The Tall Girl from Somerset 32 A party at Janet’s and a chat in the Nelson Arms.
A party
at Janet’s and a chat in the Nelson Arms.
Anne and Bob saw each other for three months,
and then they stopped. The medicine had taken effect, the course of
treatment was over and that was it. Yet they parted happily, and
each was grateful to the other for those hours in another world, out of all the
many worlds that rub along in a single city.
About three weeks after seeing Bob for the
last time, on a Friday evening in the middle of December, when the mornings are
dark, and the afternoons are dark, and even midday is dark, but when Christmas
is coming and the goose is getting fat, Anne was unenthusiastically looking
through her wardrobe for something to wear to Janet’s party. She regretted that
she had let Janet persuade her to go. Janet had rung up only
yesterday and said she couldn’t do without her, it was vital that Anne went,
she was longing to see her (etc, etc,) and Anne had given in.
She took out the black dress which was her
usual (and always successful) solution for parties. She changed her
jewellery. First, she put on long earrings of filigree
gold. They came from Niger in West Africa. Henry had
bought them for her in Chiswick along with the filigree cross of
Agadez. Anne slipped the cross on to the gold chain which had been a
present from Harvey. He had given it to her on her 21st birthday. She
clasped it around her neck. She made up carefully (ars est celare artem) (the
real trick with make-up is seeming to wear no make-up) and then looked at the
total effect in the long mirror of her bedroom. Not bad. Not bad at
all.
“But what is it all for?”
In spite of looking in party mood, she actually
felt no enthusiasm about the evening, and she left the security of home
reluctantly. She shivered in the cold evening as she went to her car
and drove out of Bristol to Janet’s house in Long Weston, as late as she dared.
She parked. There was very
little space left in front of the house. Most of the others must
already be there. She walked up through the cold garden (it would
freeze tonight, perhaps it was already freezing now) and rang the doorbell.
Anne always hated the few seconds’ wait after ringing a bell, the uncertainty
of what was to happen. She did her best to make good use of those seconds in
order to brace herself for the effort of meeting people she did not know, and
she wondered what conversations she would be involved in. Janet was genuinely
very pleased to see her and led her into the hall. As Anne took off her coat, she
heard the social buzz in the living room and steeled herself to join it.
She breathed in deeply and followed Janet
through the living room door, and her evening began. The first job
was to make conversation to a greying architect that Janet had left her
with. She dutifully asked him questions about his latest project, a hotel
in Ilfracombe.
“How many bedrooms? All
overlooking the sea? Blending with the existing buildings?” She did her best to
appear interested.
And then she saw Harvey on the other side
of the room.
Harvey? Harvey? Here? But he is
supposed to be in Australia. He is supposed to be in Perth. How can
he be in Long Weston? He hasn’t seen me yet. He’s very
brown, he looks fit and well. He really hasn’t changed much, just
filled out a little perhaps.
Anne left the architect in mid-sentence,
(his not hers), took two glasses of red wine from a tray on the table, and
then, as casually as she could (“Walk slowly, breathe slowly, walk slowly.”), she
walked slowly over to Harvey, interrupting his conversation with a fair-haired
girl who turned out to be the Alice Penhow to whom he had lent that money years
before.
(Good, at least he looks surprised.)
“Harvey, would you like a drink?”
He felt the same sensation then as when he
had first met her, years before, in Headington just outside Oxford, after the
play competition, when he had stopped his car and she had said, “Thank you.”
All was well with the world. Why on earth had he gone to
Australia? It was the same sensation of relief as before.
Wasn’t this another first meeting?
Harvey took the glass of wine that she
held out to him, and they drank and talked. Alice saw that she was
becoming less and less involved in their conversation and resignedly went off
to look for something to eat. She was approached by the architect of
the hotel in Ilfracombe, intent on completing the sentence that he was unable
to finish earlier.
Anne had gone to Long Weston expecting
nothing, and here she was with Harvey, feeling good, looking very good, in a
warm room with such marvellous people. Parties were
great! Harvey was smiling too. He hadn’t expected much
either, but he always enjoyed going out, and usually something pleasant turned
up. He had never imagined that Anne would be there.
He now regretted that he had not contacted
her the moment he arrived in England. A phone call from
Heathrow! That would have been the thing. That’s what he should have
done.
Anne said, “I didn’t know you were back in
England.”
“Well, yes. I’ve been back
about a month. I was going to phone you.”
“Were you?”
“Yes, I’m trying to get sorted out and
organised and then contact everyone again”
Anne smiled at the thought of Harvey
getting himself “sorted out” and “organised”, but she said, “But you
must have contacted Janet, as she knew you were around and invited you here”
Touché! Sometimes being a barrister stood her in good stead!
