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Authors: Marcia Willett

The Children's Hour (27 page)

BOOK: The Children's Hour
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Oh dear, Elyot! I've just reread this and feel that I sound like a rather second-rate cross between Mother Teresa and Mary Whitehouse. Have you noticed how terribly easy it is to moralize about other people's dilemmas? Well, the shoe might well be on the other foot soon. I've just had a telephone call from Lyddie who is coming home for a few days.

Her husband, it seems, has been playing the field and she's clearly in need of a little TLC. The timing couldn't be worse and poor Nest will be in a terrible state. It's the unpredictability of it all. All I can say is, watch this space.

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

‘The timing couldn't be worse,' said Nest, her face drawn and strained. ‘And Helena and Rupert about to go on a week's holiday.'

‘Try not to anticipate trouble,' said Mina gently. ‘Lyddie is only here for three days. Just a breathing space.'

‘That
bloody
man,' cried Nest. ‘I never liked him. He's so smooth and charming. Always smiling. One shouldn't trust people who smile all the time.'

‘Oh, Nest.' Mina couldn't help chuckling. ‘It's too late to do the “I always said his eyes were too close together” thing now, I'm afraid.'

Nest stared at her for a moment and then burst out laughing. ‘Mama used to say that,' she said, ‘do you remember?' – and they laughed again until Georgie came upon them, looking for her breakfast.

‘What's the joke?' she asked amiably.

Once again, Nest found herself making the effort not to answer ‘Nothing', thereby excluding her sister. Instead she
said, ‘We were remembering how Mama used to say that you couldn't trust people whose eyes were too close together. So silly, really.'

‘But probably true,' said Georgie. ‘There's always a grain of truth in the old saws. Is it porridge this morning, Mina?'

Nest and Mina exchanged a glance of relief at this apparently sane approach and prayed that it might last.

‘If you like,' said Mina cheerfully. ‘Oh, and Lyddie's coming later on this morning. She's staying for a day or two. Just a little break between books.'

‘Oh.' Georgie looked slightly put out. ‘But I wanted to go to Lynton this morning to get my new library book.' She frowned. ‘Did I say that it was in?'

‘Yes,' said Nest quickly. ‘Quite right. The librarian phoned yesterday afternoon. There's no reason why you shouldn't go to Lynton to get it.'

‘Of course not,' agreed Mina. ‘I'll drive you over later.'

Her eyes met Nest's privately – ‘and keep her out for as long as I can' implicit in the glance – and Nest felt a lessening of tension. As they ate breakfast she wondered if it would be possible to keep Georgie and Lyddie apart for most of the time, although it would be a strain, but, even as she considered ways and means of achieving it, the dogs began to bark and they heard Lyddie's voice in the hall.

Mina reached her first, hugging her tightly, holding her close.

‘How lovely for us,' she said. ‘My dear child . . .' She looked into Lyddie's eyes and held her again, murmuring little love words as she did to her dogs.

Coming behind her, wheeling slowly, Nest could hardly bear to look at the pain on Lyddie's face. She took the outstretched hand and clasped it tightly until Lyddie bent to kiss her.

‘I'm not doing very well,' she muttered, tears threatening again, and Nest swallowed her own pain and anger on Lyddie's behalf and gave the hand a little shake.

‘We'll have a chat very soon,' she said, ‘if you want to. Can you manage in front of Georgie?'

Lyddie nodded, straightening up, trying to smile, and the two older women looked at her with affection and encouragement, enfolding her in their love, communicating their strength.

‘It's the Bosun.' She tried for a lighter note. ‘Shall I let him out? You know how Captain Cat terrifies him and he's already anxious because he knows that things aren't . . . quite right.'

‘Of course he must be let out,' cried Mina, ‘and if Captain Cat can't behave himself I shall shut him in the woodshed. Go and get him and then come and have some coffee. I'm just about to take Georgie off to Lynton, and you and Nest will be able to have a good old talk or whatever. I'll let the dogs out for a while and you can bring the Bosun in so as to get him settled. They'll be fine. Give me a shout when you've got him into the hall and I'll let mine out of the kitchen door. That'll faze 'em.'

