Read No Talking after Lights Online
Authors: Angela Lambert
There was a knock on the staff-room door, but before she could call âCome in!' the pert face of Charmian Reynolds, framed by blonde bunches, looked round it.
âOh, Mrs Whitby, sorry!' she said. âI didn't think there'd be anyone here.'
âWhy did you knock, in that case?'
âWell, I don't know, um, just habit â¦'
âWhat do you want?'
âNothing. Gosh. Sorry I disturbed you. It doesn't matter.'
She would have shut the door and slipped away, but Mrs Whitby got up and led her into the room.
âCome in. I know it's not allowed, but there'll be no-one here for at least half an hour. Sit down.'
âI can't. I only asked to be excused. I have to go back.'
âAll right, dear, run along, then. Only remember: if
you want to have a chat with me, just ask. I believe your parents are getting a divorce? I know how upset you must be. I'm married and have children of my own. I can imagine what it would do to them if Mr Whitby and I were to separate. I do understand how you feel.'
âIt's awfully kind of you â¦' said Charmian, but Bibs could see that she was itching to get away.
âRemember, then. Any time.'
âYes. I've got to go now. To the aunt I mean. Thanks anyway.'
Bibs Whitby closed the staff-room door thinking to herself, Now what on earth was all that about? Charmian Reynolds, what are you up to?
Charmian, as she raced back to her classroom, thought, That is my first mistake. It makes it all the more exciting, somehow. Then, from behind her, a voice called out her name.
âWell, that didn't get us very much further,' said the Head to Peggy Roberts. From their imposing desks in the study they looked bleakly across at one another. âAnd I have received the first parental letter this morning, asking what's going on,' Henrietta added.
âWhose?'
âHermione Mailing-Smith's.'
âWell, there you
do
surprise me! I would not have thought that young lady capable of writing an articulate letter.'
âPeggy! You make me laugh with that voice. You mustn't be so cutting. Oh, dear, you're quite right, though. Just because she's nice-looking.'
âNot “nice-looking”, Henrietta. Be fair. She
is
a beauty.'
âHandsome is as handsome does, as my Scottish nanny used to say.'
âYes, and handsome does very well in a boarding-school. And everywhere else, for that matter. Well, what are you going to do? Get her in?'
âWhy not? Anything's worth a try, and I don't know what else to do.'
After the next bell, a junior was despatched to find Hermione and bring her to the study. She entered guiltless and easy, flashing the same glorious smile with which she favoured everyone. It was not returned.
âSit down, Hermione,' the Head said. âI have had a letter from your parents. I gather you have told them about the episodes of stealing that have bedevilled us all recently.'
Peggy Roberts smiled inwardly. Bedevilled, she thought. That'll fox her.
âThat's all right,' the Head went on. âYou have a perfect right to tell your parents whatever you think fit. I wonder, however, if there is anything you should be telling
me
about these thefts? Perhaps one of the juniors has confided in you?'
âNo, Mrs Birmingham, unfortunately not. I wish they had. I'd love to be able to help.'
âAnd you haven't noticed anything unusual? No special behaviour?'
âNo, Mrs Birmingham.'
Not likely to, either, thought Peggy Roberts. There was a silence.
Most girls, after a silence had lasted longer than a minute, would become uncomfortable and volunteer some remark, even if it were only âShall I go now?' But Hermione sat, apparently perfectly relaxed. She was watching the gardener's boy, sleeves rolled up to reveal his muscular arms, riding the mower across the lawn. It made a distant grinding sound. Then she realized that she could look at her reflection in the side window, beyond which a dark tree acted as a mirror. She
studied herself tranquilly, devoid of thought, until Mrs Birmingham said, âAll right, Hermione, you may go. You will be a prefect next term, I expect. I hope you take your responsibilities seriously. It's time you put something back into the school.'
âYes, Mrs Birmingham,' said Hermione prettily.
As she walked along the corridor from the dining-room towards the Covered Way, Hermione saw Charmian coming out of the staff-room; definitely coming
out
of it.
âCharmian!' she called. âCharmian! What were you doing in the staff-room?'
