1935
The Porthkerris Council School stood half-way up the steep hill which climbed from the heart of the little town to the empty moors which lay beyond. It was a solid Victorian edifice, built of granite blocks, and had three entrances, marked Boys, Girls, and Infants, a legacy from the days when segregation of the sexes was mandatory. It was surrounded by a Tarmac playground and a tall wrought-iron fence, and presented a fairly forbidding face to the world. But on this late afternoon in December, it stood fairly ablaze with light, and from its open doors streamed a flood of excited children, laden with boot-bags, book-bags, balloons on strings, and small paper bags filled with sweets. They emerged in small groups, jostling and giggling and uttering shrieks of cheerful abuse at each other, before finally dispersing and setting off for home.
The reason for the excitement was twofold. It was the end of the winter term, and there had been a school Christmas party. Singing games had been played, and relay races won, up and down the assembly hall, with bean bags to be snatched and delivered to the next person in the team. The children had danced Sir Roger de Coverley, to music thumped out on the tinny old school piano, and eaten a tea of splits and jam, saffron buns, and fizzy lemonade. Finally they had lined up and, one by one, had shaken Mr. Thomas, the headmaster, by the hand, wished him a Merry Christmas, and been given a bag of sweets.
It was a routine that was followed every year, but always happily anticipated and much enjoyed.
Gradually the noisy outflux of children was reduced to a trickle, the late-leavers, those delayed by a search for missing gloves or an abandoned shoe. Last of all, as the school clock chimed a quarter to five, there came, through the open door, two girls, Judith Dunbar and Heather Warren, both fourteen years old, both dressed in navy-blue coats and rubber boots, and with woollen hats pulled down over their ears. But that was as far as the resemblance went, for Judith was fair, with two stubby pigtails, freckles, and pale-blue eyes; while Heather had inherited her colouring from her father, and through him, back over the generations of ancestors, from some Spanish sailor, washed ashore on the Cornish coast after the destruction of the Armada. And so her skin was olive, her hair raven-black, and her eyes dark and bright as a pair of juicy raisins.
They were the last of the revellers to depart because Judith, who was leaving Porthkerris School forever, had had to say goodbye not only to Mr. Thomas but all the other teachers as well, and to Mrs. Trewartha, the school cook, and old Jimmy Richards, whose lowly tasks included stoking the school boiler and cleaning the outside lavatories.
But finally, there was nobody else to say goodbye to, and they were on their way, across the playground and through the gates. The overcast day had slipped early into darkness and a thin drizzle fell, shimmering against glowing street lamps. The street sloped down the hill, black and wet, pooled with reflected light. They began to walk, descending into the town. For a bit neither of them spoke. Then Judith sighed.
“Well,” she said in final tones, “that’s it.”
“Must feel a bit funny, knowing you’re not coming back again.”
“Yes, it does. But the funniest bit is feeling sad. I never thought I’d feel sad to leave any school, but I do now.”
“It’s not going to be the same without you.”
“It’s not going to be the same without you, either. But you’re lucky, because at least you’ve still got Elaine and Christine for friends. I’ve got to start all over, brand new, trying to find someone I like at Saint Ursula’s. And I have to wear that uniform.”
Heather’s silence was sympathetic. The uniform was almost the worst of all. At Porthkerris, everybody wore their own clothes, and very cheerful they looked too, in different-coloured sweaters, and the girls with bright ribbons in their hair. But Saint Ursula’s was a private school and archaically old-fashioned. The girls wore dark-green tweed overcoats and thick brown stockings, and dark-green hats that were guaranteed to make even the prettiest totally plain, so unbecoming were they. Saint Ursula’s took day-girls as well as boarders, and these unfortunate creatures were much despised by Judith and Heather and their contemporaries at Porthkerris, and considered fair bait for teasing and torment should they be unlucky enough to travel on the same bus. It was depressing to contemplate Judith having to join the ranks of those wet, goody-goody creatures who thought themselves so grand.
But worst of all was the prospect of boarding. The Warrens were an intensely close family, and Heather could not imagine a worse fate than to be torn from her parents and her two older brothers, both as handsome and raven-haired as their father. At Porthkerris School, they had been notorious for their devilment and wickedness, but since moving on to the County School in Penzance, had been somewhat tamed by a terrifying headmaster, and been forced to settle down to their books and mend their ways. But still, they were the best fun in the world, and it was they who had taught Heather to swim and ride a bicycle and trawl for mackerel from their stubby wooden boat. And what fun could you possibly have with nothing but girls? It didn’t matter that Saint Ursula’s was in Penzance and so only ten miles away. Ten miles was forever if you had to live away from Mum and Dad and Paddy and Joe.
However, it seemed that poor Judith had no choice. Her father worked in Colombo, in Ceylon, and for four years Judith, her mother, and her little sister had lived apart from him. Now Mrs. Dunbar and Jess were returning to Ceylon, and Judith was being left behind, with little idea of when she would see her mother again.
But it was, as Mrs. Warren was wont to remark, no good crying over spilt milk. Heather cast about for something cheerful to say.
“There’ll be holidays.”
