Read The Twyborn Affair Online
Authors: Patrick White
What had been a solemn occasion became the more solemn for an excess of port and an excessive unreality.
When the door was flung open. âI can't bear it any longer. The girls have pissed. Aren't you men ready for your coffee?'
She had stuck the Spanish comb at an even more improbable angle. She had started blinking and expostulating.
âI'm worried about Biffy's cyst. All my little dogs die of cancer. Soon I shall be left aloneâwithout the strength for rearing puppies.'
Cheeks pale by now, her mouth gaped open like a target in a fair.
Surprisingly, Judge Twyborn aimed. âYou'll never be left alone, my dear. There'll be a host of surviving fleasâand probably a paralysed husband.'
Â
On and off the parents had hopes of displaying their son to those they considered their friends: Edward's fellow judges, barristers, doctors, architects, sometimes a leavening of graziers. (âYou'll find country people speak a different language,' Eadie told him, âbut they're warm-hearted, well-meaning' adding in the course of her introductory remarks, which were intended as persuasion, âSome have greater pretensions. Ethel Tucker, for example, is reading Proust, if you can believe, down in the Riverina.')
She would start sighing, almost mewing, before announcing, âWe're having a few close friends to a little
drinks
party. We'd so love it if you'd look in.'
He staved it off. âI don't feel I'm ready. The languages alone.'
She sat looking at him incredulously.
âThough Ethel and I might become mates if we don't rush it.'
âOh, Ethel's no great shakes. Take it from me. We were at school together. Ethel was practically illiterate. I had to write her love-letters for her.'
âWas the marriage a success?'
âMarriage doesn't necessarily come of the love-letters,' she mused.
She looked at him. âYou're not ashamed of us, are you, Eddie?'
Unable to explain the reason for his diffidence, he could only murmur, âTwo such honourable characters ⦠Why should I be?'
She blushed. âI'm not all that honourable. And you sound as legal as your father while pretending not to be.'
Exposure in its most painful form was for some reason delayed till later than he had expected. âIf you don't want to meet anybody else, I must bring you together with my old friend Joanie.'
âJoanie?'
âGolsonâSewell that was.'
âHardly remember. Suppose I doâjust; I was quite small.'
âBut later, surely. You can't have been away all the time at boarding school. She remembers you and is dying to meet you.'
He gave no indication of accepting or refusing.
âShe'll be coming to afternoon tea tomorrow. I do hope you'll make the effort, darling.'
After that she took her dogs into the garden and gave them a good flea-powdering in preparation for Mrs Golson's visit.
Â
The day of the visit turned out heavy: morning yawned through a green-gold late autumn haze; hibiscus pollen clung to the shoulder blundering against those brooding trumpets; the air you breathed felt coated with fur; and under the rose bushes which Mrs Golson must skirt that afternoon, a crop of giant, speckled toadstools had shot from the compost overnight.
At breakfast (Eadie presiding over a battery of shapely but dented Georgian silver, in a steam of strong Darjeeling) the Judge informed them, âI ran into Lushington, lunching yesterday at the Club.' Before revealing the outcome of their meeting, he paused to convey a liberal forkful of kedgeree past the spidery moustache. âHe says,' said the Judge while masticating conscientiously, âhe'll take you on at aânominalâwage. Like many of the rich,' here the Judge defended himself by hunching his shoulders and clamping down on the kedgeree, âGreg Lushington is stingy. Oh, he doesn't
mean
to be. He understands it as thriftâwhich is how he came by what he's got. Thrift is something we poor professional coots are unable to indulge in. We can only aim at retiring early, to cosset investments.' He let out an enormous sigh, and continued munching, stray grains of rice trembling on the tips of the more detached hairs in his moustache.
âSometimes I wonder, darling, whether you are emulating Gladstone.'
âHow?'
âAll thisâmastication.'
He ignored it, while continuing to munch.
âLushington would see you, Eddie. But returned last night to his property.'
âMost of the time half-sloshed,' said Eadie.
âHow do you know?'
âI can tell,' she said, âby instinct.'
