Authors: Robert Barnard
The only hopeful sign was that, like all such busybodies, Mary inevitably aroused opposition. âWhat's she getting so het up for?' was a question often asked, or implied, and though the tendency of the questioners was of the quietistic or do-nothing school of behaviour (one suspects that some members of the congregation would have accepted a black mass on Sunday, provided the Satanist had been properly appointed by the Bishop), still, one did sympathize: who was Mary to lay it down as an immutable rule that the vicar of Hexton-on-Weir should have a wife? The opposition to Mary tended to be lower middle to working class, and to voice its opposition under its breath or behind its hands. Marcus was, in any case, not the man to use this opposition, perhaps wisely: it would make it too obvious, as he said, that battle lines were being drawn up. But, in spite of his scruples, battle lines there were, and we all knew it.
âI think we should do something for him,' said Marcus, one morning at breakfast.
âDo something?' I asked, knowing perfectly well what he meant.
âHave some people round in the evening.'
âI'm always happy to do that . . . ' I said cautiously. âDepending on the people . . . I am
not
having any fights about incense and thuribles in my living-room.'
âOh, they wouldn'tâ'
âThey would. You get all that over during the day, then we'll have some
nice
people round, and show him that some people in Hexton can behave in a civilized fashion.'
In the end, of course, the guest-list was a compromise, because Marcus was so good at quiet but stubborn insistence.
âI
won't
have Mary,' I said, when we got around to giving thought to actual names. âI'll say to her that we'd
love
to have had her, but we know it's too
soon.
We'll have the Westons, because he's a sweetie, and she's all right if the others are not there to egg her on. We won't have the Culpeppers.'
âYou like Franchita.'
âI do, but I can't control her, and in her present mood she'd bring faggots and burn the poor man in the back garden. If I hear she's going to be away I'll invite them. I'd like to have a talk with Howard, to find out if he exists. Same with the Mipchins, but she's never away, so we can forget them. I think I'll ask Mrs Nielson: she seems nice, she's new, and she doesn't know many people. Are there any younger people, I wonder?'
âI thought of that,' said Marcus. âI thought we might invite Timothy and Fiona.'
âOh God,' I said, âisn't there anyone else?'
But as I said it I knew there was nobody else. Timothy and Fiona were Hexton's resident young people. Fiona was the Westons' daughter, Timothy the son of the Grammar School headmaster. Just the mere sight of them together in the town square made people sigh and say what a lovely young couple they wereâthough they were not married, nor even, so far as I knew, engaged. Both of them were fair, anonymously good-looking, and they swanned it around Hexton like a Torvill and Dean begrounded by a universal thaw. Perpetually holding hands, gazing publicly into each other's eyes, greeting their elders with eager and courteous friendliness, they seemed like refugees from a 'thirties play, though their paraded courtship seemed to have lasted well beyond the regulation three acts. I found the performance quite stomach-turning, but I did not expect Marcus to share my feelings.
âAll right,' I said, giving up with a sigh before the self-evident lack of alternative young people. âTimothy and Fiona it is.'
âAnd of course we'll have to ask Thyrza Primp,' said Marcus.
âMarcus! No!'
âBut we ought to, darling. As the widow of the former incumbentâit's something she'll expect.'
âOh, expect, expect! She'll just sit there, Marcus, pursing her lips and saying things weren't like that in her Walter's time. She'll cast a blight over the whole evening.'
âShe won't be with us long. You know, it
is
an attention she has a right to expect.'
âCouldn't she carry a load of high dudgeon with her into retirement at Harrogate? You could surely arrange for Father Battersby to call on her earlier in the day.'
âI think we'll have to ask her,' said Marcus, and I knew that was the effective end of the discussion.
