Read The Quivering Tree Online
Authors: S. T. Haymon
âRed on red,' I reassured him. âIt won't show.'
It was just my luck to run bang into Miss Gosse in the hall. She looked at the bloodstained handkerchief in horror, boot-button eyes protruding. I was a bit annoyed to find her there. I had been intending to take a quick look at my face in the hall mirror. Now that the shock of having been the victim of a violent assault was â not wearing off, but descending, as it were, to a deeper level of consciousness, I had begun to feel important again. I wanted to see if the damage was as gratifyingly awful as Robert Kett had seemed to imply.
I told Miss Gosse that I had slipped and fallen against something.
âLet me see.'
As soon as I took the handkerchief away she gave a little gasp and said we must go to the doctor's immediately. Dr Becket, thank heaven, lived only a few houses up the road and as it was surgery hours he was bound to be there.
Mindful of Dr Parfitt in St Giles who probably drank iodine where other men drank whisky, he was so fond of using it, I was on the point of insisting that I didn't think it worthwhile bothering a doctor for a little thing like that when a trickle of blood ran into the corner of my mouth. Robert Kett's handkerchief, pressed tightly against the cheek as per his instructions, had stuck to the wound, and pulling it away to show Miss Gosse had started up the bleeding again.
The blood, salty to the taste with an undertone of bitterness, ran over my teeth like something alive, and frightened me. I was afraid I would bleed to death and was irked no end to see Miss Gosse looking for her gloves, as if you couldn't go to see a doctor without them.
Whilst she was still looking, Miss Locke came down the stairs looking very spick and span as if she had just that moment washed her hands and face and run a comb through her curly hair. So far as I could see, she had taken off her ring.
Miss Gosse came away from the hallstand to meet her.
âI'm taking Sylvia to the doctor's. She's had an accident.'
âDear me!' Miss Locke observed coolly. Without so much as looking at me she passed along the passage, towards the dining room. Miss Gosse looked after her in momentary perplexity before her little puppy-dog face cleared as she explained for my benefit: âI don't think she even took it in, poor girl. Those exam papers! She's working herself to a frazzle.'
I need not have been afraid. Dr Becket, crisply clean-shaven, no soup stains on his white jacket, and hands that knew their business as he put two stitches into the gash on my cheek, proved as different as could be from Dr Parfitt. No iodine either, but something cold that stung hardly at all, followed by a powdering that was wonderfully soothing. He sponged away the dried blood that was making my face feel stiff with a gentleness that, judging from his severe appearance, I would not have guessed him capable of.
In fact, he looked amazingly like Miss Locke, except that his nose was not quite as straight as hers: it looked as if it might have been damaged in school boxing. Amid the large apprehensions and the small pains of the consultation I wondered vaguely whether he was married. If not, he and Miss Locke would make a well-matched pair, to say nothing of the advantage to a doctor, surely, of having a wife who could be relied on to bring in business whenever she took it into her head to hit people so that they needed stitches. Only four houses away from Chandos House, why hadn't Miss Gosse thought to introduce them?
Dr Becket pondered aloud whether he ought or ought not to give me an anti-tetanus injection, just, as he said, to be on the safe side. This upset me, because I couldn't remember whether it was for tetanus or rabies that they stuck needles into your stomach, too agonizing for words â or so I seemed to have read somewhere. His questioning â had I fallen on to bare earth? had I been in contact with any metal? â caused me further anxiety. Since I had not regained sufficient energy to concoct a credible story to account for my injury, I took the easy way out and began to cry. Somewhat to my surprise, considering the man's stern demeanour, it worked. He discontinued the cross-examination and produced a yellow pill which I was to go to bed and take as soon as I returned home. I would wake up in the morning, he said, feeling my old self (whatever that was, I added mentally). No more was said about anti-tetanus, that was something.
Back at Chandos House, on tiptoe at my awkwardly placed looking-glass, I at last had the opportunity of surveying the physical damage Miss Locke had done to me. Whilst I must have looked much better than I had before receiving Dr Becket's ministrations I still looked ghastly, the cheek swollen so that my right eye had the appearance of a sun about to set behind a hill which would shortly obliterate it altogether.
