Last Train from Liguria (2010) (21 page)

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Authors: Christine Dwyer Hickey

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BOOK: Last Train from Liguria (2010)
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‘Indeed you do look marvellous,’ Mrs Jenkins agrees, coming forward, hand lifted awkwardly as if it is ready to shake or hug as appropriate. Her face is flushed, her smile wide, her over-bright eye just a little shifty. Bella has to wonder how Mrs Jenkins feels about all the lies that have led up to this moment. Had she helped to construct them? Perhaps even sitting beside her father six months ago, making suggestions as he composed that letter which had obviously been intended as a gentle paving of the way:

You’ll never guess who I ran into the other day - an old friend of ours, Mrs Jenkins. A very pleasant and kind woman indeed. You remember her - of course you do, she helped nurse your poor mother. Your mother, I think, was fond of her.

When Bella takes Mrs Jenkins’ hand it is shaking with nerves. Feeling sorry for the poor woman then, she kisses and lightly hugs her. She kisses both her cheeks, in the continental manner; an everyday embrace in Italy, which somehow seems less intimate. Twice the kisses - half the sentiment, Bella has always thought.

‘I hope you’ll be very happy,’ she says, wondering how she is supposed to address her father’s wife.

‘Well, we certainly hope so too,’ Mrs Jenkins laughs, ‘and please - do call me Ina.’

Bella and Alec get to like Ina Jenkins-now-Stuart and spend a lot of time in her good and undemanding company. She has an artistic hand, which pleases Alec no end, especially as she takes the time to give him a few lessons, as well as to buy him his first grown-up box of watercolours, in a proper artist’s shop. Her father, although he certainly seems to enjoy looking at Signora Lami-now-Tassi, favours the American cousins when it comes to company. They are, he declares, ‘the best of sports’. They in turn find him ‘
so
entertaining and
so
wonderfully clever’, and he certainly seems to take their minds off Edward’s desertion. Should they happen to run into each other in town, which they do with unusual regularity, he invites them for coffee or drinks, or if the time is right, back to the Angst for lunch where they always sit at a window table, staying right through to the other side of the siesta, and forming a lively display for anyone who happens by.

If his new wife minds all this reciprocal attention, she never lets on. Although Bella does feel when the time comes to leave for Berlin, Ina looks brighter than she has done in days.

*

On the last morning of her father’s visit, Bella goes walking with him to the public gardens on via Veneto. ‘I’m delighted with you, my dear,’ he begins. ‘I really am. And as for your mother? Well, I’m sure she wouldn’t have believed how things could have turned out. You’ve settled very well here, they think a lot of you, you know. But if you ever want to come home. Anytime come home. Well, you know.’

‘I am, as you say, happy here.’

‘Just thought I’d let you know. All right for money?’

‘Yes, thank you. Fine.’

‘Even so. I have opened a little account in your name in London. I mean if things ever get tricky in any way, it’s there for you. We are not short, Ina and I. She has her own money, as you may know, and is generous with it.’

‘Oh no, really—’

‘Ahaha - doesn’t do to go relying too much on the Lami family, you know. Splendid as they are. Blood is blood after all and when it comes to it, they don’t owe you a thing. Anyway, I will give you the bank book when we get back to the hotel.’

‘Thank you, Father. That’s very kind.’

‘Not at all. I have also arranged a letter of credit. The same account, of course, and amount - in case you think I’ve gone completely soft in the head. It’s just in case you ever need to get your paws on the money over here, you may even need to get yourself out in a hurry. Everything seems settled now, but with his nibs on the far side of the Alps - who knows? And that other Duce chap doesn’t seem to be the full shilling, either. Still, I suppose it’s too easy to judge the ways of another country.’

‘You used to think Mussolini was wonderful.’

‘I never!’

‘Yes, you did. You used to say it was just what England needed, someone to give it a good kick up the backside.’

‘Good God.’ He blinks good-humouredly and scratches his chin. ‘Did I really?’

