Fire and Hemlock (31 page)

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Authors: Diana Wynne Jones

BOOK: Fire and Hemlock
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“I don’t know how Nina does it!” she sighed more than once to Fiona. Nina was always sending people packing, except, perhaps, Leslie.

Leslie kissed Polly too, at Fiona’s Christmas party, a soft, moist kiss which Polly preferred to Seb’s grabbing and hard-breathing kind, even if it was not so valuable. Leslie was turning out to be a great kisser of people. It was around then that Fiona took to calling him Georgie-Porgie. And he seemed to be surviving Wilton rather well. Polly asked Seb how Leslie was doing, and Seb rather loftily admitted that Piper was a popular little beast.

More tapes arrived for Polly at Christmas,
With love from the Dumas Quartet
, in Ann’s writing – Britten, Chopin, Elgar. Ann had put her address at the top, which Polly carefully kept. She was going to need that. There was another parcel of tapes a month later, this time from Sam – Fauré, Handel, Haydn.

“Going through the alphabet, isn’t he?” Granny remarked. “What does he do when he gets round to Webern? Go back to Bach?” She, like Polly, had no doubt who the tapes were really from.

Polly finished her huge narrative during the summer term. The day after she had finished it, she went round with the oddest mixture of feelings, pride at having got it done, sick of the sight of it and glad it was over, and completely lost without it. By the evening, lost-without-it came out on top, and she began to make a careful copy in her best writing.

That too suffered interruptions. Polly was put in the athletics team again, and she was also a courtier in the school summer play. This was Shakespeare’s
Twelfth Night.
Polly was much struck by the similarity of its plot to her own story of Hero and Tan Coul. She would have given a great deal to act the part of Viola, but that went to Kirstie Jefferson, and Polly consoled herself by going on copying her story.

Shakespeare, she discovered, borrowed plots for his plays from all over the place – so there, Mr Lynn! Her story was all her own. The longer she spent copying, the more she admired it. Some parts were really good. The part, in particular, where Tan Coul is wounded in the shoulder and Hero has to dress the wound. She strips off Tan Coul’s armour and sees “the smooth, powerful muscles rippling under the silken skin of his back”. Wonderful! Polly went round whispering it admiringly to herself. “The silken skin of his back!”

She was still wonderfully pleased with that bit when she finished copying it at last. Oh, well done! Polly packed it in a vast envelope addressed to Ann, with a note asking her to give it to Tom.
I seem to have lost his address,
she wrote, to fool Mr Leroy. For the same reason, she got Fiona to write Ann’s address and post it for her. Then she waited for signs of applause and admiration from Mr Lynn.

Nothing happened for quite a while. And when it did, it was clear Mr Lynn felt strongly on the matter. He had risked writing himself. Maybe this was because he was far away. Or maybe not. The postcard was from New York. It had two words written on it.

Sentimental Drivel. T. G. L.

Polly stared at it in outrage. She could barely believe it.

“What’s up, love?” asked Granny.

“Oh nothing. Only one of the famous Lynn postcards,” Polly said bitterly. “I hope he treads on his cello.”

She went to school, furious. That day she went without lunch so that she could put the money in Granny’s telephone jar. Granny worried a lot about the size of her phone bill. Polly walked home in the afternoon, still furious. He
can’t
have gone off hero business! she kept thinking. What’s the
matter
with him? He used to
like
it! He told me he was hooked on it. What’s wrong?

Seb crossed the road and tried to walk beside Polly.

“Oh stop bothering me!” Polly snapped.

“Polly! That’s not like you!” Seb said in a huffy, pleading way.

At this, Polly was angry enough – and hungry enough – to turn round and say, “Yes, it
is
like me! You just don’t know what I’m like. I told you to stop bothering me. Go away and don’t come back for a year. I’m too
young!

Seb stood and stared at her. He was even angrier than Polly was, and fighting so hard to control it that for just a moment he almost looked like Mr Leroy. Like Mr Leroy, he said, “You’re going to regret that.” Then he walked away.

