Authors: Frank Moorhouse
âMaybe.'
âYou've been rehabilitated. Forgiven. Darling, you're back.'
âSounds like it.'
âThat speech made it feel like the end of the war, didn't it? Where were you when the other one endedâon Armistice Day? Everyone remembers where they were on that day.'
âI was at the Front in France. It was a very strange day indeed.'
âTell me.'
âI was travelling up to a field hospital with an ambulance unit of the 56thâthe London Divisionâand in that last hour before the Armistice was signed and the cease-fire occurred we had a Lance Corporal stretcher-bearer shot dead. We all thought at the time that it was the last shot fired in the war and that he'd been the last person to die in the warâthe worst possible luck. We found out later that all along the line there were cases like that, of men killed in the last minutes.'
Ambrose drifted away into his memories momentarily and then pulled himself back with a smile. âOh, another thingâI cried with anger on Armistice Day.'
âWhy
anger
?'
âAlong with Marshal Pétain and others, I thought it shockingly premature.'
âThe Germans should've been thoroughly beaten?'
âYes.'
âI think it's the only time that a war has stopped too soon.'
âAnd you, Edith? Where were you on Armistice Day?'
âNothing as remarkable as your Armistice Day.'
âTell me your Armistice Day.'
âBy Greenwich Mean Time our 11th of the 11th of the 11th was really in the evening but we celebrated it anyhow at our morning timeâperhaps the news was withheld to synchronise with Europe. I was at Sydney University studying scienceâmy second year. We were in the lab and Elkin, a member of the
Public Issues Society, came in and said that the war was over. He cried. It's disconcerting to see a teacher cry. We stood in our places in our white lab coats, test tubes or whatever in hand, until he waved us out of the room, saying something about there being no lectures that day. Oh â¦'
âWhat?'
âI've just remembered who was beside me during the celebrations later down in Martin Placeâa student named Arthur Tuckerman.'
Scraper's friend.
âYou all right?' Ambrose asked.
âOh, memories from when I was back in Australia and Armistice Dayâall a little too much for me.'
He put an arm around her.
She looked at Ambrose. âThe man ScraperâI told you about the shocking incident. He came back to mind.'
Scraper had joined the day.
âI suppose we've to take whatever memories are handed out to us.'
âIt's sickening. It's as if he's still manipulating me.'
Edith looked around at the people she'd worked with during the war years.
It would be the last day, really, that she would see them in this setting. After San Francisco everything would be back to normal, everyone out of the Library and back to their offices, some of them gone forever and newcomers arriving.
She hesitated. âGoing to the Bavaria will be one of our good memories of this day. I think I should try to control the memories of this day. Maybe do things which will crowd out other parts.'
Jeanne joined them.
âWe were just telling each other about where we were on Armistice Day.'
âI will tell you where I was!' Jeanne said. âBut only over drinks.' She winked.
âLet's go to the Bavaria,' Ambrose said.
Jeanne said. âCome on, Edith, it's our half-holiday. You're appointed Leader of the Fun Club. Let's go.'
Jeanne had hoped to go to San Francisco but wasn't in the team.
Having piled into whatever cars were available, they arrived at the Bavaria and were welcomed in by the new owner and the new staff. There were no staff from the old Bavaria. God knows where they'd ended up.
Everyone exclaimed over the renovations.
Privately, Edith yearned for the smoky, dingy old Bavaria.
She was pleased to again see the Derso and Kelen caricatures of League personalities from before the war.
âI met Robert here,' she said to Ambrose. âHe pursued and, I suppose, courted me here.'
Was that a good memory to have today?
Couldn't be stopped.
She smiled as she recalled one time early in her career as a newly arrived young officer at the League. She herself had designed some stationery stands for the delegates' tables, and had them made and put in place. They'd all been souvenired by the delegates.
But she'd gone to the Bavaria clutching two of the new stationery stands, to find Ambrose and instead found Robert who was writing at a corner table.
âIt is going to happen,' she called to him as she pushed through the crowd.
âWhat's going to happen?' He was deep in self-preoccupation and had, for whatever perverse reason, obviously not been at the concluding meeting of the conference which had renounced war.
âWhat, Edith Campbell Berry, is going to happen?'
She tried to bring her voice to a level of diplomatic calm.
Unpredictably, she felt protective of the worried journalist. She
saw him as a person who had a gloomy pessimism about life. She felt sorry that she had to break the news to him and spoil his hopeless view of things. âThere is going to be a renunciation of warâthe Kellogg-Briand Peace Pact has been initialled.'
He smiled at her. âBierce said peace is a period of cheating between wars.'