Silence fell on a debris of haddock bones and rejected rice. Eadie was entering the desert which lies between the breakfast cuppa and the first snifter.
âLushington says that, as a jackeroo, you'll share a cottage with the managerâwhich, I take it, is meant as compensation for the nominal wage you'll be receiving.'
âFair enough,' Eddie Twyborn heard himself; morning apathy had dulled the glint in his brave idea.
All three Twyborns sank their chins and sipped their strong Darjeeling.
Eddie felt the sweat trickling down his temples.
When he had done all there is to do at that hour he went out and roamed. He took a tram to the city and bought some pencils for which he had no immediate use. Later in the morning he caught sight of the Judge sniffing at cigars in a tobacconist's; later still, his mother buying a card of buttons in a store. So that all three, for the time being, were employed.
He might have evaporated completely towards the time for afternoon tea, if what Eadie would have called his âmorbid streak' had allowed him to resist a glimpse of Joanie Golson. So he hung around the periphery.
The doorbell rang and Mildred in her frills ran to answer.
A breeze had broken out in the garden, stirring the perfumes, the pollens. The harbour had become a sheet of corrugated zinc. Mildred was using a hankie.
âWell, Mildred, how nice to see you. Are you keeping well?'
A grateful sogginess issuing out of the hankie.
âAre
they
all well?'
The felted distances were the more intriguing for remaining invisible; he, the would-be voyeur, preferred to train his mind's eye on the person formed by Mrs Golson's voice.
Eadie, entering from the garden, slipped where marble verged on jarrah.
Joanie must have caught her.
âThank you, darling. Such a stand-by. You're my
rock
!'
âI'd have thought Edward â¦'
âEdward is my judgment.'
A high breathiness in Joanie. âBut rocks suggest bulk, don't they? When I've been at such pains to reduce.'
âOh, you have, of course you have! You're looking positively flimsy, Joanieâin your blueâthat panama so light it's ready to fly out the window.'
âOne never knows how to take you, Eadie.' Mrs Golson sounded peeved.
âTake me? No one has attempted that in years.' Eadie Twyborn too, was breathy, but in the bass, subsiding, it seemed into the sofa's non-existent springs.
Mrs Golson must have subsided shortly after, her impact more audible. âAnyway,
he
is here. Cheer up, Eadie! Am I going to have a glimpse of him?'
âWho can tell?'
Mildred bearing tea-things was competing with a gardenful of birds.
âIt remains to be seen,' Eadie continued cryptically, to keep it from the servants.
âNowhere else,' Mrs Golson vouchsafed, âdoes one find such delicious bread-and-butter rolls.'
âEtty learned them from the nuns.'
As Mildred had withdrawn, the two ladies went into a giggle.
âOh yes,' Mrs Golson gasped, âwe can learn a lot from the nuns, I'm sure.'
After that they must have fallen to counting the crumbs or searching their thoughts, until Eadie embarked on the pedigree of somebody who had married someone.
âDid you know,' Joanie interrupted, âthat Marian is expecting another?'
âYes, Marian's expecting another.'
âDoes she know that Eddie is back?'
âWho can say? I'm too discreet to ask. But the world is full of indiscretion.'
A southerly had risen to trouble the garden; it was bashing the helpless hibiscus trumpets. From where he was stationed, round the corner in the study, he could look out and see flesh already bruised, shredded. Soon he must declare himself, face other damage at the tea-table, for all anybody knew, perhaps even create worse.
So he held back.
âYou know, Eadie, when we were away that time in France, before the War, there were several occasions when I was about to write you a letter.'
âThat was when you were neglecting me.'
âIt would be difficult to say, Eadie, who was neglecting who.'
Half a French door was slammed shut by the mounting gale. Nobody rose to attend to it.
âWas there something specific you had to write about? Or only that you still loved meâand were too cruel to re-assure.'
âOf course I still lovedâI do still love you! Of all people, I think I'm the one who understands you.'
âTo understand a person can make her most unlovable.'
âOh, darling, you do know how to stick the knife in!'
âThen why did you want to write, and didn't?'
âI didn't because I had no concrete evidence.'
