So when the big day of the garden party arrived, I gave Tinky a wash and a good brushing and we set out on the bicycle for the Polliack mansion situated in a new posh suburb named Emmarentia that was miles out of town. As it turned out, it was on five acres of landscaped gardens with a natural stream running through it. When we got to the elaborate iron gates, wrought with a motif of two peacocks with their tail feathers flared, facing each other, the security guard looked highly doubtful, holding his hand up in a command to us to stop. You could see he was thinking, how could a low-down like me with a dog in a box, arriving on an old bicycle, possess an invitation to such a swish affair? Fortunately, moments later, Mr Fisher and his wife arrived in a brand-new Chevrolet. Sticking his head out of the car window, he called, âGlad you and Tinky could make it, Tom!' So the big Afrikaner in a pretend-policeman's uniform reluctantly allowed us through the massive gates and pointed to the garages where he said I must put my bicycle. If only he'd known that he'd been right, I was really and truly an imposter, a mere lyric-spouter and about as far from a musician as you could possibly get.
The garages alone were bigger than Doctor Van Heerden's house, and the house itself was nearly as big as The Boys Farm hostel. Later I would be told it was built in the Spanish colonial style, though when, on one occasion, I mentioned this to Graham Truby, he raised one eyebrow as usual and quipped, âMy dear, pure Hollywood Spanish! Straight off the Paramount set, Ã la Cecil B. De Mille!', whatever that was supposed to mean, other than bitchy. Let me tell you it was a house-and-a-half and I'd never seen better! Though, of course, I didn't see inside.
The gardens, for there appeared to be several, each in a different style, lived up to Bobby's description. Neatly trimmed and flowering hedges divided one garden from another. When eventually I found and entered the maze you could easily imagine how all these little secret nooks tucked away under the stars were perfect for doing âit' on a camomile lawn as soft as a double pile carpet. As for the cabana, it was huge and filled with spare sun lounges and, believe me, you didn't have to have too much imagination to know how they would be employed soon after sunset!
As for the rest of the set-up, it was just the way Bobby said: the marquee with a long table groaning with food, lots of stuff I'd never eaten before, such as lobster and prawns flown up from the Cape that tasted like you wondered what all the fuss was about. But also lots of
really
good things to eat that you'd never get normally. Black waiters in white mandarin-collared jackets with polished brass buttons and cotton gloves served French champagne and any other kind of drink you wanted. I had a Coke and they didn't seem to mind getting it for me specially.
When I arrived, the Bobby Dazzlers were already on the bandstand and were going at it hammer and tongs with people jitterbugging on the dance floor, so I couldn't say hello to Bobby. Apart from Mr Fisher, who must have gone into the house, I didn't know anyone. I was later to discover that the older musicians attended a separate cocktail party. The posh inside-the-house classical-music people, such as hailed from the Johannesburg Symphony Orchestra and the ballet orchestra, naturally wouldn't have been too interested in what was going on in the garden, especially after dark. But I didn't mind being on my own because Tinky proved to be the number-one hit of the day. All the pretty girls â Bobby was right, they were everywhere â wanted to pet him. I'd since learned that smelling of roses didn't mean you were pregnant because if it still did, then every beautiful woman there was going to have a baby. Talk about nice smells around the place!
Tinky must have thought he was back on the pavement outside Park Station begging for alms and photo opportunities for the hooded Frikkie. He'd sit up with his paws held up with his best pleading look accompanied by a soft whimper that was designed to evoke the maximum sympathetic reaction from the punters. Beautiful creatures would come up and kneel down and pat him and say, âWhat an adorable little dog! What's his name?' When this happened, a person could tell them and look them in the face. Which was something someone like me wouldn't normally do, except, of course, when they weren't looking or in the music basement, when I was hiding behind the lyrics of the latest pop song and wasn't being the real me.
