Read God Is an Englishman Online

Authors: R. F. Delderfield

God Is an Englishman (69 page)

BOOK: God Is an Englishman
4.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Perhaps his mixed blood accounted for his eccentricities. She did not know GodIsAnEnglishman.indd 365

3/27/09 5:14:28 PM

3 6 6 G O D I S A N E N G L I S H M A N

any foreigners, but she assumed they would differ very much from punctilious, predictable men like his father, or aggressive, explosive men like Sam and timid, conscientious men like Tybalt, the clerk. Different or not he was all she had and all she wanted, the man who had enslaved her from the moment she took shelter in that moorland hut, as if to await his arrival. She loved everything about him; his originality, his strange tolerance and basic kindness, and his dynamic self-reliance that was, perhaps, the most singular thing about him, for although she would never wholly understand what he sought to create for himself any fool could recognise it as a deeply personalised goal. But that part of him was still private and would, she was sure, remain so, for she sensed that in a curious way he was very jealous of it and would never lift more than the corner of the curtain on it for her or his male intimates, awaiting, possibly, the arrival of a son before he was ready to share it with another. She meant to give him that son if she could but not Alexander; some other, less important son, whom he could mould in his own image and she did not think he would quarrel with this. He was a man of his word and Alex had been spoken for. Equality she now had and she meant to hold him strictly to the terms of their original bargain, made the day after Stella was born.

She wriggled back into his embrace, running a hand half the length of his firm, muscled body and then, again recalling her wed ding night, she lifted his hand and tucked it firmly under her breasts. Its limp presence there had always given her comfort. Tonight it represented permanence and continuity.

GodIsAnEnglishman.indd 366

3/27/09 5:14:28 PM

Six

Flight oF a

sleeping paRtneR

1

When, in his old age, Adam Swann looked back on what he learned to think of, in retrospect, as the cleansing of his domestic stables, he was able to do so with humour for he saw himself in good com pany, notably that of the lately lamented Prince Consort, who had faced a similar situation earlier in his career as Master of Windsor.

Albert, Adam recalled, had finally prevailed upon his wife to let him examine the royal accounts and had found, to his astonishment, that he was footing a large annual bill for candles, and that after gas had been installed in the royal apartments for time out of mind. Candles, he learned, had been ordered in bulk during the reign of his wife’s grandfather and were now regarded as the perquisites of court flunkeys and this was only one sideline exploited by the swarm of servants whose duties, to say the least, were very loosely defined.

Albert, frugally reared in faraway Saxe-Gotha, had solaced his isolation among the islanders by applying a touch of Teutonic thoroughness to a resentful household but Adam Swann, a man cast in the same mould, went further for, unlike Albert, nobody had ever implied that he was not master of his house in fact as well as title. His cyclonic descent upon Tryst a day or so after he and Henrietta had arrived at their new understanding soon passed into local legend. It was sometimes spoken of, in Twyforde Green cottages and shop-parlours, in terms of a visitation, rather as the ancestors of those same villagers might have referred to the reign of Stephen as “a time when God and all His Angels slept.” Having carried all Henrietta’s housekeeping books into his study he remained there for two hours, emerging to make a storming descent upon the kitchen. Half an hour later a red-eyed Mrs. Hitchen, the cook, was collecting her things, assuring God and His Angels that a halfpenny-per-pound butcher’s meat commission GodIsAnEnglishman.indd 367

3/27/09 5:14:29 PM

3 6 8 G O D I S A N E N G L I S H M A N

was the acknowledged perks of every cook in Kent, and that “real gentry” had been known to wink at double the rate. “I haven’t a doubt that she is speaking the truth there,” said Adam, when Mrs. Hitchen’s recriminations were relayed to him.

“Her error lies in the fact that we are not gentry, real or counterfeit, but tradesmen, and she must be aware that no tradesman worth his salt would pay over the odds for a joint to adjust to her preference for one butcher or another.” After that it was Miss Gage’s turn. Celia Gage, a relative of the local rector, had enjoyed a sinecure at Tryst for more than a year as combined governess-nanny. She was not the kind of governess readily recognisable by readers of Miss Charlotte Bronte. There was nothing retiring or self-effacing about Celia Gage, or not after she had taken the measure of her situation and decided that she was answerable to no one but Ellen Michelmore, with whom she shared a predisposition to indulge in what the hen-pecked Ned Michelmore would have labelled “women’s clackety-clack.” It seemed that Celia’s fondness for clackety-clack had resulted in overlooked obligations in the nursery and Adam, having satisfied himself that Stella was con vinced that “elephant” began with an “H,” told the governess that he was prepared to overlook this but not the fact that his infant son was still eating porridge with his fingers. The only concession he would make as regards Miss Gage was that she could stay while she sought alternative employment. Her sins, as he saw it, were those of omis sion, not to be bracketed with those of the cook in the matter of farming out kitchen contracts.

