He shrugged.
âI hoped to smooth Alice and Martin's pathâ'
She snorted.
âI'm not a fool. Prurient is the word that springs to mind. Prurient is how I should describe your action in coming here.'
He lowered his head. She thought his colour was darkening.
âHeaven knows,' Elizabeth said, âheaven knows what your motives are, what they have ever been.'
He kept his head down.
âCould they not be,' he said into his chest, âcould they not be altruistic?'
âImpersonally, of course they could be. In your case, I doubt it. I resent your coming. I resent your crude translation of my daughter to me. I resent your possessive attitude to grandchildren who are as much mine as yours. I resent your patronage. I resent the divisions you have, as a family, made in mine.'
He got up, abruptly, clumsily.
âI had better go.'
She said nothing. He was beside himself with rage.
âI shall tell Alice of thisâ'
âYou are wrong to suppose she will have any sympathy for you. Much less gratitude.'
He wanted to shout at her that he saw exactly why Sam Meadows had left her, why Alice had seen in Cecily the mother Elizabeth had declined to be. He began, but she went past him to open the sitting room door and then the front door and he found himself outside, beside a bed of stout begonias, bellowing to himself in the quiet residential road, almost before he had said a quarter of it. There was nothing for it but to drive back to London.
Two days later, Alice received two letters at The Grey House. One was from her mother,
âI had a call from your father-in-law,' Elizabeth wrote, âin the course of which I learned a great deal more about him than about you. Perhaps you will write. Perhaps you will even come and see me. Do not be afraid of coming, because I would not try to counsel you.'
It was signed, âWith love from your mother, Elizabeth.' The other letter was no more than a postcard. It was undated and unsigned, and it simply said, in Clodagh's wild black writing, âWomen need men like fish need bicycles.'
That was all. The next day the children came home and Alice realized, holding them with great relief and love, that in the fortnight they had been away she had come to no decision at all.
âWhat are you doing?' James said. He was holding a plastic ray gun and half a biscuit.
âWriting to Grandpa.'
âCan I too?'
âYes, but not on this paper. On your own bit of paper.'
James put the ray gun down on Alice's letter. He did that all the time now, putting his spoon on her plate, his book across her newspaper, his toothbrush into her mouth.
âJamieâ'
He put his hand on the gun. Silently he dared her to move it away.
âI can't writeâ'
He raised his other hand and pushed the bitten biscuit at her mouth.
â
Darling.
Don'tâ'
âEat it!'
âNo, Jamie, no, it's all lickyâ'
He jabbed it against her lower lip and it broke.
âYou broke my biscuit.'
âYou broke it. Being silly. Move your gun so I can write.'
He kept his hand on the gun and screwed his foot round on the piece of biscuit that had fallen on to the floor until it was a brown powder.
â
There.
'
Alice took no notice. He threw another bit down and did the same thing. Alice gripped the table edge and her pen and glared at what she had written.
âAfter thinking it over and over, I know I must decline your offer. The price â the price of having to rely on you â is too high. I can't do it. You are too protective, somehow, too
administering.
I couldn't breathe. I don't really know if I trust you.'
She thought, I should be saying this, not writing it, but if I say it he will argue with me and try to persuade me otherwise. And I may say, like last time, all kinds of things that I should not have said.
âGun,' said James loudly. âGun, gun, gun.'
He pushed it roughly into her pen-holding hand and hurt her. She held the hurt hand in the other, tense with pain and fury, and he watched her.
âGun,' he said again, but with less confidence.
âGo away,' Alice said. âGo away until I have written my letter. Go and play with Tashie.'
He shook his head, but he was chastened by the red mark on her hand. He crept under the table and lay down and put his cheek on Alice's foot, and after a while she could feel tears running into her sandal. She moved her toes, so that he could feel them, and with an immense effort picked up her pen again.
âI can't,' she wrote to Richard, âbe the cure-all for your frustrations. I don't want that ever again, the prison of gratefulness. I
am
grateful, but I'd rather be it from a distance, on equal terms.'
She felt James's hand on her other foot.
âJamie? You're a bit ticklyâ'
He giggled, faintly.
âYou trapped me,' Alice wrote, âdidn't you. You trapped me into talking. I'd rather not think why you wanted to do that and I'd rather not think why you want to help me. But what has happened to me has moved me out of the objective case into the subjective case so that I am not available for anyone else's plans just now.'
She signed the letter, âWith love from Alice'. When it was licked up and stamped, by James, they put Charlie into his pushchair and found Natasha, who was arranging her Cornish shells into an interminable exhibition all around the upstairs windowsills, and went down to the post. On the way they met Lettice Deverel who was very kind and ordinary and invited them to tea to meet the parrot. When they got home, Alice made cheese sandwiches for lunch and they ate them in the garden while the children talked about all the things they would do when Daddy and Clodagh came home again.
âHave you seen her?' Clodagh demanded.
Lettice held the telephone at a little distance from her ear.
âYes. Yes, I have.'
âAnd?
And
?'
âWe didn't speak of you, if that's what you mean.'
âHow did she look?'
âA little tired. That's all.'
âLettice,' Clodagh shouted. âLettice. How can you be so awful to me?'
There was a little silence. The parrot, across the kitchen, clucked approvingly at a grape it held.
âI used to think,' Lettice said, âI used to think that you had promise and originality. And courage. Now I don't know. I'm more depressed by this episode than I can tell you. You seem to me like some kind of Hedda Gabler, all style and shallow selfishness.'
In London, sitting on her fortunate friends' sofa, Clodagh began to cry.
âExcept you have a heart,' Lettice went on. âI know that because I can see it's been touched. Oh, Clodagh dear, I do beg you to
make
something of your life.'
