Authors: Clare Clark
Peggy stopped at the draper's on the corner for needles. She told Jessica and Joan not to wait. It was so cold in the stairwell that Jessica could see her breath.
âDid you ever hear anything back from
Perspective?
' she asked Joan as they climbed. Joan shook her head.
âI think that one bit the dust.'
âSurely there's still a chance? It's only been two weeks.'
âThey would have written by now. They turn these things around awfully quickly.'
âI meant to say, I thought the articles you sent them were first-rate.'
âThank you. And thank you for your help. I'm very grateful, truly.'
âExcept that I wasn't any help, was I?'
âYou were. You gave my work to Mr Cardoza. Didn't you?'
âOf course I did. It's just that my timing . . . well, it was pretty awful.'
âI don't understand.'
âMr Cardoza and I, we're . . . we're no longer friends. I can't believe he would have done anything, you know, to spite me, I'm sure he wouldn't, but I'm just so sorry. I really hope it wasn't my fault, that I didn't mess things up for you. You deserved that job. You're a wonderful writer.'
Joan stopped so suddenly that Jessica almost cannoned into her. âIs that why you're leaving the magazine?' she demanded. Her cheeks were pink from the cold and the climb. âBecause of Mr Cardoza?'
Jessica hesitated. âI don't know. Sort of.'
âHe didn't ask you to, did he?'
âNo, of course not. I just thought maybe it might be time. You know. To stop.'
âTo stop what?'
âMaking mistakes?' Jessica offered with a weak laugh.
Joan did not laugh back. âAnd it's not a mistake to give up this job?'
âI don't know. I don't think so.'
Joan was silent, one fist bouncing on the banister. Then, folding her lips together, she shrugged and went on up the stairs.
That afternoon, Jessica answered her last letter as Mrs Sweeting. In Plymouth the voters were going to the polls. It was getting dark and raindrops wriggled like tadpoles diagonally across the stippled glass of her window. The window frame was leaking. There was a puddle on the painted window sill, peppered with smuts.
You say you have been walking out with your young man for the past six months but, although he takes you to the pictures and buys you chocolates and all your friends regard him as
your sweetheart, he has never shown you the affection. Well, for the love of peace, Crushed Strawberry, stop being such a complete and utter wet blanket. What on earth are you waiting for? Either throw the cold fish over, and his violet creams with him, or fling your arms around him and kiss him for all you are worth. How else will you ever know if he wants to kiss you back?
They arrived back at Ellinghurst on the afternoon train. It was dark as they pulled up the drive, heavy clouds blotting out the moon. The house loomed above them like a cliff, its windows unlit. As they pulled up under the carriage porch Mrs Johns came out to welcome them. She told them that Sir Aubrey had been called away on business and would not be back until the next day. In the Great Hall Jessica removed her coat reluctantly. It was chilly, despite the roaring fire. The central heating was not working, Mrs Johns explained. There was a problem with the boiler or the pipes, no one seemed sure. She asked if Nanny meant to stay for supper but Nanny shook her head. She was eager to get back to her cottage.
Jessica ate supper alone. She did not bother to change. Afterwards she went upstairs. The hot water was still working, Mrs Johns explained, at least in the first-floor bathrooms. She would have a maid draw Jessica a bath. Jessica could hear the roar of the running water from the east wing corridor as she crossed the first-floor landing. She hesitated, leaning on the balustrade that overlooked the Great Hall. There were cobwebs on the vaulted beams, their loose threads drifting lazily in the updraught, and the suits of armour wore felted toupées of dust. Poor house, she thought, and she stroked the sleek wood of the balustrade. So much for Mrs Maxwell Brooke. It was time someone took things in hand.
She meant to go up to her bedroom and undress. Instead, she found herself walking down the passage that led to her mother's bedroom. Outside the door she hesitated, one hand on the porcelain knob. Then, turning it, she went in.
The room was empty, as blank as a room in an hotel. There were no books on the curved shelves, no ornaments on the mantel, no photographs in frames. Even the silver carriage clock was gone. The bed was shrouded in a heavy coverlet Jessica had never seen before. She sat at the dressing table, staring at her reflection in the three-sided mirror. The powder puffs and the silver-backed hairbrushes and the hairpins in their china dishes had all been cleared away. All that remained was a pale mark on the polished walnut, a ghostly circle left by a long-ago glass. Jessica touched the circle with one finger. She slid open the dressing-table drawers. The top one contained the small brass key to its own lock. Otherwise they were empty. The drawers in the chest were empty too, neatly lined with sheets of folded paper. When Jessica leaned down she could smell it, under the paper smell, the lingering traces of lavender.
