There was a silence. I thought from the expression in his eyes that Mr Kips was about to make an angry reply, but he didn't: all he said was, âYou misunderstand me.'
Now all of this, read by someone not present at the party, might well sound no more than the jolly banter of clubmen who insult each other in a hearty way before sitting down to a good dinner and some heavy drinking and good companionship. But to me, as I watched the faces and detected how near the knuckle the teasing seemed to go, there was a hollowness and a hypocrisy in the humorous exchanges and hate like a raincloud hung over the room â hatred of his guests on the part of the host and hatred of the host on the part of the guests. I felt a complete outsider for, though I disliked every one of them, my emotion was too weak as yet to be called hatred.
âTo the table then,' Doctor Fischer said, âand I will explain to our new guest the purpose of my little parties, while Albert brings in the dinner.'
I found myself sitting next to Mrs Montgomery who was on the right of the host. I had Belmont on my right and the actor Richard Deane opposite me. Beside every plate was a bottle of good Yvorne, except beside our host's, who, I noticed, preferred Polish vodka.
âFirst,' Doctor Fischer said, âI would ask you to toast the memory of our two â friends shall I call them on this occasion? â on the anniversary of their deaths two years ago. An odd coincidence. I chose the date for that reason. Madame Faverjon died by her own hand. I suppose she could no longer stomach herself â it was difficult enough for me to stomach her, though I had found her at first an interesting study. Of all the people at this table she was the greediest â and that is saying a good deal. She was also the richest of all of you. There have been moments when I have watched each one of you show a sign of rebelling against the criticisms I have made of you and I have been forced to remind you of the presents at the end of dinner which you were in danger of forfeiting. That was never the case with Madame Faverjon. She accepted everything and anything in order to qualify for her present, though she could easily have afforded to buy one of equal value for herself. She was an abominable woman, an unspeakable woman, and yet I had to admit she showed a certain courage at the end. I doubt if one of you would ever show as much, not even our gallant Divisionnaire. I doubt if one of you has even contemplated ridding the world of his unnecessary presence. So I'll ask you to toast the ghost of Madame Faverjon.'
I obeyed like all the others.
Albert entered carrying a silver tray on which there was a large pot of caviare and little silver dishes of egg and onion and sliced lemons.
âYou will excuse Albert for serving me first,' Doctor Fischer said.
âI adore caviare,' Mrs Montgomery said. âI could live on it.'
âYou could afford to live on it if you were prepared to spend your own money.'
âI'm not such a rich woman as all that.'
âWhy bother to lie to me? If you weren't as rich as you are you would not be sitting at this table. I invite only the very rich.'
âWhat about Mr Jones?'
âHe is here as an observer rather than as a guest, but of course, as he is my son-in-law, he may imagine he has great expectations. Expectations too are a form of wealth. I am sure Mr Kips could arrange him substantial credits, and expectations are not taxable â he wouldn't need to consult Monsieur Belmont. Albert, the bibs.'
For the first time I noticed that there were no napkins by our places. Albert was fastening a bib round Mrs Montgomery's neck. She gave a squeal of pleasure. â
Ecrevisses!
I love
écrevisses
.'
âWe haven't toasted the late lamented Monsieur Groseli,' the Divisionnaire said, adjusting his bib. âI won't pretend that I ever liked that man.'
âHurry up then, while Albert fetches your dinner. To Monsieur Groseli. He only attended two of our dinners before dying of cancer, so I had no time to study his character. If I had known of the cancer I would never have invited him to join us. I expect my guests to entertain me for a much longer time. Ah, here is your dinner, so I can now begin my own.'
Mrs Montgomery gave a high shriek. âWhy, this is porridge, cold porridge.'
âReal Scotch porridge. You should appreciate it, with your Scotch name.' Doctor Fischer gave himself a helping of caviare and poured himself out a glass of vodka.
âIt will destroy all our appetite,' Deane said.
âDon't be afraid of that. There is nothing to follow.'