All this, however, was in the nature of an overture, and no one was surprised when the outside staff was slashed from five to two after a brisk inspection of the orchard and vegetable garden behind the house. For an hour or so, pending the investigation by Adam into the distributing end of a steady traffic in plums, peaches, and green house grapes, the fate of the gardener Dawson hung by a thread, but it was then discovered that Dawson’s lieutenant, a man called Moffat, had a weekly rendezvous with some notable bottlers of fruit, who were marketing his produce as far afield as Purley. So Dawson stayed on, converted overnight into a hawkeyed martinet whom even the Old Duke would have promoted to the rank of provost sergeant.

There were other minor changes and many adjustments in pro cedure and the chain of command, but most of them pointed in a single direction. Less than a week after the upheaval Ned Michelmore was summoned to the presence and came away with a gleam in his eye that directed him straight into his wife Ellen’s quarters, where a loud outcry was heard within seconds of him slamming the door on all that remained of the indoor staff. Not even Henrietta learned GodIsAnEnglishman.indd 368

3/27/09 5:14:30 PM

Flight of a Sleeping Partner
3 6 9

what passed between “dear Ellen” and her husband, but Stillman, the handyman, whose principal duties at Tryst were to attend to the few wants of the Colonel, formed an opinion of what had been said, re cognising the relayed ultimatum for what it was, a choice between instant dismissal and a shift to the county town, where Ned Michelmore had been offered an alternative post as stableman for Blubb’s teams on condition he took Ellen with him. Here again Adam found himself in sympathy with the late Prince Albert, having no difficulty in recognising Ellen Michelmore as his wife’s Lehzen. So long as she was entrenched, exercising control over the entire household, and flattering Henrietta into believing that no lady of the manor would be seen in her own kitchen or nursery (save for the permitted bedtime visit), it was unlikely that much progress would be made along the lines laid down over the supper table at the George.

The handyman, Stillman, a confirmed woman-hater, had noted the expression on Ned Michelmore’s face and had listened outside the housekeeper’s door from the moment the first of Ellen’s cries of dismay had penetrated to the bootroom.

He had gifts as a raconteur and demonstrated them that same night in the bar of the “King Cade,” where he supped his ale.

“In marches Ned, pale about the gills,” he recounted, “and when you mind his wife had come to reckon it was her who pays the quarter-rent for the place, tis no wonder Ned was slow in getting round to tellin’ her young gaffer’s decided to call the tune, and time enough too, as anyone up there could tell you if they’d had an ear to the ground. Ned’s bin given the choice o’ restartin’ the mill, or taking over as stableman at Maidstone, and I don’t have to tell none o’ you that that ain’t a choice at all for that mill been losin’ money since Conyer’s time and couldn’t be restarted on account o’ the floods back along. Ned was for taking the job but his missis, ’earing she was to go along whether she liked it or no, threw a fit, an’ after that a shelf full o’ crocks to keep it company. Then out comes Ellen, with her hairpins fallin’ out in a shower, and stampedes all over the damned house in search o’ the missus but when she found her she come away without change. What was said between ’em I can’t tell, for I got no business upstairs, where they did their talking. All I see is Ellen comin’ down again, blotchy about the face but quiet, thank Christ, quieter’n I ever recall, an’ now they’m packing.

Later on down comes the missis to me with a sparkle in
her
eye and a rare edge to her voice, telling me I’d best put a rare shine on the master’s boots, and I take this as a friendly nod from her ladyship that there’s been a sorting-out all round.