In the dressing room there was a large brownish patch like spilled tea on the wall above the window. The wallpaper with its tendrils of ivy was bloated, peeling away at the seam. Jessica opened the wardrobes. The rails were cleared, the shelves that had once held Eleanor's rows of shoes quite bare. The wood inside the wardrobe was rough and raw-looking, marked with scuffs and, near the bottom, a scribbled mark in white chalk. The paper that covered the base was old and slightly askew. She squatted, smoothing it out, but the corner was awkward, as though the paper were folded too thick. She lifted it.
There was another piece of paper under the lining paper, folded several times into a square. She unfolded it. The paper was old, the creases so deep that in places the paper had split. It was engraved with the address of a club in Pall Mall.
Dearest E, I write in haste, already on my way home to you. Your letterâwhat can I say of your letter, except that it pierced my heart? Of course there is no one else. There has never been anyone but you. You are exhausted, I know, and wretchedly
low in spirits as you always are in the first months, but such vile and baseless imaginings, such hateful threats? They are nothing but a torture to us both. You are my all, you and the little ones, and will be always. A
Her father returned the following afternoon. She heard the car, the sound of voices as Mrs Johns greeted him in the Great Hall. A gale was blowing in from the sea and, beyond the battlements, the trees tossed like ships against the darkening sky. She went down to meet him. He kissed her absently, his fingers plucking at the clasp of his briefcase, and disappeared to the library. He did not emerge for tea. Jessica sat alone by the fire in the morning room. She supposed there were things she should be doing, menus for the following day, a list of matters to discuss with Mrs Johns.
Instead, she flicked desultorily through old copies of her mother's magazines. The elegantly drawn plates advertising furs and French undergarments were a far cry from the small advertisements for Triumph Female Pills and Phillips' Dental Magnesia that peppered the pages of
Woman's Friend
. She wondered which of the girls had been given her desk, who would become the platitudinous Mrs Sweeting in her absence and whether they would have to take on another girl, whether they thought of her when she was not there. She thought how glad Joan and Peggy would be that Lady Astor had won her seat in Plymouth by more than five thousand votes. âWe are not asking for superiority,'
The Times
had quoted her as saying, âfor we have always had that; all we ask is equality.' Jessica wondered if Joan had seen it or whether she should cut it out and send it to her at the magazine. She knew it would tickle her. It occurred to her too that they should definitely do a piece on Lady Astor's costume on her first day in Parliament. The historic hat. Even the Bottlewasher could not call that politics.
The house was very quiet as she went up to change for dinner. When she returned there was still no sign of her father.
She waited in the drawing room but when the door opened it was only Mrs Johns. Her father sent his apologies but he had urgent work to do. Again Jessica ate alone. To her surprise she found herself missing the oppressive clatter of the maid in the kitchen at Maida Vale, the shuffle and sigh of Nanny playing cards. The meat was tough. She chewed at it until the gristly mass of it in her mouth became intolerable and she had to spit it into her napkin. She did not wait for the maid to clear her plate. She rose, asking for coffee in the drawing room.
âTwo cups, please.'
She drank hers quickly. Then, pouring a second, she added sugar and took it to the library. She knew that the maid could do it just as well but she had had enough of being alone. She knocked and knocked again. When her father did not answer, she pushed open the door.
She did not see him at first. The leather chairs and the low tables and the lamps had all gone and, in their place, trestle tables, the kind that they had used for tenant parties before the War, were crammed in, end to end. Each table was heaped with books and boxes and ledgers and mountains and mountains of papers and envelopes and manila folders tied with string. Boxes filled the spaces under the tables and stacked the window seats, leaning drunkenly against the mullioned glass, and on top of the boxes the packages from the photographic developer in Bournemouth, hundreds and hundreds of them, heaped up like sandbags. Open books lay abandoned on every surface, bristling with paper markers or sprawled, spines broken, face down. Torn-up drifts of paper littered the floor. And everywhere, like bunting, fluttered scraps of paper covered in her father's scrawl, pinned to the edges of the trestles, the carved frames of the bookcases, the panelled window shutters.
âFather?'