âThis is going too far, Doctor Fischer,' Mrs Montgomery said. âCold porridge. Why, it's totally inedible.'
âDon't eat it then. Don't eat it, Mrs Montgomery. By the rules you will only lose your little present. To tell you the truth I ordered porridge especially for Jones. I had thought of some partridges, but how could he have managed with one hand?'
To my astonishment I saw that the Divisionaire and Richard Deane had begun to eat and Mr Kips had at least picked up his spoon.
âIf we could have a little sugar,' Belmont said, âit might perhaps help.'
âI understand that the Welsh â no, no, I remember, Jones â I mean the Scots â consider it a blasphemy to spoil their porridge with sugar. They even eat it, I am told, with salt. You may certainly have salt. Offer the gentlemen salt, Albert. Mrs Montgomery has decided to go hungry.'
âOh no, I won't ruin your little joke, Doctor Fischer. Give me the salt. It can't make the porridge any worse than it is.'
Within a minute or two to my wonder they were all eating in silence and with a grim intensity. Perhaps the porridge clogged their tongues. âYou don't attempt yours, Jones?' Doctor Fischer asked me and he helped himself to a little more caviare.
âI'm not hungry enough.'
âNor rich enough,' Doctor Fischer said. âFor several years now I have been studying the greediness of the rich. “To him that hath shall be given” â those cynical words of Christ they take very literally. “Given” not “earned”, you notice. The presents I hand out when the dinner is over they could easily afford to give themselves, but then they would have earned them if only by signing a cheque. The rich hate signing cheques. Hence the success of credit cards. One card takes the place of a hundred cheques. They'll do anything to get their presents for nothing. This is one of the hardest tests I've submitted them to yet, and look how quickly they are eating up their cold porridge, so that the time for the presents will arrive. You, I am afraid, will get nothing, if you don't eat.'
âI have something of more value than your present waiting for me at home.'
âVery gallantly put,' Doctor Fischer said, âbut don't be too confident. Women don't always wait. I doubt if a missing hand aids romance. Albert, Mr Deane is ready for a second helping.'
âOh no,' Mrs Montgomery said, âno, not second helpings.'
âIt's for the sake of Mr Deane. I want to fatten him so that he can play Falstaff.'
Deane gave him a furious look, but he accepted the second helping.
âI'm joking, of course. Deane could no more play Falstaff than Britt Ekland could play Cleopatra. Deane is not an actor: he is a sex object. Teenage girls worship him, Jones. How disappointed they would be if they could see him without his clothes. I have reason to believe that he suffers from premature ejaculation. Perhaps the porridge will slow you down, Deane, my poor fellow. Albert, another plate for Mr Kips and I see Mrs Montgomery is nearly ready. Hurry up, Divisionnaire, hurry up, Belmont. No presents before everyone has finished.' I was reminded of a huntsman controlling his pack with a crack of the whip.
âWatch them, Jones. They are so anxious to be finished that they even forget to drink.'
âI don't suppose Yvorne goes well with porridge.'
âHave a good laugh at them, Jones. They won't take it amiss.'
âI don't find them funny.'
âOf course I agree that a party like this has a serious side, but all the same . . . Aren't you reminded a little of pigs eating out of a trough? You would almost think they enjoy it. Mr Kips has spilt some porridge over his shirt. Clean him up, Albert.'
âYou revolt me, Doctor Fischer.'
He turned his eyes towards me: they were like the polished chips of a pale blue stone. Some grey beads of caviare had lodged in his red moustache.
âYes, I can understand how you feel. I sometimes feel that way myself, but my research must go on to its end. I won't give up now. Bravo, Divisionnaire. You are catching them up. You ply a good spoon, Deane, my boy, I wish your female admirers could see you at this moment, guzzling away.'
âWhy do you do it?' I asked.
âWhy should I tell you? You are not one of us. You never will be. Don't count on your expectations from me.'
âI don't.'