âI don't know, Hermy ⦠sorry, Hermione.'
âYou don't
know?
'
âWell, I mean, Mrs Whitby called me in. I don't know why.'
She is an attractive child, thought Hermione unexpectedly, and that's why she's having problems. Old Bibs must be after her. She looks pale.
âAre you all right, Charmian? Are you sure? Has anything happened?'
Charmian had never seen Hermione's face so close, bending anxiously to look into her own, a long curl swinging beside her ear. Her skin was faintly translucent, with an almost bluish sheen through which her veins showed up in lilac tracery. She smelled of Elizabeth Arden's Blue Grass. Charmian had a sudden vision of herself being picked up by Hermione, of being carried away, of being taken to some secret place, of being cuddled, of telling her the whole story ⦠about Mummy and Uncle Dickie, and how much she loved Daddy, and how he didn't write to her, so she must have done something wrong, something bad. And - no, she wouldn't say what she'd done; she'd say how sorry she felt for the poor little orphans in Dr Barnardo's Homes who had no parents at
all
, and so
she was trying to cheer them up; and then in the vision Hermione was saying, âGoodness Charmian, what a kind person you are!' All this sped through her mind in seconds, as Hermione's soft fair hair tickled the side of her neck. But Charmian said nothing. She had learned about silence.
âWell,' said Hermione, in a disappointingly senior way, âyou'd better hurry back to your form-room. But
walk
, don't run.'
âYes, Hermione,' said Charmian. She dawdled back to Miss Monk's boring maths lesson.
Constance sat in class huddled inside herself, trying to blot out the hostility of the others, who knew, of course, that she had been summoned to see the Head this morning. Her finger was throbbing where a splinter had gone into it a week ago and the pain and her thoughts plunged her into sullen misery. She had expected to be one of those who was called to the study. She knew they all wanted her to be guilty. She was the ânew girl', the outsider. It would suit them if she were the one.
Mrs Birmingham had cross-questioned her closely -not so much about herself; she was not apparently a prime suspect, not in the Head's eyes anyway - but about who might be doing the stealing.
âYou're intelligent and observant. You would notice the girls in your class, how they behave, what they're like. You must have drawn your own conclusions by now about which of them is honest or dishonest. I need your help, Constance: tell me what you think.'
Constance had longed to succumb to this mixture of flattery and reassurance, and longed most of all to be rid of the burden which Charmian imposed. But if Charmian were accused, everyone would know that she had split on her friend, and that was even worse than stealing. She hesitated. Mrs Birmingham noticed
the hesitation, and extended her hands, palms upwards, upon the desk. This was an old, unconscious gesture of hers. It symbolized openness, defenceless pleading. It nearly worked.
Constance had sighed deeply, unconscious of her sigh, and looked down at her throbbing finger. The flesh around the nail was red and shiny. With each pulse the bright needle of pain zig-zagged through her. She squeezed the fingertip tightly in her clenched fist, and the red part glowed yellow and poisonous. It hurt more, and she squeezed it again.
âI don't know anything about it, Mrs Birmingham,' she had answered, looking at her finger. There was a long silence. Finally she said, âMay I go now?'
âYou may.'
âConstance King, will you repeat for the class the formula for quadratic equations?'
âI'm sorry, Miss Monk, I don't know it.'
âBut I have just this very minute explained it. Where were you?'
âI'm sorry, I didn't hear.'
âYou mean you weren't listening.'
No, I wasn't listening, thought Constance. I hate maths. I hate the Lower Fourth. Most of all I hate Charmian. I want to go home. I shall run away. And, as she hadn't got a home that she could visualize, she thought, I hope there's a letter from Mummy at Break.
Charmian entered the room, glanced decorously towards Miss Monk, and slipped into the next desk. After a moment or two she looked fiercely at Constance and gritted her teeth. Constance shook her head imperceptibly. Charmian's shoulders relaxed and she reached over and squeezed Constance's hand, making the finger throb.
âWell done, Gogs!' she whispered, and smiled in a way that anyone else would have interpreted as sympathy, but only Constance knew was pure triumph.