“With Aunt Louise.”
“Oh, come on, don’t be so down in the dumps. At least you’ll still be here. Living in Penmarron. Just think, your aunt might live somewhere awful, up-country, or in some town. And you wouldn’t know anybody. As it is, we can go on seeing each other. You can come over, and we’ll go down to the beach. Or go to the pictures.”
“Are you sure?”
Heather was perplexed. “Sure about what?”
“Well, I mean … sure you’re going to want to go on seeing me and being my friend. Going to Saint Ursula’s and everything. You won’t think I’m snobby and horrible?”
“Oh, you.” Heather gave her a loving thump over the bottom with her boot-bag. “What do you think I am?”
“It would be a sort of escape.”
“You make it sound like going to prison.”
“You know what I mean.”
“What’s your aunt’s house like?”
“It’s quite big, and it’s right up at the top of the golf course. And it’s full of brass trays and tiger skins and elephants’ feet.”
“Elephants’ feet? My dear life, what does she use them for?”
“An umbrella stand.”
“I wouldn’t like that. But I suppose you won’t have to look at it much. Got your own room, have you?”
“Yes, I’ve got a room. It was her best spare room, and it’s got its own wash-basin and there’s room for my desk.”
“Sounds all right to me. Don’t know what you’re making such a fuss about.”
“I’m not making a fuss. It’s just not home. And it’s so cold up there, all bleak and windy. The house is called Windyridge, and no wonder. Even when it’s dead calm everywhere else, there always seems to be a gale blowing at Aunt Louise’s windows.”
“Some spooky.”
“And the other thing is, that it’s so far from everywhere. I won’t be able just to hop on the train any longer, and the nearest bus stop’s two miles away. And Aunt Louise won’t have time to drive me around, because she’s always playing golf.”
“Perhaps she’ll teach you how.”
“Oh, ha ha.”
“Sounds to me as though what you need is a bike. Then you could go wherever you wanted, whenever. It’s only three miles to Porthkerris over the top road.”
“You are brilliant. I never thought of a bike.”
“I don’t know why you never had one before. My dad gave me mine when I was ten. Not that it’s much good in this dratted place, with all the hills, but out where you are, it’d be just the thing.”
“Are they very expensive?”
“About five pounds for a new one. But you could maybe pick one up second-hand.”
“My mother’s not very good at that sort of thing.”
“Don’t suppose any mother is, really. But it’s not very difficult to go to a bicycle shop. Get her to give it to you for Christmas.”
“I’ve already asked for a jersey for Christmas. One with a polo-neck.”
“Well, ask for a bike as well.”
“I couldn’t.”
“Course you could. She can scarcely say no. Going away, and not knowing when she’s going to see you again, she’ll give you anything you want. You just strike while the iron’s hot”—another of Mrs. Warren’s favourite sayings.
But Judith only said, “I’ll see.”
They walked on in silence for a bit, their footsteps ringing on the damp pavement. They passed the fish-and-chips shop, bright with cheerful light, and the warm smell of hot fat and vinegar which emanated from the open door was mouth-watering.
“This aunt of yours, Mrs. Forrester. Your mother’s sister, is she?”
“No, my father’s. She’s much older. About fifty. She lived in India. That’s where she got the elephant’s foot.”
“What about your uncle?”
“He’s dead. She’s a widow.”
“Got any children?”
“No. I don’t think they ever had children.”
“Funny that, isn’t it? Do you suppose it’s because they don’t want them, or because … something … doesn’t happen? My Auntie May, she’s got no children, and I heard Dad say it was because Uncle Fred hadn’t got it in him. What do you suppose he meant by that?”
“I don’t know.”
“Think it’s got something to do with what Norah Elliot told us? You know, that day behind the bicycle shed.”
“She’s just making it all up.”
“How do you know?”
“Because it was too disgusting to be true. Only Norah Elliot could have thought up something so disgusting.”
“Suppose so…”
It was a fascinating topic, around which the two girls had skirted from time to time without ever coming to any useful conclusion, except the fact that Norah Elliot smelt and her school blouses were always dirty. This was not, however, the time to unravel the conundrum, because their conversation had brought them down the hill, to the centre of the town, the public library and the parting of their ways. Heather would carry on in the direction of the harbour, down narrowing streets and baffling cobbled lanes, to the square granite house where the Warren family lived over Mr. Warren’s grocery shop, and Judith would climb yet another hill, and head for the railway station.
They stood in the soaking drizzle beneath the street lamp and faced each other.
“I suppose it’s goodbye, then,” said Heather.
“Yes. I suppose so.”
“You can write to me. You’ve got my address. And ring the shop if you want to leave a message. I mean … like coming over when it’s holidays.”
“I’ll do that.”
“I don’t suppose that school’ll be too bad.”
“No. I don’t suppose so.”
“’Bye then.”
“’Bye.”
But neither moved, nor turned away. They had been friends for four years. It was a poignant moment.
Heather said, “Have a good Christmas.”
