The Black Prince (Penguin Classics) (34 page)

BOOK: The Black Prince (Penguin Classics)
11.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
‘I hope she hasn’t been pestering you.’
‘Not at all. Here we are.’
I turned into a stationer’s shop in Rathbone Place. I can browse indefinitely in a stationer’s shop, indeed there is hardly anything in a good stationer’s which I do not like and want. What a scene of refreshment and innocence! Loose leaf paper, writing paper, notebooks, envelopes, postcards, pens, pencils, paper – clips, blotting paper, ink, files, old – fashioned things like sealing wax, new – fangled things like sellotape.
I dashed among the shelves followed by Rachel. ‘I must buy some more of my special notebooks. I’m going to be doing a lot of writing soon. Rachel, let me buy you something, I must, I’m in a present – giving mood.’
‘Bradley, whatever is the matter with you, you seem quite delirious.’
‘Here, let me give you these nice things!’ I had to load somebody with presents. I collected for Rachel a ball of red string, a blue felt – tipped pen, a pad of special calligrapher’s paper, a magnifying glass, a fancy carrier bag, a large wooden clothes peg with URGENT written on it in gold, and six postcards of the Post Office Tower. I paid for the purchases and loaded the bag with all Rachel’s spoil into her arms.
‘You seem in a good mood!’ she said, pleased, but still a bit
maussade.
‘Now can we go back to your place?’
‘I’m awfully sorry. I’ve got a rather early lunch engagement, I’m not going back.’ I was still worrying about the chair and whether she wouldn’t try again to remove the book. It was not that I was unwilling to talk to Rachel, I was greatly enjoying it.
‘Well, let’s sit somewhere.’
‘There’s a seat in Tottenham Court Road, just opposite Heals.’
‘Bradley, I am not going to sit in Tottenham Court Road and contemplate Heals. Aren’t the pubs open yet?’
They were. I must have spent longer than I realized in meditation. We went into one.
It was a featureless modern place, ruined by the brewers, all made of light plastic (pubs should be dark holes), but with the sun shining in and the street door open it had a sort of southern charm. We visited the bar and then sat at a plastic table which was already wet with beer. Rachel had a double whisky which she proposed to drink neat. I had a lemonade shandy for the sake of appearances. We looked at each other.
It occurred to me that this was the first time since I had been
smitten
that I had looked another human being in the eyes. It was a good experience. I beamed. I almost felt that my face had the power to bless.
‘Bradley, you
are
looking odd.’
‘Peculiar?’
‘Very nice. You look awfully well today. You look younger.’
‘Dear Rachel! I’m so glad to see you. Tell me all. Let’s talk about Julian. Such an intelligent girl.’
‘I’m glad you think so. I’m not sure that I do. I’m grateful to you for taking an interest in her at last.’
‘At last?’
‘She says she’s been trying to attract your attention for years. I warned her you probably won’t keep it up.’
‘I’ll do what I can for her. I like her, you know.’ I laughed crazily.
‘She’s like all of them now, so vague and inconsiderate and doing everything on the spur of the moment, and so full of contempt for everything. She adores her father but she can’t help needling him all the time. She told him this morning that you thought his work was “sentimental”.’
‘Rachel, I’ve been thinking,’ I said. (I had not in fact, it had just come into my head.) ‘I may be being completely unjust to Arnold. It’s years since I read the whole of his work. I must read it all through again, I may see it quite differently now. You like Arnold’s novels, don’t you?’
‘I’m his wife. And I’m a totally uneducated woman, as my dear daughter never tires of telling me. But look, I don’t want to talk about these,things. I want to say – well, first of all forgive me for bothering you again. You’ll begin to think I’m a neurotic woman with a fixation.’
‘Never, my dear Rachel! I’m so glad to see you. And what a pretty dress! How charming you look!’
‘Thanks. Oh I feel so unhappy about everything that’s happened lately. I know life is always a muddle but the muddle’s got suddenly worse and I can’t bear it. You know when things get inside you and you can’t stop going round and round the same piece of misery. That’s why I just have to come and see you. And Arnold always puts me in the wrong and I dare say I am in the wrong – ’
‘I’ve been in the wrong too,’ I said, ‘but I feel now that everything can be put right. There’s no need to have warfare when one can have peace. I’ll go and see Arnold and we’ll have a long talk – ’
‘Wait a moment, Bradley. Are you getting drunk on that shandy? You haven’t even had any yet. I don’t see any point in your talking all solemnly to Arnold. Men are so pompous about having things out and talking things through. I’m not sure that I want you to see Arnold at all at present. I just wanted to say this. Are you listening to me, Bradley?’