The Primps had been carrying the banner of the Church Moribund in Hexton for as long as anyone could remember. He had become incumbent of St Edward the Confessor's round about the time of the Festival of Britain, though it seemed more like the Great Exhibition. Walter Primp, whom Mrs Nielson had charitably described as dull, had carried irresolution to a high art, and on all the great issues that had faced the Church of England, from the ordination of women to the remarriage of divorcées, he had dithered. But then so, of course, had the Church of England. His sermons were old-fashioned homilies on upholding moral standards, though it would have been extremely difficult to define what he thought those standards were. Thyrza Primpâwell, you will meet Thyrza. Thyrza was about to retire to Harrogate, where many elderly people freeze away their last years. I could just imagine her icing over the pump waters, and curdling the cream on the cakes in Betty's Tea Shop.
âAll right,' I said with a sigh. âI'll ask Thyrza.'
It was very weak of me. I should have stood out against it. I think that on occasion, perhaps in reaction to Hexton ways, I veer towards the policy that Victorian wives adopted: let the husband take all the decisions, and then blame him afterwards. The fact is that though Marcus had the better understanding of principle, I had much the better understanding of people.
So that, as it turned out, was the line-up for the party: the Westons, Mrs Nielson, dear Timothy and Fiona, and Thyrza Primp. By dint of some tactful nosing around, I found that
Franchita Culpepper was to be away (she made periodical visits to her dentist in Barnard's Castle, and was always away overnight, which made me very suspicious, though it had to be admitted that her teeth, like entrenched castanets, could be flashed with splendid effect for a woman of her age). Anyway, I asked them both, and Howard accepted for himself alone, seeming to wag some metaphorical tail at the thought of a run-around on his own.
âDon't put up with any nonsense from Howard,' said Franchita to me, sternly.
I did, I am afraid, make one big mistake, which I could not blame on Marcus. My formula for not asking Mary was, I thought, rather clever: I stopped her in the street as she was buzzing round the town on her daily business of stirring up trouble, and I said that Marcus and I were having a party in the evening for Father Battersby, and I was asking her, though I quite understood, naturally, that this wasn't the sort of occasion she could go to, so soon after her bereavement. And Mary put on her brave smile, which was now as automatic as a mac in bad weather, and said how kind it was of me to ask, but
no
, she didn't think that . . . I went away congratulating myself on my combination of cunning and tact.
It was the day before Father Battersby's visit that Mary rang up and said she understood it was to be quite a
small
gatheringâshe'd got quite the wrong impression when I'd mentioned a
party
âand she felt she could manage just five or six, particularly as she so wished to meet
the Reverend
Battersby, and she so wanted Marcus to understand that there was nothing
personal
in her opposition.
I should have realized that the mourning etiquette of Hexton was a thing that could be subtly manipulated to suit individual convenience. I ground my teeth and added Mary.
The day of the visit dawned, and it dawned badly. Marcus had decided to take the day off entirely, and had delegated everything to Simon Fox, his junior partner. As always happened on such days, he got a call over breakfast from a farmer whose prize cow, with a complicated medical history that only Marcus apparently knew the ins and outs of, had gone down with a nasty bout of something-or-other that he said only Marcus could pull her through. The farm lay twenty-five miles north of Hexton-on-Weir. Cursing slightly,
Marcus got out his car; cursing robustly, I walked towards the town square to meet Father Battersby.
He wasn't difficult to pick out when the bus drew in, that was one thing. None of this âI'm just one of the chaps' informality that most clerics go in for these days. He actually wore robesâa cassock, or a soutane, or whatever the goddam thing is called. He was about thirty-five, I supposed, and while he was not good-looking, he was impressive in a gaunt, craggy, rather Victorian kind of way. He was a strong, determined manâif he had been a schoolmaster, the boys would have respected him enormously, and feared him not a little. In the 1840s one could imagine him renouncing all sorts of things for conscientious reasonsâwhich presumably was what he had done in the 1980s, though today the climate of opinion rendered the renunciations ever so faintly ridiculous. From the start I liked him; from the start I thought what a nice change after Walter Primp to have someone who self-evidently knew his own mind and spoke it; from the start I knew that his coming would mean trouble in Hexton.
