Read Brother of the More Famous Jack Online
Authors: Barbara Trapido
âWell, Jont,' he said, âwe'll have to make the best of this harebrained scheme of yours, though I'll never know what's wrong with London. The country is for peasants and milkmaids as you'll find out. And then who is going to buy this miserable, derelict house off you?'
âNow then, Jacob, leave him alone,' Jane said firmly.
âJonathan likes the country. He always did. Just accept that you differ in this respect.' Annie had her mouth open with indignation on our behalf.
âAnd who are you to say Jont's house is derelict?' she said. âHe's had a builder in it, hasn't he? You haven't even seen it, you old bore. Roggs has seen it and he's not complaining.'
âWhen are you going to come and see it then, Jacob?' I said. âYou're not going to wait for the half-price fares, I hope?' Jacob smiled.
âKatherine, my sweet girl,' he said, âdo you have any idea what isolation means?' I thought yes, that I did. It meant telephoning the speaking clock at four in the morning from Hendon. It meant being with the Bernards in a crowded city. It did not mean being alone in the country with Jonathan.
âI'll have Jonathan,' I said, sounding hopelessly starry-eyed.
âAnd a small child?' Jacob said. âMotherhood is isolating enough, sweetheart. You will be cut off and tied to your child. All this knitting nonsense of yours will peter out because the child will claim your time. And because there's nobody left employed in this country to buy the things you make.'
âRubbish,' Rosie said. âThe West End is full of shops selling classy jerseys. So is Hampstead. You don't notice. You only notice bookshops. Of course people buy them. I buy them, don't I? We don't all buy our clothes in Oxfam, you know, like some I could mention.' Jane smiled, undisturbed by the jibe.
âWhy is it nonsense to knit jerseys, then, Jake?' Annie said. âComing from someone who teaches metaphysics, I must say, it's a bit of a cheek isn't it? I mean which do people need more of? Jerseys or metaphysics?'
âThe fact is, darling, people pay me to do it,' Jacob said. âBut these two here â God help them, Annie, between them they've got no practical sense at all. Which one of them is it that has the entrepreneurial spirit?'
âMe,' I said. âMy father was a shopkeeper, Jacob. Jonathan knows about the country and I know about selling things. You
think I won't work hard. Admit it. You still think I'm a scatty girl with no application.'
âFlower,' Jacob said, âI think you're lovely.' I laughed.
âThanks,' I said. âA lovely scatty girl with no application.'
âHe's a sod, Katherine,' Jane said. âI hope you are fully aware of that.'
âMy dear child,' Jacob said, âwhat has hard work got to do with it? Money was never made out of hard work. Nobody ever got rich through labouring. Money is made through the exploitation of the labour of others. What you need, Katherine, is enough knitting-machines to supply all the local women who will then do the work for you while you people live off the surplus. That's what you have to do. That is the only rationale for going to Ireland, as any good capitalist can tell you. In a situation of high unemployment you exploit the opportunities for low-paid, homebound female labour. Then you hire an accountant to fiddle your books and you cheat the tax man. That's called initiative. That's what you don't have, Katherine, though your charms are many.'
âNotebooks out, chaps,' Jane said. âI hope you're all taking this down. What a frightful old pedant you are, Jake. I'm bound to say it makes one proud not to have opened a book with footnotes in twenty years.'
âBut Jont,' Jacob said, âthe point is that I don't and can't see why you people set out to starve. Surely it is important not to starve? Surely you remember the words of the great Brecht on the subject?
“Erst komt das Fressen, dan komt die Moral.”
'
âWhy are you so greedy for them?' Annie said. âPerhaps you're a frustrated capitalist, Jake. Katherine doesn't want to get rich. She wants to make beautiful things. That's all there is in life worth doing.' Jacob was touched by her sweetness.
âYou're a beautiful thing,' he said. âOnce upon a time I made a beautiful thing.' Annie jabbed him amiably in the ribs, and smiled engagingly.
âTwo fingers to you, you silly old man,' she said. âJust because my nose is nearly as big as yours. Don't think that I care.'
Jane moved closer to me in that attractive, conspiring way she had which was always so flattering in its implication about oneself. She put a hand on mine.