âAh, you think nations will cheat on the PactâI see you are a follower of
rebus sic stantibus,'
she said, saying it for the first time. But by saying it to him she had, she thought, neutralised him. She also saw that she was displaying her new diplomatic maxim, seeking his approval.
She must not sit with him. His gaze was transfixing and his manner always reached out at her.
âRebus sic stantibus,'
he repeated, looked up at her again, focusing on her, smiling with approval. âI am relieved that you know
rebus sic stantibus,
Edith Berry, very much relieved.' He returned to his drink. âVery much relieved.'
âYou miss the importance of all this. For the first time, nations are talking about the end of war. Don't you see? With this Pact of Peace a change has happened in the psychology of the world. That is what has happened.'
He did not seem convinced.
âAnd hereâhere is a memento of this historic occasion.' She gave him one of the stationery stands.
He took it, surprised and pleased. He turned it around admiringly.
âI thank you, Edith Berry.'
She broke away from his gaze and left him to go over to Ambrose.
âThey are going to do it,' she said to Ambrose, âgoing to renounce war.'
âI heard. It was buzzing all over the Palais an hour ago.'
âBuy some champagne.'
âI will.'
Edith reminded herself that history was being made and she
was where it was being made. She laughed wryly at her contribution to historyâstationery stands.
Tears came to her eyes again, this time for the wasted effort of her marriage to Robert, for her bad treatment of Ambrose back then, for those innocent days of error.
Was that recollection of Robert going to be part of her memories of this day?
She turned to Ambrose. âYou never seemed jealous of Robert?'
âI was.'
âYou were?'
âTo Robert,' he said.
âTo Robert,' and they touched glasses.
âIn the long run, it turned out you didn't have anything to fear from him.'
âIn the long run? In the long run we are all dead, Edith.'
She hugged Ambrose and then moved off, hugging each of her old friends and colleagues.
She hugged Jeanne and said, âIt's not the same, is it?'
Jeanne looked at her and said, âBetween us?'
She'd meant the Bavaria.
She held Jeanne's hand and looked into her eyes. âMy old university motto is
sidere mens eadem mutato
: “though the sky be changed our spirit is the same ⦔ We are the same, Jeanne.'
âAre we, Edith?'
Edith felt cold. âYes, yes, yes.'
But as she said it, the words fell to the floor.
Jeanne looked wistful.
They hadn't been the same since Avenol. Despite every effort on both their parts to act as if nothing had happened to them back then.
Their masks had remained in place during the war years, and now the masks had fallen off.
Oh hell.
Oh hell.
âWe will make something different now, Jeanne, we will tryâyou'll see. New skies above us now, we will â¦'
They looked into each other's eyes and Edith saw that it was not going to happen.
Another outcome of war. The war had been a time of unfinished business, business buried because of the crisis.
Everything was going to change. Not only with Jeanne.
She looked around the outwardly merry crowd.
Not with Ambrose, that was safeâbut perhaps it, too, would be different?
Some of the crowd began to sing.
She still held Jeanne's hand as she looked around the crowd, but Jeanne's hand seemed cold.
She knew which of those in the crowd would stay on and which would now go home never to returnâgo away to start their ordinary lives which had been postponed during the war.
Go to their banal and happy lives.
Her eyes came back to Jeanne. She'd lost Jeanne.
That couldn't be helped.
They let go of each other's hands.
âGoing back to Paris, Jeanne?'
âAs soon as I can.'
âGood.'
âGo well, Edith.'
âGo well, Jeanne.'
They were both tearful.
Edith turned away from her.
She went back to Ambrose to assure herself that he would not change. There he was in his sardonic, elegant self, chatting with urbanity. He would not change. She kissed his cheek and said that she was going to mingle, and she pushed her way through the crowd to find another drink as she had so many, many times there in the Bavaria, and also to find some more strong, good memories to paste onto the page of this unsettled day.
As the UN train pulled in to San Francisco, Edith looked out of the carriage window and searched for Sweetser's face.
She saw him wearing a red carnation and holding up a placard, saying âWelcome to the League of Nations: Part Two', with their names on it.
He had printed his name at the bottom in large letters.
Perhaps in case no one remembered his face.
She smiled. He was surrounded by others she took to be from the United Nations conference, although she didn't recognise any of them.
The platform was jammed with reception groups meeting the train from New York.
Other conference officials held placards identifying themselves as meeting points for national delegations. Uniformed chauffeurs held name placards or offered limousine service. She turned back to the others.
âThere's something of a reception. Dear Sweetser is holding a placard with our names on it. And his own. How very American.'
