Anglo-Saxon Attitudes (20 page)

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Authors: Angus Wilson

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'Oh you won't eat the little bird's eggs!' cried Inge.

'He'd better eat them while he can,' said Gerald; 'they're being prohibited after this year.'

'And I should like
sole mornay
to follow,' added John.

'I shan't have fish,' Robin said, with the importance of the eldest child, 'I will have a steak.'

'And what will you have, Kay? It's your birthday. You choose what you like.' Gerald looked at his leggy daughter with affection. But Kay looked at her mother.

'What shall I have, Mummy?'  she asked.

'Oh! you must not ask me. Ask Papa, who is giving this lovely birthday to a lucky little girl.'

Kay looked at her father obediently. It annoyed Gerald that she apparently had no views of her own, after all she was thirteen, but he guessed the agony this spotlight was causing her and thought it better to order for her. 'Lobster Thermidor,' he said to the waiter. 'There you are, madam,' he said, hating himself for the facetiousness which he could not avoid with his children, 'the lobster is being boiled at your command.' Kay became very red in the face.

'Oh! Gerald, my dear, what have you said?'  cried Inge. 'She will never eat it now. Poor little Kay! You don't want the lobster to be cooked for you, do you, dear?'  Then she whispered fussily to the waiter. 'I've ordered her some fried sole,' she told Gerald.

'Kay's turned red instead of the lobster,' Robin declared with glee.

'Shut up,' said Gerald.

'Poor Robin!' cried Inge, 'you were only teasing, weren't you? You mustn't tease your sister on her birthday, you know. But even so, Kay,
you
mustn't cry just because your brother makes a joke,' she added to her daughter, who was now in tears.

John was waving across the room and smiling with all the charm he already put over at twelve years old. 'There's Auntie Dollie,' he cried. 'Why doesn't she come over?'

Gerald's heart sank; any other interruption but this would have been heaven-sent. 'I expect she is dining with someone else,' he said, without looking round.

'She isn't dining,' John replied. 'She's sitting at one of those long marble-topped tables, drinking. All by herself,' he added precisely. 'She's talking to herself,' he said. 'She oughtn't to do that, ought she, Thingy? People will think she's potty.'

'The French mistress in the form I was in last term talks to herself,' Kay announced. 'We all laugh at her.' Gerald shot her a look of gratitude for the child's tact in changing the conversation; but it was clear that it was a childish rather than a tactful remark, for she added, 'Let's all laugh at Auntie Dollie.'

'Good idea!' cried John. They both laughed loudly, 'Ha! Ha! Ha!'

'Now that is very unkind to laugh at people,' said Inge. 'Auntie Dollie will come over when we have finished our dinner.'

'It's very bad manners to laugh out loud in restaurants,' Robin announced. 'I suppose this
is
rather a good restaurant,' he said conversationally to his father.

Once again Gerald heralded the tact that goes with fifteen years. 'Yes,' he said. 'It used to be very famous when your grandfather was young. All sorts of writers and actors and people came here. But it's still pretty good.'

'I thought so,' said Robin. 'Harkness said his people wouldn't come here because it wasn't good enough. Not that that shows anything. I don't think they're as rich as we are, and anyway; his father has to work for
their
money.' His curiosity satisfied, he sat back.

'And what do you think
your
father does?'  asked Inge in shocked tones.

'He lectures in medieval history,' Robin answered by rote, 'but we don't get much of our money from that. We live on unearned income,' he announced proudly.

'That is no reason to be proud.' Inge was deeply shocked now. 'We hope Robin that you will go into the business with grandfather and then all the money we have will be earned.'

'You
wouldn't be earning it just because Robin was working,' said John loudly.

Inge ruffled his hair. 'Be careful the trolls don't take that quick little tongue of yours.'

Gerald hoped for a moment that John was going to put his tongue out at his mother, but he only put his hand in hers. 'Is my tongue
very
quick?'  he asked.

'As lightning,' said Inge. 'We shall all have to have little lightning-conductors on our hats.'

Kay laughed at her mother's joke until she choked. Robin now had started to stare at Dollie and soon the other two joined him.