They stroll on, him sucking his cigar and stopping to peer at a tree now and then, tipping a leaf over, frowning at the end of a branch, as if examining a body part of one of his patients. Bella knows he is mulling over his impressions of the past few days, whatever has got stuck in his head. One by one he will draw out his conclusions until his mind is clear again.

‘Where will you live when you get back to London?’ she asks him then.

‘Where? Well, we haven’t quite decided. Probably Ina’s. She feels the house in Chelsea will always be your mother’s, although she has already dickied it up quite a bit.’

‘Oh? What’s it like?’

‘Tasteful, I believe the term is - you won’t know it when you see it! We could move into her house - I don’t mind in the least being haunted by the late Bill Jenkins - it’s not as if she has any children to object to my presence. Then again, we may quite simply start all over, buy somewhere free of all ghosts.’

‘It’s kind of Ina to think of Mother, all the same,’ Bella says.

‘And you, she’s thinking of you too, you know. Indeed she is.’

‘Will you go straight home after Berlin?’

‘What? Not sure yet. It depends very much on Ina. We may go to Amsterdam. Return through Hull. We may try the lakes - who knows?’

‘Not to Switzerland?’

‘Not so far as I know - why? Ah, of course - Amelia and Grace. They’ve invited us to join them. Has Ina said something?’

‘No. They told me. And will you? Join them, I mean.’

‘No. I said we
may
do so, purely out of politeness. They are good sports, of course they are, but - do you like them by the way?’

‘Sometimes,’ Bella laughs.

‘Yes, I know what you mean. Personally, I wouldn’t trust them an inch.’

He takes off his panama hat and fans his face for a moment before handing it to Bella so he can relight his cigar.

‘What will you do all day when the boy goes to school?’

‘If anything there’ll be more to do, bringing him to and fro, homework, all that. The Signora will be returning to Naples with her husband and it’s not suitable there for Alec.’

‘Why - don’t they allow children in Naples?’

‘I can only tell you what the Signora says.’ Bella shrugs.

‘And the other chap, the one off on holiday?’

‘Edward?’

‘Yes, I mean, what can he be at - if the boy is at school all day. Bed and board and a wage simply to teach the piano? A cushy sort of number, if you ask me. Pity I didn’t learn to tinkle the old ivories myself.’

‘It’s never been discussed with me. And he does teach him other things, you know, mathematics and science. I think the Signora probably feels it’s safer if there’s a man around. We are so near the border here and well, people come and go, there’s been a lot of movement lately, and she gets nervous, I suppose.’

‘What’s she get nervous for - she’s never bloody here?’

‘For Alec, Father.’

‘Bit unconventional though, two single people, only a child and a housekeeper besides under the one roof. Don’t read me wrong, I’m not criticizing, but—’

‘He doesn’t live in the house, Father. He has his own place at the back entrance, a sort of mews flat over the garage where I keep the car.’

‘Ah yes, of course. You and your car what?’ He gives her a nudge and a grin.

‘Well, it is only on approval.’

‘The Signora approves. Don’t you worry - you’ll get to keep your little motor.’

They come to the fountain that marks the end of the path. ‘Another lap, Bella - what do you say? May as well give these old hams a stretch before they’re cooped up on the train for God knows how long.’ They move on. ‘Still, he’s fond of you, that little chap.’

‘Yes. We’re fond of each other.’

‘He’s not quite right of course. But I daresay you know that.’

Bella stops short. ‘What do you mean?’

‘My dear girl. Don’t look so shocked. You must have noticed.’

‘There’s nothing the matter with him.’

‘Well, it’s not my field, of course. But don’t you find him a little detached? A little too wary of people? Reluctant to make eye contact, for instance. To listen even? And then other times he’s overfamiliar, coming straight out and saying something forward, even a little bizarre?’

‘He’s not used to so many strangers, that’s all. It’s his way of coping. When he starts school in October… And the boy scouts, you know. He needs company. That’s all. Other children. He’s a good little artist, he’d hardly be able to draw and paint like that if there were anything wrong with him. Ask Ina, she’ll tell you how artistic he is.’