As the end of the week approached, the school was gripped by a single over-riding purpose. Saturday was Speech Day, when form-rooms were decked out with needlework and pottery, exercise books and text books, arranged so that the best were nearest the front, while pages marked âUntidy work, Rachel: you must take more trouble' or âYou haven't understood, Charmian: please see me!' were hidden away at the bottom of the pile.
The school, of course, had no secrets from parents.
Up in the studio the best pictures were displayed on wooden battens along the walls or tacked on to easels with drawing-pins. Every girl's portfolio was there to be opened; some were simply more accessible than others. Fathers would walk round in navy blazers and striped or regimental ties, hands behind their backs, peering uncertainly at the drawings or paintings, stuck for words.
âWhich one's yours, darling?' mothers would ask; and then, â
Lovely
, my pet! Oh, I
do
like it! Are you allowed to bring it home?' If the picture did come home at the end of term, rolled up and a little crumpled, the grey sugar paper already shabby, it would be folded and put away in a âtreasures drawer', and often not looked at again until years later. After the death of the parent, a dutiful daughter, now middle-aged, clearing through âtheir old junk', would suddenly stop, rock back on her heels, and stare at this same drawing. Then the recollection of the high studio with its skylight and chalky easels, stained jam jars, splayed paintbrushes, and of their aprons splashed with bright poster paints, would flood through her
with an emotion more acute than any evoked by her parent's recent death.
The amphitheatre was a natural dip in the ground behind the swimming-pool, surrounded by pergolas that had once been draped with Edwardian roses but were now sadly neglected because the gardener had no time, with just the one boy to help him, and the games field to roll and mow. Here, in the evenings, rehearsals for
1066 and All That
went on until the dormitory bell rang and the jaunty singing of âOh, we don't want to lose you, But we think you ought to go â¦' had to stop. In the long, light evenings of high summer it seemed as if their voices floated for miles across the green and leafy Sussex hills, vibrant as the sunsets, mellowing towards the finale.
Ginny Valentine, bright-eyed and endlessly enthusiastic, sewed and altered costumes every evening when rehearsals were over, and badgered other members of the staff to do the same. In her study, Mrs Birmingham sat writing her speech for the parents and school, searching for words that would reassure the parents without being dishonest about the state of affairs within the school. Usually the plump cadences would have rolled off her nib. âAnd in this coming year, as every year, we shall strive to carry on that Christian tradition which is perhaps the school's proudest, and at the same time its humblest, boastâ¦' How could she say that, when each girl and every member of staff knew that someone was stealing and at least one other person was lying? She could not set the girls an example of duplicity; yet parents - and in particular the bishop, who was to be this year's special guest and give out the prizes - needed to be told that the school was a character-building Christian community.
She had invented a prize for Sheila Dunsford-Smith
- Best Garden, not that their square, unimaginative little patch really deserved it - in the hope that this would persuade the Major to bring his daughter back to the school. The child had said no farewells, and Mrs Birmingham knew from her own experience that a proper leave-taking was essential.
She remembered the disbelief with which she had greeted the news, brought by the village postman bearing a telegram. First Alistair. Dead. Then, two years later, Hugo. Dead. She could not reconcile her last image of them - in uniform, but so ebulliently, solidly alive - with the realization that now they were dead. Blown up, shot to pieces, left to die of thirst in some shell-hole: the details, however often she had tried to imagine them, were almost beside the point. It had taken years to accept that she would not see them again, not even when the war was over and life had supposedly returned to normal, except that her brothers were still dead.
Mrs Birmingham knew that Sheila needed the rituals of saying goodbye, exchanging home addresses, promising to write, to visit, to keep in touch. Even if she did none of these things, she ought to round off her time at the school. She hoped the child would come, and that she herself could find a moment amid the bustle and demands of Speech Day for a quiet word with her about the death of her mother.
On Saturday morning the girls dressed with unusual care, wearing everything clean, from white knicker linings and white ankle socks to freshly laundered dresses. Charmian, who usually spent hours doing her parting and combing through her bunches, dressed hastily and sped downstairs, leaving behind her the trail of a half-heard explanation.