'Gerald,' cried Inge in cooing tones, 'go and ask Dollie to have a liqueur with us. Somebody has said some silly thing and now she is shy to speak to me. She looks very unhappy,' she whispered as though Gerald's failure to make Dollie happy was directly answerable to her.

'I don't think that's necessary,' he said. 'She'll come over if she wants to.' But it was too late, for Kay, anxious to please her mother, asked, 'Shall I go and ask her, Mummy? After all it's
my
birthday party.'

In the end, Gerald accompanied his daughter across the great dining-room.

'Good evening, Kay,' said Dollie, trying to bring her fuddled senses to cope with the situation. Her mind reeled round until the centre of everything seemed to be in her mouth. This she contorted into what she hoped was a suitable smile.

'It's my birthday dinner,' said Kay. 'I came to invite you to join us.' She could see that Auntie Dollie was 'not very well' and she put all the sweetness into her little speech that the English mistress had taught her in last term's production of
Mary Rose.

The stilted little elocutionary voice only made Dollie giggle. She was acutely aware that she could not trust herself to walk happily across the room. 'Thank you,' she said, 'I can't come.' Then she stopped dead, for she could think of no reason to give. Gerald desperately announced, 'Auntie Dollie's waiting for someone.'

Dollie smiled at him gratefully, then she sought for something to say to Kay, something funny. 'You shouldn't wear a hat like a jerry on your birthday,' she said.

Every sense in Kay was outraged - to talk of vulgar things like that in public, to make fun of her clothes, to make fun of the school hat. 'It's our
school
hat,' she said. Then, red in the face, she walked back to their table.

'Oh, my God!' said Gerald. 'Whatever made you say that?'

'She's a silly little tike,' said Dollie, 'she needs a good what-for on her behind. I say, I'm most awfully sorry, Gerrie.' She looked at him earnestly.

'Yes, my dear, I'm sure you are. Shall I get you a taxi?'  he asked.

The scene he dreaded, however, was not to be avoided. Tears began to roll down Dollie's cheeks. 'You're not to leave me, Gerrie,' she said. '
You
must take me home.'

'I can't, Dollie, really I can't. You had no right to come here. You knew I was giving Kay her birthday dinner.'

'I tried not to,' said Dollie. She had got to that stage in their relationship when she felt that she must force her prior claim upon Gerald's love and she knew that by doing so she risked losing it altogether. Either seemed better than accepting terms from him. Yet as soon as she took any action, she regretted it. 'I meant to have an evening at home with a book.' And she pictured with longing a series of evenings spent at home with books, anything would be wonderful that excluded all this, that excluded, in fact, Gerald. But as soon as her mind reached this point, her emotions revolted. 'You had no right to leave me this evening,' she said, 'you know I was in a state. You ought to have stayed with me.'

'You promised me that you would go out with Pamela, if you felt like this,' said Gerald. 'It was all fixed.'

'I'm not one of your bloody children to be sent out and told to behave,' Dollie raised her voice.

Gerald sat down on the bench beside her. He took her hand. 'Look,' he said, 'you've got to understand. Some things you've got to put up with. And this is one of them. Kay gets little enough in life. You're entirely selfish.' One of his growing frequent fits of revulsion from her possessed him. 'It's bad enough that I should have lost all real contact with the children. I refuse to be entirely cut off from them because of your lack of self-control. The lesser things have to be sacrificed to the greater.' He spoke with deliberate cruelty. He only did so when, as now, Dollie was too far gone to respond to cold-water shock, however.

She looked at him with a face that was trembling. 'It's no good, she said, 'your talking. Because you're going to take me home.'

'Very well,' said Gerald, 'but I'm not staying at the flat. You realize that.'

Dollie knew, as well as he, that she had won, for she said, 'Of course, this isn't really a scene, you know.' They had got to the stage where 'scenes' were to be computed against her in a list. 'It's only because I'm drunk.'

But they had reckoned without Ingeborg. Before he could make his way to the family table to explain his departure, she had borne down upon them. 'You must go back to the children, Gerald. I will take Dollie back to her flat.'

'Gerries
taking me home,' said Dollie in petulant assertion, but she was no longer shouting.

'No!' said Inge in her soothing voice, 'Gerald is giving Kay her birthday dinner.
I
will take you home, Dollie,' and she began to slip Dollie's coat on her.

