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Authors: Julian Fellowes

Tags: #Literary, #England, #London (England), #English Contemporary Fiction - Individual Authors, #Nineteen sixties, #London (England) - Social life and customs - 20th century, #General, #Fiction - General, #london, #Fiction, #Upper class - England - London, #Upper Class

Past Imperfect (45 page)

BOOK: Past Imperfect
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Sam opened his mouth to agree, but before he could do so his host, on Lady Gregson's other side, cut in, 'It was more delicious than it was original, but that's not saying much.'

'
What
?' Billie Mainwaring's voice sliced through the atmosphere, silencing most of the rest of us, even those who didn't know what was going on.

Lady Gregson, who was a nice woman but not an exceptionally clever one, now took the measure of the situation and spoke before Peter could answer. 'We were just saying how much we enjoyed the last course.'

But Peter had been tucking into his excellent claret for quite a while by this time and clearly some sort of dam within him had at last given way. 'Yes,' he said. 'I always enjoy it. Every time you produce it. Which is more or less every time anyone is unlucky enough to dine in this house.' At which moment, with slightly unfortunate timing, one of the maids arrived at Lady Gregson's left, which placed her next to Peter's chair. She was holding a platter of what looked like white cheesecake. 'Oh God, darling.' He rolled his eyes. 'Not this again.'

'I
love
cheesecake.' Lady Gregson's tone was now becoming harder, as if she, sensing a whiff of rebellion, were determined to impose order on the gathering whether we liked it or not. She was the kind of woman who would have been very useful at Lucknow.

'What about the strawberries?' Peter was now staring straight at his wife.

'We're having cheesecake.' Billie's voice had all the animation of the Speaking Clock. 'I didn't think we'd want the strawberries.'

'But I bought them for tonight.'

'Very well.' There was a quality of tension in the air that reminded me of one of those films, so popular in that era, about the threat of nuclear war, a universal obsession of the time. The Big Scene was always centred on whether or not the President of Somewhere was going to press the button and start it. Having let the moment resonate, Billie spoke again: 'Mrs Carter, please fetch the strawberries.'

The poor woman didn't know what to make of this. She looked at her employer as if she couldn't be serious. 'But they're--'

Billie cut her off with a raised palm, nodding her head like a fatal signal from a Roman emperor. 'Just bring the strawberries, please, Mrs Carter.'

Of course, there are times when this sort of thing comes as a relief. As most of us know, there is nothing that will cheer a dreary dinner party more than a quarrel between a husband and wife. But this incident seemed to have acquired an intensity that made it slightly inappropriate as guest-pleasing fare. It was all too raw and real. At least we did not have long to wait for the next act. In the interim the rest of the company had taken the disputed cheesecake, but nobody had begun to eat. I saw Sam give a quick wink to Carina and, on my left, Terry's chair was beginning to shake with smothered giggles. Apart from these slight diversions we just sat there, divining that, in the words of the comic routine, we ain't seen nothing yet. Mrs Carter reentered the room and went to Lady Gregson's side with a bowl of strawberries, but as she began to help herself it was absolutely clear to everyone present that the fruit was completely frozen, like steel bullets, and had just been removed from the freezer. The wretched woman dug in the spoon and put them on to her plate, where they fell with a metallic noise like large ball bearings. Mrs Carter moved to Peter, who carefully spooned out a big, rattling helping. Clatter, clatter, clatter, they sounded as he heaped them on to his plate. On went Mrs Carter to the next guest and the next, no one was passed by, no one dared refuse, so the hard, little marbles fell noisily on to every plate in the room. Even mine, although I cannot now think why we didn't just refuse them, as one might refuse anything in the normal way of things. With a puzzled look Mrs Carter retired to the kitchen and then began the business of eating these granite chips. By this time you may be sure there was no conversation in the room, nor anything remotely approaching it. Just ten people trying to eat small round pieces of stone. At one stage the General seemed to get one lodged in his windpipe and threw his head up sharply, like a tethered beast, and no sooner were we past this hazard than the land-owner's wife, Mrs Towneley, bit down with a fearsome crack and reached for her mouth with a cry that she'd broken a tooth. Even this did not elicit a Governor's Pardon from our hosts. Still we crunched on, particularly Peter who bit and chewed and sucked and smiled, as if it were the most delicious confection imaginable. 'You seem to be enjoying them,' said Lady Gregson, whose destiny that night was to make everything worse, just when she sought to do the opposite.