âSweetser always feared he would not be recognised,' said
Ambrose, rising to get the briefcases from the overhead rack. âHe reintroduced himself every time one met him.'
Ambrose handed the briefcases to their respective owners.
âSweetser, what a curious man,' Loveday said, rising from his seat, dusting his trousers. âIndispensable, but where does one put him within any given organisation?'
âUndoubtedly he's found a title,' Ambrose said. âAnd while you all discover what that title is, I'll lure a porter or two.'
âI'm glad to have him hereâafter all, he's one of us,' Lester said, also rising from his seat and stretching. âMakes one feel a little more at home.'
âRemember that he's now an employee of the State Department,' Loveday said.
âBut looking after
us
, I hope,' said Lester. âHe and Ruth always had a magnificent table.'
They found their way down the steps, assisted by the black train attendants, out onto the platform.
âAmbrose,' Lester said, âwould you look after any tipping that's necessary, please? I find American tipping something of a puzzle.'
âOf course,' Ambrose said and went off.
Why would he think Ambrose knew about American tipping?
âGerig and Gilchrist are supposed to be here too in some capacity,' Edith said, looking around the platform as they moved towards Sweetser.
She wondered whether there would be the usual bodyguards and all the other American fuss.
She rushed ahead of the others and hugged Sweetser, his placard hard against the back of her head as he pulled her towards him. âOh, Arthur â¦'
âThank God you're here, Edith. Nothing can go wrong now.'
They parted and looked each other over.
âLet's thank the gods that you're here, Arthur. None of us speaks American.'
Her breathing was constricted with emotion. âIt's so grand for us all to be together again,' she said. She felt tearful with the joy of it.
âAnd was that the enigmatic Ambrose I saw darting about?'
âOh yes, Ambrose is very much here.'
âI am told through the grapevine,' Sweetser said, âthat you and he are ⦠companions, still? And he's working with the delegation?'
âNot
with
the delegation as such. He's my
aide-de-camp
.'
Sweetser put on his face of discretion and nodded knowingly.
âOh, there are no secrets, Arthur,' she said. âHe's more an
attendant lord
, I suppose.'
They both watched as Ambrose herded up porters. âHe's been magnificent behind the scenesâhis remarkable connections and so forth. With me, the office really gets two for the price of one.'
âI remember him in the old days when we began the Leagueâhe was almost second-in-command. He came over to Geneva on the League train from London in 1921. Now he repeats history by coming to San Francisco on the UN train. He's a damned fine fellow.'
âHe is, indeed, a damned fine fellow.'
âAnd still a spy?' Sweetser said, grinning.
âOh, indubitably.'
âFeel in retrospect that he was badly treated,' Sweetser said.
She linked arms with Arthur. âThe English never believed he was a spy.'
Arthur laughed. âAnd now, as it turns out, everyone was a spy during the war. We all ended up being spies.'
Lester and Loveday reached them. Edith could see the joy in the reunion of the men, the aching bonds which gripped them as they shook hands using both their hands in that
positive men's way, and then thumping each other's backs. They had put civilisation together after the first war and had then seen that civilisation fall apart.
Now they were here to put it back together again.
The men talked excitedly with much laughter.
âNot only is America in the League: the League is now in America!' Sweetser said, as usual implying that he'd at last brought it off. Maybe he hadâat last.
âWell said.'
She was still tight with emotion and tears, but she turned back to business and looked at the other people around Sweetser and then realised that perhaps they were not all with Sweetser, that some were simply part of the throng. There were officials and people in military uniforms galore still milling about on the platform.
âWhich are our people?' she asked Sweetser, quietly.
She could see that Lester and Loveday were also interested in who was there.
Arthur said, âFor now, I'm it.' He did an imitation of a tap dance and bowed. âI'm your reception partyâthe formalities come later.'
âThat's a relief,' said Lester.
âWe're working with an improvised staff,' Sweetser said. âThis is not Genevaâno well-oiled machine hereâ
yet
. There is great chaos, as you would expect.'
Lester and Loveday were looking about them. âWe saw Victor Hoo on the train. Only face we knew.'
âNaturally there'll be the official stuff, but not on the railway platform. I have cars waiting. I'll find a porter.'
âAmbrose is on that mission. And here he comes,' Edith said.
Ambrose arrived carrying newspapers and magazines, followed by two black porters with red caps and trolleys.
He and Sweetser embraced, which she found touchingly intimate, holding the embrace, their cheeks touching, Arthur patting Ambrose's back.
Then Arthur pulled away, saying, âEnough is enough, Ambroseâpeople will talk.'
âYou look well, Arthur,' Ambrose said, his voice tinged with emotion.
