Sugar and Other Stories (24 page)

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Authors: A. S. Byatt

Tags: #Fiction, #Short Stories, #Short Stories (Single Author), #Historical, #Anthologies

BOOK: Sugar and Other Stories
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Mrs Sugden, even in her fear, had partly looked forward to having a talk with the other woman, now one was broached, now the social distance had been got over. It was amazing that annoyance at his intrusiveness should co-exist with consciousness of the way he had mopped and mowed, of the flash of his hand.

“I’ve often seen you,” he said. “You always come this way.”

“The path is even here. I can let Elsie run.”

“Oh,
of course.
You come every day?”

“To let her have a run.”

“Fantastic,” he said. “Just fantastic.”

“And you?” said Miss Tillotson. “Are you in training, or something? I hear you go up and down.”

“I keep fit, yes,” he said. “I’m unemployed, at the moment. I try to keep busy.”

“I’m sorry to hear that.”

“Oh, don’t be. I’d go mad in a shop or an office. I’m fine, this way, I get out and about, in the air. There was only one job I wanted.”

“And what was that?”

“I wanted to fly planes. I wanted to be up there. Always liked planes, from being ever such a small boy. But they won’t have me.”

“Oh dear. Why not?”

“Various reasons. Medical reasons. Nothing to worry about. They might change their mind. I was an air cadet, that was O.K. I’m working on them.”

There was a silence. Miss Tillotson strode on, and Mrs Sugden trotted beside her, holding her elbow, and on the other side he padded, jogging on the spot more or less, slightly crab-like, his gaze fixed on Miss Tillotson.

Mrs Sugden talked about Elsie. She could hardly carry on, in his young presence, the interesting talk that had been started about lack of occupation. She felt it was indelicate to ask, with him galumphing there, all the questions she would have liked to ask about how Miss Tillotson managed things like cooking and buses, though she wanted to know, and felt that Miss Tillotson did not mind answering. Let alone ask whether Miss Tillotson was afraid, and if not, why not, how not? So she ascertained that Elsie had half a pound of fresh meat a day, and some Vitalin dog bran, and two hours’ exercise as well as necessary journeys to the shops, and revealed that she felt she was not really fit to keep up with Wolfgang, but liked his company. She stopped short of saying she felt safe with him. It was their companion who raised safety.

“Don’t you both worry,” he said, “about being out on your own? With all the goings-on we hear about? Aren’t you afraid?”

“I feel all right with Wolfgang,” said Mrs Sugden miserably, wondering if she was condemning her bright dog, imagining a knife grating on his breast-bone.

“In my position,” said Miss Tillotson, “you could be afraid of everything. Everything is hazardous, if you look at it in one way. So after a bit, it seems that you can only survive at all by not bothering about that sort of thing. So I don’t. There isn’t much I could do, if I was worried. Just live a little less, in a smaller circle. Which is the way my life could so easily have been contracted in any case. No, I’d rather come out in the air. So I do.”

“I do admire you,” he said, all liquid emphasis. “I think you’re marvellous.”

“Hardly,” said Miss Tillotson. “Just trying to live with a considerable disability.”

Mrs Sugden’s mind was exercised about what would happen at the other end of the path, when the ways parted. She felt she should see Miss Tillotson home, to be sure, and that she wanted to be back within her own walls, and that he was teasing them both, smiling and concealing. She said, with more directness and
warmth than she would have dared without this provocation, “I am very glad I spoke to you. It’s been very pleasant to have company. The dogs are enjoying the company too. I hope we can go on —”

“Why don’t you come back for tea?” said Miss Tillotson. “That is, if you have nothing better to do.”

“I should be delighted.”

“Good. I live just off the Common. Through the underpass. In Bellevue Mansions.”

He had moved away slightly. He was running along the very edge of the asphalt promontory, arms wide-spread and aslant, torso veering from one side to the other, a huge boy-aeroplane. There was even a faint engine-hum between those extravagant lips. Mrs Sugden wanted to seize the moment to hiss a warning which should alert without alarming, but there was no time, he was back. He said, “I’ll walk back with you. Just to make sure you’re all right.”

“There’s no need. Mrs Sugden is coming to tea.”

“I wish you’d ask
me
to tea.”

“You said you must be getting back,” said Mrs Sugden. “When you asked the time, you said you must.”

“Back where to? Where’ve I got to go to?”

“You can come to tea, of course, if it would interest you,” said Miss Tillotson.

“Oh, it would,” he said. “It would. It’d be really great, I mean it.”

