Authors: Gaynor Arnold
âLook, she may be lovely, Radnor, but she's afraid of you, all the same.'
âAfraid?' He seemed genuinely taken aback. âWhat
is
all this nonsense about, Anne? Please come to the point.'
âOkay.' I was in for it now. I took a deep breath and the words came out in a rush. âEvie can't have children. She had a hysterectomy ages ago. I don't know the details. Evie finds it too upsetting to discuss, even with me. And she couldn't face telling
you
at all. So I'm here instead â the fall guy.' I gave a stupid little smile.
He stared at me. He didn't look shocked, or even surprised, although he raked his hair a little with his fingers. âYes, I suspected something like this.'
âYou
knew
?'
âWell, Anne, it's not rocket science. We've been lovers for four years. There must have been something wrong. I'm not totally obtuse.'
âOh, Radnor, why didn't you say? She's been going half-mad about these tests. Afraid you'll dump her, even.'
He frowned at the distasteful word. â
Dump
her?'
âLeave her. Throw her out. You know what I mean.'
âHow badly you think of me, Anne.'
âYou've been known to do it, though, haven't you?'
His eyes deepened with anger, but he said nothing. He was in super-control. âThe difference in this case, Anne, is that Evie is the innocent victim. So I can hardly let her down â even when things are, well, disappointing.' He adjusted a pile of papers a quarter of an inch to the right, and I saw the tightness in his throat.
âDisappointing? Is that all you can say? I thought â she thought â you wanted a child more than anything.'
âYou know I did. You of all people know how
much
I did. But sometimes things don't work out just as we want. Fate takes a hand. Or people help Fate along a little, don't they, Anne?' He gave me a hard look. âBut Evie mustn't worry. You can pass that on, as you seem to be the appointed messenger. Tell her I just don't want to hear any more about it. End of story.'
I was totally perplexed. It was all too easy. But I nodded, grateful. He'd dismissed me; the interview was over; I had actually done it.
I turned to go. But even as I turned, he spoke again. âBut tell me, Anne. Why have you of all people taken it upon yourself to be the bearer of bad news?'
âI told you. Evie asked me.'
âAnd do you do everything she asks?'
âObviously not. But she'd got herself into such a state that I thoughtâ'
âThat you'd come in person and see how I took it.'
âNo, that's not it at all. I'm sorry about it. I really am, Radnor.'
â
Sorry
? I find that hard to believe. Coming from you, after what you did.'
âPlease don't rake that all up.'
âWhy ever not? Why should I spare you? You have a nerve, I must say. Coming here and gloating.'
â
Gloating
? You think I'm gloating?'
âIt seems awfully like it, Anne.'
I sighed. âI knew you'd take it out on me.'
âAre you surprised?'
âNot really. It's what I expected. You've always had to beat me into the ground.'
âYou speak as if I'm some sort of sadist.'
âYes,' I said. âThat's how you appear.'
âWell, appearances can be deceptive, as you full well know. I thought â mistakenly as it seemed â that you loved me once.'
âI did.' The words jumped out unbidden.
âSo why did you see fit to break my heart?'
âI don't know.' I really didn't know any more. His presence confused my thought processes. I was back swimming in a vast emotional sea, feeling the heavy tug of his body as he enclosed me in a drowning embrace. All I could say was: âIt was just too much for me. You were too much for me. You never let me breathe.'
He stared at me, unbelieving. âI see. But that doesn't exactly explain why you killed our baby.'
I could feel the tears collecting behind my eyebrows, my nose, my forehead, making everything ache. âYou can't imagine that I
wanted
to do it.'
âThen, for God's sake, Anne, why did you?'
âI don't know.' I felt unable to account for it, even to myself. âI suppose a baby made everything too complicated. Closed down my options in life.'
âSo you weighed the life of my child against your “options”? Did you never think you were being the slightest bit selfish?'
He was glaring at me from the moral high ground, but I wasn't going to be intimidated. âOf course I was being selfish â I was nineteen, for heaven's sake; I wanted to have a life. And don't imagine I haven't blamed myself ever since â wondering what it would have been like to hold a child in my arms! Don't imagine I don't think of it every day now.' I choked and stopped, ambushed by my tears. âBut I knew you'd never let me go once I had your child.'
âAnd would that have been so bad? Us together for ever?' His voice had softened and he looked at me in his old intense way.
âI don't know, Radnor. I really don't know. But it's all in the past. I made my decision and you made yours.' I felt exhausted; I wanted to go.
But he got up. Came round the desk, eyes fixed on me. Stood over me. âIs it really all in the past?' He grasped my arms, his fingertips finding the old places as if the bruises had never healed.