I watched the dancing for a bit, but then an older lady came up to me and asked me to dance and said her husband wouldn't dance with her so would I? I felt a real fool. âI'm sorry, madam, but I've got a badly sprained ankle,' I lied. So I had to leave, affecting a pronounced limp in case someone else who might be beautiful asked me. One day you're going to learn to dance, I told myself. Sometimes in the newspapers you'd see these ads for Arthur Murray â âWhy be the one left out of the fun? Learn to dance the Arthur Murray way. Guaranteed results in six easy and exciting lessons!' There was this photograph of a beautiful girl and above her head in quotation marks it said: âWill you dance with me?' I had written this down on the mental list I kept, along with the deadly effect champagne had on girls, as one of the things I was definitely going to do one day.
It was a hot day and the sun hadn't set, but you could see there was a lot of spontaneous laughter going around the place and the girls seemed to be getting very friendly with the guys, grabbing their arms and sometimes putting their heads against their chests. You could feel it in the air that things were about to happen the moment the sun went down.
From all the excitement and the heat Tinky's little tongue was hanging out and he was panting, so we walked through two of the gardens and passed the maze to get to the little stream so he could have a drink. We found this lovely spot with a rock and waterlilies with a tiny fall of water turning the stream into a quietly tinkling brook. It was late afternoon and the sun was now pleasantly warm on my back, and I thought I'd probably had enough of the crowd for a little bit, so Tinky and I decided to sit there for a while. Sometimes it's nice to be just on your own in a pleasant place like that, like some good days at the big rock when you could read a Miss Phillips book or sit beside the creek coming down from the high mountains.
I must have been sitting daydreaming for a while when suddenly I heard this nice voice call, âHello! Would you mind if I joined you?'
I turned around, and I suppose my mouth must have fallen open. I'm not saying she was beautiful because it was more than that, perhaps she wasn't even pretty, she was startling. Jet-black hair, cut almost like a boy's, and green eyes highlighted with what I later learned was eyeliner and mascara to emphasise their vivacious beauty. She also had full lips with a very red lipstick and her face was lightly tanned. I must have looked the full dumbstruck idiot because the next thing she said was, âMove over, handsome.' Then I saw that she was carrying two glasses of champagne. âHere, hold these,' she instructed, holding them out. I accepted the champagne and she sat down beside me and arranged her skirt, then reached out and picked up Tinky and placed him on her lap, natural as anything. Tinky seemed to think it was perfectly normal to be seated in the lap of this astonishingly exotic creature because he simply settled in. She reached out again and took one of the glasses of champagne. âCheers,' she said, holding it out towards me.
What could I possibly do? Here was this startlingly beautiful person, arriving out of the blue, and now sitting so close to me that I could feel the warmth of her thigh, and my first words to her were going to be âEr . . . Miss, I don't drink.'
âCheers,' I replied, touching her champagne glass lightly the way I'd seen it done all afternoon. She took a tiny little sip and I followed suit. It tasted like sour lemonade and, as with the earlier lobster and prawns, I wondered briefly what all the fuss was about. Now my big problem was what to say next. âI'm Tom Fitz-harrumph-saxby,' I said, my voice faltering in the middle of my own surname.
âYes I know, three Steinways for cash already,' she laughed.
I guess I must have turned completely beetroot. Tinky was licking the back of her hand and I wanted to die on the spot. âJune Hayes,' she said, offering me her Tinky-licked hand. âI'm Mr Polliack's granddaughter.'
Now instead of saying âPleased to meet you, June,' I took her hand and blurted out, âBut that's not a Jewish name!'
She smiled and my heart skipped a beat. âIn one of the more stupid of the many mistakes in my life, I was married to a gentile doctor named Hayes.' She laughed. âMy mother liked the doctor bit, but wasn't at all happy about the
goy
. The trouble with Jewish mothers is that they usually turn out to be correct about their daughters and affairs of the heart.'
â
Goy
?'
âIt's a not very polite Yiddish word for a gentile,' she laughed again.
I was still a long way from âY' in Meneer Van Niekerk's
Shorter Oxford English Dictionary
, and my stupid brain couldn't help itself. âYiddish?'
