Authors: Winston Graham
Her eyes were cool, sizing up, not unfriendly but non-committal.
âAre you? â¦' I began.
âI'm Malcolm's widow.'
âOh ⦠I see.' The Ayrshire heiress. Who, it seemed, had brought good looks as well as siller. âI thought you might have been one of his sisters.'
On cue another female showed. Shorter and older than the first, a thick black jersey over a shabby black woollen frock. We were introduced. This was Lucie, Malcolm's sister, sallow-faced, and her lips tight and plump like a closed fist. She looked as if she'd missed her man by saying too many Hail Marys.
âDo come in,' said Alison at last, and led the way into the drawing-room. âCan I get you coffee? Or something stronger?'
âCoffee would be fine.'
We talked, Lucie sitting by the window staring out and joining in with a few dry crumbs when she felt like it. I reckoned she must have been Malcolm's elder sister; maybe most of the troubles of the family weighed on her.
Alison rang the bell for coffee and the same little maid came in, glancing at me askance before she left. The Sealyham wobbled across and sniffed at my shoes, probably scenting the gun dogs. He thumped his tail and whimpered.
âYou'll be wanting to see Mother,' said Lucie abruptly.
âIf she's to be seen,' I said. âNot that it matters if she's not.'
âI don't think she will wish to talk business,' said Lucie, as if there was a disagreeable smell about it. âThat is all left for Mr Macintyre.'
âI didn't come to talk business.'
âI'll see if she'll see you, then.' She got up and left. When I sat down again I said: âI'm a bit hazy as to the number of Abdens in this house. Or even in the district. I never met one until I met Malcolm a few years ago.'
A very still young female, this: her head might have been one of the cameos in the hall.
âMalcolm's four daughters are away at school. My town ⦠she is out with her nurse. Apart from Lucie and myself there is Lady Abden and â er â Mary.'
âMary?'
âMalcolm's other sister. She is not well and tends to keep to her room.'
âDo you live here yourself all the time?'
âMost of the time. Should I not?'
âI wondered whether you spent part of the year with your own family in Ayrshire.'
âKirkcudbright,' she corrected.
âSorry,' I said, âor is ignorance no excuse?'
She half smiled; very delicate lips, choosy, fastidious. You wondered if Malcolm's extravagant, extrovert style mightn't have jarred on this contained young female.
She said: âWe spent one summer at Wester Craig. Then after Malcolm's death I was waiting for the birth of my daughter. Then Sir Charles took ill. I have felt it my place to be here â¦'
Coffee came. The little maid looked so goggle-eyed at me as she served it that I was tempted to pinch her bottom. Just in time she moved out of reach.
âAnd you,' said Alison Abden when we were again alone. âShall you make your home here?'
I thought to cough up what I felt about the place, but restraints were growing on me with increasing age. âDepends what I've inherited.'
âI thought Mr Macardle would have explained â¦'
âA little. Anyway, I've a profession in London â¦'
She stirred her coffee. âI know. It was you who made a present to Malcolm of perfumes and things â four years ago, was it? More? Yes, well, I've used Faunus ever since.'
âBread upon the waters,' I said. âAs a matter of fact, I had noticed it.'
She did not raise her eyes, which were long and pale-lidded and brown when you saw them.
âDo you know this part of Scotland?' she asked.
âI've never been to Scotland before.'
âI thought you went to the same school as Malcolm.'
âI don't count schooldays.'
The faint smile again. âDon't you like your family?'
âThey haven't given me much cause to.' Then I added: âAs a Lowlander, you may also have found their exclusiveness hard to bear.'
âNot at all.'
âNot at all?' I echoed.
She looked at me then. â But you seem such a typical Abden, if I may say so. Not in looks perhaps, but something in your manner. Forgive me if that seems unpertinent. But is it possible that the exclusiveness was not all on one side?'
I stared back at her and laughed. She flushed and seemed about to join me, when the door came open and Lucie was on view again. She looked disapprovingly at us both and said:
âMother will see you now.'