Too much.

Mrs Sugden found time to marvel at the way Miss Tillotson managed the lift in her mansion block, call button, outer door, inner door, no hesitation, though they were all a little interlocked in the lift, eight dog-legs and his large splayed knees and swivelling shoulders. The flat was a surprise, very tastefully decorated with flame-coloured velvet chairs, reading lamps made of Chinese vases, glass-topped low tables on a dark Persian carpet,
slightly hazed by cream dog hairs. There were mirrors in the hall and over the hearth in the drawing-room. There were pictures on the walls — a Chinese brush drawing of a cliff and waterfall, a print of Velasquez’ “Las Meninas”, with its complicated group of infantas and deformed dwarves, seen from behind the easel. There were bowls of spring flowers and a scented jasmine plant. Miss Tillotson switched on lights in the dark afternoon, and indicated chairs for them to sit in. Mrs Sugden wondered if she bothered to do this, in the dark alone. Or did she turn the light on for Elsie? There was a collection of silver-framed photographs on a little bureau.

“Are these your family?” said Mrs Sugden.

“Ah yes. The one in the wig is my barrister-brother, Clive. The two in gowns are my nieces, on graduation days. The baby is my grand-nephew, Maurice. The house is the family home in Somerset, where I grew up. Don’t you think the one of Elsie is a good likeness?’

Over Mrs Sugden’s shoulder he breathed his hot breath misting the legal and academic faces.

“It looks a recent one, of Elsie.”

“Oh, no. You wouldn’t believe it, but Elsie’s nearly ten. She still looks girlish. I’ll give her — and your Wolfgang — some water, and make us all some tea. Do you like China or Indian, Mrs Sugden — or Earl Grey? And — I’m afraid I don’t know your name.”

“Me name’s Barry,” he said. “Call me Barry. I’ll have whatever you said last, Earl Grey I’ll have. With two of sugar. Thanks.”

Mrs Sugden offered to help in the kitchen, but felt unable to persist, in case that might appear rude, a questioning of Miss Tillotson’s undoubted competence. So she sat where she had been told to sit, watching him roam amongst the pretty furniture in his incongruous shoes. One curious effect of Miss Tillotson’s blindness was that Mrs Sugden came to feel that she herself was invisible. Miss Tillotson turned a polite blank face with great accuracy
almost
as it would have been if she could truly have
met Mrs Sugden’s eye, but not quite. Her sightless stare went somewhere to the side of Mrs Sugden’s head, to the blank wall. Mrs Sugden found herself quickly wiping her face of dismay and distress, suddenly remembering that he could see her. He picked things up: an inkwell, a small lacquered box, a paperweight.

“She’s got some pretty good stuff here, wouldn’t you say? Some valuable knicknacks?”

“I don’t know about value. It’s very pleasant. Very well designed.”

“Someone must do it for her,” he said, Mrs Sugden thought brutally. “She can’t pick chairs and curtains, hunh? She got help. Mebbe from that brother and his wife. Yah. Mebbe from them. She gets around pretty neatly, wouldn’t you say? No nonsense. No feeling around. A bloody miracle.”

“Oh yes,” said Mrs Sugden, repressively.

Miss Tillotson returned with the teatray, which she placed accurately on a glass-topped low table. The teapot was ample and silver; the cups were very pretty, Crown Derby Mrs Sugden rather thought, and not entirely free of interior stains of stubborn tannin. Also the tray, a black Chinese lacquer, had been wiped in great visible streaks and smears. Miss Tillotson poured. She said, “Barry, would you be kind enough to give this to Mrs Sugden? Thank you. This is your own cup, with the two sugars. Help yourselves to biscuits.”

She turned her dark questioning face to Barry. “Tell us about yourself. I used to have contacts, amongst employers. Maybe I can help.”

Mrs Sugden was quite glad Miss Tillotson could not see what she herself categorized as the scornful leer that came over his face at this.

“I shouldn’t think so. They don’t want to know. And I don’t want the sort of thing there is. You know, shifting packing cases, making trains of supermarket trolleys, YTS and all that crap.”

“You can’t want to be unemployed, either,” said Miss Tillotson.

“I dunno. I get out in the fresh air a lot. I get time to think. I get to have tea with nice ladies like you.”

The two dogs came importantly into the room from the kitchen. Elsie went to Miss Tillotson’s side, and sat mildly pressed against her knee. Wolfgang prowled, uncertainly, investigating corners. Barry broke one of Miss Tillotson’s biscuits in half and held it out to him.