It occurred to me to wonder if I was scarred for life. No one would want to marry me looking like that, and I would live and die an old maid, probably a schoolmistress like Miss Locke, like Miss Gosse. My attempt to work up a good head of self-pity got nowhere. I simply could not be fagged. I swallowed the yellow pill.
One other thing the mirror had shown me. Red on red
did
show. The new dress was scarlet, my blood crimson. It was obvious that we were not, after all, made for each other. Untidy threads of blood showed all the way down the right side of the bodice from neck to waistline. Dr Becket hadn't done it any good either. Splashings of water darkened and patches of his therapeutic powder whitened a substantial area of the front. On the way to the doctor's, Miss Gosse had ventured nervously, as if afraid what the answer might be, âI don't think I've seen you wearing that frock before, Sylvia.'
âHaven't you?' I said: and that was the sum of our conversation on the subject.
I pulled the dress over my head, not bothering to check that I had undone all the buttons, two of which promptly popped off and disappeared who cared where. The buttons were shaped like tiny acorns, covered with the same material as the dress. I could almost hear Mrs Benyon complaining that the dratted things had put paid to her carpet sweeper.
I bundled the dress up and thrust it into the drawstring bag which I used for soiled linen, lay down on the bed in my underwear. My mother was right in one thing, I told the leaves trembling at the window. Red was not a suitable colour for children.
Next day, though the swelling was worse and my cheek had turned a threatening shade of purple, I felt much better. Thanks to the yellow pill, I suppose, I had slept long and dreamlessly, awaking only when Mrs Benyon arrived at the door with my breakfast.
Breakfast in bed! And Mrs Benyon actually smiling! I could almost have fancied myself still dreaming and back in St Giles again.
I was not in St Giles. As the memory of where I was, of what had happened the day before took hold, my eyes filled with tears.
In a voice I scarcely recognized, so human was it, the housekeeper said: âI didn't work my fingers to the bone making a slap-up breakfast for a cry-baby.'
Slap-up was the only word for it. I could never have imagined that Chandos House even harboured the makings of such a banquet â scrambled eggs, sausages and mushrooms with fluffy little potato cakes on the side, oodles of toast and marmalade; two silver pots, one with coffee, one with hot milk, all disposed prettily on a pale blue tray with little legs that came down so that you didn't have to balance it on your knees.
The housekeeper, having plumped up my pillow and settled me comfortably (with no insistence that I get up first and go and wash), produced a silver bell which she placed among the dishes.
âAnything more you want, just ring.'
When, as she was leaving, I told her shyly that she was an angel, she turned in the doorway, her face arranged in that marble stare of hers I ordinarily detested.
âMake the most of it while it lasts, if I was you.'
âI will!' I promised, whereupon we both laughed. We actually laughed together!
The laughter seemed to have prompted second thoughts. Mrs Benyon came back into the room and informed me that the schoolmistresses had long ago gone off to school, Miss Gosse leaving instructions that I was to stay at home for the day and take things easy. Seating herself on the end of the bed, which made the bed tray teeter dangerously until mattress and spring had made the necessary adjustments, she inquired, with the ease of one settling down to a comfortable chat, âSo what really happened, then?'
Kicking myself mentally for still not having my story ready, and using a mouth full of toast and marmalade as an alibi, I mumbled something about falling over and hitting my face against something.
As an explanation it was pathetic, but it seemed to satisfy â or did it?
âPity Miss Locke had only just that minute come indoors. She stayed out a bit longer, she might have caught you as you fell.'
âI suppose she might,' I agreed faintly.
âFunny thing is â' the housekeeper went on relentlessly â âshe must've had a bit of a fall herself. There's a coincidence! When she came in through the french window I went into the dining-room to ask should I bring in the tea, and she was white as a sheet. And what do you think?' The old devil regarded me with an expression of the utmost innocence. âThere was blood on her hand.'
Mrs Benyon got up, the bed responding with a whinny of relief. She stood looking down at me.
âDon't you go letting those sausages get cold, now. And next time she tries to lay a hand on you, the filthy cow, take my advice an' give her back as good as you get, either on the conk or the backside, whichever is most convenient.'
