Authors: Clare Clark
It grew dark. He did not go down for tea. Later he heard feet on the stairs, snatches of conversation, the low rumble of a man's voice he assumed was the doctor. He did not want to go downstairs but he washed and changed and combed his hair, digging the teeth hard into his scalp, because love was selfless and what he wanted did not matter. Phyllis was not yet down. He accepted the glass of whatever it was that Jessica offered him and drank it too quickly as Jessica told him about Nanny. She had knitted cardigans for both the girls which she insisted on them putting on there and then.
âMustard yellow,' Jessica said. âIt's enough to make you miss the War.'
A sombre Phyllis came down just as they were going through to dinner. Sir Aubrey's temperature had soared. In his delirium he had mistaken Phyllis for his mother.
âGrandmother?' Jessica asked. âAre you sure?'
âHe called me Mama,' Phyllis said.
âBabies say Mama,' Jessica said. âIt's what you say when you can't say anything else. It doesn't mean anything. The only reason mothers have always called themselves Mama is to get in first.'
âEleanor,' Phyllis said, rolling her tongue over the vowels like someone trying out a foreign language, and to Oscar's bewilderment both girls began to laugh helplessly, each attempt at recovery giving way to a new convulsion. They laughed until Jessica pressed her stomach and pleaded with Phyllis to stop.
âI'm sorry, Oscar,' Jessica said, wiping her eyes. âYou must think us mad.'
âNot at all,' he mumbled. âIt's nice to see you laughing.' He was glad Phyllis did not look at him. He was afraid she might be able to see inside his head.
At dinner Jessica asked him about Cambridge, his friends and his rooms and the photographs he had sent to Sir Aubrey.
âYou should see them, Phyll,' she said. âThey're riddles, really. Like Father's. There's one that looks just like an angry face until you look closer and you realise it's actually a door handle. Where did you say you found that, Oscar?'
âSt John's.' A side door near the Bridge of Sighs on a golden August evening. Phyllis had walked barefoot, swinging her shoes by their straps. He had photographed her feet, pale as fish in the trailing green weed of the river, and her wet footprints on the sun-warmed stone. Almost as soon as he had clicked the shutter they were gone.
Phyllis said little. She knew all his answers anyway. As soon as dinner was over she pleaded exhaustion after her journey and bid them both goodnight. She kissed her sister and brushed Oscar's cheek with hers.
âYou'll have some coffee with me, won't you?' Jessica asked Oscar but he shook his head. His cheek prickled, electric with the touch of her. Jessica wore her long pearl necklace and a short silk dress with narrow straps like a film star's nightgown. Oscar thought of Phyllis's green-and-white striped summer dress, her squashed hat.
Worth me Best Straw
, he thought, and his heart ached.
Upstairs the bathroom door was locked. Jessica could hear the sound of water running. She banged on the door. âPhyll?'
âWhat?' Phyllis's voice was muffled.
âLet me in.'
The door clicked and Phyllis opened it, her toothbrush in her mouth. She went back to the sink as Jessica crossed to the
lavatory. Pulling down her knickers, she sat down. White foam spilled down the handle of Phyllis's toothbrush. She leaned forward to spit as Jessica wiped herself and reached up to tug on the chain.
âBudge over so I can wash my hands,' Jessica said, turning on the tap. Phyllis put her toothbrush under the flow. âWait your turn.'
Reaching for the soap she pushed her sister away with her hip. Phyllis flicked her toothbrush at her, spattering her with tiny droplets of water, and she made a scoop of her hand, splashing water over the front of Phyllis's nightgown. âNow look what you made me do,' she said.
Phyllis took the hand towel from its rail and flicked it at Jessica's neck. Jessica laughed, ducking out of the way. Halfheartedly Phyllis dabbed at the wet patch on her nightgown. The starched white towel was thick and glossy, the Melville monogram embroidered on it in white thread.
âAre you all right?' Jessica asked, taking it to dry her hands. âYou hardly said a word all evening.'
Phyllis shrugged. She sat on the edge of the bath, the wet nightgown clinging to her thighs. The water made the white cotton almost transparent. Jessica could see the jut of her hipbones, the dark shadow of hair between her legs. She looked away, busying herself with her toothbrush.