Gerald, seeing Dollie's sudden acquiescence, held back his objections. 'What on earth are the children ...'

Inge answered his unfinished question. 'I have told them that Dollie's drunk,' she said.

'Was that necessary?'  Gerald asked angrily.

'Yes, Gerald, it was. They must be told the truth. Besides,' she added, 'they must know the reason why they will not see her any more.' She turned to Dollie. 'You see, Dollie, what comes of behaving like a little child. You frightened my little Kay and I cannot have that. So you will not come to see them and they will not visit you.'

So this, thought Gerald, is where Inge wriggles out of the position her muddled ethics have got her into; but, looking at his wife, he saw that her big blue eyes were sincerely full of tragic compassion for Dollie's deprivation. More surprising to him still, however, was Dollie's reaction. She took Inge's arm and, with a tearful voice, 'Please take me home, Inge,' she said. As they left the restaurant, a huge and a tiny figure, each in the fashionable black cloth coats with fur at shoulders and cuffs, they did not seem the two women with whom he was most intimate, but rather two repellent black shapes from a nightmare. ...

Gerald emerged from his reverie with a feeling of perplexity. It had been doubt of Inge's much-advertised claim to consistent treatment of the children that had led him to recall all this - so much he remembered - and yet what relation was there? If Inge had been inconsistent it was in her treatment of
him,
he thought indignantly, but no more than Dollie had been. They had constantly humiliated him at that time. It was he rather than the children who had suffered. He, in fact, who was the pitiable child       Gerald drew back with disgust from his introspection. It seemed as though some part of his mind was intent on manufacturing causes for self-distaste. The very ease with which that word 'child' had slipped into his thoughts spoke of second childhood. He turned his attention determinedly to the family conversation.

An interlude of purring had succeeded the growls and scratches. Donald's adherence to the firm of Middleton was now the topic, and, since it had been Inge's idea that Robin should give Donald a job, even John was unwilling to criticize. In any case he looked forward with malicious glee to the results of the venture; A satisfied look of favours bestowed had appeared on the faces of all the interested parties. Robin had put that touch of twinkle in the eye into his mask of patronage which made clear that he knew he was acting a little quixotically, was taking one of those calculated risks that show that the industrialist is not always bounded by practical, day-to-day horizons. Donald, too, felt he was conferring a favour, but his mask of intellectual superiority was tempered by a smile that suggested the temerity of his role - how few academicals would have seized this opportunity to season their theory with a pinch of practice. Kay smiled with indulgence as she thought how little her family realized what a brilliant bargain they had bought in Donald. Marie Hélène just smiled as the cultured wife of a brilliant business man. But the most contented smile was Ingeborg's - once again the architect of her family's happiness. She felt that it was her place to say a few words in launching the ship.

'You know, Donald,' she said, 'I believe that you are going to have a wonderful experience. You will find these men and women very alive, very receptive. And you will be doing a very good deed. I remember so well how my father used to tell me of the lectures that he went to when he was a young worker just arrived in Copenhagen. They taught him everything, he said. "Evening classes," he would say, "are the foundations of social democracy."' She smiled as one intellectual to another. Donald did not return the smile, but, as he had promised Kay not to quarrel, he said nothing.

'There you are,' cried John delightedly, 'Donald's Adventures in Webbland. I look forward to hearing how you deal with the Communists in your audience.'

Robin smiled. 'I doubt if Donald will find a lot of Communists at his lectures. I sometimes think half these Communists in the factories have been invented by Radicals like you, John, to make yourselves respectable. I don't know of any at the works. Oh! one or two, perhaps. A lot of the bloody-minded, of course, but that's not the same thing at all. And a few natural anarchists, who I must say,' he leaned back in his chair with broad-minded pride, 'have my fullest respect. They'll slap into you, Donald, I promise you, if you start anything tendentious.'

'Oh! Donald will confine himself to facts, won't you, darling?'  Kay smiled with teasing affection at her husband.

'Selected,' said John with a laugh.

'Yes,' said Donald primly and a little angrily, 'but selected out of respect for human intelligence, not out of a desire to please.'

'Haha!' cried John, delighted at the prospect before them, 'I know, "We're not living in the nineteenth century." '

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