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Authors: Anthony Quinn

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‘You had the war,' Freya pointed out.

Jimmy shook his head. ‘But I hardly used it. World events, politics, these are less important to the true diarist than who said what at lunch, and whether X really did cut Y in the street that day. Anyone can write history. But it takes an artist to render gossip and opinion interesting.'

He took a sip of his tea, and continued. He was one of those talkers who saw no reason to share out the conversation, since he regarded his own portion as more entertaining and instructive than anyone else's. But his was not a generous form of sociability; he didn't inspire others to say brilliant things. If he could not dominate a room, he would sooner be out of it.

Fosh, having shot a reel of film, announced that he'd got enough. As he was readying himself to leave he said to Jimmy, ‘Best of luck with
Echoes of Homer
. I look forward to reading it!'

He winked at Freya on his way out. The door closed, and Jimmy pursed his lips in the manner of someone who'd just been done by a three-card trick.

‘A
very
pert fellow, I must say. When he was buttering me up a few minutes ago I assumed he'd at least read the book. In the event he couldn't even remember the title.'

‘I suppose
Echoes of Homer
is a sort of accidental compliment …' she said consolingly.

Jimmy made a little ‘huh' sound. ‘Given how nervous my publishers are about
Ecce Homo
, perhaps I should use it. So … how old is he, your colleague?'

‘Fosh? Oh, mid-thirties, I should say.'

‘Hmm. I wonder what his cock's like.'

Freya stifled a snort of mirth. Jimmy, noticing the shorthand pad she was scribbling on, added, ‘You can strike that last from the record, dear. Don't want to startle the innocent eyes of your readers, do we?'

‘I'm not sure they'd believe their eyes if they saw it,' she said. ‘As a matter of fact I've another friend you, um, admired, when we were at Oxford – Nat Fane.'

‘Ah! Saw him at a dinner they gave me just the other night. Still playing the cleverest boy in the class.'

Freya looked up from her notepad. ‘And yet you're full of praise for him in your book. Didn't you nominate him the best young playwright under forty?'

Jimmy lifted his chin imperiously. ‘Fane's got talent, no question. One could only wish he weren't so prodigal of it. His first couple of plays were remarkable, and he seemed likely to push on to greatness. Alas –' he made an explosive motion with his hand – ‘the playwright has been taken hostage by the controversialist. He appears to have got hold of the idea that he must have
something to say
, as though his audience were waiting for the Great Fane to come down from the mountain and tell us about Suez or race relations or, God help us, the Bomb. Whereas what we really want is a well-made play with characters and situations that intrigue and provoke us.'

‘I don't imagine he'll be bothered with the theatre now that he's writing screenplays for Hollywood.'

‘Ughh,' he exclaimed, wrinkling his nose in distaste. ‘I don't care how many awards it won,
The Hot Number
was a wretched thing. It combined all his very worst faults – glibness, modishness, self-advertisement. A good editor would have taken him in hand. But I fear there's no one brave enough to try.'

At this moment George returned from his errand, Jaffa Cakes in tow. He handed the packet to Jimmy, who emptied half of the biscuits onto a plate and began contentedly feeding them into his mouth; it didn't occur to him to offer Freya one. In the meantime she had spotted a painting on the wall and got up to take a closer inspection. It was a small oil of a man's face in a convex mirror, froggy in aspect yet enchanting for his amused eyes and childlike smile.

‘I've seen this before,' said Freya.

Jimmy paused, and raising himself unsteadily on his cane shuffled over to join her. He stared at the portrait. ‘That is my dearest friend in the world, László Balázsovits. “Was”, I should say. He died four years ago this month. This he bequeathed to me in his will. He had little else …'

Moments passed. He was lost in contemplation, his breathing stertorous. Glancing sideways she saw that tears bulged in his eyes.

‘It's a lovely picture,' said Freya gently, and waited for him to recover his composure. ‘Did you know that my father painted it?'

Jimmy wiped his eyes and replaced his monocle, the better to glare at her. ‘What? Your father, you say – Stephen Wyley?'

She affirmed it with a nod.

‘I see … László was a great admirer of his. I remember how outraged he was over that business with Gerald Carmody, back in the thirties. I'm sure you heard about it.'