Polly went home without another thought for Seb except a mild relief that he seemed to have been sent packing at last. She put her lunch money in the telephone jar and dialled Mr Lynn’s number.

She was answered by the robot, sounding a bit old and scratched these days, but she had been expecting that. “Polly,” she said crisply. “What the hell do you mean – sentimental drivel?” And slammed the phone down again.

Again it was some time before anything happened. During that time Polly had been taken out of the Hurdles and put in the Relay and the 400 Metres, and asked to be a sailor as well as a courtier in the play. Also during this time Ivy kept telephoning to tell Polly all about her new lodger, Kenneth Curtis. She had had a couple of girls before that and had not got on with them. Kenneth, she wanted Polly to know, was different. “It’s quite platonic,” she said, “but I feel so peaceful now. I think I may have got my hands on a little happiness at last.” She wanted Polly to come round at least for a visit.

“Don’t you,” said Granny.

At last, the Saturday before Polly was fourteen, a letter arrived from London. It was in the spiky, flowing writing of Sam Rensky.

Dear Polly,

Tom wishes you, for some reason I can’t understand, to consider the human back. He says there are many other matters you should consider too, but that was a particularly glaring example. He invites you, he says, to walk along a beach this summer and watch the male citizens there sunning themselves. There you will see backs – backs stringy, backs bulging, and backs with ingrained dirt. You will find, he says, yellow skin, blackheads, pimples, enlarged pores and tufts of hair.

This is making me ill, but Tom says go on. Peeling sunburn, warts, boils, moles and midge bites and floppy rolls of skin. Even a back without these blemishes, he claims, seldom or never ripples, unless with gooseflesh. In fact, he defies you to find an inch of silk or a single powerful muscle in any hundred yards of average sunbathers. I hope you know what all this is about, because I don’t. I think you should stay away from the seaside if you can.

Yours ever, Sam.

This, if possible, made Polly angrier still. She hurled the letter in the bin and stormed off for a walk. And, having walked some way in that direction, she decided angrily that she would, in spite of Granny’s advice, go and visit Mum. Poor Ivy. She did so deserve a little happiness.

“Good heavens!” Ivy said, opening the door to her. “I never expected your grandmother to let you near here. Well, come in, now you’ve come.”

It was not very welcoming, but Polly went in and followed Ivy to the kitchen. The new lodger was sitting at the table over the same sort of substantial breakfast that Ivy used to give David. He was a stringy, quiet little man, with not very much hair brushed over to make it look more.

When he saw Polly, he jumped up with such violent politeness that his chair fell over.

“Sit down, Ken,” Ivy said soothingly. “She’s only Polly.”

Ken sat down guiltily. He had, Polly noticed, a mole on the side of his nose with a tuft of hair growing out of it. A vision came to her of how Ken would look on a beach. But Ivy seemed to like him well enough. She and Polly sat and chatted until Ken had finished eating. Then Ivy sent him to the living room to look for the newspaper Polly could see on the other chair.

When Ken had shuffled off, Ivy said, “You haven’t quarrelled with
her
too now, have you?”

“No,” said Polly. “Of course not!”

“You do quarrel with people,” said Ivy. “It’s your besetting sin, Polly.” Polly opened her mouth to protest, then shut it, almost with a snap, like Granny. She let Ivy go on, “But don’t think you’re going to come back here. It wouldn’t do at all. I can’t have Ken upset.”

When Ken came shuffling back to say there was no paper in there, Polly got up to leave. He looked puzzled. Polly said goodbye to Ken politely, because it was not Ken’s fault, and left. As she walked back to Granny’s house, it began to seem to her that she knew what Tom meant. She had Ivy’s example to show her that there were ways of thought that were quite unreal, and the same ways went on being unreal even in hero business. Her first act on getting in was to rescue Sam’s letter and shake the tea leaves off it. Her second act was to get out her own first copy of the huge narrative and look at it carefully.

She found she knew exactly what Tom meant. She writhed. Oddly enough, it was all the bits she had been most pleased with that now made her writhe hardest. She would have torn it up – except that it had taken such months to write. She wondered what she could do to show Tom she understood now. The book of tickets she was supposed to be selling for
Twelfth Night
caught her eye, piled on a heap of other notices from school.