As I went round with him, desperately wishing Marcus would return from his silly cow, I became aware of something else which it is less easy to put into words. He was very slightly inhuman. He said the wrong thing, or he said the right thing to the wrong person. As a consequence he sometimes left people uneasy or resentful. I can illustrate this easily enough. I took him first to visit St Edward the Confessor's, down in its little hollow, and an attractive enough church to gladden the heart of a new incumbent. While we were there, Mrs Bates came in to freshen up the flowers, and naturally I introduced them, and they got talking. The conversation strayed around to a stint of three years Father Battersby had had in a remote mission in Tanzania. While he was talking about the disease and misery there, he was at his most intense: âIt makes me quite ill, when I remember all the suffering I saw in and around the place, to see how people begrudge making the least sacrifice from the absolute luxury we live in, to alleviate it.'
I saw Mrs Bates stiffen, the line of her mouth harden. Mrs Bates's husband had been declared redundant two years before, and had never found work; they had three children, and times were very hard for them. Of course, by any standards Father Battersby was right, and even Mrs Bates lived in absolute luxury in comparison
with his remote Tanzanian tribesmen. And yet, one felt that another man might have noticed on her the signs of pinching and scrapingâI could certainly see them, all too many of them, and one felt he ought to have been used to them in his parish in Sheffieldâand would not have said that. As I say, I liked him; on any other occasion I would have enjoyed talking to him on my own, perhaps joshing him a little; as it was, I was pleased to hand him on to Marcus.
I had set the party at an early time. Father Battersby had to catch the 11.15 train to Sheffield from Darlington, and Marcus was to drive him there, so I'd said seven o'clock. I'd prepared a buffet supper, so that everyone could perch how and where they could, even in the garden if it was fine. It wasn't a very Hexton way of doing things, but I certainly couldn't seat so many round my dinner table. Promptly at two minutes past seven the doorbell rang, and there stood Timothy and Fiona, looking all scrubbed and eager and dewy, as if they had been auditioning for roles in a particularly tepid soap-opera. Just behind them came the Westons, Fiona's parents. Nancy Weston was one of the leaders of the âAren't they a lovely couple?' brigade; Colonel Weston, on the other hand, I had sometimes caught casting glances at Timothy that were charged with something very close to suspicion.
Then they all started coming: Mrs Nielson arrived almost simultaneously with Howard Culpepper. She had, by arrangement, brought Gustave (âI know other people's dogs are a pain, but he does bark when I'm out and annoy the neighbours'), and we put him up in our bedroom. Then Mary arrived, with a conspicuously sober demeanour, like a Roman virgin at her first orgy of the season. She was terribly and unremittingly sweet to everyone. Then Marcus and Father Battersby got back from calling on the town's oldest communicant, with whom Father Battersby, it seemed, had been a great success (he reminded her, apparently, of what âthe cloth' had been like in her girlhood, and she kept looking at him and saying âThat's more like!'). And then, lastly, came Thyrza, bringing with herânot by arrangement but pretty much by traditionâher dog Patch.
Patch was a Jack Russell. At bottom he was a rather nice-natured dog, I was convinced, but at top he was a highly aggressive yapper. He formed quite a fitting accompaniment to Thyrza Primp, but in
her case I was much less sure of the nice nature at bottom. We put Patch in what we called the nursery, destined for children who had never come, and scenting the presence of Gustave and my dog Jasper in the vicinity he created merry hell for about ten minutes, and then settled down for a bit of shut-eye.
Thyrza, meanwhile, had been accorded the armchair of honour in the sitting-room while she had graciously allowed me to settle her dog. She sat there, her short, squat body encased in a tight black dress of a hideous crimply material, her black eyes drilling slowly and painfully through one person in the room after another. On her lap was a handbag, clutched tightly with both hands, as if she were in Sicily. The bag snapped openââPrimp!' I always heard it sayâand snapped shut, and at moments when she wished to express shock or disapproval she would snap it openâPrimp!âtake out a tiny embroidered handkerchief, raise it to her nose, and sniff. Then she would return it to her handbagâPrimp!âand sit staring fixedly in front of her. This was Thyrza Primp, wife, helpmeet, taskmaster and terrorizer of poor dead Walter. As Mary kept saying, what would we do without Thyrza? Soon, praise God, we were going to find out.