âHe's dying, isn't he?' Phyllis said quietly.
Jessica shook her head furiously. âDon't say that.'
âWhen I saw him I . . . it's not him, Jess. Not any more. He's not there.'
âHe's got a fever, that's all. It makes him confused. When that passes . . .'
âDoes Dr Wilcox honestly believe it will pass?'
âHe hopes. So should you.' Jessica swallowed, scrubbing ferociously at her teeth. Phyllis pleated the fabric of her nightgown between her fingers.
âWould I . . . would there have been time to talk to him? If I had got here sooner?' She looked up at Jessica tentatively. Jessica
stopped brushing. If you had been here, she wanted to say, if you had ever bothered to come home, you could have talked to him whenever you wanted. Instead, she shook her head.
âNot since the second stroke,' she said. âHe hasn't really been able to speak since then.'
Phyllis bowed her head, staring at the bunched-up fabric in her fist. Jessica spat out the dental cream, then turned on the tap, rinsing out her mouth. She did not know how it was possible to feel so angry with Phyllis and so very close to her, both at the same time. Phyllis said something she could not catch above the noise of the water. She turned off the tap. âWhat?'
âI said I stayed an extra day. In Malta. Two days nearly. There was this relief, this extraordinary relief quite unlike the others, they think it might prove as important a discovery as the fat lady statue. I . . . I waited. I wanted to stay.'
Jessica shook her head. âWhy are you telling me this?'
âI thought it was what mattered, this piece of stone that had been buried in a field for thousands of years. That it was somehow more important. I never thought . . .' She bit her lip. âWhat if he had died before I got here? What if I had never had the chance to say goodbye?'
âHe didn't die, Phyllis. He isn't going to, do you hear me? You have to stop saying things like that. It's horrible.'
âSaying things out loud doesn't change anything,' Phyllis said but there was something in the way that she said it that made Jessica think that she did not believe it either. They were both silent.
âYour feet are blue,' Jessica said.
Phyllis looked down. âMore lavender, wouldn't you say?'
âNanny would call that showing off.'
âShe would also tell us it was time for bed. Sleep, Jessica Margaret Crompton Melville, is a poor man's treasure.'
âAnd only thieves have important business after dark,' Jessica said, pulling the cord of the bathroom light, and in the darkness they smiled at one another, their eyes glistening with memories.
âI'd forgotten how full of us her cottage is,' Phyllis said. âLike a museum of our childhood.'
âWe were her life.' On the other side of the landing, along the passage of the East wing where their father slept, a lamp burned dimly.
âI suppose we were. How sad.'
âWhy is that sad? She was ours, too, for years and years.'
At the door of the Chinese room Phyllis put her hand on the porcelain knob with its painted dragon. She did not turn it. She looked down the passage towards the faint light of the lamp. âHave you ever told him you love him? I mean, actually told him?'
âI don't have to. He knows.'
âDoes he?' Phyllis stared at the rug, her toe tracing the pattern. âI keep thinking about something someone told me once. That it isn't a scientist's results that are the most interesting part of his experiment, it's the facts he takes for granted before he starts.'
âThat sounds like something Oscar would say.'
âDoes it?' She hesitated, her hand on the door knob, as though she meant to say more. Instead, she ducked her head forwards, kissing Jessica's cheek. âI'm sorry,' she murmured. âI should have . . . I'm sorry.'
âSorry for what?' Jessica said but Phyllis had already closed the door.
Oscar undressed slowly. The fire had gone out in his room and it was very cold. When he got into bed he realised he had left his book in the drawing room. He reached into his knapsack and took out another. His mother's book of Gray's poems with Sir Aubrey's photographs of Ellinghurst tucked inside. He opened the cover, reading the inscription.