Another pause. Abruptly, Heather leaned forward and planted a kiss on Judith’s rain-damp cheek. Then, without saying anything more, she turned and went running away down the street, and the sound of her footsteps became fainter and fainter, until Judith could hear them no longer. Only then, feeling a bit bereft, did she continue on her solitary way, climbing the narrow pavement between small shops brightly illuminated, their windows decorated for Christmas with tinsel wound around boxes of tangerines and jars of bath salts tied with scarlet ribbons. Even the ironmonger had done his bit. USEFUL AND ACCEPTABLE GIFT said a handwritten card leaning against a ferocious claw-hammer which sported a sprig of artificial holly. She passed the last shop, at the very top of the hill, which was the local branch of W. H. Smith, where Judith’s mother bought her monthly Vogue and came each Saturday to change her library book. After that the road levelled off and the houses fell away, and without their shelter the wind asserted itself. It came in soft gusts, laden with moisture, blowing the drenching mist into her face. In the darkness this wind had a special feel to it and brought with it the sound of breakers booming up on the beach far below.
After a bit, she paused to lean her elbows on a low granite wall; to rest after the stiff climb and get her breath. She saw the blurred jumble of houses slipping away down to the dark goblet of the harbour, and the harbour road outlined by a curved necklace of street lamps. The red and green riding lights of fishing boats dipped in the swell and sent shimmering reflections down into the inky water. The far horizon was lost in the darkness, but the heaving, restless ocean went on forever. Far out, the lighthouse flashed its warning. A short beam, and then two long beams. Judith imagined the eternal breakers pouring in over the cruel rocks at its base.
She shivered. Too cold to stand in the dark, wet wind. The train would be leaving in five minutes. She began to run, her boot-bag thumping against her side; came to the long flight of granite steps which dropped to the railway station, and hurtled down them with the careless confidence of years of familiarity.
The little branch-line train waited at the platform. The engine, two third-class carriages, one first-class carriage, and the guard’s van. She did not have to buy a ticket, because she had a School Season, and anyway Mr. William, the guard, knew her as well as his own daughter. Charlie, the engine driver, knew Judith too, and was good about holding the train at Penmarron Halt if she was late for school, tooting his whistle while she pelted down the garden of Riverview House.
Travelling to school and back in the little train was going to be one of the things that she was really going to miss, because the line ran, for three miles, along the edge of a spectacular stretch of coast, incorporating everything that one could possibly want to look at. Because it was dark, she couldn’t look at it now as they rattled along, but knew it was there just the same. Cliffs and deep cuttings, bays and beaches, delectable cottages, little paths and tiny fields which in spring would be yellow with daffodils. Then the sand dunes and the huge lonely beach which she had come to think of as her own.
Sometimes, when people learned that Judith had no father, because he was on the other side of the world working for a prestigious shipping company called Wilson-McKinnon, they were sorry for her. How awful to be without a father. Didn’t she miss him? How could it feel, not to have a man about the house, not even at weekends? When would she see him again? When would he come home?
She always answered the questions in a vague fashion, partly because she didn’t want to discuss the matter, and partly because she didn’t know exactly how she did feel. Only that she had known, always, that life would be like this, because this was how it was for every British India family, and the children absorbed and accepted the fact that, from an early age, long separations and partings would, eventually, be inevitable.
Judith had been born in Colombo and lived there until she was ten, which was two years longer than most British children were allowed to stay in the tropics. During that time, the Dunbars had travelled home once for a Long Leave, but Judith had been only four at the time, and memories of that sojourn in England were blurred by the passage of years. She was never to feel that England was Home. Colombo was, the spacious bungalow on the Galle Road, with a verdant garden, separated from the Indian Ocean by the single-track railway line that ran south to Galle. Because of the proximity of the sea, it never seemed to matter how hot it got, because there was always a fresh breeze blowing in with the breakers, and indoors were wooden ceiling fans to stir the air.
But, inevitably, the day came when they had to leave it all behind. To say goodbye to the house and the garden, and Amah and Joseph the butler, and the old Tamil who tended the garden. To say goodbye to Dad. Why do we have to go? Judith was asking even as he drove them to the harbour where the P & O boat, already getting up steam, lay at anchor. Because it is time to go, he had said; there is a time for everything. Neither parent told her that her mother was pregnant, and it was not until after the three-week voyage had been made and they were back in grey England, with the rain and the cold, that Judith was let into the secret that there was a new baby on the way.
Because they had no establishment of their own to return to, Aunt Louise, primed by her brother Bruce, had taken matters into her own hands, located Riverview House, and leased it as a furnished let. Soon after they took up residence, Jess was born in the Porthkerris Cottage Hospital. And now the time had come for Molly Dunbar to return to Colombo. Jess was going with her, and Judith was remaining behind. She envied them dreadfully.
Four years they had lived in Cornwall. Nearly a third of her life. And, by and large, they had been good years. The house was comfortable, with space for all of them, and it had a garden, large and rambling, which spilt down the hill in a series of terraces, lawns, stone steps, and an apple orchard.
Best of all, however, was the freedom which Judith had been allowed. The reason for this was twofold. Molly, with her new baby to care for, had little time to watch over Judith, and was content for her to entertain herself. As well, although she was by nature over-anxious and protective of her children, she soon came to realize that the sleepy little village, and its peaceful environs, held no threat for any child.