Her father looks carefully at her for a moment then takes a pull of his cigar and flips the smoke off his tongue back to the air. ‘Ah, it’s most likely he’s just been a bit mollycoddled, probably that’s what has him nervy. School will sort him out and as you say the boy scouts. A bit of rough and ready, just what a boy needs. As I’ve said, it’s not my field. He’ll grow out of it. I daresay he will.’

*

The house becomes quiet again. At the end of August the Signora and her husband move back to Naples and the thank-you cards and letters begin to arrive from the wedding guests who have finished their respective tours about Europe and are now returned to their everyday lives. Eugenia first, just back from a visit to her father’s family in Dusseldorf. A large greeting card lined with red velvety rose petals: ‘a thousand kisses for my adorable Alec’ - who stomps off in a huff when Rosa teases him about it. The Swiss couple, thanking Bella for kindness she hadn’t really shown, and inviting her to visit their house in Zurich. She had been like a daughter to them, the letter declares, puffing up what had really been no more than common courtesy into deep affection, and making her worry about how the unfortunate pair usually found themselves treated. A short girlish letter from Grace next; all snappy sentences and scattered punctuation. A sort of a jazz letter, Bella decides.

Back in N.Y.C. Dad put Amelia to work. Get this - in his fuddiest-duddiest hotel!! A morgue practically… (to keep her out of trouble - as if - ho hum!) Lucky ol’ me left to care for Mother, an invalid now, nothing much working except her complaining whine - only joking ha! Anyway. Here we both are, BORED to tears and longing for Europe. Europe! Had a note from Aunt Lami thanking us for the wedding gift - didn’t say if she liked it though… Bing!!!

Then a long letter from Ina, wanting Bella to know, and please not to mind, that they have decided to live in the house in Chelsea after all, her father having all his papers and medical paraphernalia there, it just seemed to make more sense. Although the house - for so long without a woman’s touch - had become a little shabby and would really need to be completely redone (with Bella’s blessing of course and with no disrespect to the taste of her late mother). Bella, recalling what her father had said about the ‘tasteful’ improvements already carried out, is at first shocked and a little hurt by this blatant lie, but then after a while she decides not to care.

‘Germany,’ Ina’s letter concludes, ‘has been more interesting than anything else. Impressive city that Berlin is and for all the beautiful countryside afterward, the air is tense and hard-edged. Not at all like the soft warm air one finds with our friends in Italy!’

To the end of the letter her father has added a few hasty lines. Bella can imagine, now that he has a wife, he will be relieved never to have to think through, never mind write, another full letter to her or anyone else again. His few words say more than Ina’s three pages.

That Fuhrer - a certifiable nutter with too many puppets in his dangerous charge. The minute his nose sticks over the Alps, you get yourself home, girl. Hope all well with you, the boy, and that you’re not causing too much havoc whizzing about Liguria in your little
topolino
. Come home or come visit - your affectionate father - The Old Goat.

Finally there is a postcard from Edward, a few illegible words, like a written mumble, sent from somewhere outside Linz and looking as if he’d been carrying it around in his pocket for weeks.

*

September and the Almansi sisters arrive, taking Alec over and leaving Bella with little to do apart from bring him to and from the beach club attached to their hotel. In between she helps Cesare in the garden, and as the Signora has made it quite clear there is no longer any need to be ‘always disturbing me with domestic banalities’ Bella has taken on the role of private secretary and occasional housekeeper of the Bordighera branch of the Lami/Tassi family.

Four mornings a week, she gives English lessons to Rosa and Elida, helping them with the housework to free up their time. At first Elida is horrified at the thought of Bella’s hands getting dirty, but as her English improves and she begins to enjoy herself more, she gets over this. Both women prove themselves as pupils, as well as companions, giving Bella a sense of camaraderie she hasn’t felt since childhood - not that, as she has to admit to herself, she’d ever really felt it then.

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