The Bosun was delighted to be set free, rushing away over the lawn, into the secret garden and then back again, tail waving, tongue lolling. He seemed relieved to be at Ottercombe, despite the potential anxiety of a run-in with Captain Cat, sensing the possibility of a security that had been absent for the last twenty-four hours in Truro. Presently they went inside, giving the all-clear to Mina, who opened the kitchen door with relief so that the three barking dogs, mad by now with inquisitive frustration, shot like furry white arrows into the courtyard, round to the front of the house and began to search for the intruder.

‘I'll take them with me when we go,' said Mina, bending to stroke the Bosun's head. ‘Don't worry, they'll settle down. Poor old fellow, you must be worn out.'

The Bosun flattened his ears, responding to the sympathetic tone, managing to look both pathetic and brave. He
was
exhausted: woken early from sleep, dragged off for a walk whilst it was barely light and then hurried into the car for a two-hour drive. His tail beat hopefully against Georgie's chair and she looked at him consideringly whilst Mina slipped him a biscuit or two as a reward for his suffering. He crunched happily and Georgie patted his head.

‘You
are
a big chap,' she said admiringly. ‘He'll like a walk down to the beach, won't he?'

‘I'm sure he will,' agreed Mina, ‘but Lyddie needs some coffee and you and I have to go to Lynton. Do you need anything else besides your library book?'

‘I don't know.' Georgie looked distracted. ‘I can't remember . . .'

‘It doesn't matter.' Mina was very calm. ‘We've got all morning to wander round. Go and get yourself ready while I make a shopping list.'

Once she'd gone a constraint fell upon the three of them, covered by the necessity for coffee to be made for Lyddie whilst Nest agreed that she'd like some more, so that a small bustle ensued and each of them was careful not to look at the other. The atmosphere was lightened by the appearance of the three dogs at the kitchen door, where they stood in a row, staring indignantly through the glass at the Bosun as he lay stretched full length on the floor, deeply asleep.

‘Ever been had?' Mina remarked to nobody in particular – and even Lyddie laughed. Georgie appeared in her coat and hat, carrying a capacious bag, and Mina collected her belongings and hurried her away. There was the usual
commotion as the dogs were encouraged into the camper, the engine started up and, finally, there was silence.

Lyddie drank some coffee, blew her nose and stared at the table. Nest watched her sympathetically.

‘If you don't want to talk that's fine by me,' she told her. ‘You don't have to, you know. You might just want to think things through on neutral territory and give yourself some space. Do whatever you want to.' She turned her wheelchair away from the table so that she could see Lydia's rock-garden, and sipped some more coffee.

‘That's what's good about you and Aunt Mina,' Lyddie said. ‘You're like contemporaries. It's odd, really. I couldn't think where else to go. Roger and I have never been really close and I hardly know Teresa. I thought about Jack and Han but it didn't seem fair with their house-load of children. In Truro there's no spare space for moments like these, you see. No spare room to retreat to or a second living-room. And I just didn't know how to handle it. Did Mina tell you?'

‘She said that Liam had been unfaithful with Rosie and probably one or two others.' Nest continued to look out into the courtyard. ‘We gained the impression that he didn't deny it.'

‘No, he didn't deny it,' said Lyddie bitterly, ‘nor did he feel that change was an option.'

‘It does rather make for an impasse,' murmured Nest.

‘I was thinking about it for most of the night and for the drive here.' Lyddie pushed her mug aside and put her head in her hands. ‘The thing is, you see, we lead such a strange life. I can't just go back to how it was. Rosie's right when she says that I shall never know now which of those women he's been with. And I feel so humiliated. How could I walk into The Place again, knowing what I know?'

‘How clever of Rosie, wasn't it? Those words were a death-knell to your relationship.'

‘He didn't bother even to make a stab at protesting. He seems to feel that, because he married me, I shouldn't mind. “The rest mean nothing.” I quote.'

‘And, as far as he's concerned, that's possibly true. The rest probably come under the same heading as a pint of beer or a good long walk. Necessary at that moment, briefly satisfying, but easily replaceable.'

Lyddie's chair scraped on the slates. ‘But you don't think that I should go along with that, do you?' She sounded anxious. ‘How would
you
feel if the man you adored was having it off with someone else?'