“Here,” he said. “Nice dog. Come over here. What did you say his name was?”

“Wolfgang.”

“Sounds funny. Sort of fierce.”

“It’s German. It was Mozart’s name. I don’t know why I thought of it. He doesn’t like biscuits.”

“Oh no?” said Barry, as Wolfgang came up warily, and snatched. “Doesn’t he just. You just don’t indulge him. Good dog, old Wolfgang.”

“People are always offering Elsie biscuits when I’m not looking,” said Miss Tillotson. “They make her fat. Please don’t give Elsie any biscuits, Barry.”

“Of
course
not,” he said, watching Wolfgang lick crumbs from the carpet.

It turned out to be a long teaparty. Most of the conversation was a dialogue between Barry and Miss Tillotson. He asked her all sorts of questions, very direct questions, questions Mrs Sugden would never have ventured on. He found out that Miss Tillotson had been blind since she was a small child, that she had worked with handicapped people most of her life, that she had studied Social Administration at London University. That she had a special little Braille machine for taking down notes of telephone conversations, that she lived alone, that Elsie was her fourth dog, that the death or retirement of a dog was something she dreaded.

“It’s terrible, very frightening, the period of adjustment to a new dog,” said Miss Tillotson. “I go away to a special centre, to get used to them, we walk the streets together. They can stop too
soon, too far from the kerb, they can refuse to budge at all, they can do all sorts of things. They are nervous and over-conscientious and so am I. When we come home, it takes a long time to settle to old ways and routines. Routine is very important in my life.”

“I think you are the most incredibly brave person I’ve ever met,” he said, throbbing like a sincere guitarist, cocking his head on one side. Miss Tillotson did not answer this, but asked for the cups back and took out the teatray. They could hear her steps in the hall, her confident turn onto the kitchen linoleum, the sound of taps and water. Barry leaned forward and said to Mrs Sugden, “If you moved a few things — chairs, tables, that sort of thing, the kettle in the kitchen, I bet, or biscuit-tins, she’d be all over the place, wouldn’t she, she wouldn’t know what to do with herself?”

“Nobody would do such a thing.”

“Oh they easily might, by accident. Easily. You could move that little table with the telephone, just to see what she’d do.”

Mrs Sugden rejected various dangerous words: cruel, stupid, unkind, mean. She said, schoolmistressy, “That would be rather silly.”

“Oh, I wouldn’t do it for anything. I think she’s fantastic. I was just thinking.”

He looked at Mrs Sugden. “It was really nice of her to ask me to tea. Really nice. I bet
you
wouldn’t.”

Mrs Sugden had no answer. Her heart thumped.


You’d
be afraid to. Sensible, really. I might be any kind of maniac, how do you know, how does she? You ought to take care.”

And as if to emphasize this, he put out his hand to Wolfgang, who sniffed his fingers and allowed his ears to be scratched.

After that, Mrs Sugden decided that she could not leave him alone with Miss Tillotson. They had to leave together, in which case she would herself be alone with him. It was like that puzzle about the fox and goat and the corn and the boat, or the similar one about
cannibals and missionaries. She rose from her chair and said firmly, “Thank you for the tea, Miss Tillotson. I ought to be getting along, and I’m sure Barry ought too. I think we should go now. You must be busy.”

As though she was. As though any of them were.

Miss Tillotson rose, too, graceful and isolated.

“It was very pleasant to have you. I hope you will come again. Can you find your own coat?”

He
lounged
in a velvet chair, his feet splayed amongst crumbs and dog hairs on the lovely carpet. The schoolmistress in Mrs Sugden spoke. “Come along, Barry. It’s time to go home.”

He was playing with the paperweight. Chunk, slap, from one hand to the other. Mrs Sugden was glad Miss Tillotson could not see him. She stopped short of saying, “Put that down, immediately,
exactly
where you found it.” And yet he seemed to hear the thought, for he did put it down, he grinned and scrambled to his feet.

“All right, all right, just coming, Miss,” he said, answering her tone.

Miss Tillotson hoped they would come again. Mrs Sugden said, “You must visit me,” out of a dry mouth. Barry said, “Thanks, I’m really grateful, you’ve made my day.”

Mrs Sugden had no idea what Miss Tillotson thought or sensed, or did not sense.

Out on the pavement, she clipped on Wolfgang’s lead, and turned to Barry. She had decided her tactics. She asked him which way he went, already determined to set out in some quite opposite direction, even if it meant walking for a very long time to get home.

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