Exploring, Judith had tentatively ventured beyond the bounds of the garden, so that the railway line, the neighbouring violet-farm, and the shores of the estuary became her playground. Growing bolder, she found the lane which led to the eleventh-century church, with its square Norman tower and wind-torn graveyard filled with ancient lichened headstones. One fine day, as she crouched trying to decipher the hand-hewn inscription on one of these, she had been surprised by the vicar who, charmed by her interest, had taken her into the church, told her some of its history, and pointed out its salient features and simple treasures. Then they had climbed the tower and stood at the top in the buffeting wind, and he had pointed out interesting landmarks to her. It was like having all the world revealed, a huge and marvellously coloured map: farmland, patchworked like a quilt into small fields, green velvet for pasture and brown corduroy velvet for plough; distant hills, crowned with cairns of rock which dated back to a time, so long ago, that it was beyond comprehension; the estuary, its flood-waters blue with reflected sky, like a huge land-enclosed lake, but it wasn’t a lake at all, for it filled and emptied with the tides, flowing out to sea down the deep-water passage known as the Channel. That day, the tide-race of the Channel was indigo-blue, but the ocean was turquoise, with rollers pouring in onto the empty beach. She saw the long coastline of dunes curving north to the rock where the lighthouse stood, and there were fishing boats out at sea, and the sky was full of screaming gulls.
The vicar explained that the church had been built upon this hillock above the beach so that its tower would be a beacon, a marker, for ships seeking a landfall and safe water, and it was not difficult to imagine those bygone galleons, their sails filled with wind, moving in from the open sea, and upstream with the running tide.
As well as discovering places, she got to know the local people. The Cornish love children, and wherever she turned up she was welcomed with such pleasure that her inherent shyness swiftly evaporated. The village fairly buzzed with interesting characters. Mrs. Berry, who ran the village shop and made her own ice-creams out of custard powder; old Herbie, who drove the coal-cart; and Mrs. Southey in the post office, who set a fireguard on the counter to keep bandits at bay and could scarcely sell a stamp without giving the wrong change.
And there were others, even more fascinating, residing farther afield. Mr. Willis was one of them. Mr. Willis had spent a good chunk of his life tin-mining in Chile, but had finally returned to his native Cornwall after a lifetime of adventure, and put down his roots in a wooden shack perched on the sandy dunes above the shore of the Channel. The narrow beach in front of his hut was littered with all sorts of interesting bits of flotsam: scraps of rope and broken fish boxes, bottles, and sodden rubber boots. One day, Mr. Willis had come upon Judith searching for shells, got talking, and invited her into his hut for a cup of tea. After that, she always made a point of looking out for him and having a chat.
But Mr. Willis was by no means an idle beachcomber, because he had two jobs. One of them was to watch the tides and raise a signal when the water rose high enough for the coal-boats to sail in over the sandbar, and the other was ferryman. Outside his house, he had rigged up an old ship’s bell, and any person wishing to cross the Channel rang this, whereupon Mr. Willis would emerge from his shack, drag his balky row-boat down off the sand, and oar them over the water. For this service, fraught with discomfort, and even danger if there happened to be a roaring ebb-tide, he charged twopence.
Mr. Willis lived with Mrs. Willis, but she milked cows for the village farmer, and quite often wasn’t there. Rumour had it that she wasn’t Mrs. Willis at all, but Miss Somebody-or-other, and nobody talked to her much. The mystery of Mrs. Willis was all bound up with the mystery of Heather’s Uncle Fred who hadn’t got it in him, but whenever Judith broached the matter with her mother, she was met with pursed lips and a change of subject.
Judith never talked to her mother about her friendship with Mr. Willis. Instinct told her that she might be discouraged from keeping company with him, and would certainly be forbidden to go into his hut and drink tea. Which was ridiculous. What harm could Mr. Willis do to anybody? Mummy, sometimes, was dreadfully stupid.
But then, she could be terribly stupid about a lot of things, and one of them was how she treated Judith exactly the way that she treated Jess, and Jess was four years old. At fourteen, Judith reckoned that she was mature enough to have really important decisions, that were going to affect her, shared and discussed.
But no. Mummy never discussed. She simply told.
I have had a letter from your father, and Jess and I are going to have to go back to Colombo.
Which had been a bit of a bombshell, to say the least of it.
But worse. We have decided that you should go to Saint Ursula’s as a boarder. The headmistress is called Miss Catto, and I have been to see her, and it’s all arranged. The Easter term starts on the fifteenth of January.
As though she were a sort of parcel, or a dog being put into a kennel.
“But what about the holidays?”
You’ll stay with Aunt Louise. She’s very kindly said that she’ll take care of you, and be your guardian while we’re all abroad. She’s going to let you have her best spare room for your own, and you can take your own bits and pieces with you, and have them there.
