Authors: Nicholas Mosley
Sheila said âThere's no need to push!'
Mrs Washbourne was saying âWhat are you doing here?'
I realised she was talking to me.
Brian Alick said âLet's get out.'
Uncle Bill said âNo.'
I don't know how long all this took. I suppose only a few seconds. Time stretches: then people are at home again in their environment.
Uncle Bill said âTake her upstairs.'
I said âI was going to.'
I thoughtâTill you all came in with your pick-axes and gumboots.
Brian Alick said âAll right.'
Sheila said âWhat are you doing here?'
I realised, after a time, that she too was talking to me.
Mrs Washbourne said âBert, we thought you'd been kidnapped.'
Uncle Bill said âWe'd better have a post-mortem; though no one's actually dead yet, are they?'
Uncle Bill said âBut did, or didn't, anyone see if they got a photograph.'
Brian Alick said âI didn't'
Sheila said âI saw a flash.'
Mrs Washbourne said âFlash is the word.'
Uncle Bill said âConnie!'
We were in the drawing-room on the first floor. Mrs Washbourne was standing by the window and was holding one side of the curtain back as if she were a secret-service agent in a film Sheila and Brian Alick were sitting straight-backed on the sofa.
âThere was definitely a photographer.'
âWho was he, do you know?'
âNot that unattractive photographer.'
âConnie!'
âCan you find out?'
âHow?'
âYou've got contacts, haven't you?'
Uncle Bill was by the fireplace holding a glass of whisky. He had handed round whisky to the others. Every now and then he moved as if he had forgotten his whisky, and drops like a blessing flew out over the carpet.
âWho was supposed to be with Mavis this evening?'
âNo one.'
âWhy not?'
âWhy should they be?'
âI must make it clear we have absolutely no interest in any of this.'
âWe came here to find out about Bert.'
âWhat was it about Bert: Connie?'
I was sitting in a straight-backed chair opposite the fire. I thoughtâI will be here like a secretary just to take things
down: or like that figure on the banks of the Nile to tell the world what are true and what are untrue messages â
âI asked our two friends hereâ'
âSheilaâ'
âBrian Alickâ'
âTo come round?'
âDoes this matter now?'
âOf course.'
âWhy?'
âI don't know if this aspect worries youâ'
âWhat about Mavis â'
âWe understood he hadn't been seenâ'
âWhat about?'
ââfor two days. We came round hereâ'
Aunt Mavis had been taken up to her room. A doctor had been sent for. One of the secretaries had stayed with her: then the rest of us had gathered in the drawing-room as if in the last act of a play about murderers and detectives.
âWhat do you mean he hadn't been seen for two days?'
âHe was here last night. He disappeared.'
âPeople don't just disappear.'
âHe was having dinner.'
âHe went out of the front doorâ'
âI thought you said a window.'
âI said he couldn't have got out of the window.'
âWhy don't you ask him then?'
âAre we here to talk about Bert?'
âThat's exactly what we were supposed to be here for.'
âDid anyone, or not, see whether they got a photograph?'
I thoughtâAre Cabinet meetings like this? People say what they want, and seem to listen; then gas or music comes in through little pipes in the ceiling â
âWhat happened last night?'
âI don't know how much anyone could see through that door.'
âHe was in the kitchen.'
âHow far does a flash reach?'
âI thought you said he was at dinner.'
âThen when he went out of the front doorâ'
âNot out of the windowâ'
âYou could certainly see in through that door.'
âWhy?'
âWhat do you mean why?'
âLook we're not here to talk about Bert.'
âBut we are.'
âBut things have happened since then.'
âI thought you said he was in the house all the time.'
âI said it looked like it.'
âThere was this screech of tyres, and the noise of a car driving away.'
âA screech and a carâ'
âIf he hadn't got out of the window, it looked as if he was in the houseâ'
âBut he wasn't.'
âThere was a man at the door.'
âI thought you said it was a car.'
âI think we're talking about different things.'
âIt wasn't us who wanted to come here you know.'
I thoughtâIs it the point of a committee that it should just go on? Is that why you don't ask me?
Sheila said âCan't you stop the printing of a photograph?'
Brian Alick said âWhat, in this democratic society?'
Mrs Washbourne said âI'm glad you think so.'
Uncle Bill said âHow did you three know each other?'
Mrs Washbourne left the window and came and sat down on the other side of the fire opposite Sheila and Brian Alick.
I thoughtâIt was she who got the information about my friendship with the Trotskyites?
Then Uncle Bill said âWhere were you, Bert?'
I said âWhen?'
He said âToday.'
I said âI was at the Annual General Meeting of the Young Trotskyites.'
Brian Alick said âHe couldn't have been.'
Uncle Bill said âWhy not?'
Brian Alick said âBert, what happened at the AGM?'
Sheila said âWe thought you'd been kidnapped.'
Brian Alick said âWe didn't!'
Mrs Washbourne said âWhat did you think then?'
Sheila said âWe heard a shot: then a car drive away.'
Uncle Bill said âAt the AGM?'
I said âThere was a bomb scare: but nothing happened.'
Brian Alick said âThat's right.'
Mrs Washbourne said âBut that was when he was having dinner here.'
I said âNo, that was the evening before.'
Uncle Bill said âA shot? A bomb scare?'
Sheila said âHe was definitely being followed.'
Brian Alick said âNot by us. He was with us.'
Mrs Washbourne said âI was afraid he might do some injury to himself.'
I opened my mouth to sayâBut I was not being followed! Then it seemed as if I would not stammer, and then that this was not worth saying.
Uncle Bill went to the window and raised a corner of the curtain as if he were a secret-service man looking out.
Brian Alick said âDo they know who we are?'
Mrs Washbourne said âI rang up Sally Rogers.'