Freya had heard: in the autumn of 1936, Stephen had contributed to what he believed was a theatre charity, only for the papers to expose it as a fraudulent cover for a Fascist splinter group. When the identities of the backers came to light, he found his own name among them and was dragged into the ensuing scandal. For a few months he became a pariah. László wrote a letter to
The Times
in his defence. The ironic coda to the story was Stephen's belated discovery of his Jewish ancestry.

‘Yes, and then my dad discovered he was half Jewish himself. He was shocked at first and then quite pleased.'

Jimmy said, ‘I believe László talked to him about it. His own family had been forced to flee some pogrom or other back in the nineteenth century. Lost nearly all their money. But I never knew a man who bore his misfortune so lightly.' He continued to stare at the painting. ‘One has always felt a certain pride in this place as a haven for the émigré. And yet the garden of England is still rank with the weeds of intolerance. I never thought Mosley's idiots would amount to anything, and they didn't, but that strain of xenophobia endures. “Keep Britain White”, indeed. Is
that
what we beat the Nazis for?'

‘The voters of Netherwick may enlighten us on that score.'

‘Hmm? Oh, the by-election … I was listening the other night to that young Labour MP, what's-his-name –'

‘Robert Cosway.'

‘Yes, him. About time someone talked sense on immigration. Met him once – had plenty of charm …'

‘I know,' said Freya, who ever since Robert had become the immigrants' friend had felt the purity of her animus somewhat adulterated. You couldn't straightforwardly despise a champion of the oppressed. She waited for Jimmy to continue his song of praise, but the old man's expression had altered. She wondered for a moment if he was going to speculate about his ‘cock'.

‘Don't quite trust him, though, do you?'

Here was a different music to her ears. ‘No. I don't.'

‘He reminds me rather of an actor. A good one, I should say, got all his lines and gestures down. Yet still one detects in him something … counterfeit. I imagine he'll go far.'

Good old Jimmy, she thought. He hadn't been a critic for nothing. They were on their second pot of tea when George returned with a tray loaded with squat brown bottles. ‘Time for the master's medicine,' he announced, and proceeded to measure out a selection of pills from each bottle. There were a lot of them.

‘I take so many damned pills I've started to rattle,' Jimmy complained.

George, with a little glance over his shoulder at Freya, said, ‘Pills for his asthma, for his blood pressure, for his arthritis. Not forgetting his eyedrops …'

‘For glaucoma,' the patient explained. ‘That would be fate's cruellest trick, turning me blind. An echo of poor old Homer, indeed.'

His tone was at once self-pitying and stoical. Freya saw that some rallying was required: ‘Well, even blindness doesn't stop you being a writer. Milton dictated
Paradise Lost
to his daughters. Maybe George can be your amanuensis.'

‘George? No, no. Anything more than a shopping list is beyond him. I'd be spelling out every word.' George, with a tolerant chuckle, continued counting the pills. ‘It isn't just the eyes. The energy is gone. Time was when I would write from nine in the morning to six or seven in the evening, clattering away at the typewriter. The words
poured
out of me. They don't any more.'

‘Well, instead of writing you'll have more time for living,' said George coaxingly.

Jimmy gave a gloomy shake to his head. ‘I subscribe to the theory that no writer lives absolutely, just for the joy of living. When he stops writing, life becomes practically meaningless. Would Keats have rejoiced in the song of a nightingale, or the brightness of a star, if he hadn't been able to write poetry about 'em? Perhaps he would … But I fear that life cannot be faced without the shield of prose to deflect all the slings and arrows. For sixty years and more I wrote to live – to earn a living – but it would be more truthful to say that I lived to write.'

George tapped the tray, now dotted with pills. ‘Well, while you're still breathing, here's your medicine. Shall I do the drops for you?'

With a flutter of his hand Jimmy dismissed him. He sat there for a moment, looking disconsolate, then slowly lifted his eyes to Freya. ‘And so I return to a condition that becomes, unavoidably, the spiritual home of the aged – we call it, the Dumps.'

Freya pulled a sympathetic expression. ‘There are still reasons to go on.'

‘Really? Name three of 'em.'

