Read The Darling Buds of May Online
Authors: H.E. Bates
âSoda with flavouring,' he said.
âThat sounds quite nice. Perhaps we might have two of â'
Pop was away, pushing through the foggy crowd to the living room, where he presently mixed two Ma Chéries, double strength, adding an extra dash of brandy to hold the feeble things together.
âThere you are. Knock that back.'
The Miss Barnwells, who hardly ever had much lunch on Saturdays, took their glasses, chewing rapidly, and thanked him. The air danced with freckles. He was, they said, infinitely kind.
âI'll keep 'em topped up,' Pop said.
A moment later a firm gentle hand fixed itself to his elbow and drew him away.
âMr Larkin, isn't it?'
A tallish lady in a small grey tweed hat with a peacock feather in it smiled at him over a piece of cheese toast and a glass of champagne.
âLady Bluff-Gore. You remember?'
Pop remembered; they had met occasionally at village Christmas socials.
âAh, yes,' Pop said. âLady Rose.'
âAfraid we don't run across each other very often.'
She smiled again; her ivory teeth were remarkably long and large.
âI hear you made an interesting suggestion to my husband this afternoon.'
âOh! about the house? That's right. Time it was pulled down.'
âSo I heard.'
All afternoon she had been thinking what an interesting suggestion it was to pull the house down. She had so long wanted to pull it down herself.
âWho wants these old places?' Pop said.
Who indeed? she thought. She had so often longed to pull hers down, and all the miles of silly greenhouses, unused stables, and draughty barns. Perhaps if it were pulled down, she thought, they might have a little money in the bank instead of living on overdrafts. Perhaps Rosemary would come back.
Perhaps they could really live in comfort for a change.
âWould it be too much to ask what you feel it's worth?'
âCould take a squint at it tomorrow,' Pop said, âand let you know.'
Nothing like striking the iron while it was hot, Pop thought. That's how he liked to do things. In a couple of hours he could get a rough idea what bricks, tiles, doors, flooring, and hard core he would get out of it. In two shakes he could be on the blower to Freddy Fox and do a deal with Freddy.
âYes, I'll take a squint at it â'
âDo you suppose â could we talk elsewhere?' she said. Her voice was quiet. âIt's a little public here.'
Elsewhere, at Pop's suggestion, was under the walnut tree. The evening was overcast and humid, with a feeling of coming rain. Cuckoos were still calling across the fields in their late bubbling voices and a few people were wandering among Ma's flower-beds, taking the air.
âYou see it wouldn't be at all an easy business to persuade my husband.'
âNo?'
âNot at all an easy man.'
Pop didn't doubt it at all.
âAll the same I think I might persuade him.'
If he could persuade Miss Pilchester to ride the donkey, Pop thought, it ought to be possible to persuade Bluff-Gore to do a little thing like pulling a mansion down. Nothing to it. Perhaps by much the same process too?
âIt's just a thought,' she said, âbut supposing I did?'
âDon't get it,' Pop said.
âMightn't it be an idea to come to some little arrangement? You and I?'
Women were clever, Pop thought. That showed you how clever women were. All the same under their skins. He snagged on now. Lady Five Per Cent he would call her now.
âI get you,' Pop said.
âGood. Shall I let you know when we might have another little talk?'
Back in the smoky, clamorous fog he discovered the Miss Barnwells gazing at empty glasses. How had they liked the Ma Chérie? Quite delicious, they thought; and he went away to get them more.
In the comparative quiet of the sitting room, where it was getting dusk, he got the impression that the entire billiard room would, at any moment, blow up behind him. The place was a whirring dynamo, rapidly running hot.
âAnd what about me?'
It was Miss Pilchester, furtive against the Spanish galleon. Another one come to collect her interest, Pop supposed.
âHaving a nice time?'
âIt'll be nicer when you've kept your promise.'
Might as well get it over, Pop thought.
âLovely party. Such luck with the weather. Best gymkhana we've ever had.'
Pop put down the two Ma Chéries and braced himself. Miss Pilchester simply didn't know how to hold herself for the act of kissing and Pop seized her like a sheaf of corn. There was a momentary bony stir of corsets and Miss Pilchester gave a short palpitating sigh. She had determined, this time, to give everything she'd got.