'It's such a treat to eat something unusual,' said Peter. 'At any rate in this house.' He spoke loudly and clearly into the silent crunching room. Inevitably, all eyes turned to his wife.

For a moment I thought she wasn't going to respond. But she did. 'You fucking bastard,' said Billie, reverting to her standard vocabulary when enraged, although actually this time she spoke quite softly and the words were rather effective despite their lack of originality. Next, she stood and, leaning forward, picked up the bowl holding the remainder of the icy inedibles. With a gesture like throwing a bucket of water on to a fire, she flung what was left of the frozen fruit at Peter, in the process spraying the rest of us, as well as the table and the floor, with sharp, bouncing, painful little missiles. She finished by lobbing the bowl at him which missed since he ducked and shattered against an attractive George IV wine cooler in the corner. In the pause that followed you could hear only breathing.

'Shall we get our coats?' said Lady Gregson brightly. 'How many cars are we taking to the dance?' In a commendable effort to bring matters to a conclusion she stood, pushed back her chair, stepped on a frozen strawberry and fell completely flat, cracking her head on the edge of the table as she went down, and with her evening frock riding up to show a rather grubby petticoat and a ladder in her right stocking, although that might have been a product of the moment. She lay totally motionless, stretched out on the floor, and for a second I wondered if she were dead. I suspect the others did too, since nobody moved or spoke, and for a time we were enveloped in a positively prehistoric silence. Then a low groan ameliorated this worry at least.

'I don't think we
all
need to drive, do you, darling?' said Peter, also standing, and the dinner party was at an end.

All of which goes to explain why I ended up in bed with Terry that night. We stayed together when we finally got to the dance, as it felt odd not to be with someone who had witnessed the previous events of the evening. Sam Hoare and Carina seemed to be similarly motivated and were soon dancing. In fact, they began a romance that was to take them through marriage, three children and a famously unpleasant divorce, when Sam ran off with the daughter of an Italian car manufacturer in 1985. At any rate, from our house party that only left Terry for me and I wasn't sorry. From then, somehow, as the night progressed it all seemed to become inevitable, in the way these things can and do. We jigged away while the music was brisk, but when the lights lowered at around one in the morning, and the DJ put on
Honey
, a sickeningly sentimental hit of the day, one of those ballads about dead loved ones, we moved into each other's arms without a question and began the slow, rhythmic clinch that passed for dancing in the last phase of these events.

In a way those mordant, melodic dirges were one of the hallmarks of the period, although the fashion for them has entirely faded long before now. It was an odd phenomenon, when you think of it, songs about husbands, wives, girlfriends, boyfriends, all being killed in car crashes and train smashes, by cancer and, above all, on motorbikes, the last scenario combining several pet crazes of the time. I suppose there must have been something in their facile, tear-soaked emotionalism that chimed with our largely false sense of trailblazing and 'release.' They ranged from the tuneful and robust
Tell Laura I Love Her
to those like
Terry
or
Teenangel
and, while we're on the subject,
Honey
, which were soppy beyond endurance, but the stand-out example, the exception that proved the rule, a song which, like the more recent
Dancing
Queen
, must have been performed in more bathrooms than any other hit of the day, was definitely
The Leader of the Pack
by the Shangri Las. There is a verse in it, which has always fascinated me: 'One day my Dad said "find someone new"/ I had to tell my Jimmie we're through/ He stood there and he asked me why/ All I could do was cry/ I'm sorry I hurt you, the Leader of the Pack.' No prize for guessing who's in charge here: Dad. This tough leather biker boy with his shining wheels, this girl in the grip of passion, both know better than to argue when Dad puts his foot down. 'Find someone new!
Now
!' 'OK, Dad. Whatever you say.' What would the lyric be changed to were it rerecorded today? 'I had to tell my Dad to get stuffed'? I cannot think of another vignette that tells of the collapse of our family structure and our discipline as a society more economically yet more vividly. No wonder so much of the world laughs at us.

