Authors: H. E. Bates
âI don't think,' I said, âI could have been here when you arranged it.'
âNot here? You hear that, Freddie?' she called. âWhat a spoof! He's trying to say he wasn't here when we arranged the picnic. Of course you were here! We were all sitting exactly where we are now. Freddie, isn't that so?'
Uncle Freddie, rotund, radish-pink and utterly unassertive, lay in a hammock attached to the far side of the apple tree, enjoying his customary zizz in the warmth of the afternoon. He waved, without a word, what might have been a dissentient hand but equally one that didn't care.
âIn fact,' she said to me, revealing in the sweetest of smiles those large, long teeth of hers, âyou actually threw out the idea yourself. “Let's have a fishing picnic,” you said, “on the Mill Lake. Just like the one we had last year.”'
I couldn't help admiring the words âthrew out'. They had a marvellous casual cunning of their own. They almost had me believing, for one moment, that I had actually concocted this myth of picnics, even the one from last year.
âMoreover you promised to bring that girl â that rather jolly one â what is her name? Penelope.'
With amiable restraint I begged to inform Aunt Leonora that I knew of no girl named Penelope.
âWell, it's a name of that sort. Something like it.'
âIs it?' I said. âAnd when was she last on the scene?'
âOh! you remember as plain as a pike-staff. You'd been to the point-to-point races on Easter Saturday and you met two girls and brought them along here afterwards. With a
young man named Tim or something. Tom it might have been.'
âIt so happens that I never go to point-to-point races,' I said. âI loathe them.'
âWell, you'd been
somewhere
.'
âIt was Tim Walters who had been to the point-to-points. I was out for a walk when he stopped and gave me a lift and dropped me here. You were clipping the garden hedge and you asked us in for a glass of red-currant wine.'
âI remember the girls so well!' she suddenly said, with a beautiful, half-absent breeziness. âThe one called Penelope was the jolly one, full of mischiefâ'
âHer name is Peggy.'
âVery well, Peggy.'
âAnd she isn't the jolly one. She's the rather shy, thoughtful one.'
âOh! I thought that was Violet.'
âValerie,' I said. âShe's the jolly one. She's Tim's sister.'
âOh! really?' she said. âI thought they were married.'
âMarrying your sister,' I said, âisn't generally done.'
âOh! well, then they should have been. I thought they were admirably suited to each other.'
Aunt Leonora is a divine, lovable crack-pot. Many people are tone-deaf or colour-blind or lacking a sense of humour or smell; in Aunt Leonora there are merely strange fundamental forces at work that prevent her from distinguishing, even remotely, between truth and falsehood, fact and fancy. For these reasons she is also a schemer; she for ever seeks to put things right. If two people are not friends when she
thinks they ought to be friends, she will strive indefatigably to make them friends, even to the point of total disaster. When she dies there will be carved on her tomb â or should be â the words
There is a Divinity which shapes our ends, rough-hew them how we will
, and she, I fear, will have been the Divinity. She is the great divine end-shaper of all time.
âAnyway, these are the three people you'd like to come to the picnic, are they?' she said, again with that bland, toothy smile.
It was monstrous. It was also impossible.
âTim,' I said, âis in Cape Town. He's taken a job there.'
âBut his wife and the other girl will come.'
âNot his wife. His sister.'
âAnyway she's the jolly one.'
âShe is not the jolly one.'
âAnyway, they'll come, won't they?'
âI haven't asked them.'
âBut good grief, man, you must. You're getting awfully slack, aren't you? I've already asked another young man. There'll be just a nice round six of us.'
âWhat young man?'
Here Aunt Leonora proceeded to describe, in the vaguest possible terms, a young man she sometimes met at the public library. She thought his name was Bennett or Barnett or something of that sort. Her chief impression of him was that he seemed woefully undernourished. He was distressingly thin. He lacked fresh air. He seemed to read mostly books on engineering or science or kindred subjects and had a rather prominent mole on one cheek or the other and was
going rapidly and prematurely bald.