‘Yes, my dearest creature.’
‘You said some very kind and probably very wise things last time we met about friendship. I feel I was rather churlish – ’
‘Not at all.’
‘I want to say now that I accept and need your friendship. I also want to say – it’s hard to find the words – I’d be wretched if I felt you just saw me as a desperate middle – aged harpy trying to pull someone into bed to spite her husband – ’
‘I assure you – ’
‘It’s not like that, Bradley. There’s something I feel I didn’t make absolutely clear. I wasn’t just looking for a man to console me after a married row – ’
‘You did make it clear – ’
‘It could only have been you. We’ve known each other for centuries. But it’s only lately come to me – how much I really care about you. You’re a very special person in my life. I esteem you arid admire you and rely on you and – well, I love you. That’s what I wanted to say.’
‘Rachel, what a delightful thing, it’s made my day!’
‘Be serious for a moment, Bradley.’
‘I am serious, my dear. People should love each other more in simple ways, I’ve always felt this. Why can’t we just comfort each other more? One tends to live at a sort of level of anxiety and resentment where one’s protecting oneself all the time. Climb above it, climb above it, and feel free to love! That’s the message. I know in my relations with Arnold – ’
‘Never mind your relations with Arnold. This is about me. I want – I must be a bit drunk – let me put it crudely – I want a special relationship with you.’
‘You’ve got it!’
‘Be quiet. I don’t want an affair, not because I don’t want an affair, maybe do, it’s not worth finding out, but because it would be a mess and belong with all that anxiety and resentment you were talking about, anyway you haven’t got the guts or temperament or whatever for an affair, but, Bradley, I want
you
.’
‘You’ve got me!’
‘Oh don’t be so gay and flippant, you look so horribly pleased with yourself, what’s the matter?’
‘Rachel, don’t worry. I can be everything that you want me to be. It’s all perfectly simple. As Julian’s namesake remarked, obscurely but with
élan,
all shall be well and all shall be well and all manner of thing shall be well.’
‘I wish I could hold you to some sort of seriousness, you’re so terribly sort of slippery today. Bradley, this matters so much – you will love me, you will be faithful?’
‘Yes!’
‘A real true friend to me forever?’
‘Yes, yes!’
‘I don’t know – thank you – all right – You’re looking at your watch, you must go to your lunch date. I’ll stay here and – think – and – drink. Thank you, thank you.’
The last I saw of her, through the window as I went off, she was staring at the table and very slowly making patterns in the beer drips with her finger. Her face had a heavy sullen dreamy remembering look which was very touching.
 
 
Hartbourne asked after Christian. He had known her slightly. The news of her return must have somehow got around. I talked about her frankly and at ease. Yes, I had seen her. She was much improved, not only in looks. We were on quite good terms, very civilized. And Priscilla? She had left her husband and was staying with Christian, I was just going to visit them. ‘Priscilla staying with Christian? How remarkable,’ said Hartbourne. Yes, I supposed it was, but it just showed what good friends we all were. In turn I asked Hartbourne about the office. Was that ridiculous committee still sitting? Had Matheson got his promotion yet? Had the new lavatories materialized? Was that comic tea lady still around? Hartbourne remarked that I seemed ‘very fit and relaxed’.
I had indeed decided to go to Notting Hill that afternoon, but I decided to return to my flat first. I had to refresh myself with some silence and solitude and thinking about Julian. So holy men return to temples and crusading knights feed upon the blessed sacrament. I felt a bit inclined to go home and stay home in case she rang up, but I knew this to be a temptation and I resisted it. If all was indeed to be well I must not alter the pattern of my life in any way: apart, that is, from the tidyings and reconcilings which I now felt so sure that I could effect. At a bookshop on the way home I stopped and ordered Arnold’s complete works. There were, of course, far too many to carry, and anyway they were not all in stock. The shopman promised to send them to me soon. Looking at a list, I realized that I had not even read all his books, and some of them I had read so long ago that I could remember nothing about them. How could I judge the man on that basis? I realized that I had been completely unjust. I smiled upon the shopman. ‘Yes, all of them please, every one.’ ‘And the poems, sir?’ ‘Yes.’ I had not even realized that Arnold had published any poems. What a skunk I was! I also purchased the London edition of Shakespeare complete in six volumes, to give to Julian in exchange for her
Hamlet
when the time came, and I went away still smiling.