âPlease don't.' I tried to break away.
âOh? Would your husband not like it? I daresay you run rings around that poor sap of a plumber.'
âDon't call him that.'
Radnor smiled. âI'm so sorry. I beg his pardon. No doubt he has his good points. Although he hasn't given you that longed-for child, I notice.'
âAnd he hasn't turned his back on me, either. He's stuck by me. He's a nice man.'
Radnor went on gripping my arms, and I felt the utter helplessness he always induced when he touched me. I knew I had to resist him, to forget the feel of him, the smell of him, the look of him. I had to turn my mind to Steve â Steve who let me be myself, who made me feel relaxed. Steve who pottered around the house, whistling through his teeth, taking a fag break at the back door, smoke curling away from his face. Steve who turned to me in bed, with his lazy, confiding wink:
Okay, babe?
Radnor's voice was insistent. âNice. Yes, no doubt,
nice
. If that's what you want, Anne. If you want something ordinary. I don't suppose your poor plumber makes many
demands
.'
âLet me go.' My voice was very faint.
He went on holding me. I went on letting him. My head might be remembering Steve, but my body remembered Radnor. I could hear his voice insistently in my head. âThe plumber may have his good points, but I don't suppose he takes your breath away, does he?
Does he, Anne
?' His voice sharp now, probing.
I didn't answer.
He relaxed then, smiled down at me. Such a sweet smile; luminous. And his eyes â like stars in the frost. âAnne,' he said, pulling me close.
I thought the word âstop' in my head. I tried to speak it. But I had no breath. My lungs were full of grief, and love, and regret, and I sank beneath the water line, into the darkness.
Steve and I sit over the remains of the meal. He's on his second fag, but he's still grumpy. I try again.
âOkay, you're right about me getting upset about Radnor. There've always been a lot of unresolved issues.'
âLike why he dumped you and took up with Evie?' Steve's feeling brutal.
âIt didn't happen quite like that.'
âOh? I never knew the full story.'
âThey got together much later â just after I met
you
, in fact. She ran into him in a cake shop.'
âA cake shop?
Radnor
?' Steve looks astounded.
âWell, even Radnor eats cake.' Although I'd wondered about it, myself, questioned how much he'd planned it all. âI admit it was a bit of a surprise. She's hardly his type. Although I suppose any bloke would give his eye teeth to have someone like Evie hanging on his arm.'
Steve grunts. âExcept that Radnor is not
any bloke
, is he? Isn't that what all this fuss has been about?'
âWho can say what people see in each other? He thinks she's perfect.'
âPerfect?' Steve laughs. âIs he completely off his head?'
âEvie's not very complicated. It looks like innocence. It appeals to him.'
Steve is unconvinced. âThat's not the message I've been getting these past weeks. I thought it was the relationship from hell. But maybe I wasn't listening properly. Or I don't have the A-levels to work it out.'
âOh-oh. Your chip is showing again.' I can't help laughing.
Steve laughs too. The atmosphere lightens. I feel able to put my arms round him and not risk being pushed away. âLook, why are we wasting all this time on Evie and Radnor, when
you
are so extraordinarily sexy and nice?' I kiss his ear.
âOh,
nice
! I'm a bit sick of that.'
âIt's a good quality. It'll make you a great dad.' I stroke his dark curls. They're so tight they spring back under my fingers. I love his hair, his dark, smooth skin, his male smell. Even the fags. âI know you're annoyed about it. But seeing Radnor today
did
help. Sorted things out. You know â closure.'
Steve snorts. âClosure! God help us, you sound like Marsha.' He broods a bit, takes time to finish his cigarette, then suddenly blows the last of the smoke into the air. âOkay, Annie-pannie. Let's see if it's worked.' He plants a big sploshy kiss on me. It has a sharp tail of desire in it and I think this might be the night.
Clive is organizing a farewell party. I'm not supposed to know, but there's much rustling of wrapping paper and clinking of bottles in the cubbyhole. âJust a few friends,' says Evie, who has crept in to tell me the wonderful news that Radnor's taking time off to come along too. She goes on again about how Radnor has forgiven her, and how he is in such a good mood these days she can't imagine why she was so worried about telling him.
The last few months I've closed my mind to Radnor, just refused to think about him. I concentrate on Steve. I concentrate on the baby. Positive vibes. Good karma. Willing things to be the way I want.
I was worried about how Evie would take the news, but she's been up for sharing every bit of the experience â making sure I'm taking all the right advice, buying all the right things. She says that being godmother will be much more fun. âAll the gain without the pain, Annie darling! Now doesn't that sound like me?' And she thinks Radnor agrees. âHe's too wrapped up in his work for fatherhood. At least that's what he says. And to be honest I can't imagine him putting up with a load of noise in the house. But he's really pleased about
your
baby, Annie. He's always asking how you are getting on. There's a whole new side to him you just don't know.'