Which was, perhaps, most daunting of all. It wasn’t that she didn’t like Aunt Louise. During their sojourn in Penmarron, they had seen quite a lot of her, and she had never been anything but kind. It was just that she was all wrong. Old—at least fifty—and faintly intimidating, and not cosy in the least. And Windyridge was an old person’s house, orderly and quiet. Two sisters, Edna and Hilda by name, who worked for her as cook and house parlourmaid, were equally elderly and unforthcoming, not a bit like darling Phyllis, who did everything for them all at Riverview House, but still found time to play racing demon at the kitchen table and read fortunes with tea-leaves.
They would probably spend Christmas Day with Aunt Louise. They would go to church, and then there would be roast goose for lunch, and afterwards, before it grew dark, they would take a brisk walk over the golf course, to the white gate which stood high above the sea.
Not very exciting, but at fourteen Judith had lost some of her illusions about Christmas. It ought to be as it was in books and on Christmas cards, but it never was, because Mummy wasn’t much good at Christmas, and invariably showed a sad disinclination to decorate with holly, or dress a tree. For two years now she had been telling Judith that she was really too old to have a stocking.
In fact, when Judith thought about it, Mummy wasn’t really much good at anything like that. She didn’t like picnics on the beach, and she would rather do anything than throw a birthday party. She was even timid about driving the car. They had a car, of course, a very small and shabby Austin, but Mummy would come up with any excuse rather than get it out of the garage, convinced as she was that she was about to drive it into some other vehicle, lose control of the brakes, or be unable to double de-clutch when they came to a hill.
Back to Christmas. However they spent it, Judith knew that nothing could be worse than that Christmas, two years ago, when Mummy insisted that they spend some time with her parents, the Reverend and Mrs. Evans.
Grandfather was incumbent of a tiny parish in Devon, and Grandmother a defeated old lady who had struggled all her life with genteel poverty and vicarages built for huge families of Victorian children. They had spent an inordinate amount of time treading to and from church, and Grandmother had given Judith a prayer-book for a Christmas present. Oh, thank you, Grandmother, Judith had said politely, I’ve always wanted a prayer-book. She had not added, but not very much. And Jess, who always ruined everything, had gone down with croup, and taken up all Mother’s time and attention, and every other day there were stewed figs and blancmange for pudding.
No, nothing could be worse than that.
But even so (like a dog worrying a bone, Judith’s thoughts turned back to her original grievance), the business of Saint Ursula’s still rankled. Judith hadn’t even been to see the school, nor to meet the probably terrifying Miss Catto. Perhaps Mother had feared an outburst of rebellion and taken the easiest course, but even that didn’t make sense, because Judith had never, in all her life, rebelled against anything. It occurred to her that perhaps, at fourteen, she should give it a try. Heather Warren had known for years how to get her own way, and had her besotted father nicely twisted around her little finger. But then fathers were different. And, for the time being, Judith didn’t have one.
The train was slowing down. It passed under the bridge (you could always tell by the different sound the wheels made) and ground to a hissing halt. She collected her bags and stepped out onto the platform in front of the station, which was tiny and looked like a wooden cricket pavilion with much fancy fretwork. Mr. Jackson, the station-master, stood silhouetted against the light which shone out from the open door.
“Hello there, Judith. You’re late tonight.”
“We had the school party.”
“Lovely!”
The last bit of the journey was the shortest possible walk, because the station stood exactly opposite the bottom gate of the Riverview House garden. She went through the waiting-room, which always smelt distressingly of lavatories, and emerged into the unlit lane that lay beyond. Pausing for an instant to let her eyes get used to the darkness, she realized that the rain had stopped, and heard the wind soughing through the topmost branches of the pine coppice that sheltered the station from the worst of the weather. It was an eerie sound, but not a frightening one. She crossed the road, felt for the latch of the gate, opened it, and went into the garden and up the steeply sloping path, which rose in steps and terraces. At the top, the house loomed darkly before her, with curtained windows glowing in friendly fashion. The ornamental lantern which hung over the front door had been turned on, and in its light she saw an alien car parked on the gravel. Aunt Louise, come, no doubt, for tea.
A big black Rover. Standing there, it looked innocent enough, harmless, solid and dependable. But any person who ventured onto the narrow roads and lanes of West Penwith had reason to be wary of its appearance, because it had a powerful engine, and Aunt Louise, good citizen that she was, regular churchgoer and pillar of the golf club, underwent a sort of personality change the moment she got behind the wheel, roaring around blind corners at fifty miles an hour, and confidently certain that, provided she kept the heel of her hand on the horn, the letter of the law was on her side. Because of this, if her bumper grazed another person’s mudguard, or she ran over a hen, she never for a moment considered the possibility that the fault might be hers, and so forceful were her accusations and admonitions that the injured parties usually lacked the guts to stand up to her, and slunk away from the encounter without daring to claim damages or demand reparation for the dead chicken.
Judith did not want, instantly, to be faced by Aunt Louise. Because of this, she did not go in through the front door, but made her way around to the back, through the yard and the scullery and so into the kitchen. Here she found Jess sitting at the scrubbed table with her crayons and her colouring book, and Phyllis, in her afternoon uniform of green dress and muslin apron, dealing with a pile of ironing.