âIt's a
patois
, no, not really, probably a complete language that German and Polish Jews use among themselves.'
Thank God I knew what
patois
meant. âOh,' I replied, continuing my brilliant monosyllabic dialogue.
June Hayes laughed again, then throwing back her head she emptied her champagne glass. âBottoms up, Tom,' she commanded.
I wasn't caught out this time, it was an expression I'd read in some book or another and I knew what it meant. Besides, her meaning was obvious. So I upped my glass and swallowed. Suddenly there was champagne issuing spontaneously in a fine spray from my mouth and bursting through my nostrils in an exit that landed partly in my lap and partly on the rock. âShit!' I cried. Another single word!
âWell, at least that's an exclamation and not a question, Tom,' June Hayes quipped, plainly amused and seemingly not at all concerned with my dreadful champagne accident. âMy turn now, Tom. Is this the first time you've had champagne?'
âYeah, afraid so,' I said, sheepishly, finding my handkerchief and wiping my dripping, snotty nose.
âAny alcohol ever?' I shook my head. âHow old are you, Tom?'
âSeventeen, eighteen next month.' I'd made such a complete balls-up of everything that there seemed no point in lying.
âEighteen, that's a perfect age for a young stud.'
âStud?' Shit, here we go again!
âI tell you what, Tom, why don't we start all over again? You go get two more glasses of champagne and we'll take it from there.'
âTinky, stay,' I commanded. At least I was in control of something around the place. I rose and made my way through the two gardens to the main party area and returned without having spilled a drop.
â
Salut
!' June Hayes said this time as we touched glasses. âJust take it slowly, Tom, it was vulgar of me to quaff it like that.' The smile that followed was stunning, all teeth and mouth and virescent eyes.
âI'm sorry,' I apologised.
âShush! Never say you're sorry, Tom. It's a word that's lost its true meaning. Besides, nobody will believe you. When we're
really
sorry we usually lack the courage to say so.' She paused, taking a sip from her glass. âNow, starting all over again, my name is June Hayes,
née
Polliack, my friends call me Pirrou and when they don't like me, which is quite often, they call me La Pirouette. That's because I can be a spoilt bitch and, besides, I'm a professional ballet dancer. I'd very much like you to call me Pirrou and to try to like me.' She looked at me, tilting her head. âNow, it's your turn, Tom.'
What was I supposed to say? âI'm Tom Fitzsaxby, otherwise known as
Voetsek
the
Rooinek
, world-record-holder of Chinese writing on my bum, internationally successful gospel-tract writer, tone-deaf lyric-spouting phoney pop-music salesman and a member of the brotherhood of derelicts'? âI'm a second-year law student at Wits and in my spare time I work for your grandfather,' I said lamely.
âAnd what do you do for fun, Tom?'
âFun?' Oh, Jesus! Another monosyllabic answer! To my surprise, in the process of all this questioning I had emptied my glass. âShall I get another glass of champagne?' I asked, stupidly examining my empty glass with some bemusement as I hadn't remembered taking a single sip from it.
âYou're making me quaff again, Tom!' Pirrou accused, smiling, then downed her glass instantly and handed it to me. âAfter all, a girl has to protect her virtue.' She glanced at me out of the corner of her beautiful eyes, absently fondling Tinky's ears.
There it was! The deadly effect of champagne on members of the opposite sex working in front of my very eyes! After one glass of sprayed-all-about champagne and another I'd managed to drink down effortlessly, I was feeling quite good and the sour lemonade taste seemed to have completely disappeared.
âAsk them for a bottle of Bollinger, Tom,' Pirrou suggested. Only it was the kind of suggestion that suggested that she expected me definitely to return with the bottle. I wasn't at all sure that I could command sufficient authority to grant her request. But a man has his pride and so off I went through the two gardens again. It was beginning to grow quite dark, but I couldn't hear any moaning and as I passed several hedges and the maze on the third lawn with the double-pile camomile lawn, it was completely silent.