III
Lady Abden was a small woman, well upholstered with cushions in a big black chair. She'd been quite a looker; her face broad over the bridge of the nose, which had probably grown more noticeable with age, arched brows still dark over pale stony-blue eyes, very fine-textured wavy hair which was now curled over her forehead; you could see how jolly that had been. She looked older than her late husband's sixty-nine.
Did one kiss one's aunt? (One wouldn't have minded kissing one's cousin-in-law downstairs.) Lady Abden came up with the answer by putting out a wrinkled hand on which a couple of diamond rings looked out of place. (The trouble with diamonds is that they're ageless.)
âSo you are Stewart's son?'
âYes.'
âPray sit down.' Her voice had just a trace of Scottish accent.
I took a hard seat. Lucie squatted by the window and looked out, just as she had downstairs.
âSo you have come to claim your inheritance.'
âSome people achieve greatness,' I said, âsome have it thrust upon them.'
Big ears for a woman. She shouldn't have worn the pearl drop earrings because it drew your attention to them.
âYour name is David, is it not? David Kilclair?'
âIt is.' She'd scored 100 so far.
âAre you a Catholic?'
âNo.'
She put out her bottom lip and breathed deeply. âYour father was.'
âHe was brought up a Catholic but let it lapse; I don't know when; before I was born.'
âWhen he married. That's when he lapsed.'
âCould be.'
âIs your mother still alive?'
âOh, yes. Not old yet. Remarried, of course.'
âOf course.' You didn't know whether this meant she ought to have known, or that she would expect nothing else of such a woman. âYou were the only child by the marriage?'
âYes, Aunt. Fortunately.'
Lady Abden frowned. âMy brother-in-law died in unhappy circumstances.'
âYes,' I said, âhe was drunk.'
Lucie stirred. âI don't think my mother wishes to hear all the â' She stopped as Lady Abden raised a hand.
âYou come of a very old and staunchly Catholic family, as you must know. In this area in particular we are rather â an enclave. I hope you may in due course consider returning to the Faith again, for the sake of the family, for the sake of your ancestors and your descendants.'
I checked my first reply. âI doubt it, Lady Abden.'
âI could arrange â we could arrange â¦' She looked across at Lucie. âWe have an excellent priest here, Father Donald; you would not find him without an intellectual basis for his beliefs. You might consider that you owe it to your family to arrange one or two meetings â¦'
I said: âIt's just not on.' I couldn't ask her what the hell she thought I owed her of her family, which had shrunk in horror because one of its sons had married a Jewess.
Silence for a bit. The colour in her cheeks didn't look artificial. But there was no warmth in her eyes.
âThe baronetcy carries little with it. As I expect you know.'
âThat was my impression.'
âYou may wonder at the â er â division of the Abden family into two properties some thirty miles distant. But perhaps Mr Macardle will have explained this.'
âI don't think so.'
âWester Craig has been the family house of the Abdens since the sixteenth century, but over the years the land we inherited or acquired came to be around the shores of Loch Fiern, so in the late eighteenth century we built this house and moved, keeping the other as a hunting lodge. Then the family fell on hard times, most of the land round Wester Craig was sold and the house was allowed to fall into ruin. Some fifty years later, when our fortunes had taken an upturn, Wester Craig was rebuilt and made habitable again, and that is how it has remained.'
âA family home,' I said, âunused by the family.'
âOh, indeed not! The eldest son when he married has always lived there â that is, until he inherited.'
âI see. I see.'
She put her bottom lip out again. âThere is, of course, a degree of money and property in the family itself. This house, for instance. And we have eight thousand acres, and some other possessions. Had Malcolm succeeded he would have inherited all of it â or most of it, with of course adequate provision for my daughters. So it is very sad for me to see the baronetcy and all that it has meant to us through the generations going to a â forgive the expression â to an outsider.'