After the cold outside, and the damp, the kitchen felt blissfully warm. It was, in fact, the warmest room in the house, because the fire in the black-leaded, brass-knobbed Cornish range never went out. Now it simmered, causing the kettle on the hob to sing. Opposite the range a dresser stood, arranged with a motley of meat platters, vegetable dishes, and a soup tureen, and by the side of the range was Phyllis’s basket chair, in which she collapsed whenever she had a moment to get the weight off her legs, which was not often. The room smelt pleasantly of warm linen, and overhead hung a pulley, laden with airing laundry.
Phyllis looked up. “Hello there. What are you doing, sneaking in the back way?”
She smiled, showing her not very good teeth. She was a flat-chested and bony girl with pale skin and straight mousy hair, but had the sweetest disposition of any person Judith had ever known.
“I saw Aunt Louise’s car.”
“That’s no reason. Have a good party, did you?”
“Yes.” She delved in her coat pocket. “Here, Jess,” and she gave Jess a bag of sweets.
Jess looked at them. “What are they?”
She was a beautiful child, chubby and silver-blonde, but dreadfully babyish, and Judith was constantly being exasperated by her.
“Sweets, of course, silly.”
“I like fruit gums.”
“Well, look and see if you can find one, then.”
She pulled off her coat and her woollen hat and dumped them on a chair. Phyllis didn’t say, “Hang them up.” Sometime, she would probably hang them up for Judith herself.
“I didn’t know Aunt Louise was coming for tea.”
“Telephoned, she did, about two o’clock.”
“What are they talking about?”
“Nosy Parker.”
“Me, I suppose.”
“You, and that school, and lawyers and fees, and half-terms and telephone calls. And talking of telephone calls, your Aunt Biddy called this morning. Spoke to your mother ten minutes or more.”
Judith perked up. “Aunt Biddy?” Aunt Biddy was Mummy’s own sister, and a favourite of Judith’s. “What did she want?”
“I wasn’t eavesdropping, was I? You’ll have to ask your mum.” She dumped down the iron and began to do up the buttons of Mummy’s best blouse. “You’d better go through. I’ve laid a cup for you, and there’s scones and lemon cake if you’re hungry.”
“Starving.”
“As usual. Didn’t they feed you at the party?”
“Yes. Saffron buns. But I’m still hungry.”
“Off you go then, or your mother will be wondering.”
“Wondering what?”
But Phyllis only said, “Go and get your shoes changed, and wash your hands first.”
So she did this, washing her hands in the scullery, using Phyllis’s California Poppy soap, and then, with some reluctance, left the snug companionship of the kitchen and crossed the hall. From beyond the sitting-room door came the low murmur of female voices. She opened the door, but silently, so that for a moment the two women remained unaware of her presence.
They sat, Molly Dunbar and her sister-in-law Louise Forrester, on either side of the hearth, with a folding tea-table set up between them. This had been laid with an embroidered linen cloth and the best china, as well as plates containing sandwiches, an iced lemon cake, hot scones spread with cream and strawberry jam, and two kinds of biscuit—shortbread and chocolate.
They had made themselves very comfortable, with velvet curtains closely drawn and the coal-fire flickering in the grate. The sitting-room was neither large nor grand, and, because Riverview House was a furnished let, nor was it specially well-appointed. Faded chintz graced the armchairs, a Turkey rug covered the floor, and occasional tables and bookcases were functional rather than decorative. But nevertheless, in the gentle lamplight, it looked quite feminine and pretty, for Molly had brought with her from Ceylon a selection of her favourite bits and pieces, and these, set about the place, did much to alleviate the impersonality of the room. Ornaments in jade and ivory; a red lacquer cigarette box; a blue-and-white bowl planted with hyacinths; and family photographs in silver frames.
“… you’ll have such a lot to do,” Aunt Louise was saying. “If I can help…” She leaned forward to place her empty cup and saucer upon the table, and doing so, glanced up and saw Judith standing at the open door. “Well, look who’s here…”
Molly turned. “Judith. I thought perhaps you’d missed the train.”
“No. I’ve been talking to Phyllis.” She closed the door and crossed the room. “Hello, Aunt Louise.” She stooped to kiss Aunt Louise’s proffered cheek. Aunt Louise accepted this but made no move to kiss Judith in return.
She was not one to show emotion. She sat there, a well-built woman in her early fifties, with legs of surprising thinness and elegance, and long narrow feet shod in brogues polished to a chestnut shine. She wore a tweed coat and skirt, and her short grey hair was marcel-waved and kept firmly in control with an invisible hairnet. Her voice was deep and husky from smoking, and even when she changed for the evening into more feminine attire, velvet dresses and embroidered bridge coats, there was something disconcertingly masculine about her, like a man who, for a joke or a fancy-dress party, puts on his wife’s clothes and reduces the assembled company into shrieks of glee.