At any rate on that evening the sad refrain did its work, and by the time Terry and I were helping ourselves to breakfast in the large marquee, rather imaginatively decorated with farming tools and sheaves of corn, we both knew where we were headed and I was glad of it. As most of us can remember, there is something sweet, during the early, hunting years particularly, in the knowledge that one's next amorous partner has been located and is willing.

I drove us back to the Mainwarings' house in my car, drunk as I was, with Terry nudging me to keep my mind on the business, and we let ourselves in through the unlocked front door as we had been directed. How would such arrangements work in these more fearful days? The answer, I suppose, is that they wouldn't. Then we climbed the stairs, attempting to make as little noise as possible. I do not think we even hesitated for form's sake as we approached our separate chambers. I am pretty sure that I just followed Terry into her bedroom without either explanation or permission, closed the door gently and began.

Of course, one of the problems of being male, which I suspect has never changed nor will it, is that young men tend to operate on an Exocet-type imperative to seek bed larks no matter what. This was perhaps especially true in those days, when a great many of our female contemporaries were having no such thing, with the result that the moment there was a possibility of scoring, the faintest breach in the wall of virtue, one simply went for it without pausing to consider whether this was something one really wanted to do. Unfortunately, that realisation, that questioning of purpose, sometimes came later. Usually, when you were already in bed and it was far too late to back out. My generation was not, including the men (whatever the ageing trendies like to imply), nearly as promiscuous as those who came after us, even before we reached the complete sexual mayhem of today. But it was beginning. The male in his early twenties who was still a virgin, a comparatively normal type for my father's generation, had become strange to us and the goal of achieving as many conquests as we could was fairly standard. And so from time to time, inevitably, any man would find himself in bed with a woman who might be termed unlikely.

Usually when this happened he would just bang on, and the dazed query,
What was I thinking of?
did not surface in the front of his brain until the following morning. But inevitably there were occasions when a Damascene moment would suddenly strike mid-action. The scales would fall from your eyes and the whole event would be rendered completely and indefensively
insane
as you lay there, naked, with another, unwanted, body in your arms. So it was that night with me and Terry Vitkov. The truth was I was not in the least attracted to her; I didn't even like her all that much in the normal way of things, and without the Mainwarings' battles and the near hysteria of the evening we had lived through I would never have been in this position. If events had not created a sense of artificial closeness in our hearts I would have gone to sleep, happily alone. But now that I was in bed with her, now that I could smell the faintly acrid scent of her body and feel her wiry hair and spongy waist, and handle the rather pendulous breasts, I knew with an awful clarity that I wanted to be anywhere but there. I rolled back on to the pillow, heaving my body off hers as I did so.

'What's the matter?' said Terry in her now grating voice.

'Nothing,' I said.

'There'd better
not
be.'

Which, naturally, sealed my fate. I had a momentary vision of becoming a funny story, a fake who couldn't deliver, a joke to be sniggered over with the other girls as they wiggled their little fingers derisively, all of which I knew Terry was perfectly capable of delivering. 'Everything's fine,' I said. 'Come here.' And with as much resolution as I could muster on the instant I did my duty.

The dinner was not going particularly well. Gary had almost given up on us and Terry was, by this stage, airborne. We were staring at the menus for pudding and when Terry started to heckle over the ingredients of some sort of strudel it was clear from Gary's expression that we had reached the city limits. 'I'll just have a cup of coffee,' I said in a feeble attempt to push Terry forward to the next part of the evening. Inevitably, this gave her ideas.

'Come to my place for coffee. You wanna see where I live, don't you?' Her drawl was beginning to stretch out to positively Southern proportions. Inexplicably, really, since I knew she came from the Midwest. It reminded me of Dorothy Parker's description of her mother-in-law as the only woman who could get three syllables out of 'egg.'

'Shall I bring the check?' volunteered Gary eagerly, seizing at the chance of ridding himself of this potential troublemaker before the real storm broke. Not many minutes later we were standing in the car park.

BOOK: Past Imperfect
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