Uncle Bill said âWho?'
Sheila said âYou know Sally Rogersâ'
Uncle Bill said âDoes she now!'
I began laughing.
I thoughtâWe are tickled by glands? By tiny angels pushing pumps like men in pubs?
Uncle Bill said âNow let's get this straight. You made contact with our friends here because you thought you had reason to be anxious about Bert. He'd disappeared: out of a kitchen: out of a door: there was a carâSo you two came round hereâ'
I said âI was all right.'
Mrs Washbourne said âI'm sure you were, Bert.'
Uncle Bill said âAnyone want some more?'
âYes please.'
âYes please.'
Uncle Bill handed round the whisky.
He said âThe point is what do we do now.'
After a time Brian Alick said âWhat I don't understand is, if you thought he was in the house all the time, why you telephoned.'
Mrs Washbourne said âBut the point is he wasn't.'
Sheila said âThat's the mystery!'
Uncle Bill said âHow did you put up with your ordeal, Bert, did these fellows give you the electrical treatment, what?'
Brian Alick said âI don't know what effect all this will have on you, but it will certainly embarrass us.'
Mrs Washbourne said âWhen did you last see him?'
I said âWhy do anything?'
I thoughtâIs this like upsetting the chess-table? All the lights in the auditorium coming on?
Uncle Bill said âWhy do anything about what.'
I said âThe photograph. Of Aunt Mavis.'
They all seemed to think.
Then Brian Alick said âYou mean, what can we do about such a photograph anywayâ'
I said âNo, I mean no one will believe it anyway.'
They all seemed to think.
I wonderedâIs this what my sister meant when she said I would become insufferable?
Sheila said âSurely you can find out.'
Mrs Washbourne said âHow?'
I said âPeople only believe what they want to believe. Or what it's in their interests to believe. Whose interests will it be in, for God's sake, to believe a photograph like that?'
I thoughtâSomeone magical?
ThenâThey will think about this for a time: then talk about something different.
I said âThe whole thing will seem to be a joke: and so in some quite different category.'
Uncle Bill said âYou mean do nothing?'
Brian Alick said âAnd it'll fly away?'
I thoughtâAh, you think you're mocking me!
I said âIt'll be like one of those photographs you stick your head through on a pier.'
After a time Mrs Washbourne said âBert!'
Uncle Bill walked round the room with his head down, smiling.
Brian Alick said âIt's true, of course, that one can fake a photograph.'
Sheila said âIndeed.'
Brian Alick said âSheila!'
I said “The point is that people aren't interested in what's true â'
I thoughtâOh keep quiet, this is not a moral, but a theological problem.
Uncle Bill sat down beside Sheila and Brian Alick. He pulled out his pipe.
I said âI mean people have known for years, haven't they, about Aunt Mavis doing things like getting drunk and taking her clothes off? But who on earth has wanted to talk about it?'
Uncle Bill said âYes that's true.'
After a time Mrs Washbourne said âBert, how did you get back into the house then?'
I said âWhen I got out of the kitchen window there was a bit of glass that cracked, so I could put my hand back in through it and get at the latch.'
Uncle Bill said âBut why did you want to?'
I said âBecause at the door there was a policeman.'
Uncle Bill seemed to think about this.
Brian Alick said âThere isn't a policeman at the back?'
Uncle Bill said âWell, it was extremely good of you two to come along!'
Sheila said âOh it's been very nice to see the place really!'
Mrs Washbourne said âHow many other photographs has anyone got by the way?' But no one seemed to want to pay attention to this.
Brian Alick said âWell thanks for the whisky.'
Uncle Bill did his trick of suddenly taking his pipe out of his mouth and looking as if he had broken a tooth and swallowed by mistake some poison hidden in it.
I thoughtâWhat is magical is when what one is talking about at the same time seems to happen; and we are so unused to this, that it is like seeing ourselves looking down at ourselves in the mazeâ
ThenâBut with all this magic, will Aunt Mavis now be able to change: or will Uncle Bill just be all right?
I thoughtâNow carry me, my dark horse, to my beloved!
Dr Anders saidââWere it not for your imagery about birds, I would say that you looked like the cat that has swallowed the canary.'
I had walked all the way to Dr Anders' house and it was as if I were slightly above myself like one of those bird-songs which lead heroes through forests.
I had begun to tell Dr Anders something of what had happened; and then had stopped; as if the theatre had packed up and gone home through lack of interest.
I said âBut I must get out.'
She said âWhere do you want to get to?'
I said âSome university. I don't know.'
She said âWhich?'
I said âAny.'
I thoughtâAnd it is because of lack of interest that there are in my mind no more dull stories about pistols going off and papers being stolen and flashlight photographs being taken: or a son's tearing his eyes out behind closed doors, o my mother.
Dr Anders said âAnd what would you read there?'
I said âI don't know.'
I thoughtâBut now, don't I?
I said âI don't think I want to do philosophy. I think reason is good at saying what things are not, but not good at saying what things are.'
I thoughtâDo words have to wrap round each other like making love; like poetry?
ThenâBut I can do this?
Dr Anders said nothing.
I said âI think I'd like to do biology or chemistry or physics.'
I thoughtâDr Anders' silences are when she is pleased?
She might have been listening to music?
I said âThere was this idea, you know, that I should wait a year before going to university so that I could come to you; to be straightened out; to be cured Well, of course, I'm not cured; but I don't think my stammer will really worry me very much any more, do you?'
I thoughtâIt can accept, can't it, poor thing, that words might press together like making love, like poetry?
I said âThe trouble is, if I went to university, I might not be able to go on coming to you.'
I thoughtâDo I believe this?
AlsoâI'm not doing this just to be nice to her, am I?
I felt suddenly as if I might cry.
She said âHave you heard the results of your exams yet?'