A handsome woman, but not beautiful. And, if old sepia photographs were to be believed, never beautiful, even in youth. Indeed, when she was twenty-three, still unengaged and unspoken for, her parents had been reduced to packing her off to India to stay with Army relations stationed in Delhi. When the hot weather came, the entire household decamped north to the cool hills and Poona, and it was there that Louise met Jack Forrester. Jack was a major in the Bengal Rifles and had just spent twelve months holed up in some remote mountain fort, skirmishing from time to time with warlike Afghans. He was in Poona on leave, desperate, after months of celibacy, for female companionship; and Louise—young, pink-cheeked, unattached, and athletic—glimpsed bounding about on a tennis court, seemed to his hungry and bedazzled eyes a most desirable creature. With enormous determination but little finesse—there was no time for finesse—he pursued her, and before he knew what was happening discovered himself engaged to be married.
Oddly enough, it was a sound marriage, although … or perhaps because … they were never blessed with children. Instead, they shared a love of the open-air life, and all the glorious opportunities for sport and game that India offered. There were hunting parties and expeditions up into the hills; horses for riding and playing polo, and every opportunity for tennis and the golf at which Louise excelled. When Jack was finally retired from the Army and they returned to England, they settled in Penmarron, simply because of the proximity of the golf course, and the club became their home away from home. In inclement weather they played bridge, but most fine days saw them out on the fairways. As well, a certain amount of time was spent at the bar, where Jack earned the doubtful reputation of being able to drink any man under the table. He boasted of having a stomach like a bucket and all his friends agreed, until one bright Saturday morning, when he dropped dead on the fourteenth green. After that they weren’t so sure.
Molly was in Ceylon when this sad event occurred, and wrote a letter of the deepest sympathy, being unable to imagine how Louise would manage without Jack. Such friends they had been, such pals. But when finally they did meet up again, she could find no change in Louise at all. She looked the same, lived in the same house, enjoyed the same life-style. Every day saw her out on the golf course, and because she had an excellent handicap and could thwack the ball as hard as any man, was never short of male partners.
Now, she reached for her cigarette case, opened it, and fitted a Turkish cigarette into an ivory holder. She lit it with a gold lighter which had once belonged to her late husband.
“How,” she asked Judith through a cloud of smoke, “did the Christmas party go?”
“It was all right. We did Sir Roger de Coverley. And there were saffron buns.” Judith eyed the tea-table. “But I’m still hungry.”
“Well, we’ve left plenty for you to finish up,” said Molly. Judith pulled up a low stool and settled herself between the two women, her nose on a level with all Phyllis’s goodies. “Do you want milk or tea?”
“I’ll have milk, thank you.” She reached for a plate and a scone and began to eat, cautiously, because the thick cream and strawberry jam were spread so generously that they were liable to squidge out and drop all over the place.
“Did you say goodbye to all your friends?”
“Yes. And Mr. Thomas and everybody. And we all got a bag of sweets, but I’ve given mine to Jess. And then I walked down the hill with Heather—”
“Who is Heather?” asked Aunt Louise.
“Heather Warren. She’s my special friend.”
“You know,” said Molly, “Mr. Warren, the grocer in the Market Place.”
“Oh!” Aunt Louise raised her eyebrows and became arch. “The dashing Spaniard. Such a good-looking man. Even if he didn’t sell my favourite Tiptrees marmalade, I think I should have to give him my custom.”
She was obviously in a good mood. Judith decided that this was the right moment to broach the subject of the bicycle. Strike while the iron’s hot, as Mrs. Warren liked to say. Take the bull by the horns.
“Actually, Heather had the most frightfully good idea. That I ought to have a bicycle.”
“A bicycle?”
“Mummy, you sound as though I’m asking for a racing car, or a pony. And I think it’s a really good idea. Windyridge isn’t like this house, next door to the railway station, and it’s miles to the bus stop. If I have a bicycle, then I can get myself about, and Aunt Louise won’t have to drive me in her car. And,” she added cunningly, “then she can get on with her golf.”
Aunt Louise gave a snort of laughter. “You’ve certainly thought of everything.”
“You wouldn’t mind, would you, Aunt Louise?”
“Why should I mind? Glad to be rid of you,” which was Aunt Louise’s way of being funny.
Molly found her voice. “But Judith … isn’t a bicycle dreadfully expensive?”
“Heather says about five pounds.”
“I thought so. Dreadfully expensive. And we have so many other things to buy. We haven’t even started on your uniform yet, and the clothes list for Saint Ursula’s is yards long.”
“I thought you could give it to me for Christmas.”
“But I’ve already got your Christmas present. What you asked me to get for you—”
“Well, a bicycle could be my birthday present. You won’t be here for my birthday, you’ll be in Colombo, so that will save you having to post me a parcel.”
“But you’ll have to go on the main roads. You might have an accident…”
Here Aunt Louise intervened. “Can you ride a bicycle?”
“Yes, of course. But I’ve never asked for one before, because I haven’t really needed it. But do admit, Aunt Louise, it would be terribly handy.”
“But Judith…”
“Oh, Molly, don’t be such a fuss-pot. What harm can the child come to? And if she drives herself under a bus, then it’s her own fault. I’ll stand you a bicycle, Judith, but because it’s so expensive, it’ll have to do for your birthday as well. Which will save me having to post you a parcel.”
“Really?” Judith could scarcely believe that her argument had worked, that she had gone on pressing her point, and actually got her own way. “Aunt Louise, you are a brick.”