Harvey didn’t know what to say, so he
told the truth. “She didn’t know I was back. She had invited an old
school friend of mine, Roger Knight, I don’t think you know him, and Roger
couldn’t go, and then she was one short, and I happened to phone Roger when I
got back, and Roger suggested I should come here instead of
him. That was when I phoned her.”
Anne smiled again. Both Harvey
and she had been reserves for the first team in this party. They were both
replacements.
They decided to leave. They both
knew that they had no intention of talking to anyone else. They
found Janet slicing lemons in the kitchen and said goodbye with the excuse of
one having to give a lift to the other, or the other way round or something,
and they both received a look of great surprise from Janet who saw them to the
door and watched them leave together. She was happy to see them
together especially since she had been involved in the disastrous meeting in
Rusholme. She smiled at them as they left and hoped for better things for them
this evening. And for herself? For herself nothing seemed to be
materialising at all. Never mind, on we go. On we go.
Anne and Harvey walked down the village
street to the Nelson Arms, and went in. How different for Anne the happiness of
entering the room with Harvey compared with the dread of going through the door
and joining the party at Janet’s alone just an hour before. They were lucky to
find two unoccupied stools at a small table in the corner of the lounge bar,
not far from the log fire, and sat down together, on their own, for the first
time in three years.
They talked about what mattered and what
didn’t matter, they talked about his journey and about her work. She
envied him for the places he had seen, and he envied her for having a job she
could go to at 9 o’clock next Monday morning and for being part of the jigsaw
of Somerset life. As for their own relationship, Harvey was
confident that nothing had changed. But how could nothing change in several
years? Anyway, spontaneously and confidently he began, “So when can
we go out? Perhaps tomorrow? I know a great pub in
Bristol, and there’s an Irish fiddler who plays there every Saturday.”
Anne was about to agree (she always used
to agree with Harvey), but she said, “No, not tomorrow, Harvey.”
“Well, Sunday, then, or Monday, although
the fiddler only plays on Saturdays. It would be a pity to miss him.”
“No, not Sunday or Monday
either. You see, I’m very busy. I’m afraid I can’t see
you.”
She had never seen Harvey so crestfallen. She
wanted to touch his cheek. In fact, she just said, “So, there we are.”
Hadn’t he been the one who’d gone off
round the world for three years? Hadn’t he left her to go to
Manchester? And what about that girl in his room the evening she
visited him in Rusholme? Seeing Janet again this evening had reminded her of
that. All Harvey’s sins were summoned for judgement. Anne would have
preferred to be acting for the defence. How many arguments
would she have found! But she stuck it out and battled on. She
was learning. Already expert in law, which was easy, she was now a
little less naïve in love, which wasn’t.
“Oh,” said Harvey. This sort of
thing had never happened to him before, even with Lorna, and that was the
nearest he had come to being out of his depth. “Oh,” he repeated, and then they
talked a little more, and then they parted.
Nothing helped Harvey to know his own mind
better, or rather his own heart, than Anne’s refusal to go out with him on
Saturday, Sunday and Monday. He hadn’t dared mention the rest of the
week for fear of a string of refusals there too. At least he had
asked for her phone number and at least she had given it to him. That was something. Not much but something.
As he walked back to his car he realised,
more clearly with every step, what he really felt. Nothing new in all this, of
course. “Men are April when they woo.” Women should keep them
at the April stage a little longer, but the men who carry on being April are
thin on the ground, and this is one of the little sadnesses of life.
Anne’ mother had told her all
this. Only now was Anne grateful for the knowledge. And only now did
she make any use of it. When she said goodbye and left Harvey that
night, she was 99% happy.
The other 1% depended on Harvey giving her
a phone call in the next few days.
Wait! Go back a
bit. Rosalind was so right and it’s best if she tells us the rest of
her thoughts on April. Let’s hear her out!
“Men are April when they woo, December
when they wed. Maids are May when they are maids, but the sky
changes when they are wives.”
Yes, Rosalind was so absolutely
right. Keep men at April as long as you can, like an expert angler
with a fish on the hook. Play the fish a little because the sky
changes when the fish is brought to land.
On we go. As Anne drove home
the streets looked different. Her front door looked different. She
looked up and she saw Orion. Orion was there. The stairs up to her
flat were different, and so was her bedroom. She remembered how she
had felt only a few hours before, when she had dressed for the party, had
chosen her earrings and had put on her make-up, as she thought, for no one.
But would Harvey ring?
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