I don't want to know the new side. I feel it will be awfully like the old side. I can't cope with it. And now he's coming to the party, and I know it's significant. He wouldn't come just to stand around talking to people he despises. While Evie chats on, unwrapping lemon Babygros and tiny vests â
Oh, aren't they sweet!
â I feel a cold sensation creep up through my body.
When the time comes, we all cram into the upstairs office â Steve and me, Clive, Richie, Eileen, Luke, Tom, Deirdre, Marsha, Evie â and Radnor. Radnor stands at the back and smiles a lot. Marsha's gobsmacked, whispers aggressively in my ear: âHey, the guy's totally charming. A real pussycat. I think you and Evie have been holding out on me.'
Radnor doesn't say much, doesn't speak to me directly, but I can feel his scary smile all the time. I think of crocodiles and little fishes. I feel exposed. I want Steve to take me away somewhere quiet and safe, but I'm the centre of attention and have to stay and laugh at Clive's jokes. When he's finished saying how much he'll miss me bossing him about at the office, he pops the corks and fills the tall flutes that Eileen's holding out on a wobbly tin tray. He's fussing as usual, getting champagne foam all over his trousers, and before he can organize himself to speak, Radnor raises his glass.
âTo Anne's baby!' he says, standing tall and proud in the middle of the room.
Everyone looks at me. Except for Steve.
Steve looks at Radnor.
LOOKING FOR LESLIE HOWARD
S
eeing him sitting at that awkward corner table made me jump a bit. I normally didn't put customers there unless we were really full. He must have sat himself down when I had my back turned, even though there were lots of empty tables much more convenient. His head was turned away from me, so I couldn't see his face, but his hair was very dark and thick. He still had his overcoat on, and his trilby was placed neatly on the empty chair beside him. He was reading, and the little table lamp threw a small circle of light onto his hands as he held the book.
And that's when I saw his skin. I always notice people's skin. In fact, it's the first thing I notice. His was a lovely golden colour. And I knew it would be soft, too â meltingly soft â just like the kid gloves rich women wear. And his nails were neat and pink as he turned a page with his finger and thumb: a quick, neat movement that made me shiver.
I left off cutting up the Victoria sponge, and squeezed my way through the empty tables until I was standing in front of him â or as far in front of him as I could manage in that corner â with my pad and pencil at the ready, white cuffs well pulled down, collar well pulled up. He didn't move, as if he had no idea anybody was there. I waited, wondering what kind of book he was reading. It looked like a library book, with a dark red cover and very small print. I couldn't read the title. After a few moments standing there like an idiot, I coughed and jiggled the empty chair a bit. And then he looked up. Brown eyes, of course, to go with the golden skin. Soft eyes too, fine and bright, with thick, dark lashes that made his eyes look made-up, as if he had drawn a black line all round them, like a film star. He was so good-looking I could hardly take my eyes off him. But I managed to look nonchalant: âCan I take your order, sir?'
He stared for a moment as though he didn't understand the words, and I thought perhaps he was a foreigner. But when he spoke, it was in perfect English. âI beg your pardon â miles away. Just tea, please.'
âNothing to eat?'
He seemed surprised, and then, âWhy not?' His eyes flicked to the teatime menu in its little silver stand. âWhy don't I have some ⦠hot buttered toast?' It was the first item on the list. And the cheapest.
âCertainly, sir. Strawberry or raspberry?'
He looked perplexed.
âJam's included,' I said.
âIs it? Then I'll have strawberry.' He smiled. He had a beautiful smile â pleasant, interested, but not too familiar. A gentleman's smile, in fact. You could tell he was a gentleman, even though there was this mysterious, foreign look to him. When I came back with the tea and toast, he was deep in the book again. Hardly lifted his eyes when I put down the tray and took off the heavy teapot and hot water jug â just murmured a little sound that might have been âthank you' when I put the plate of toast in front of him. I slid the milk jug next to the teapot and placed the cup and saucer to the right of the toast, turning the cup the right way up, and moving the menu stand to a position near the wall. I placed the jam next to the milk, moved everything round again. I made as much noise as I decently could, hoping he'd look up. All the time I couldn't take my eyes off the beauty of his skin, his narrow face with its long, nice-shaped nose, and his eyelids drawn down slantingly over his eyes. âIs that all right, sir? Anything else?'