âOf what, Joan? Only Edward can be as tiresome.'
âWell, you see, I met this very beautiful, very charming young womanâa Madame Vatatzesâmarried to an elderly, mad Greek.'
âAh, now we're coming to it! You had an affair with this very charming, beautiful young woman. You comforted her in her husband's madness.'
âYou're the one who's mad! I've never been unfaithful to you, darling.'
âWill you give me your hand on it?'
âIt's far too butteryâand far too hotâbut if you must.'
Round the corner in the study Eddie Twyborn was enveloped in this same buttery silence of schoolgirl pacts and womanly frustration. Could he escape the dénouement of then and now?
âIf you didn't have the affair, what else was there to confess, in this letter you didn't write?'
âIt would sound too silly. I couldn't tell! There's nothing to back it up. Only that she had such extraordinary eyes.'
âShe won you over. She seduced you, Joanie.'
âNothing of the sort.'
âIn your thoughts at least.'
The silence was palpitating.
âI don't think you're being honest with me, Joan.'
âI am, I tell you. You're unfair. Well, nobody's completely honest in every corner of her mind. Are you, Eadie?'
Eadie did not answer.
Joanie said, âI don't believe Eddie's going to appear.'
âYou could be right.'
âYou frightened him off.'
âHow?'
âBy wanting to possess him.'
âIsn't he my child?'
The storm broke in the drawing room as against the gale outside in the garden.
âYou do, you know!' Joanie Golson was riding both inner storm and outer gale. âEverybody!' she seemed to exult.
âOh, people are cruel! One only asks for trustâcertainty â¦' There was a terrible glug-glugging, an infernal bath water escaping. âThat's why one keeps dogs, I suppose.'
âOh, darling, don't! Nobody else knows how to hurt.'
âOnly Eddie. Eddie's an expert.'
âYou can depend on me, Eadie darling. Didn't you say I was your rock?'
Shattered by now, he must slip away, regardless of the consequences. The shadow in other people's lives oppressed him as much as the shadow in his ownâthe unpossessed.
He glanced back from the hall and there in the depths of the drawing-room mirror was this inchoate mass of flesh gobbling desperately at flesh. Was he the cause of their Laocoon's breaking up? Nobody could have told, because at this point Eadie kicked the tea-table, the remains of the nuns' bread-and-butter rolls, the uncut jam sandwich, the Georgian family silver lovingly acquired at auctionâall crashing.
âOh God, Joanie, they'll hear! Do help me pick it up. They'll see. Mildred's so sharpâI'd give her the sackâif I thought I'd get anybody else.'
He stole awayâthe word for thieves and ghosts. The bottoms erected between himself and the shambles neither observed nor accused, as hands scrabbled to repair a situation for which he, perhaps, was totally responsible.
Â
As the waitresses, plump or sinewy, wove and interwove in their uniform black with white flashes, the head waiter, that giant currawong, a sheaf of menus tucked into a wing, swirling and descending, in nobody's pay yet open to persuasion, and woe to the heads he might crunch off as a reward for unworldliness (Mr Effans, no other), those seated at Sunday luncheon in this most reputable Sydney hotel should have felt assured, and for the most part were, the napkins so thick and nappy, the excessive cutlery so solid and elaborately incised; you could play a chord or two if you chose on either side of your brown Windsor soup.
In fact Eddie Twyborn did. But the Chabrier did not swirl to the same extent as the head waiter, whose gyrations were constantly bouncing the tips of his tails off the convexity of his splendid calves.
Eadie grumbled. âI don't know why you brought us, Edward. We could have lunched much more happily at home. Instead the servantsâEtty and Thatcher anyway; it's Mildred's afternoon offâwill be eating their heads off at your expense and blaming me for being their mistress.'
âI brought us, my dear,' said the Judge, trying out the surface of his brown Windsor, âfor the sake of old times, and to give our son a little treat.' Here Judge Twyborn might have been blowing on his soup or laughing up his sleeve.
âOld times â¦' Eadie mumbled; then, as though stung by memories, she cried, âI think I was born before my time!' and hit the rim of her plate with her spoon.