âNo!' said the parrot. âNo. No. No.
Not
pretty.'
It threw the grape stalk out of its cage.
âI can't give this up,' Clodagh said. âI can't. I'll die.'
âOn the contrary, you will live much better.'
âIs she missing me? Does she look as if she's missing me?'
âDon't ask me idiotic questions. Ask me how your poor parents are.'
âWell?'
âMuch in need of hearing from you. You should have rung them, not me.'
âI couldn't ask them about Alice.'
âYou shouldn't be asking anyone.'
âWhat about the children then? Did they mention me?'
âNo. We only spoke of the parrot.'
âOh,
parrot
,' said the parrot. âDear parrot. Dear me.'
Clodagh's voice grew small.
âI
long
to come down.'
âI dare sayâ'
âBut I'm not crawling to
anyone
â'
âIf you don't get off your bottom, Clodagh Unwin,' Lettice said, âand make an independent decision, you'll find that Alice will probably have made them all for you.'
âWhat d'you mean? What's going on? What did Aliceâ'
âI mean nothing, except that Alice has three children and no money of her own and can't fiddle-faddle around like you can.'
âHas Martin been around?'
âNo. He's living with a friend in Salisbury.'
âI'm coming down, damn what everyone thinksâ'
âThink!' Lettice cried. âThink!
You
try a little thinking.'
The parrot hooked its beak into the wires of its cage and began to haul itself up to the top. When it got there, it hung upside down for a bit and then it said, with great calm, âDamn
and
blast.' Lettice began to laugh. Delighted, it joined in, and Clodagh, hearing what appeared to be a roomful of merriment in Pitcombe, put the telephone down, in despair.
Martin was just waiting. He had stopped talking to anyone about Alice, particularly to Cecily. He had a very comfortable room in a friend's house on the edge of the Close in Salisbury, and he was working hard, and seeing his children once a week when Alice left them for him at The Grey House and went out, and he was making sure he played tennis a good deal and golf a bit, and he had accepted an invitation to stalk in Sutherland in October. He was making quiet plans to sell The Grey House. Whatever happened next, they couldn't possibly stay there.
Cornwall had restored him in some measure, certainly as to how he stood with his children. He liked being with them but was amazed at how much they needed done for them, how insatiable and helpless they were. Except for the brief time over Charlie's birth, he had never been responsible for them, a thing he didn't like but was perfectly prepared to do, if he had to. He felt perfectly prepared for a lot of things. That was the trouble, really, feeling like that. Nothing seemed violently upsetting any more or impossible to face or to be worth very much angst of any kind. When he tried to think what really
mattered
now, he couldn't. So he thought he would just get on with each day, as unremarkably and pleasantly as he could, and wait. In any case, if he waited, in the end it would be Alice who had to do something. And that would be only just. Wouldn't it?
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
On Friday nights, Sam Meadows went to Sainsbury's. He had grown rather to like the expedition because the store was full of people who had just finished work and who were full of a pre-weekend relief and excitement. As the years of his lone living went on, he found to his amusement that he was making sure he had no teaching commitments early on Friday evenings to get in the way of going to Sainshury's. He also noticed how he was beginning to buy the same things, whisky and white bread and black cherry jam and pasta and jars of pesto, and how he would make for the same check-out because there was such a dear little woman on the till, who ducked her head at him, bursting with half-hidden smiles.
Since he had left Elizabeth, a good many women had tried quite hard to live with him. He had let two of them begin but they had both had over-clear ideas about how life should be lived, and had been unable to keep those ideas to themselves. The only woman he had wanted, in ten years, to come and do whatever she liked with his life as long as she came, hadn't wanted to. She liked his bed, but preferred her own life outside it. Because of this, Sam had continued to love her and had stopped collecting his pupils like an array of Barbie dolls. They still flirted with him, particularly if essays were late, but these days he could just let them. In any case, the university now had a ferocious female Committee Against Sexual Harassment.
Sam had five years to go before he retired. When he retired, he thought he would go and live in Wales, preferably in a fishing community, and write a book on the power of language that would become an indispensable text book in schools. When he had done that, he would write fools' guides to the Bible and classical literature because he was still so exasperated, after thirty years of teaching, to find that clever modern students of literature were so ignorant of both that they couldn't get through a line of Milton without having to look up the references. After that, he thought he would probably die, and be buried in an austere Welsh hillside under the wheeling gulls. He didn't really want a headstone but he did want something to indicate that he had meant to be a poet, so that posterity should know that inside his apparently phlegmatic, idle, pleasure-seeking bulk, quite a lot of striving had gone on.
Standing in the Sainsbury's queue one August Friday, he was offered most of a very small, very wet dolly mixture by a gregarious baby in the child seat of the next trolley. He accepted it gratefully and ate it. It tasted of scented soap and reminded him of the sweets of his childhood. The baby reminded him of Charlie. Or rather, not of how Charlie looked, because Sam had only seen him once when he was too new to look like anything, but more that Charlie existed, that Sam
had
a baby grandson. In the early spring, Alice had sent Sam photographs of The Grey House and had said that it would all be ready for him, when he came for his annual summer visit. After that, he had heard nothing. He hadn't minded or noticed much, because he presumed that she had been too busy, and because he had been busy himself, but now, standing in the queue and smiling at the strange baby (it was not a pretty baby, it had a high domed forehead and its chin was glossy with dribble, but the gift of the dolly mixture had been true generosity in one so young), he thought that perhaps Alice's silence was beginning to have a flavour of oddness. Half the summer vacation had gone and she had not even telephoned. No more had he, he wasn't blaming her, but now that he thought about her, he found that he wanted to see her and his grandchildren. By the time he had got his groceries to the car, he wanted to see them very much indeed.