âWhat is it?' His voice was muffled, impatient. âWhat are you doing here?'
âI brought you some coffee.'
He stood and she saw him, tucked into a corner behind a mound of worn black ledgers. He was still wearing the tweed suit he had travelled in. Squeezing her way between the laden tables and the heaped-up boxes, she held out his cup. He frowned. Then, taking it, he swallowed the coffee in a single gulp. There was ink on his fingers and on the cuff of his shirt.
âThank you,' he said, clattering the cup back onto the saucer.
âHave you eaten?'
âThere's a tray somewhere.' He waved without looking up. âI'll eat when I've finished.'
âAnd when exactly will that be?'
âGo to bed. I'll see you in the morning.'
âI could help you, you know,' Jessica said. âWith the book. If you wanted.'
âRight now the book is the least of my concerns. Go to bed.'
âWhy? What's the matter?'
âThe matter is that this damned Government is determined to break us. Taxes, rent controls, inflation. Land values going down the drain. Twenty-five per cent we pay, now, on estate income. Twenty-five per cent! And that's before death duties. How the devil do they think . . . ?' He pressed his fingers to his temples, blowing out between his lips. âIt doesn't matter. Go to bed.'
âWhat are we going to do?'
He shook his head, forcing a smile. âWe'll manage. Between us we'll manage.'
âYou mean, when I get married.'
âIf only that were all it took.'
Jessica was silent. She picked up his cup and saucer, staring at the brown smear of coffee at the bottom. âAre you really thinking of marrying Mrs Maxwell Brooke?' A frown like a twitch flickered over her father's face.
âEleanor told me,' she persisted. âIs it true?'
âIt's an option I am considering.'
âBecause of Ellinghurst?'
âIt would certainly give us some breathing space.'
âAnd if Eleanor refuses to give you a divorce?'
âThere are ways. I am talking to lawyers.'
âWouldn't that mean a scandal?'
âAlmost certainly.'
âAnd Mrs Maxwell Brooke? She wouldn't run a mile?'
âThat's a risk one has to take.'
Jessica looked at her father. âYou would do all that? To keep Ellinghurst?'
âOne hundred times over. Wouldn't you?'
She blinked. âI don't know.'
âBut I do. This house is in your blood, just as it's in mine. You could no more abandon it than abandon your children.'
âExcept I don't have any children.'
âNot yet. But you will. And when you do they will love this place as you and I do, in the marrow of our bones.'
âI have to find a husband first.'
Sir Aubrey smiled drily. âThat would be advisable.'
âHusbands are not so easy to find, you know. These days.'
âPerhaps you're just looking in the wrong place.'
The tears rose unexpectedly in her throat. She turned her head. âI should let you get on,' she said.
At the door she paused. Her father's pen scratched noisily across the paper and his hair gleamed white in the circle of light from the desk lamp. âYou would tell me, wouldn't you, if there was anything else I could do?'
Her father was not listening. He turned a page of the ledger. Softly she closed the door.
On the last day of the Michaelmas Term, Mr Willis left a message for Oscar in his pigeonhole. He asked that Oscar come and see him urgently. Instead, Oscar went to the Victoria cinema on Market Square. The afternoon feature was
South
, an account of Sir Ernest Shackleton's heroic and ill-fated attempt to reach the South Pole. Oscar watched as the grinning crew embarked on their expedition, waved off at the dock by a huge and cheering crowd. England had been at war with Germany for four days. In Antarctica the
Endurance
pushed through mile after mile of frozen sea, its glittering rigging festooned with icicles, its bow scything a path through the pack ice while all around icebergs loomed against the sky, vast white cities crowned with towers and spires. The sled dogs gambolled on the ice and the meteorologist played the banjo. It was magnificent and beautiful. Then the temperature dropped. Little by little, month after month and inexorably, the ice entombed the
Endurance
in its crushing grip. There was nothing Shackleton's men could do but watch. Oscar watched too, bleakly, as, powerless against the ice, the 350-ton vessel crumpled like a paper boat. The rudder smashed first, then the mast, snapped like a matchstick before a violent eruption of ice forced the ship high into the air. For a moment the ice held it aloft, a broken trophy, Ahab's
Pequod
. Then it was gone. Oscar closed his eyes, frozen
and bereft. It was no solace to know that not one of Shackleton's crew had lost their lives. In the row behind him a couple kissed as though they were drowning.