Authors: Frank Moorhouse
She looked directly at him. âI know this sounds unmodern â but I really haven't done this sort of thing before.' There was Ambrose but that was another sort of thing, too. She remembered Ambrose in her first week and the Alpine inn.
âI haven't done this sort of thing very often either. In fact, I have never done this sort of thing,' he said.
She wondered whether he was also making exceptions and special exclusions.
âI want things between us to be â serious,' she said.
âThey are serious.'
âGood.'
âWill I make arrangements then?'
She took a breath. âYes, make arrangements.'
He stood and came around to her, taking her hand. âI am very serious, Edith.'
She lightly, and quickly, kissed his hand.
âWe are, after all, part of
l'aristocratie internationale
. We can do as we wish,' he said.
She then managed to sound lightly accepting by saying, âPerhaps we could stay in Briand's suite.'
He laughed. âI'll see.'
She realised that she was making a private joke back to her beginnings at the League and therefore the Time of Ambrose. She didn't seem to feel any guilt.
He then excused himself and went to arrange things with that authority which she'd seen before in men who'd been at the War. They behaved as if they'd earned the right to ask anything, to break any rule. He'd earned this while she'd been
working with her mother in the Red Cross to preserve 327½ dozen eggs to send to Number Four hospital and making 1,194 pounds of jamâwhat privileges had that earned her? She realised curiously that she envied the men their war. She sat at the table nervously avoiding the eyes of the waiters who, she felt, must know what was going on, as Emery Kelen had known at the luncheon, as the whole of the luncheon must have known. As the whole of Geneva would ultimately know. Probably, eventually, also the
Journal de Genève
.
And tomorrow morning? Tomorrow they would have to leave the hotel in daylight, go into the street in evening clothes, clearly from the night before. She didn't have to go to the office but still, they did have to go out into the daylight of the street. She had no toiletries with her. In the morning, she would have to face him, and face the staff of the hotel. It all seemed too much. To say no now would also require a huge exertion of will. As Machiavelli would say, regard all courses of action as risky. Never imagine there was such a thing as a safe course. When one tried to avoid one danger, one encountered others. The danger in saying no at this point would be to upset his planning and his desires, and her desires too, perhaps, and to present herself as some other sort of woman. No, they were embarked but it would be her farewell to Bohemia.
Robert Dole returned and sat down. She looked at him. He gave her an embracing smile the like of which she had never had from him. She returned the smile in kind and looked down, thinking, this is ridiculous, I am nearly thirty, and my knees should not have turned to jelly.
âThey are very willing to have us as guests. I talked with the night manager, not with the desk clerk. At first, I said something about “lost luggage and missed trains”. It was all unnecessary.
He is a man of the world, he seemed to know who I was, remembered from some event.'
âThey'll want to see our passports?'
âI think the formalities will be overlooked. But not the niceties.'
She felt he was securely in charge of the evening and she was quietly happy for that. She would just let it all happen.
âGood,' she said, not feeling it yet. âBad. Really, I'm nervous.'
âThat will pass.'
She was relieved to find that they were not expected to leave the table that minute and go to The Room. They went on, in an urbane manner, to have their desserts, with the nervous, but beckoning, thought of The Room sitting, somehow, on the table with them, like an oversized gift box. With further urbanity, they then had their cognacs and coffee in the lounge and were just finishing when a porter came to their table in his smart brass-buttoned uniform and said, in a discreet, whispered announcement, âYour room is prepared, Monsieur, Madame, when you are ready.'
Robert Dole thanked him, and turned to her: âShall we go up?'
Just like that? âI suppose so.'
âYou've finished? Do you want anything else?'
âI would like a glass of something.'
âThere will be a glass of something in the room. Courtesy of our
bon
host.'
She could think of nothing further to arrest the moment, although it was not delay that she wanted really, what she wanted was to be magically whisked from the comfortable seat in the calm lounge to The Room, without any intervening movements.