There was a silence. The Bosun groaned in his sleep, stretching, whilst beyond the glass door a robin pecked at some toast crumbs.

‘I should feel gutted,' Nest said at last. ‘I should feel betrayed, sick with jealousy, and utterly gutted. I wouldn't want anyone to see me, I would feel incapable and helpless, but the worst and most humiliating thing of all would be the fact that I still loved him and wanted him more than anything else in the world.'

‘That's much too close to be a guess,' said Lyddie, after a while. ‘So what did you do when it happened to you?'

‘I didn't have too many choices,' answered Nest, ‘and we weren't married. It was a different situation but if you're asking if I fought my corner the answer is no. I was too humiliated and I couldn't bear for anyone to know.'

‘Well, that's a luxury I don't get,' said Lyddie grimly. ‘I feel quite sick when I think of all the nights I've gone bouncing into that bloody wine bar and everyone's been thinking, poor fool, if only she knew, while those women . . .' She swallowed. ‘How could he do that to me?'

Nest shook her head. ‘It makes you wonder if he thinks the same way as other people, doesn't it?' she asked. ‘It's like cruelty to helpless children. It makes you wonder how people's minds actually work. It's as if there must be a bit missing somewhere or as if they genuinely feel that they have a divine right to operate outside the usual rules by which most people live. You can see that Liam is driven by some restless urge to achieve and this might be all of a piece with the sexual urge. It explains his passion for The Place and his will to make it succeed. At its best it's amoral rather than immoral. It's utterly tunnel-visioned, and everything – and everyone – is sacrificed to the greater plan.' Nest glanced at Lyddie and was shocked by her white face and shadowed eyes. ‘You look exhausted,' she said. ‘My poor darling, could you sleep, do you think?'

‘I couldn't sleep last night,' Lyddie admitted, ‘and I'm absolutely bushed. My head feels as if it might split open at any moment.'

‘Take some paracetamol and go to bed,' suggested Nest. ‘If it doesn't work, get up again and we'll think of something else.'

‘I might just do that. Now that I'm here, and I've got it off my chest, I do feel as if I could sleep. No, don't worry. I've got painkillers. Am I in my usual room? Great. I'll see you later, then. And, thanks, Nest.' She bent and kissed her cheek. ‘You've been brilliant.'

It was only after she'd gone that Nest realized that, for the first time, Lyddie had dropped the prefix ‘Aunt'. She smiled a little; perhaps it was a compliment. She sat, still gazing out, listening to the Bosun's regular breathing and thinking about Connor.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

It is Mina who, unaware of the real situation, arranges for Connor to take Nest out to tea just before the end of term. His letter to Mina, thanking her for his afternoon at Ottercombe, suggests it – very casually – since he will be near the school during the following weekend, ‘if your mother is happy about it,' he adds, ‘and Nest's headmistress allows it.'

Nest is relieved to hear that Connor has managed to visit Ottercombe but Mina's letter unconsciously strikes a warning note that makes her uneasy: ‘He's great fun and made us laugh. Mama was very taken with him but not as much as he was with Henrietta, who was down for the weekend. Anyway, he's sent a bread-and-butter and asks if you'd like to go out to tea . . .'

‘You seem to have been a great success with my family,' she says lightly, once they are settled in the tea-shop in the little local town. There are other families with their daughters at nearby tables and she is obliged to behave with
a decorum that she doesn't feel at all. ‘Mina says Mama was very impressed with you.'

‘She's a lovely woman.' He seems calm, quite at ease, but she senses his tension. Fear seizes her and her fingers tear and crumple the paper napkin in her lap. ‘I can see where you get your looks, you and your sisters.'

‘We're all very alike.' She wants to take his hand, touch him, make him look at her properly, but from the corner of her eye she sees little Lettice Crowe's mother, smart in navy foulard, watching them, trying to be noticed. ‘So what did you think of Mina?'

‘Ah, Mina.' He smiles in the old familiar way that twists her heart. ‘She's a darling, so she is. I would have recognized her anywhere from everything you've told me about her. She's a rare soul.'

‘And Henrietta? Do you think she's a rare soul? I hear you met her too?'

BOOK: The Children's Hour
5.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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