For all the velvet artistry he put into it Pop could make little impression on lips so well fortified with teeth that he felt they might at any moment crack like walnuts underneath the strain.
âThanks. That was just what the doctor ordered. Time for one more?'
âLast one,' Pop said. âMust get back to the party.'
With thrilling silence Miss Pilchester gave everything she'd got for the second time. It was almost too much for Pop, who throughout the kiss was wondering if, after all, he might indulge in a firework or two. Finally Miss Pilchester broke away, gazing wildly up at him.
âAnd in case I don't get another chance of seeing you alone again, thanks for everything. Marvellous day. All your doing. Simply wouldn't have been anything without you. Best gymkhana we've ever had. And this party. Made me very happy.'
The length of the speech suddenly seemed to take away the rest of her capacity for calm. She gave something like a sob, patted Pop's cheek, and rushed hurriedly away and upstairs, brushing past two women already on their way up. Once more she had forgotten to say how absolutely ghastly everything was.
âYou simply must see the polly,' one woman was saying. Purple and yellow tiles with big blue hollyhocks coming out the top. And pink nymphs on the bath mirror.'
âOh! God!' Miss Pilchester said.
Taking the two Ma Chéries back to the Miss Barnwells Pop found them laughing merrily, chewing at their seventh ham sandwich.
âGoing positively to drag you away if you'll let me.'
The longest, slimmest, coolest hand Pop had ever touched suddenly came and took him sinuously away from the munching Miss Barnwells, now eagerly sipping their second Ma Chéries.
âThey tell me you practically organized this whole bunfight single-handed.'
A tall aristocratically fair girl, so fair that her hair was almost barley-white, with a figure like a reed and enormous pellucid olive eyes, had Pop so transfixed that, for a moment, he was almost unnerved. He had never seen her, or anyone like her, before.
âThe thing positively went like a bomb.'
The cool, long hand still held his own. The large pale eyes, languidly swimming, washed over him an endless stream of softer and softer glances.
âAnd this party. What a slam.'
Her dress was pure clear primrose, with a long V-neck. She wore long transparent earrings that swung about her long neck like dewy pendulums.
âGoing to have a party of my own next week. Say you'll come.'
Pop, who had so far not spoken a word, murmured something about he'd love to, trying at the same time to decide where and when he'd seen this unheralded vision before, deciding finally that he never had.
âGorgeous party. Do you dance at all?'
âUsed to fling 'em up a bit at one time.'
âScream.'
She laughed on clear bell-like notes.
âMy dear. Absolute scream.'
Bewitched, Pop again had nothing to say. A vacuum left by Ma, three or four feet away from him, made him feel quite naked before it filled up again.
âThat donkey ride, they tell me, was your idea. Blistering success.'
Pop, with a certain touch of pride, admitted it.
âThe seven foolish virgins. Scream. Couldn't stop laughing. Practically needed changing â'
Again she laughed on pure bell-like notes, the dewy earrings dancing.
âJust what it needed. They can be absolute stinkers, gymkhanas, don't you think? Everybody jog-trotting round. Fond mothers biting lips because little Waffles doesn't win the trotting on Pretty Boy. Oh! absolute stinkers.'
She held him captured with moist splendid eyes.
âBut you thought of the virgins. That was the stroke. Absolute genius. Absolute scream, the virgins.'
She suddenly gave Pop what he thought was a fleeting sporting wink.
âSo few, after all, aren't there?'
To Pop it now began to seem that he might have met, under the sheer primrose sheath, the dancing earrings, the aristocratic voice, and the shining languid eyes, a character something after his own heart and kind.
âBut seriously, dear man, what I came to say was this. My
name's Angela Snow. Emhurst Valley. We've got one of these pony-trots coming off in August â what say you come over and bring the donkey outfit and make that one go with a bang?'
The word bang made Pop remember something. It was, he thought, the one thing needed to make the day a perfick one.
âLike fireworks?'
âLove 'em. Adore 'em.'
âStay here,' Pop said, âwhile I fetch you a drop more champagne.' He started to struggle through the smoky screen hemming him in on all sides and then remembered something and came back to her. âOr a cocktail? Rather have a cocktail?'
âAdore one. Just what I need.'
âThis way.'