‘OK. One – you're not actually blind.' At that Jimmy made a harrumphing noise which seemed to be short for
Is that the best you can do?
I'll have to throw him a bone, she thought. ‘Two – you've written a wonderful memoir.'

This drew an approving grunt. ‘Perhaps you could remind my publishers of that. So far they've spent all of tuppence on promoting it.'

‘Three,' she continued, her eye alighting on his side table just in time, ‘you still have half a packet of Jaffa Cakes left.'

On returning to the flat she gave a start on entering the living room; she still wasn't used to the sight of the television squatting there, like a shiftless and rather sinister house pet. She had written a note to Chrissie thanking her for the gift, though it didn't stop her secretly wishing that she'd sent a fridge instead.

She took her copy of
Ecce Homo
from her bag and opened it. Before leaving she had asked Jimmy to sign it, and while he looked for his spectacles and pen she had one more go at jogging his memory: could he really have forgotten that evening at the Oxford Union when he caved in to her pestering? She would write up an interview with Jessica Vaux and he promised to help her place it at the
Chronicle
. Jimmy listened, and made a shrugging face.

‘What munificence. They should raise a plaque to me. But at my age I can't be expected to remember every instance.' His pen was poised over the title page of his book, and as if to confirm his imperfect recall he said, ‘Your first name again?'

‘Freya,' she replied, ‘– Wyley.'

Jimmy looked up. ‘Yes, I know that. I'm not
senile
.'

The handwriting was tiny, crabbed and wavery. She had not anticipated much warmth in the inscription, but the old man had surprised her.

For Miss Freya Wyley

Who was kind, and admired this book.

James Erskine, London MCMLXII

She had left a bookmark in there, a page torn from her notepad with a telephone number scribbled on it. For a moment she couldn't remember whose it was. Then she did: it was the doctor she had rung a few days ago to arrange the disposal of the unwanted guest in her stomach. He hadn't given her his name, only an address and an appointment for the following Monday.

28

Almost until the point she needed to start getting ready she was in two minds about going. She had rehearsed the arguments in her head all day. If she did go, she would be conceding ground in an estrangement she had nurtured for years. In spite of her avowals that no ‘great scene' of reconciliation was expected, Nancy would count it a victory if she entered her house. Robert, having felt the edge of her asperity that night, would presume that she had at last relented. The thought of that false smile plastered across his face was a strong incentive to stay away.

But if she didn't go it would reflect badly on her, not least because she would be snubbing Nancy's noble effort at fence-mending. And would it not also cast herself as an obsessive keeper of grudges? She would seem perhaps quite pitiable in having neither the capacity to change nor the largeness of soul to forgive. And yet might there not also be something magnificent in her implacable aloofness? Her rejection of them still had meaning; they had done her wrong. If she were to climb down now it would surely diminish that proud flexing of her will eight years ago.

And her unforeseen condition was playing havoc within her. Aside from the weariness, she found herself prey to strange moods: she was skittish, light-headed, forgetful. Before work that morning she had parked the car in an obscure little cul-de-sac and left without walking a witch's circle. She had returned to find a parking ticket and promptly burst into tears. Those fuckers! The first time she had forgotten to walk the circle, and she'd been stung … It took her some moments to calm down. The shadow passenger inside her was the cause of this, there could be no other explanation. She was twenty weeks, a little over. She kept checking herself in the mirror, looking for signs. Perhaps there was a slight thickening here, and here. Yet nobody else had noticed; Nat, Fosh, her dad, Diana, she had seen them all in the last couple of weeks and no one seemed to suspect. There had been no curious looks, no appraising glances.

The only person who knew, apart from the GP, was Chrissie Effingham – which struck her as the oddest thing of all. Chrissie: not a friend, barely more than a stranger, and yet Freya had found herself making a confidante of the girl over breakfast in a caff. Chrissie's big hungry eyes came back to her, accusingly. She had looked so
hurt
when she realised that Freya wasn't going to keep the child. It was the first moment she had felt her resolve wobble. The encounter with Chrissie had jolted her in an unlikely way: she had conceived a tenderness for her that was possibly romantic, and possibly maternal. Such was the disorder in her head she was at a loss to distinguish between them. For the first time in her life she felt not wholly in possession of herself: decisions that she would have made in an instant now loomed before her as perilous leaps into the unknown.

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