âYou're getting an awful lot of advice from Himself,' she said. âThis day and every day. I hardly like to add my own, but it is this. Your scheme to make things will work splendidly because â no matter what Jake says â there are always enough very rich people to buy a few very beautiful things. Rosie is perfectly right. Jacob knows this too. He is simply concerned about losing Jonathan's company.'
âThat's not true,' Jacob said. Poor Jacob, lying through his teeth, the old bastard. Jane ignored him.
âYour scheme will work on one condition, Katherine, if I may say so,' she said, âand that is that you wring â I emphasise
wring
âfrom that stubborn and truculent son of mine, a very specific and very business-like commitment to share the domestic work and the child-care with you.'
âHe will,' I said. âHe does. He couldn't be nicer to me, Jane.'
âWe're all nice to you, Katherine,' she said. âYou're having a difficult pregnancy. But I'm talking about the long run. I know all about these clever chaps like yours and mine you see. I know all about their nice impressive commitments to the rights of women and the division of labour, because they're very good at articulating these things and it costs them nothing to say it all as nicely as they do. If you are going to earn a living, Katherine, and keep up seriously with your orders, you will not do it and mind a small, active child at the same time. Jonathan must mind that babe for you, either every morning, or for four whole working days a week. Not as a favour, mind, but as a necessity. Along with the shopping and the cooking and cleaning and laundry. Just as women do it. Make him earn the right to sit at his typewriter. That's his indulgence. All the men in this family are distinguished by the fact that they earn a living from their favourite pastime. That is a luxury in a suffering world. Jonathan doesn't even earn a living by it yet, but that is by the by. He will.'
âJust carry on, Ma,' Jonathan said. âDon't mind me.'
âThank you, Jonathan,' Jane said, âI will.'
âOr you could save your breath,' Jonathan said, âand have my head right off. On a bloody plate. Go on.' Jane laughed briefly.
âKatherine,' she said, âthis is what you do. You put down a schedule for him, in writing, and make him sign it. Get him drunk first if necessary, or threaten to hide his fishing tackle.' Jonathan was miming her behind her back, making horrible, schoolboy yakkity-yak faces which made me want to laugh. âPhotocopy it and leave a copy with me,' she said, âbecause if you don't, I have a good idea how it will be in that little house of yours. Lots of lovely fresh fish on the fire and you sitting down to that knitting-machine after sluicing the nappies at midnight.' Jonathan had stopped pulling faces at her and was eyeing her suddenly like a gathering storm cloud.
âAre you trying to be funny?' he said. âBecause you're not succeeding. Sharing the work is what I do now. She tells you so herself, but you're so busy grinding your axe you don't even listen to her. What makes you think I'm like Jake?'
âI wonder,' Jane said provocatively. âNow whatever could make me think such a thing?'
âI don't need Katherine to find my stinking socks for me,' Jonathan said indignantly. âI'm not like Jake. I cook. I cook all the time. Now leave me alone.'
âMy darling Jontikins,' Jane said, âwe all agree that your gingerbread men are lovely.'
âOh shut up, you old cow,' Jonathan said. âDon't bloody patronise me.'
âAnd he goes to the launderette,' I said. I held an impeccable sleeve for effect. âSee this shirt. Jonathan ironed this shirt.'
âLook,' Jane said, âI don't deny for a moment that he is some what better than Jake in that respect. The times have moved to make him so. Don't think I haven't heard him in that funny little kitchen of yours, whistling Boccherini over
The Pauper's Cookbook
. I won't say I wasn't impressed, but quite a
lot of men will cook now and again if their wives lay in the garlic and root ginger and whatever else is necessary for the star turn.' âOh fuck off, you bitch,' Jonathan said. âJust get off my back, lady.'
âBabies tie women at home, Katherine,' Jane said. âThere is nothing like having a woman at home to create dependence. Jonathan's last baby was born in such very different circumstances, you see. Hosts of aunts and grannies falling over themselves for the privilege of rinsing the nappies. Now look at the poor man. I've made smoke pour out of his nostrils.'
âWhen Katherine needs your advice she'll bloody well ask for it,' Jonathan said. âOkay?'
âOr perhaps she won't,' Jane said. âNot when she needs it most. So I give it to her notwithstanding.'