He looked up, surprised. As if he'd never seen me before, let alone given me an order; as if I might have been a Martian come to stand in front of him. Then he looked down at the table as if the tea and toast had come from another planet as well; as if he hadn't heard me clash about for five minutes right under his nose. âYes. Thank you,' he said, smiling up at me. âEverything looks very nice.' And he opened his napkin, laid it carefully across his lap and stretched out his beautiful brown hand for the teapot. His skin looked so much like velvet. I couldn't help staring, wishing my own was half as lovely. I wanted to stroke it. And, yes, kiss it, too. Let my lips feel the soft smoothness, let the feel of it go straight to my brain.
I was completely daft about nice-looking men. But it was all in my head, all romance and daydreams; I wasn't a good-time girl who'd flirt with anybody. The man had to be dead right â well-dressed, and well-mannered â or he meant nothing to me. I was always looking out for the perfect gentleman. A man like Leslie Howard, in fact. Leslie was my ideal. I loved all his films. I'd go to the Odeon on my afternoon off and sit through the programme two or three times, until the anthem came up and the lights came on, and I'd walk out in a kind of dream. I kept wishing the men I met in my life were more like Leslie. Most of our customers were genteel, of course, and I'd married myself off to doctors and solicitors on no end of occasions since I'd started work at the hotel. But behind the scenes, there wasn't much choice. I'd given up on the porter's boy by the end of the first week. He liked to tell stupid jokes, and whistled loudly if your petticoat was showing even a little bit. And Mr Reeves and Mr Mullan were far too old for me. I'd once had a fancy for Keith Beddoes, the delivery boy from Smollett's, who winked at me with his arms around a cardboard box full of veg and asked, â
Anything doing, kiddo?
' But in the end, I gave him the cold shoulder. He was good-looking, but a bit full of himself, and I could tell he was just waiting for a chance to pinch my bottom or put his hand up my skirt. I couldn't bear the thought of that. One day, I knew, I was bound to find a man like Leslie. He'd come to the restaurant and our eyes would meet.
Miss Jennings always laughed at my ideas. âThese people â they're ships that pass in the night,' she'd say, as she collected up all the forgotten scarves and umbrellas left behind in the cloakroom. âDon't you get any romantic ideas, Elsie, or you're bound to be disappointed.' And although I loved the idea of two great lit-up liners passing each other, bright white against midnight blue, with me leaping across the gap into the arms of a handsome stranger, I realized that she was right. Most of my customers behaved as if I didn't exist. They came in a rush, taking off coats and gloves, and talked amongst themselves without so much as a glance at me. Just one or two were chatty and used to tell me what they got up to when they weren't tucking into cream teas or crêpes suzette. Mr Reynolds, for example. He came nearly every lunchtime and had a lamb chop or a piece of steak, always with season's vegetables and rice pudding afterwards. He was quite old, with mottled skin like a toad, but always had some story to tell me and didn't seem to notice my neck and hands. âYou always brighten my day, Elsie,' he used to say with a wink. âYou're a lovely girl.'
Did he really think I was lovely? Sometimes I'd try to get a glimpse of my reflection in the floor-length mirror in the lobby and persuade myself I looked normal enough in my tailored black dress and white starched pinny.
Now I hovered over the handsome young man, loath to leave him. It was nice, just to be so close to him, to be breathing the same air. âLet me know if you want anything else, sir. I'll be just here.' I indicated the sideboard where the silver cutlery lay in baskets, where the clean napkins were folded and stacked, where rows of cruets waited to be filled, and where Winnie sat at the cash register totting up the lunchtime takings. It was three o'clock; a quiet time. Lunch had finished and tea had not yet begun. In half an hour Mavis would come on duty, the rush would start and I'd be up to my eyes in orders for Welsh rarebit and âa choice of pastries if you don't mind, Miss'. But in the meantime I could get away with standing at the counter and feasting my eyes on the young man's beauty as he sat there in his heavy coat, idly stirring his tea, his hot buttered toast left untouched in front of him as he devoured the contents of his book instead. I pretended to give an extra shine to the knives and forks as I watched him from the corner of my eye. He went on reading for ages, drinking his tea absent-mindedly, so in the end I went across to him, squeezing again through the empty tables and chairs, my tray like a shield in front of me.
âFinished, sir?'
âBy all means.' He pushed his teacup away, still reading.
âYou haven't touched your toast,' I said, as I removed his plate.
He looked up. Then looked at the toast. Again, that look of surprise, as if he hardly recognized it. âOh dear. I'm afraid I forgot.'
âWell, it's gone cold now.'