âOh, I'm still overeating.'
âSince the end of the war we are all overeating.'
Ambrose said that the porters would get their luggage and the boxes of official documents and so on.
Loveday said, âHave they provided cars for us?'
He probably expected brass bands, Edith thought.
Sweetser overheard him and said, âIt's all hell here at present, AlexâI collared some taxis to take us to the hotel. It's sheer hell in this city at present. Let's get you settled.'
She decided to let things just happen. âYes, let's get to the hotelâI'm dying for a hot bath.'
âI could do with a gin,' said Ambrose.
âWe'll find you some gin, Ambrose. Instead of tonic or whatever pretence of moderation it is you put in your gin, we'll just drop in an olive and a dash of vermouth and call it a martini.'
âSounds fine to me,' Ambrose said. âThough I doubt that I need the olive.'
Sweetser ushered Loveday and Lester towards the exit.
Ambrose shepherded the porters as they made their way out of the station.
In the drive to the hotel, Lester told Arthur about the UN train trip across from New York. âIt was very moving. At every stop people gathered to cheer us on. I don't mean that they were actually cheering the League. They wouldn't have identified us as such, but the whole idea of the new United Nationsâcitizens, the mayor or city manager, were all out at each station. We sometimes got out to stretch our legs, talk with them. Wonderful to see.'
âWe're making history here,' Sweetser said fervently.
Everyone laughed and Sweetser looked at them, not understanding the source of the humour.
As they pulled into the hotel, Sweetser, obviously heading off their disappointment, said, âNow remember, accommodation is scarce. The Soviets demanded the best, the Americans took the best, the French found the bestâchaos, a dreadful scrambleâbut this is a decent enough hotel, and much better than it looks.'
âAnd the British are made think they
have
the best,' said Ambrose.
âRight!' said Sweetser, laughing.
Loveday asked whether Lester and he needed to be briefed.
âAll that comes later, Alex. The official stuff all comes later,' Arthur said. âFor now, relax. Take in the sights.'
Edith and Arthur and Ambrose exchanged bleak glances. The hotel was less than first class. In New York they'd stayed in style at the Taft.
Sweetser said, âI know the manager personallyâTremain Loudâyou'll be well looked after. You'll be treated like royalty. Which you are.'
Aged bell boys helped Ambrose with the luggage. âYou'll be heartily tired of American hospitality by the end of it all, believe me.'
They went into the hotel lobby which smelled of the human comings and goings of many years.
âGet washed up, refresh yourself, get rested,' Sweetser said. âI'll see you all tomorrow some time. Anything you needâask for Tremain. Mention my name.'
Edith lay in the bath, glad of the oodles of American hot water, a gin and tonic water on the bath ledge.
They had not taken Sweetser's advice about martinis.
âWould you have expected someone to be either at the
railway station or in the lobby?' she called to Ambrose in the other room.
âAs Arthur said, General Chaos was there to meet us. There'll be the usual banquets and balls. As Jane Austen said, “All those balls.” '
âI don't believe she said that. At least there are flowers in the room.'
She heard him repeat âAll those balls.'
She smiled. âI heard it the first time, darling, and not for the first time. I hope you are keeping in mind that Americans are never
risqué
. Was there anything at reception when you registered us at the reception desk?'
âNothing official. Just a sewing kit from the management. One for each of us. Lester and Loveday took theirs. I left ours. Didn't see us doing much sewing.'
Over breakfast on the first day of the conference, their spirits were high. The four of them ate their American breakfast heartily.
âHave come to enjoy an American breakfast,' Ambrose said, âAt least, that is, once a day.'
âThere is more national difference expressed in breakfast than any other meal,' Lester said. âMust say something about how different nations view the demands of a coming day.'
âI cannot understand the strange idea that it's the most important meal,' said Ambrose. âSurely dinner is the most important meal of the day? Or one could argue that all meals are equally important. I would've thought that it could be argued that the results of a good dinner carried over to the next day, so to speak.'
âWe should have had Health Section do a study of breakfasts,' Loveday said.
âThey did,' Edith said. âThe Nutrition Report, 1937.'
âThe more I think about it,' said Ambrose, âI have never
done anything important at breakfast. Lunch, yes. Dinner, yes. Breakfast never.'
âIs Arthur picking us up?' Loveday asked.
Edith said she understood entry passes for the seating at the opening session of the UN Assembly would be hand-delivered.
âAre they not calling for us?' asked Loveday peevishly.
âI have a feeling that we are to make our own way,' Edith said.
âSurely they'll send cars?' Loveday said again.
âOh yes,' she said, making a note to herself to call Sweetser about transport.