I said: âI understand how you feel, Lady Abden. You've had two tough breaks. Malcolm could father nothing but girls; and a famous manufacturer's rotten tyres saw to the rest. Without that you'd never have had to meet me, let alone see me slip undeservedly into the ermine, or whatever one does slip into on these great occasions. But as for being an outsider â¦'
She waited. âYes?'
âWell â not to split hairs â I am just as much an Abden as Malcolm was ⦠And more so than you, since you married into the family â'
Lucie was on her feet. âWill you please leave! I will not have Mother spoken to in such an insulting fashion!'
âNo,' said Lady Abden. âLet us hear him out. I do not suppose you will come here again, Sir David, so you may say what you will while you
are
here.'
An odd moment to think of Shona, but I did. It was suddenly as if she was beside me saying once again. âBehave yourself, you stupid man!'
I was swallowing thirty-odd years of spleen but couldn't keep it all down.
I said: âMy dear Aunt, I am not here to insult you, but to
meet
you. I came up â was nagged into coming up here by Macardle â for the first time yesterday. I don't much like Scotland or the people in it; I have my own life in London, so whether
I
shall ever come here again remains to be seen. I shall certainly not trouble you more than I can help â you or your daughters or your daughter-in-law or anyone else. But it's my name too. I came by it honestly in the marriage bed. This title frolic is nothing I ever wanted or ever should want. But presumably we've got to live with it. Don't you agree?'
There was a pause while Lady Abden fingered her pearls.
âI understand you are with a perfumery firm.' She said it as if I was trading in French letters.
âAre you married?'
âNo.'
âLiving with a woman?'
âYes.'
Lady Abden wrinkled her nose. âThat's all the rage nowadays, I believe.'
âIt was when I left London.'
She glanced at me coldly. âWe have â we try to keep to â more traditional forms of behaviour in the Highlands.'
âI've no doubt there's plenty of fornication goes on.'
She sighed. âI think you are rather a disagreeable young man.'
âQuite a lot of people think so,' I agreed. âPerhaps it was a bad mixture, the Scot and the Jew.'
âYou have said it, not I.'
âI had no choice in the matter. You do understand that, don't you?'
She sighed again. âAt least the mixture did not produce a nonentity. Perhaps it is better to dislike a person than to ignore him.'
âAt last, Aunt,' I said, â we have agreed on something.'
I
âI'm
sorry
,' I said to Shona. âI know you warned me, but practically every conversation went downhill.'
âHow unnecessary. Life is so short. Why should one have to quarrel with one's relatives? A blood relationship should not be a blood-poison relationship.'
âAfter I left Auntie,' I said, âI met the other daughter, Mary. She was on the landing outside, in a blowsy dressing gown, complaining to the maid. She was as drunk as a tick.'
âDear, dear. What time would this be?'
âAbout midday. I must admit she was the only one to greet me with any real warmth. Possibly drink runs in the family.'
âA lot of things seem to run in the family! Did you see your factor in the end?'
âHe caught up with me when I was at breakfast yesterday.'
âWhy try to avoid him? You had to see him sometime.'
âI wanted to take people on the hop. Not be cushioned by some smooth gent who had arranged it all in advance.'
âAnd was he a smooth gent?'
âWell, very tweedy. And rather well bred in that way that never quite carries conviction. But all right. He's agreed to continue to look after Wester Craig for me.'
âWhat is it you have actually inherited?'
âWell, this house, Victorian of the worst period but with a Tudor core, sizeable but rickety, needing money spending on it; two cottages; about five hundred acres of scrub.'
âNot a grouse moor?'
âNot a grouse moor. Grassy sort of shallow-soil land with boulders and a stream running into the nearby loch. Some trout or a salmon or two, no doubt. Sheep.'
âAnd beyond?'
âOne way the sea and the loch; behind the house moorland going up to mountains. Stags up there and a few grouse, I suppose; but that's all owned by the Countess of Something-or-other. Abden land is pretty extensive at the further side. Not mine, though.'
âWill it pay its way?'
âWhat, the property? Oh,
no
. Nothing like. Maintenance and repairs, caretaker, no shooting or fishing to rent out.'