âAny idea of his first name?' I said.
âI rather fancy it's David.'
âIt sounds like a man named David Benson I know vaguely. He works in insurance.'
âThat's it. Benson.'
âAnd what, pray, made you ask him?'
In answer she gave me one of those dark, meaningful glares, full of sinister suspicion, that were so typical of her.
â
I thought he ought to be taken out of himself
.'
I was about to suggest that perhaps he didn't want taking out of himself, but finally I decided to let this almost accusative piece of information pass without a word. It was just as well I did so because, a moment later, she broke into what sounded like a concluding twitter of song.
âWell, then, that's just about all fixed. I've asked Mr Benson. You'll ask the girls. Uncle Freddie will see to the rods and tackle. And what would you like to eat?'
âNow?'
âNo, no. For the picnic. Freddie!' she suddenly called, âwhat sort of food do you fancy for the picnic?'
As if from the end of an invisible telephone line Uncle Freddie replied with remarkable alacrity:
âPork pie and cucumber salad.'
âOh! no, that's dull. That's ghastly. That's plain cowardice.'
It seemed to me that at this moment Uncle Freddie, so peremptorily crushed, slipped suddenly deeper into the hammock and the zizz.
âYou know what I thought would be
an absolutely marvellous thing?
'
Amiable again, I begged her to tell me.
âI think we should picnic off the land.'
âGood God,' I said.
This unlikely and impractical prospect so alarmed me that it was some moments before I could remind her that she hated shooting, hunting and violence of any kind to animals and birds and that she only tolerated fishing for Uncle Freddie's sake.
âI really meant picnic off the water,' she said.
âGood God,' I said. âNot fish?'
âWhy not? I was thinking principally of perch. I once had them in Switzerland. On the lake of Geneva.
Filets de perche
. With local white wine. Absolutely delicious.'
âBut supposing,' I said, âwe don't catch any perch?'
She merely gave me the toothiest of white smiles.
âWe'll guard against that eventuality by taking smoked trout along.'
âOh,' I said.
Perhaps that was cowardice too but it was all, for the moment, I could think of to say. Inwardly I felt my heart grieve for the undernourished Mr Benson. I seemed to see, in imagination, the jolly, healthy, mischievous figure of Valerie, a girl whose bouncing frame needed strong sustenance if ever living creature did, sucking on the pale bones of a four-ounce perch.
âDon't you think,' I said, âthat we shall perhaps need something more substantial?'
âOh! that's all arranged,' she said with the most disarming brightness, âI'm making a big steak-and-kidney pie. We'll have it cold. And salads and apricot tarts and things of that sort. Oh! nobody will starve. It was just that I thought we ought to have one little touch of the wild.'
âOne touch,' I said, âwill undoubtedly make the whole world kin.'
âWhat was that? What were you muttering about?'
âNothing at all. Just thinking aloud.'
âWell, just don't. It's an extremely bad habit. I've told you before. It's worse than thinking with your eyes.'
A moment later she turned swiftly from these dark accusations to call yet again to Uncle Freddie:
âFreddie, what do perch eat?'
âWorms.'
âThen you must be up at crack of dawn, don't forget. Digging.'
From the round radishy figure of my Uncle Freddie there came, in answer, one brief sound. It might have been the croaking of a snoozing frog.
By half past eleven on Saturday morning I was lowering, gently and indeed with some reverence, half a dozen bottles of red-currant wine into a shallow pool on the Mill Lake, under the dark shade of an alder tree. The morning had on it a blissful and somnolent bloom, tenderly hazy and without glare. The surface of the lake even reeked with misty steam.
âWhere are those two children?' Aunt Leonora demanded,
I think perhaps for the third or fourth time and as if she didn't know. âLost their way, I shouldn't wonder.'
Aunt Leonora continually sought in other people, but rarely found it, that quality of restless and unflagging energy with which she attacked everything in life from chasing mythical marauders from her garden to making currant wine and custard tarts. âThose children' were the undernourished Mr Benson and the shy Peggy Mortimer, who were somewhere bringing up the rear of our fishing column with a large basket-work hamper containing picnic plates, cutlery and food.
