by all that oily fawn hair?'
âWretchedly unbusinesslike.'
âYou think I'd criticize? It's me that makes a mess every time. Me, me, me.'
âLet's not beat our breasts.' Paul got up and pulled Robin's head out of the bush. âWhat am I going to do about Jeanette?'
âLeave her to me,' Lily said aggressively.
âIt's my business.'
âMine too. I'll see her off. Listen, darling.' She held Paul's arm and looked at him seriously. âNothing comes between us.'
With one of her quick switches between solemnness and excitement, Lily got quickly into the saddle and turned John toward the ocean.
âReady to gallop?'
As they left the stunted trees and turned to the gap in the higher dunes, the wind from the sea hit them in the face like a shout.
The tide was out. Beyond the deep soft sand, ridged flats and shallow pools glistened in the hard bright light. The sea was far away, breaking in overlapping ranks of small surf.
The horses were wild with excitement, trampling, and grabbing their heads down, eyes agog. Lily could not hold John, so she shouted, âLet's go!' and they went.
They had miles of hard sand before the cottages started, and a
scattering of hazily glimpsed tiny people on the beach. All you had to do was lean forward and let your horse go until he was ready to slow down, and if he never was, you could turn him up into the soft sand to stop him.
The quarter-horse part of Robin sent him into a flat-out sprint for a quarter of a mile. Then his head and back came up a bit and his stride slowed and lengthened, and he settled into a steady powerful gallop, drumming the hard sand, splat, splatter through the pools and channels. The wind tore past, shrieking. Lily and John came alongside. She and Paul could only look toward each other with joy and open their mouths on a wordless shout that streamed away behind them with the streaming tails and storm of kicked-up sand.
For a long time, the beach was endless. The houses and people did not seem to come any nearer. They galloped for ever, out of time and out of life. Suspended in the ecstasy of power and speed.
At last, John slowed. His dark, chunky head was down. People became distinguishable; a woman with children, men jogging along a sand bank, still figures on the edge of the surf with fishing poles stuck at an angle into the sand. Lily turned John toward the dunes and stopped. Ahead of her, Paul pulled Robin in. He trotted a few paces and then stopped, wet and heaving.
Paul's hair and face and shirt were soaked with spray. He turned in his saddle to look at Lily. She had got off. She stood with the red shirt clinging to her, her hair tossed back wildly from her wet face, holding the reins of the brown horse. John stood with his legs apart, head up, nostrils squared to the salt wind.
Paul's body was relaxed in exhaustion. His mind was swept clear of everything but serenity. Lily. The horses. The sea. Freedom. Peace. His lovely children. He thought: I have everything I want.
When they got home, Harry came out to help them unload the horses. Lily seemed at ease with him again. In the house, she went straight to the phone in the kitchen, and she talked loudly to Jeanette, so that Paul and Harry could hear.
That bill you sent us. It's far too much.' Some fast talk from the other end of the phone. âAgreed? No, it wasn't. You've got nothing in writing ⦠What? Oh, about five hundred at the most. I don't even think the work was all that good, but we'll send you a cheque.' Splutter. âWell, if you don't like it, come down and we'll give you a saddle or something ⦠a secondhand one.' Quack, quack. âOkay. So sue already.'
âPower!' Harry threw out his long monkey arms, with the fists clenched.
Lily threw her arms out and backwards, sticking out her glorious chest, which had lost nothing in fifteen yean of marriage and motherhood.
âOh, Harry, we had such a wonderful day! I ⦠love⦠my⦠life!' She flung her arms round Paul.
Joy. Almost too intense to bear.
Mike called Lily several times on the Crisis number. Sometimes she talked to him. Sometimes one of the volunteers told him, âI'll see if she's in here,' as if it wasn't obvious that they would have known whether Lily was there.
Mike was working again now. Indestructible Corrigan had taken him back, to load and drive, though not to live, because Corrigan, famous lone wolf, had let a domineering female move in, and was on a diet and in danger of becoming domesticated.
Occasionally, when Mike was delivering near the south end of Boston, he would drive behind the Crisis centre, and if Lily's white car was there, he would park the van and go in to see her. Sometimes she would sit with him for a while, whether he chose talk or silence. Sometimes Martha came down to see him, and tried to find out how long he was prepared to live on the edge of a precipice.
Lily would be upstairs. On his way out, Mike kept Martha
talking in the hall and sent his senses up the stairs to where Lily sat or stood or moved about. In an odd way, he could feel closer to her in his imagination than if they were actually in a room together, when he often could not look at her, and could not speak.
Last summer, Lily had employed a girl to be with Isobel and Cathy, so that she could go to Boston to work. This year, she had asked Martha to find a temporary assistant. Lily went into the office only about once a week, and supervised from home the volunteers in the outreach programme, with which Crisis helped people who could not come in to the centre.
Martha would take her back in the office any time. Meanwhile, Paul's shop was doing well. It might take two or three more years to show a profit, but customers were beginning to come to him from a wide area. Turnbull's wasn't the same now, some of them said. They would rather come here, because they knew Paul, and although he did not have a huge stock, he could always get them what they wanted.
More people were coming to live on Cape Cod. Some of them brought their own horses, although too many of the places to ride were being bulldozed up and built over, and sold to people who would not let riders skirt round the edge of their property to reach a trail that had been a bridle path for years.
Paul had two extra horses now, as boarders. Tony helped and Lily worked in the stable and in the shop, and went to horse shows with Paul to follow up the right contacts. They were very happy.
She had given her father the fare to Boston for his sixtieth birthday, and he came for two weeks and talked his heart out to Lily and Paul and Isobel and Cathy and Tony and Dodo at the drug store, and anyone else who would listen. Although he lived in a pub world where people came in morning and evening, and he had to chat to them, he was lonely, and hungry for his own
kind of talk: showbiz tales of photographers and film studios, past days, the old gang in Wimbledon, the post office talent shows. Nora, Nora, Nora.
âShe's lost so much.' He ruminated in his favourite wicker chair on the porch with the same brand of bourbon that Paul had remembered to get for him. âWhat I can't see is how she could chuck it all away. Marvellous woman, Nora. I'm not saying a word against her, mind, but the change of life makes some women go dotty, and that's all about it.'
Cathy and Isobel were both teenagers now, busy with many friends, and with tennis and horses and boats and ballet, and Isobel had a morning job, taking a toddler to the beach. Lily had been afraid that their grandfather would be disappointed to find them no longer children who wanted to go to the drug store for sodas, but he was enchanted with them because they were beautiful â dark and vivid, fair and graceful â and they told him jokes and gave him a lot of loving attention.