He started to lead the way out to the sitting room, but half way he was stopped by Mr Charlton and Mariette, who said:
âPop, Charley has something he'd like to say to you.'
âNot now,' Pop said. âBusy now.'
âIt's terribly important. It's something he's
got
to ask you.'
Mr Charlton looked unexpectedly strained and tense. Must have found out about the baby, Pop supposed. Pity.
âBe back in five minutes,' he said and followed the tall, reedy, primrose figure into the sitting room.
There, over his Spanish galleon, he asked the dewy, languid girl which she would rather have â Rolls-Royce, Red Bull, or Chauffeur. Red Bull was the blinder, he said.
âRed Bull then, dear,' she said. âWhat names they give them nowadays.'
Pop mixed two double Red Bulls and in the falling twilight the elegant Angela Snow knocked hers back with the coolest speed, like a man.
âOne more of these, dear boy, and I'm ready.'
Pop was ready too. Ten minutes later the first firework went off like a bomb under Ma, who showed hardly any sign of disturbance at all. The two ladies who had been to investigate Ma's impossible bathroom met a Roman Candle on the stairs. The
tall reedy girl put two jumping crackers under the Brigadier's sister and another under Sir George Bluff-Gore. Ma started laughing like a jelly and Pop put a Mighty Atom under the billiard table where it set the glasses ringing like a xylophone. The two Miss Barnwells started giggling uncontrollably and said it reminded them of a pujah in Delhi and Miss Pilchester was heard saying she knew this would happen and that it was absolutely ghastly and she'd hide under the stairs. People started running from the smoky house into the garden, where the tall, languid girl had a big fizzing Catherine Wheel already going on the walnut tree and was now getting ready to put a Roman Candle as near as she could without killing him under a man named Jack Farley, who was a complete slob and had tried to pinch her three times in the tea tent early in the afternoon. A few rockets started shooting up from empty champagne bottles into a sky now summerily dark, cuckoo-less, and completely canopied with cloud. Pop did what he had so long wanted to do and put a beauty under Miss Pilchester, who started shrieking she was burned. Upstairs Primrose, Victoria, and the twins hung out of the bedroom windows shouting, laughing, and eating the day's last ice-cream, potato crisps, and appletart. In the middle of it all Mariette and Mr Charlton tried once again, with little success, to speak with Pop, who was running about the flower beds waving a Golden Rain, calling like a Red Indian, happy as a boy. When finally Pop had thrown the Golden Rain over a damson tree Mr Charlton said:
âPop, I want to speak to you. Ma says I can marry Mariette if you'll let her â'
âPerfick,' Pop said. âLet her? â course I'll let her.'
The tall, willowy girl was everywhere, selecting victims. The sky was comet-bright with sprays of silver stars, rockets, and Golden Rain. A Roman Candle went off with shattering concussion behind the walnut tree and Mr Charlton begged of Pop:
âPop, Ma says if you agree will you announce it? She says now's the perfect time.'
âPerfick it is an' all,' Pop said. âNever thought of that.'
A quarter of an hour later Pop was standing on a chair outside the billiard room, announcing to the gathered guests, in the smoky garden, with a touch of imperial pride in his voice, together with a certain sadness, that Mr Charlton was going to marry his daughter Mariette and had everybody got their glasses filled?
âGive you the toast!' he called into the smoky summer air. âCharley and Mariette.'
As he lifted his glass a stunning explosion split the air, knocking him yards backwards.
âOne for his nob!' Mr Charlton shouted.
âWhat Paddy shot at!' Ma screamed and started choking in helpless laughter.
It was the last devastating Roman Candle of the cool, tall, primrose girl.
âQuite perfect,' she said.
When it was all over, and even television had closed down, Ma and Pop sat alone in the kitchen, Ma now and then shaking all over as she remembered the donkeys, Miss Pilchester, and the way Pop had been blown flat on his back by the Roman Candle.
âNothing at all to eat?' Pop inquired.
âThink there's another apple tart,' Ma said and got up to get it from the fridge. The apple tart was large and puffy, with white castor sugar sprinkled on its lid of crust. With it Ma brought two plates, a knife and, out of sheer habit, the bottle of ketchup. âBy the way, who was that girl in the yellow dress? She was a spark.'