Aunt Leonora had enlisted them into this task with blatant deliberation, simply with the unashamed purpose of throwing them together. It was clearly her first move in taking Mr Benson out of himself.
âThey get on absolutely splendidly together, don't you think?' she said, airily tossing the first part of the sentence to Valerie Charlesworth and the second to me. âThey sort of went for each other from the word go.'
Again I couldn't help admiring her choice of words. âThey sort of went for each other from the word go' was just another characteristic, charming lie. No two people could ever have ached more not to be left alone together.
âThere's a sort of fusion when some people meet,' she said, âisn't there?'
I didn't bother to answer this but merely winked, sideways, at Valerie Charlesworth. With her extraordinary golden-brown eyes, that had in them some of the hazy languor of the morning air, she winked back at me, but
whether in understanding or out of sheer mischievous habit or in secret invitation about something I had no time to decide.
âNow off you go collecting wood, you two!' Aunt Leonora said. âNice dry pieces. Ash, if possible. That burns so well.'
âI thought of helping Uncle Freddie with the rods and tackle,' I started to say.
Aunt Leonora peremptorily cut me off by brandishing the frying pan into the air.
âOh! don't disturb the man. He likes to do it himself, in his own way.'
âAbsolutely sure you don't need any help, Uncle Freddie?' I said.
Uncle Freddie, puffing with enormous contentment at his big brown pipe, merely shook his head and said âNo. Thanks all the same, dear boy.'
âThere!' she said. âI told you so. Now off you go, you and Peggy. Wooding.'
âThis,' I said blandly, âhappens to be Valerie.'
âOh! does it?' she said and gave me one of those remarkably dark accusative glares of hers, actually as if it were I who was now telling the lies.
So we went off to collect firewood, Valerie and I, walking slowly to the far end of the lake, in a morning that seemed to grow more exquisite in its summer embalmment every second. Deep woods of hazel and chestnut and alder fringed the lake on all sides and at the very far end of it a few wild duck were placidly paddling among islands of water-lilies,
the new yellow buds of the flowers rising like crook-necked snakes among them. In the deepest shade of the woods, where no sun had penetrated for weeks, a few drifts of late bluebells still bloomed, smoky mauve.
Valerie was one of those charming animals whose presence is entirely physical. She was wearing lemon linen shorts and an emerald nylon blouse and her legs and arms were deeply tanned and bare. In the water she would have been a big golden fish; on land she was more like a large, affectionate, beautiful dog, with smooth glistening brown hair and an occasional habit of brushing her body against you.
âAnd what,' she suddenly said to me, âwas the meaning of the big wink back there?'
I told her; I informed her, frankly, that in my opinion my Aunt Leonora was simply doing her damnedest to fix a match between Peggy and the undernourished Mr Benson.
âOh! don't be silly.'
âAbsolutely as plain as daylight.'
âYou've got a suspicious mind.'
âNot on your life. It's an old habit of hers.'
At this she stopped on the path, in the warm sunlight now breaking through the haze, and turned to me. She was framed against the barely turning lower leaves of a big silver poplar and she suddenly gave me the slowest and most mischievous of smiles.
âYou wouldn't by any chance suppose she had designs for us too?'
âNot impossible.'
âIn that case,' she said, âaren't we going to do anything about it?'
I murmured that I didn't see any reason at all why not and then put my arms round her and kissed her long and full on the mouth. The effect of this was that my body seemed to become a 'cello on which the very deepest reverberating notes were being played. The effect on her was startingly different. She finally held her big body away from me, locking her hands softly round the nape of my neck, and smiled full into my eyes.
âYou know what?' she said. âKissing always makes me terribly hungry.'
âGlad to have been of service.'
âI suppose it's something to do with the mouth. But when you kissed me just now my stomach turned over and I started thinking about steak-and kidney pie and salads and bread and cheese and custard tarts and all that sort of thing.'