Thoughts that breathe and words that burn, with all my love
. He frowned at the handwriting, struck by its familiarity. Then it dawned on him. The writing was Sir Aubrey's. Not an inscription from his father to his mother at all, but from Sir Aubrey to
Godmother Eleanor. His mother must have borrowed the book and forgotten to return it. He stared at the inscription. The words were different now that they no longer meant the same thing. Sliding the photographs out from between its pages, he put the book on the bedside table. He would have to leave it behind when he went back to Cambridge. The thought made him obscurely sad.
He fanned the photographs in his hand like playing cards, then laid them out, one after the other, on the counterpane. They had been printed by a machine on cheap cardboard and the images were soft, as though they were already starting to fade. They had an elegiac quality, as distant and unreal as the portraits of the Ellinghurst household that Sir Crawford had insisted on taking with a camera of his own invention, which had required an exposure time of nearly a minute so that the faces of the servants all came out blurred. As distant as the photographs on the boys' dressing tables at school, those soldiers in their smart uniforms smiling into a future that turned out not to exist at all. When his mother saw the photographs Sir Crawford had taken she said that they did not even look like people, just ideas for people that someone had got bored with in the middle, which was so exactly what they looked like that Oscar had wanted to kiss her in delight. He thought of the way she smiled to herself when he read her the Gray poem about the goldfish from the book that was not hers, the way it spread on her favourite line:
Presumptuous maid!
He missed her. Perhaps, he thought, if she were here, he might be able to bear it better, the ache that pummelled inside him like a fist trying to punch a bigger hole.
He never meant to open the letter. He only meant to look at the envelope, to draw comfort from her familiar handwriting.
To my dearest Oscar, on this happiest of days
. He thought of the way she had sat in the parlour on days when she knew he was unhappy, her stockinged feet tucked under her and her book set aside on the arm of her chair, waiting for him to
be ready. One corner of the envelope's flap was not properly stuck down. Oscar picked at it, his thumbnail worrying the flap, and abruptly the gum gave way and the fold opened.
He missed her, her laugh and her frown of concentration and her silly music hall songs, the private smile over the top of her book. He wanted to believe what she believed, that one day he would marry and it would be the happiest day of his life.
The ink was blue and faintly smudged.
My dearest O, it is dawn as I write this, a grey winter's dawn. Beyond the chimney pots the dull white sun is peering from under the clouds like a child reluctant to get out of bed. I ache too much to sleep and a good deal too much to try to get up so I am writing this to you
.
I know too little of marriage to give advice. I made a mess of mine. I wish I had tried harder. A love affair, however passionate, is nothing but a chemical reaction, like gunpowder or phosphorus in water, dazzling perhaps but not profound. A marriage, even an unhappy marriage, is an act of creation. Exhausting sometimes, difficult often, but always interesting. You are thoughtful by instinct, attentive, endlessly curious. You see things others do not see. You will make a fine scientist. Perhaps you are one already. You will be good at marriage
.
This letter is a last kiss. A fond goodbye. It was ever so. From today your family is not the one you were given but the one you have chosen for yourself. It is not a child's majority but his marriage that topples the parent from his throne, that strips him of his power and his glory. The King is dead, long live the King. Amen to that. My father was a tyrant who terrorised my childhood but from Clapham he was nothing but a querulous, peevish old man
.
I wish I could tell you this instead of writing but it is too soon. This way is better, I think. When a mother dies, her child's father is his next of kin. Until he marries. When he marries, that person is his wife
.
In the summer of 1899, I met Joachim. You know this part of the story. I loved him, or wanted to. Joachim was so stubbornly, unyieldingly free and I wanted to be free too. You see, for a long time I had loved a man who could not love me back and I was tired of it, angry with myself and with him. Anger made me reckless. When I told him Joachim had proposed marriage he asked for a week. One week to say goodbye. When it was over he went back to his wife and I went to Paris
.
I never regretted it. How could I? There was you. And no one was hurt. Joachim never knew, never even suspected. Why would he? You were like him in so many ways. You were like them both. They say a mother has an instinct for these things. Perhaps some do. As you grew up there were times when I believed that I knew, that I knew beyond doubt, but I have noticed, as I grow old, that what we see depends mainly on what we look for. Truth alters with the light. The only certainty is that we can never be certain. We must choose what to believe. In my mind you will always have two fathers
.