Avoiding any other eyes, she stood, took Robert's arm and they went from the lounge and its calm, murmuring conversation and its ordered service, and, clutching the rolled caricature, she was led by him and the silent, uniformed porter to the lift and its too noisy door, and staring liftboy, up the three floors, along the wide corridor, to The Room, a journey taking at least a month. To The Room, where nothing would be methodical or calm and nothing quite certain.
The porter fumbled with the key and took another week to unlock the door.
âHow very Weimar,' she whispered to Robert Dole, striving for urbanity.
He chuckled. âVery.'
How ruthless new love was. Yet she decided not to do it again. She decided that new love had to have its own language and its own sayings.
There was, indeed, a bottle of champagne. Champagne, at least, was a certainty in life. So were their hats, gloves, and coats, also there in the room.
âShall I open the champagne for you, sir?' the porter said.
âThank you, porter, no. I will do it myself.'
He was a man who opened his own champagne. After glancing around, but not taking in much of the luxury of the room, seeing at first only the large turned-down bed, she went to what she took to be the door of a bathroom, and, seeing from the corner of her eye Robert tip the porter, she went in to the bathroom for temporary respite more than for any bodily need.
She refreshed her make-up and tried to garner strength from the coolness of the tiled bathroom and its new efficient taps and sumptuous towels, leaning her cheek momentarily against the cool tiles. Should she bathe? She did not want to go to him with
the light but inescapable dampness of body. Nor did she have the boldness to do such a definitive thing even if it would give her more time. But she used the bidet to make sure that her private parts were fresh and clean.
When she came back into the bedroom, he was opening the champagne.
They drank to their future, and to authorship, and to the League, linking arms for the toast in the European way.
As if to take command of the room, she turned on the bedside lamp and turned off the overhead light. She checked that the blinds were drawn. She unrolled the caricature and held it to the wall, then went to the bathroom and returned with a wet cake of soap and used the soap to fix the caricature to the mirror in the room.
âWhere did you learn that?' he asked.
âBoarding school.'
He reached out to her, and stopped her nervous busyness about the room, pulling her to him. They kissed for the first time, champagne glasses in hand.
Coming out of the kiss, their faces close together, she saw closely his male skin, smelled his shaving soap. Her heart was excited.
âStill nervous?' he asked.
âYes. In a different way now.'
âWhat way now?'
âThe happy kind. Not the anxious kind.'
They kissed again, following that timing which kissing sets in motion, where all is naturally urged and fashioned by the body's impetuosity, advancing but without haste. And so, amid the kissing, they gradually undressed. She liked the gradual inevitability of their undressing, and relaxed. She liked both the gradualness of it and the inevitability of it, the way he watched
while she removed her evening dress, leaving on her white pearls, to stand before him in her underwear.
The way he removed his studs and bow tie and shirt and singlet, showing eventually his naked, almost hairless, chest. The muscles of his stomach, the way he removed his trousers and hung them over a chair, then she almost gasped. His back had a single bad scar. She knew that it must have been from the War. Were all the men scarred? He turned to her in his undershorts and took her into an embrace, kissing again, their bodies clothed only in their underwear. The underwear no longer a barrier as such, but an enticing setting of their bodies, a display of their physical differences and their allures as a man and a woman. She was at first frightened to let her fingers come to rest on the scar, but then she did, and she caressed it.
She knew he was aware of her cognisance of the scar but he didn't say anything. They parted and she was pleased by the way he watched her release her stockings from her suspenders, the way she eased down her lace-edged corset, as she wriggled out of it, to reveal her favourite short petticoat with lace inserts and edging, shrugging it off to show to him, at last, her breasts. And then she took down her satin knickers and stepped out of them. Showing him at last, her full nakedness, fully pleased by the way she had done it, by the artfulness of her revealing of herself. She always dressed carefully for sleep, always with her appearance in mind, her appearance to herself as much as to anyone. Now, intuitively, she left on only her earrings and her necklace. Her apprehension of him was of a different kind now, it was the apprehensive anticipation of the marvel of their bodies meeting, naked, although she found she had no doubts that what she was and how she was, would please him.