Not that I didn’t see it comin’, mind, wi’ that fat thief of a cook sacked, and that Moffat, who was so gen erous with other folks’ fruit gone, and parson’s nominee GodIsAnEnglishman.indd 369

3/27/09 5:14:30 PM

3 7 0 G O D I S A N E N G L I S H M A N

for governess under notice to quit. Come to think on it, it began brewing a week since, the day young missis comes home on the Colonel’s skewbald drenched through, and with her clothes in tatters. There’s more’n one story as to how
that
come about, but you’ll get none of ’em from me, for I’m walking a tightrope up there myself.”

At this stage in the long recital one of Stillman’s audience suggested that Swann was a hard man to please but Stillman, after a mo ment’s thought, denied this.

“Nay,” he said, finally, “but he’s a hard man to best, or to turn aside once he’s put his mind to something. Looks to me he’s decided it’s the missis and not them women who run the place, and good luck to him, and to all you other mugwumps who have been soft enough to let your ole John Thomas steer you to church and lived on to regret it.”

The majority of ex-Rifleman Stillman’s audience accepted this gibe as the price of a first-class story, that would be something to carry home to their wives when their tankards were empty, but Still man’s summing-up was a fair estimate of what had occurred, for the Henrietta who returned from London was a mark-edly different woman from the one who had set out forty-eight hours previously, and even Adam, who looked for a change, was not fully aware of this at first. It was as though, with the title to Tryst in the family deed-box, she summoned the spirits of long-dead Conyers to witness the fact that she had it in her to equal the best of them, and it would not be too much to say she sought counsel in the building itself, pausing to listen to the whisper of old timber at the turn of the staircase, or reading something intelligible in the creak of the scullery pump-handle that had witnessed innumerable kitchen feuds down the generations. She seemed to enlarge herself not only in assertiveness and positivity, but in stature, and this despite the fact that she was soon showing unmistakable signs of pregnancy and took no pains to hide the fact. She had plodded through her previous pregnancies with a certain modest pride but concerning this one she seemed to go out of her way to advertise the fact that a third cygnet would make his appearance around February. For she had no doubt whatever that the child had been conceived, as though by decree, in the course of what she had come to regard as their truce talks at the old George where they had, one might say, agreed terms, signed articles, and dutifully exchanged hostages.

It was because she herself viewed it in this light that she never once thought of the child as hers in the way she had indulged herself re garding the foreseeable future of Stella and Alexander. This boy (the child would hardly have the effron-tery to be female) was city spawned, a living amalgam of his father’s involvement GodIsAnEnglishman.indd 370

3/27/09 5:14:30 PM

Flight of a Sleeping Partner
3 7 1

with the capital, as though Adam had set himself to the task of siring an heir to his Thameside sprawl and had gone about it with the thrust and singleminded-ness that he brought to all his commercial concerns. It pleased her, indeed, that it should be so. After all, on that memorable evening he had not only presented her with Tryst, but had invested her with the authority of a person who was expected to exercise sup remacy in her own right and not as a cosseted deputy, and this made the loss of dear Ellen, the cook, the governess, and their cohorts, easy to bear, their very removal from the scene enabling her to settle to the business of grafting a new personality on to the house and find ing in this a task that was not only absorbing but extremely satisfy ing.

This was before he found her Phoebe, who arrived a month or so later, her few belongings enclosed in a basket-trunk of the kind Hen rietta had carried out of Scab’s Castle. It might have been the trunk that established a rapport between the two women from the moment Adam ushered her into the sewing-room, introducing her as Miss Phoebe Fraser, the daughter of his Border Triangle manager, who had had the advantage of a Scots education, and, for good measure, four years in the service of a Galloway laird, with a reputation for counting the groats and living almost exclusively on gruel.

Phoebe was a small-boned, fresh-complexioned girl of about two and twenty, unobtrusive up to a point but extremely forthright once she had pondered a problem and made her decision. She had, every one soon discovered, very definite opinions on a wide range of sub jects, the benefit of fresh air, good table manners, the improving habit of selective reading, diet, exercise, the hour of lying down and getting up, and particularly the importance of inculcating into chil dren at a very early age the social obligations of the fortunate towards the less fortunate.

BOOK: God Is an Englishman
4.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

A Bloom in Winter by T. J. Brown
Just Her Type by Jo Ann Ferguson
Beauty by Sheri S. Tepper
The Amber Trail by M. J. Kelly
Escalation Clause by Liz Crowe
Coffee, Tea, or Murder? by Jessica Fletcher
The Fall Guy by Barbara Fradkin