âYou have a poor man's pride, I see. After all, why shouldn't I tell you. You
are
a sort of son. I want to discover, Jones, if the greed of our rich friends has any limit. If there's a “Thus far and no further.” If a day will come when they'll refuse to earn their presents. Their greed certainly isn't limited by pride. You can see that for yourself tonight. Mr Kips, like Herr Krupp, would have sat down happily to eat with Hitler in expectation of favours, whatever was placed before him. The Divisionnaire has spilled porridge down his bib. Give him a clean one, Albert. I think that tonight will mark the end of one experiment. I am playing with another idea.'
âYou are a rich man yourself. Are there limits to
your
greed?'
âPerhaps I shall find out one day. But my greed is of a different kind to theirs. I'm not greedy for trinkets, Jones.'
âTrinkets are harmless enough.'
âI like to think that my greed is a little more like God's.'
âIs God greedy?'
âOh, don't think for a moment I believe in him any more than I believe in the devil, but I have always found theology an amusing intellectual game. Albert, Mrs Montgomery has finished her porridge. You can take her plate. What was I saying?'
âThat God is greedy.'
âWell, the believers and the sentimentalists say that he is greedy for our love. I prefer to think that, judging from the world he is supposed to have made, he can only be greedy for our humiliation, and
that
greed how could he ever exhaust? It's bottomless. The world grows more and more miserable while he twists the endless screw, though he gives us presents â for a universal suicide would defeat his purpose â to alleviate the humiliations we suffer. A cancer of the rectum, a streaming cold, incontinence. For example, you are a poor man, so he gives you a small present, my daughter, to keep you satisfied a little longer.'
âShe's a very big alleviation,' I said. âIf it's God who gave her to me I'm grateful to him.'
âAnd yet perhaps Mrs Montgomery's necklace will last longer than your so-called love.'
âWhy should he wish to humiliate us?'
âDon't I wish to humiliate? And they say he made us in his image. Perhaps he found he was a rather bad craftsman and he is disappointed in the result. One throws a faulty article into the dustbin. Do look at them and laugh, Jones. Have you no humour? Everyone has an empty plate but Mr Kips, and how impatient they're all getting now. Why, Belmont is even finishing up his plate for him. I'm not sure it's quite in accordance with my rules, but I'll let it pass. Bear with me a moment longer, my friends, while I finish my caviare. You can untie their bibs, Albert.'
10
âIt was revolting,' I said to Anna-Luise. âYour father must be mad.'
âIt would be a lot less revolting if he were,' she said.
âYou should have seen them scrambling for his presents â all except Mr Kips â he had to go to the lavatory first to vomit. Cold porridge hadn't agreed with him. Compared with the Toads I must admit your father did keep a kind of dignity â a devilish diginity. They were all very angry with me because I hadn't played their game. I was like an unfriendly audience. I suppose I held a mirror up to them, so that they became conscious of how badly they were behaving. Mrs Montgomery said that I should have been sent from the table as soon as I refused to eat the porridge. “Any of you could have done the same,” your father said. “Then what would you have done with all the presents?” she asked. “Perhaps I would have doubled the stakes next time,” he said.'
âStakes? What did he mean?'
âI suppose he meant his bet on their greed against their humiliation.'
âWhat
were
the prizes?'
âMrs Montgomery had a fine emerald set in platinum with a kind of diamond crown above it as far as I could see.'
âAnd the men?'
âEighteen-carat gold watches â quartz watches with computers and all the works. All except poor Richard Deane. He had that photograph of himself in a pigskin frame which I saw in the shop. “You've only to sign it,” Doctor Fischer told him, “to get any teenage girl you want.” He walked out in a rage and I followed him. He said he was never going back. He said, “I don't need a photograph to get any girl I want,” and he got into his Mercedes sports car.'
âHe'll go back,' Anna-Luise said. âThat car was a present too. But you â you'll never go back, will you?'
âNo.'
âYou promise?'
âI promise,' I said.
But death, I was to argue later, annuls promises. A promise is made to a living person. A dead person is already not the same as the one who was alive. Even love changes its character. Love ceases to be happiness. Love becomes a sense of intolerable loss.