She hesitated. Was it worth risking more reprisals from Mr Leroy? “Why not?” she said. “He probably won’t come.”

Without giving herself time to regret it, she wrapped the tickets in all the other stuff – notices about uniform, the price of dinners, Sports Day, the Swimming Bath Appeal and choir practice – and stuffed the lot in an envelope. Perhaps Mr Leroy would think it was a bundle of waste paper. She addressed the bulging envelope to Old Pimply Back at Sam Rensky’s address and went daringly out and posted in herself.

No one except Granny came to
Twelfth Night
Polly looked carefully on all three nights, but it was so. She just had to accept it. Granny enjoyed the play anyway, although sitting in the draughty hall gave her sciatica. She could scarcely move the next day. But she vowed she would all the same, even on crutches, come to Sports Day later that week.

“You don’t have to come to everything, Granny!” Polly protested.

“I’m the only family you’ve got who cares enough to come, and I’m coming!” Granny said.

She was so firm about it that Polly did not argue any more then. But when Sports Day turned out to be cold and drizzling, Polly had another try at persuading Granny to stay at home. Granny turned warlike on her. She gave Polly the stare which unnerved men in offices and she said, “I know my duty, Polly. Don’t argue. I shall wear my fur coat and carry my umbrella and I shall be there to watch you win. Let’s say no more about it.”

So very fierce was she that Polly was seriously alarmed when Granny did not turn up that afternoon. There was, in spite of the rain, quite a large crowd of parents, teachers, and brothers and sisters of competitors spread round the field. Polly kept hoping she had missed Granny among the rest. But Granny and her fur coat were very recognisable, particularly together, and the umbrella was even more so, since it was very large and made in green and white triangles. Look as she would, Polly could not see that umbrella.

“Should I go home?” Polly asked Fiona while Fiona was helping her put her hair into a tail with an elastic band.

“Perhaps the bus she was on broke down,” said Fiona. “Or she may be behind some big people. Let’s go round the field and look.”

They toured the field with Fiona’s plastic mac across them both to keep their track suits dry, but no fur coat or green and white umbrella could they find. Polly was grateful she had a friend like Fiona. Fiona was entirely sensible and soothing. Polly’s stomach felt queer, and she kept saying to herself, If Mr Leroy’s done something to her now, I shall go to Hunsdon House and
kill
him! I really shall!

“Go home after the Four Hundred, if you must,” Fiona said as they stood in the drizzle, jumping from leg to leg to keep warm. “You ought to win the Four Hundred first.”

Polly took off her track suit and went heavily to the start with the rest of the runners. She knelt, knees and knuckles wet, with the rain feeling like pins and needles falling on her arms and legs, and took a last worried look round the field. And the umbrella was there at last, in the distance near the gate. Granny was under it, but she was not holding it. Mr Lynn was holding it over both of them.

The gun went and Polly got left at the start. She thought that, in the circumstances, it was pretty speedy of her to come third. But her speed in the race was nothing to the speed with which she covered the distance from the finish to the gate, frantically tearing the elastic band off her hair as she ran. It wound itself up in her hair and she only got it off just as she arrived at the umbrella.

Granny was holding it alone now. Mr Lynn had gone.

“Tom was here – surely he was!” Polly cried out.

“Put something on, Polly. You’ll catch your death,” said Granny. “Yes, he was here, but he had to go. The quartet’s just off to Australia. He left you this.” She held out a paper.

Polly dropped the elastic band all trammelled in fine silvery hair and slowly took the paper. Rain pattered on it. The drawing on the paper bulged and blurred from tears Polly was determined not to let go of. “How’s your sciatica?” she said while she waited for her eyes to clear.

“Not too bad, thank you for asking,” Granny said.

Polly could see now. It was a drawing of a kangaroo wearing glasses, and he had made it look really quite like him. And Mr Leroy had won – hands down. “He thinks I’m just a child!” Polly said angrily.

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