âYes, indeed.' He looked at it unhappily; almost guiltily. I felt slightly guilty too, as it had been me that had pushed him into having the toast, and now he had wasted his money. I didn't know if this mattered to him. I couldn't tell if he was well-off or not. His coat looked as if it had been expensive once, and his hat had a nice curl to the brim and, all in all, he had a well-kept kind of look. But I had an idea that money didn't come easily to him, and that he spent it carefully.
âYou were too busy reading,' I said, adding boldly, âIt must be a good book.'
âVery good. Food for the mind. I'll have to make do with that.' He smiled again and my heart fluttered again. But if I'd hoped he would share the contents with me I was disappointed. He closed the book and slid it into his pocket. âHow much do I owe you?'
âTwo and threepence,' I said, tearing his order off my pad. âPay at the desk, sir,' I added as he started to rummage for change in his trousers.
âOf course. But I was looking for â¦' He put a shilling on the tablecloth.
âOh, that's too much!' I cried.
He looked even more surprised than he'd done before. Nobody turns down a tip, especially a generous one.
âI mean, it was my fault you had the toast,' I added lamely.
âNot at all. And it certainly wasn't your fault that I didn't eat it. I'm always letting food go cold. My mother despairs of me.' He was getting up, picking up his trilby, trying to slide his chair back and getting stuck in that awkward corner, chair and table legs tangling in their usual stupid way.
âHere, let me move it.' I reached to pull the table out and as I did so, my sleeves slid up my arms an inch or two. I saw his glance fall on the backs of my hands, my wrists, and I hastily pulled my cuffs back down. âSorry,' I said, feeling the blood pulse in my neck and cheeks.
âNothing to apologize for,' he said, and I didn't know whether he meant he had seen or not seen. Or whether he had seen and forgotten it, as a gentleman should. Then he said, âGood afternoon,' made his way to Winnie's desk and paid quickly before walking out into the lobby. He checked his watch before putting on his hat, descending the hotel steps and turning right. Another ship passed by, I thought.
But after supper, when I was lying on my bed, still in uniform, trying to ignore the sound of Winnie's wireless from next door, I thought about him again. I reckoned he must be five or six years older than me â around twenty or twenty-one. It was difficult to judge his age as he was quite boyish-looking, but when he spoke, it was in a grown-up way that was completely different from Keith and the other lads. He was clearly very clever, because no one read a book â especially such a dull-looking book â in that concentrated kind of way unless they were. And he lived with his mother. I imagined she'd be dark-haired and dark-eyed like him â a foreigner perhaps, come to England for the love of an Englishman but left a widow with an only child and a small private income. I decided his mother would have just enough money to stop her son from having to work, but not enough to allow them to live in style. Their clothes would be good quality but not new, and she would, I thought, do her own cooking, while the young man would sit at the table in their artistic dining room with his nose in a book, letting the food go cold while he read about â what? Not romance, I felt sure. Not Mary Webb, Ethel M. Dell, or American detective stories. Something serious and quiet. Philosophy, perhaps. That was the most serious thing I could think of, although I had no idea what it really was. However, I imagined the young man taking me back to his house in the leafy suburbs and introducing me to a dark-eyed lady with black hair plaited over the top of her head and coloured shawls over her shoulders, and who would keep a gramophone continually on the wind with gypsy music while she presented dish after dish of exotic fare. Hungarian goulash, possibly, like we had in the restaurant sometimes. âMy son is very absent-minded,' she would say. âI despair of him. He needs a good woman to look after him. Someone just like you, Elsie.'
âElsie, can you do me a favour?' It was Miss Jennings, rattling my doorknob. She was always bothering me about something or other at bedtime. I got off the bed and opened the door. She had on her satin dressing gown, as usual, and her hair was wound in pin curls and covered with a heavy-duty net. Her skin was shiny with cold cream and gave off a smell I always thought was too sweet â almost sickly, in fact. âOh, Elsie,' she said, taking my hand in her clammy one. âI've just put my hair in curls and now I need something from the late chemist. Can you be a love and go for me?'
âIt's quarter to ten,' I said grumpily, not wanting to get my swollen feet back into my shoes.
âI know, dear, but it's, you know' â she lowered her voice â â
time of the month
. Come on, Elsie, I'll do the same for you. Hurry up, or they'll be shut.'
So I put on my hat and coat and shoved my feet into shoes that seemed to have shrunk two sizes since I took them off, took the slightly greasy two shilling piece, and scuttled down the back stairs with a bad grace. I liked the chance to be friendly with Miss Jennings, to have cocoa with her and chat about how she did her nails, but sometimes I felt she seemed to be taking advantage of the fact that I was the youngest girl on the staff â and although she always promised she'd make things up to me, somehow she never really did.