âHer experience is infinitely wider than yours,' Jonathan said. âShe's had more men in her life than you've had hot dinners. What makes you think she needs your advice on how to protect herself against me, you evilminded crone? She spent four years living with a fascist lunatic.'
âSix,' I said.
âYou surely can't mean that charming man who sent you the cake?' Jane said, but Jonathan ignored her.
âWhat did you ever do but flutter your eyelashes at an arty queer to make Jake miserable, you patronising bitch?' he said. Jacob was smoking one of his smelly cigars.
âCalm down, Jont,' he said mildly through the fog. âShe patronises everybody. We all like to display our greatest talents. That is hers. That and enumerating female grievances. Jane took out a monopoly on hardship for the female sex long before anyone thought to burn a bra in a public place. Jane invented the Women's Movement in my back yard.'
âOver your babies' cot sheets more like,' Jane said. âOver your rubbish bin, Jacob, scraping chop bones off dinner plates. Over the wash basin, picking out your beard remnants while you sat and wrote your lovely books. Now it's your son who's writing
books. Why should the same thing happen to Katherine? Why shouldn't she benefit from my experience?'
âBecause she can't,' Jacob said shortly. âPeople don't. You're very boring, Janie.'
âBeing boring has never inhibited you from carping at them, has it, Jake?' Jane said. âNow it's my turn.'
âYou sound like any one of a thousand band-wagoning harridans,' Jacob said. âWomen against the world. Women against the bloody works.' Mike leaned over to Annie.
âDoes he call himself a radical or something, your father?' he said,
sotto voce.
It made them giggle quietly together. âHe sounds like Genghis Khan.'
âDon't,' Annie said, whispering back.
âYour children have grown up, for Christssake,' Jacob said. âYou haven't washed a cot sheet in years. Look at them. They're lovely rational adults. You have a cleaning woman to muck out the kitchen for you. If you find yourself having to pick my beard out of the wash basin from time to time, I'm sorry for you, but what the hell else have you got to do with your time, other than harass your daughters-in-law? You can't want to spend your whole life at that damned piano. That is your indulgence, sweetheart, and it never paid the gas bill.'
Jesus, I thought to myself. Jacob, you swine. You absolute bloody swine. Why is it I have always liked you so much?
âMy quarrel is with
Jane,
' Jonathan said. âWith Jane, who has this persistent fantasy about me as some jackbooted hood. Don't sidetrack her with all this clap-trap about the Women's Movement.'
âIt isn't altogether clap-trap to anyone like me, Jont, who's had six children,' Jane said. âSeven, counting Jake.'
âOh please, Ma,' Annie said. âPlease stop it.'
âI have no quarrel with the Women's Movement,' Jonathan said, âjust so long as it isn't my sperm goes into the freezer to fertilize lesbian marriages.'
Sally, who was offering her lovely breast to her new baby, tensed slightly, with disapproval at Jonathan's terminology,
though she weathered it well enough. In her hierarchy of human secretions, she obviously found breast milk more acceptable than sperm. But Jane smiled, as Jonathan meant her to. In his kindness, he was exercising for her benefit a flair for comic relief.
âYou're very sweet, Jontikins,' she said, âand very clever. Don't be angry with me. It was injudicious of me to meddle in your affairs and I hope you will forgive me.'
Roger's small daughter was frustrating herself with a gyroscope which she could not manipulate. She was bumping up against Roger's thigh, trying to attract his attention, but he didn't hear her â I don't think he really heard any of us. In a house full of talkers Roger never talked much. He always disliked the unremarkable small change of conversation. It was persistently a difference between us â I love what people say to each other. For this reason I like to stand in queues while Roger, in my experience, avoided shops for fear that he might be called upon to say whether he didn't think that the weather had come on a trifle nippy. He had a nice enough gentle manner with his child, but he did not play with her. Not in that wild and wonderful way in which Jacob played with children; that way which made watching adults cry, âStop it, Jacob, she'll break a leg. It'll only end in tears.'
âHe's not listening to you, Small,' Jonathan said to her. âBring it here. I love those things. I'll make it go like the clappers.' He caused the thing to spin on the string in a most accomplished way and gave her the ends of the string to hold. It made me stir with pleasure to think that Jonathan would make gyroscopes spin for my child. Besides, the idiom turned me on. To go like the clappers.