As I was just turning into the court I saw Rigby, my upstairs neighbour. I stopped him and had begun some cordial conversation about the fine weather when he said, ‘There’s someone waiting outside your door.’ I gasped and excused myself and quickly ran. A man, however, was awaiting me. A well – dressed distinguished – looking figure with a soldierly air.
When he saw me Roger started to say, ‘Look here, before you tell me – ’
‘My dear Roger, come in and have some tea. Where’s Marigold?’
‘I left her in a sort of café down there.’
‘Well, go and get her at once, go on, I’d love to see her again! I’ll be putting the kettle on and putting the tea things out.’
Roger stared and shook his head as if he thought I must be mad, but he went off all the same to fetch Marigold.
Marigold was looking very dressed – up for town with a little blue linen cap and a white linen pinafore dress and a dark blue silk blouse and a rather expensive – looking red, white and blue scarf. She looked a bit like a musical comedy sailor girl. She was rounder however and had the self – conscious self – satisfied pouting stance of the pregnant woman. Her tanned cheeks were deeply ruddy with health and happiness. She smiled all the time with her eyes and one simply could not help smiling back. She must have left a trail of happiness behind her down the street.
‘Marigold, how lovely you look!’ I said.
‘What’s your game?’ said Roger.
‘Sit down, sit down, please forgive me, it’s just that you both look so happy, I can’t help myself. Marigold, will you be mother?’
‘I suppose this is some sort of sick joke?’
‘No, no’! I was serving tea on the mahogany night – table. I had put Julian’s chair well back out of the way.
‘You’ll be turning nasty in a minute.’
‘Roger, please relax, please just talk to me quietly, let’s be gentle and reasonable with each other. I’m very sorry I was so unpleasant to you both down in Bristol. I was upset for Priscilla, I still am, but I don’t regard you as wicked, I know how these things happen.’
Roger grimaced at Marigold. She beamed back. ‘I wanted to put you in the picture,’ he said. ‘And I want you to do something for us, if you will. First of all, here’s this.’ He put a large gaping carrier bag on to the floor beside my feet.
I peered down and then began to dig into it. Necklaces and things. The enamel picture. The little marble, or whatever it was, statuette. Two silver cups, other oddments. ‘That’s good of you, Priscilla will be so pleased. What about the mink?’
‘I was coming to that,’ said Roger. ‘I’m afraid I sold the mink. I’d already sold it when I saw you last. I agreed with Priscilla it was a sort of investment. I’ll let her have half the proceeds. In due course.’
‘She mustn’t worry,’ said Marigold. She had advanced her smartly shod blue patent leather foot up against Roger’s shoe. She kept moving her arm so that her sleeve lightly and rhythmically brushed his.
‘All the jewels are there,’ said Roger, ‘and the little things from her dressing table, and Marigold has packed all the clothes and so on into three trunks. Where shall we send them?’
I wrote down the Notting Hill address.
‘I didn’t pack all the old cosmetics,’ said Marigold, ‘and there were a lot of old suspender belts and things – ’
‘And could you tell Priscilla we want the divorce to get going at once? Naturally I will make her an allowance.’
‘We won’t be poorly off,’ said Marigold, sweeping her sleeve across Roger’s. ‘I shall go on working after the little one is born.’
‘What do you do?’ I asked.
‘I’m a dentist.’
‘Good for you!’ I laughed out of sheer
joie
de
vivre.
Fancy, this charming girl a dentist!
‘You’ve told Priscilla about us, of course?’ said Roger, sedate.
‘Yes, yes. All shall be well and all shall be well, as Julian remarked.’
‘Julian?’
‘Julian Baffin, the daughter of a friend of mine.’

Other books

The Mince Pie Mix-Up by Jennifer Joyce
Anastasia and Her Sisters by Carolyn Meyer
Past Imperfect by Kathleen Hills
Directive 51 by Barnes, John
Disarming Detective by Elizabeth Heiter
A Kindness Cup by Thea Astley
Thrasher by K.S. Smith
Rescue Team by Candace Calvert
The Good Boy by Schwegel, Theresa