She glanced quickly at his crotch and saw that he was stiffening.
And then they were lying on the turned-down bed and she felt that it had happened by wishing, rather than by effort or decision, again, a flowing inevitability.
He quietly asked her about the hazard of her falling pregnant. She remained silent as if having not heard his query, thinking now that the wonderful flow of it all had halted, was lost now.
He again said quietly, âEdith?'
He was waiting for an answer, bending over her. He kissed her lightly. âWell?' He smiled at her. âYou have a personal method?'
âNot exactly.'
He laughed at her. Not his hard laugh, a soft and caressing laugh. âYou either have a method, Edith, or you do not. There really isn't any halfway.'
She was shamed and she felt foolish. She said in a small defensive voice, âI really didn't think that tonight was a night when I should be prepared for such eventualities.' What made it all worse was that she had studied science, that she did know about it vaguely but had never quite got around to facing it. As a science student she'd been considered by the other students as âworldly' in the way that medical students and nurses were thought of as worldly. Reproduction, asexual and sexual â although at this very moment her mind seemed to recall more about asexual reproduction of cells and such. And before, because of Ambrose's infertility, there'd been no need. She told him this in a small voice.
He said, his voice soft and reassuring, âI have to worry â the male line in my family are all perfectly potent.'
She liked him saying the word potent, it was fleshly and forthright. It was then that she realised that she didn't give a heck about birth control, this night, with him, but knew that was not correct either and should not be said. That it was
romantically delinquent to feel that way. Or was it an observance of a higher order of biological being?
Then she said it. âI really don't care.' Without looking at him. âI am happy for you to take me.'
He kissed her and said quietly, âThat's a beautiful thing for a woman to say to a man. Thank you, Edith. But we have to be careful, for now.' She detected in his voice and body an urging to accept her submission to him, that he was struggling with control.
They then joined under the bedclothes in a flow of kissing and caressing, their passion forgiving them for the interruption, for being sensible. She went into his arms, enjoying the muscularity of his body, her breasts firm against his chest, her nipples sensitive to the light hair of his chest, her pearls excitingly hard between them.
She could feel that he was hard and moistening against her body and that they were moving inexorably to his entering her and she wanted it fiercely.
But he held back, tantalisingly, delightfully, returning in a natural way to a whispered, loving conversation, their hands moving about each other's body, arousing and coming to know. She sensed it was also his way to keep his passion from bursting too soon.
âAnd what changed your mind about me?' he asked, softly. âHow did I finally after all this time, find favour with you?'
âThe last glass of champagne,' she said, into his ear. âNo, I'm wrong, it was the cognac.' She lay there thinking, I must be honest. âIt was your toast to Aristide Briand, at lunch â I knew then you would be on my side.' This was, perhaps, closer to the truth. As a quick answer. âAnd that you would be
by
my side, one day soon,' she said with an easy boldness.
She whisperingly asked him if this was the bed that Briand
had slept in. He whisperingly replied that he had asked for just that bed, and yes, this was the bed that Briand slept in. They were playfully joined in their jesting.
He then revealed to her, with a hint of self-congratulation, that he'd arranged the caricature with Kelen before the luncheon.
She became nervously tight. She lay there, dismayed. She pulled slightly away from him, âYou didn't!'
She remained in his arms, but unresponsively. The amorousness of their joining and the mood had fled to the corner of the room.
âEdith?' He was startled.
Whether now to leave this bed; or whether to laugh and pretend to amusement. To then pretend the night away in the interests of a makeshift harmony, in the interests of a makeshift love? No. It would not be in the interest of their love to begin with a sham. She would not pretend laughter, she did not want to misuse urbanity, she would not put down her disquiet. She was never again going to pretend to laughter. She did not want to be swindled any more by the connivances men and women used with each other. And she with herself.