To my surprise, when I went down the garden at the time I guessed Mr Betts would be taking his elevenses, I found him sitting on the bench eating a whipped cream walnut. How could that be, when only yesterday I had watched with my own eyes as he scoffed the last one?
The gardener put the chocolate down on his folded paper and got up as soon as he heard my approach. The concern that showed on his knobby face pleased me. It was all screwed up with the force of his feelings as he drew me down by both hands to sit beside him.
âWell, well! You
have
been in the wars!'
I was grateful that here was one, at least, who did not press me for details.
But then, as I quickly discovered, he had no need to. With a little help, he must have worked it out for himself.
âThat young man o' yours, bin here first thing. In a dreadful hurry to get off to school, but he brought you the biscuits and the whipped cream walnuts you wanted, an' said I was to tell you there's fourpence change in the bag.' Over the last of his whipped cream walnut Mr Betts looked at me in a worried way. âLike me t' fetch one out fer you?'
Full of my bang-up breakfast, I answered that I did not fancy one at the moment, thank you; wondering why the man still looked upset.
âIt looks worse than it is,' I assured him. âThe doctor put two stitches in and once the swelling's gone down he says it'll soon dry up and I'll hardly be able to tell even where it was.'
âTha's good! Wouldn't want yer chances ruined of ending up a star of the silver screen.'
But I could see that something was still bothering him.
âThat young “wha's-his-name” â' he came out with it at last. âHe left a message for you.'
âAbout the fourpence, you mean? You said.'
âNot just that. He said â' There was a long pause. âHe said I were to tell you he knew he said he wouldn't tell anybody, like you made him promise, but somehow, arter he got home, he told his ma. He said it just come out like, not intending it. And his ma â' an even longer interval â âhis ma says it's better if he doesn't come again, not for a while, at any rate.' When I made no immediate comment, the gardener added, his voice gentle: âDon't take on, gal.'
I said, more or less truthfully, that I had no intention of taking on. That it was Bagshaw I was thinking about and how Mrs Kett made Victoria sponges which weren't any good, only Bagshaw was crazy about them. I wasn't being brave, though I could see Mr Betts thought I was. Mingled with the sour taste of rejection was a sense of relief. At least I wouldn't have to rack my brains any more to remember what Robert Kett looked like. As a matter of fact, his image was already fading rapidly.
Mr Betts looked at me in admiration. He was a great patriot and I could see he thought I was keeping a stiff upper lip in the traditional English fashion, when I wasn't at all, only a stiff upper cheek, courtesy of Miss Grecian-conk Locke. So that when he went on, his rosy face rosier than ever with earnestness: âPretty gal like you, there's plenty more fish in the sea,' I was able to reply with sufficient honesty that, taking one thing with another, I was not dissatisfied with the way things had turned out. Boys, on the whole, were an awful bother and I had exams to think of.
For some reason, my answer only seemed cause for further disquiet. Having once been one himself, I suppose, Mr Betts insisted that boys were a good thing and I wasn't on any account to go thinking different. Living with âthem two old desiccated coconuts', which I took to mean my landlady and my co-lodger, might have given me the wrong idea.
I said it had nothing to do with the schoolmistresses. And anyway, Miss Locke wasn't old.
âThey're the worst kind,' he replied darkly.
His break over, he heaved himself up on to his ex-stable boy's bowed legs and started off towards the greenhouse.
âGot to love yer and leave yer.'
I went slowly back up the garden, past all the lovely growing things. How lucky they were to have only greenfly and cuckoo-spit to worry about! I was half-way back to the house when Mr Betts overtook me.
âHead like a sieve, that's me,' he said cheerfully. âThere
were
one other thing. The young ' un asked me special to say as how he hopes the dress is OK.'
Feeling a bit low, I went indoors, got âPale Hands I Loved' out of the piano stool and played it loudly, hoping Mrs Benyon would hear, wherever in the house she happened to be, and come and join in. She must have been busy in the kitchen, getting the lunch ready or something. However, across the distance separating us her strange, extra-terrestrial voice sounded almost as loud as if she were in the room, her heavy hands on my shoulders, her heavy-scented breath wafting past my ear.