“Anything to get you out from under my feet.”
“When can we buy it?”
“What about Christmas Eve?”
Molly said faintly, “Oh, no.” She sounded flustered, and Louise frowned. “What’s the matter now?” she demanded. Judith thought there was no reason to speak so unkindly, but then Aunt Louise was often impatient with Molly, treating her more like an idiot girl than a sister-in-law. “Thought of more objections?”
“No … it’s not that.” A faint blush turned Molly’s cheeks pink. “It’s just that we won’t be here. I haven’t told you yet, Louise, but I wanted to tell Judith first.” She turned to Judith. “Aunt Biddy rang.”
“I know. Phyllis told me.”
“She’s asked us to go and spend Christmas and New Year with them in Plymouth. You and me and Jess.”
Judith’s mouth was full of scone. For a moment she thought she was going to choke, but managed to swallow it down before anything so awful should happen.
Christmas with Aunt Biddy.
“What did you say?”
“I said we would.”
Which was so unbelievably exciting that all other thoughts, even the new bicycle, fled from Judith’s head.
“When are we going?”
“I thought the day before Christmas Eve. The trains won’t be so crowded then. Biddy would meet us at Plymouth. She said she was sorry that she’d left it so late, the invitation, I mean, but it was just an impetuous idea. And she thought that, as it will be our last Christmas for a bit, it would be a good idea to spend it all together.”
If Aunt Louise hadn’t been there, Judith would have jumped up and down and waved her arms and danced around the room. But it seemed a bit rude to be so elated when Aunt Louise hadn’t been asked as well. Containing her excitement, she turned to her aunt.
“In that case, Aunt Louise, perhaps we could buy the bicycle after Christmas?”
“Looks as though we’re going to have to, doesn’t it? As a matter of fact, I was going to ask you all to spend Christmas with me, but now it looks as though Biddy’s saved me the trouble.”
“Oh, Louise, I’m sorry. Now I feel I’ve let you down.”
“Rubbish. Better for us all to have a bit of a change. Will Biddy’s boy be there?”
“Ned? Unfortunately, no. He’s going to Zermatt to ski, with some of his term at Dartmouth.”
Aunt Louise raised her eyebrows, not approving of expensive and extravagant gallivanting. But then, Biddy had always spoiled her only child quite appallingly, and could deny him no pleasure.
“Pity,” was all she said. “He would have been a companion for Judith.”
“Aunt Louise, Ned’s sixteen! He wouldn’t take any notice of me at all. I expect I shall enjoy myself much more without him there…”
“You’re probably right. And knowing Biddy, you’ll have a high old time. Haven’t seen her for ages. When was she last here, Molly, staying with you?”
“At the beginning of last summer. You remember. We had that lovely heat wave…”
“Was that when she came to dinner with me in those extraordinary beach pyjamas?”
“Yes, that’s right.”
“And I found her in your garden sunbathing in a two-piece bathing suit. Flesh-pink. She might just as well have been naked.”
“She’s always very up-to-date.” Molly felt moved to stand up for her flighty sister, however feebly. “I suppose before very long we’ll all be wearing beach pyjamas.”
“Heaven forbid.”
“What will you do for Christmas, Louise? I do hope you won’t feel abandoned.”
“Heavens, no. I shall rather enjoy being on my own. I’ll maybe ask Billy Fawcett over for a drink, and then we’ll go down to the club for lunch. They usually put on quite a good do.” Judith had a mental picture of all the golfers, in their knickerbockers and stout shoes, pulling crackers and donning paper hats. “And then, perhaps, have a rubber or two of bridge.”
Molly frowned. “Billy Fawcett? I don’t think I know him.”
“No. You wouldn’t. Old friend from the Quetta days. Retired now, and thought he’d give Cornwall a try. So he’s rented one of those new bungalows they’ve built down my road. I’m going to introduce him around. You must meet him before you go. Keen golfer as well, so I’ve put him up for the club.”
“That’s nice for you, Louise.”
“What’s nice?”
“Well … having an old friend come to live nearby. And a golfer too. Not that you’re ever short of a partner.”
But Louise was not about to commit herself. She only played golf with the very best. “It depends,” she said, forcefully stubbing out her cigarette, “on what sort of handicap he gets.” She looked at her watch. “Heavens, is that the time? I must be on my way.” She gathered up her handbag and pulled herself out of her chair, and Molly and Judith, as well, rose to their feet. “Tell Phyllis, a delicious tea. You’ll miss that girl. Has she found another position yet?”
“I don’t think she’s tried very hard.”
“A treasure for some lucky person. No, don’t ring for her. Judith can see me out. And if I don’t see you before Christmas, Molly, have a ripping time. Give me a tinkle when you get back. Let me know when you want to move Judith’s belongings up to Windyridge. And, Judith, we’ll buy the bicycle at the beginning of the Easter holidays. You won’t need it before then, anyway…”
Copyright © 1995 by Robin Pilcher, Fiona Pilcher, Mark Pilcher, and the Trustees of Rosamunde Pilcher’s 1988 Trust