The Tightening String

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by Ann Bridge




  THE

  TIGHTENING

  STRING

  A Novel by

  ANN BRIDGE

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  The Tightening String

  This novel records the lives and emotions of a group of English diplomats in Budapest from the Spring of 1940, till the entry of the Germans compels them to leave at Easter 1941: a year full, for them, of the sense of being in a sack of which the string at the neck is drawn tighter and tighter as first Italy enters the War, and then the Germans take over Rumania and Bulgaria. It closes with their crossing the Russian frontier en route for Moscow and the U.S.A. – an episode at once dramatic and distinctly comic. But the characters’ main pre-occupation is less their own predicament than the desperate and sustained endeavour to send food and clothing to the 44,000 British prisoners-of-war in Germany, during those first months when no Red Cross Parcels from England reached the camps. A touching love-story, a personal tragedy, and a disconcerting glimpse of treachery are skilfully interwoven in this revealing book.

  Chapter 1

  The big Legation Humber bowled smoothly along the wide blue road leading out from Budapest to the airport at Buda-Örs. Mrs Eynsham, the Counsellor’s wife, seated in the back, was grateful to the Minister for the loan of it – David, her husband, was using their own car, and she had felt a desperate need that afternoon to get out of the city and among trees and fields and growing things, if only for an hour. So she had telephoned to Sir Hugh, and of course he had said Yes. This was the very end of May 1940, and Rosina Eynsham, like thousands of other English mothers, was in desperation about her son. Dick was in a county regiment, the Glosters; the Belgians had just surrendered, leaving the British left flank in the air; Panzer divisions were fanning out all over northern France, and pressing the English troops back onto the coast; the French were apparently in flight, and the Americans still on a ‘cash-and-carry’ basis.

  Mrs Eynsham always heard whatever news was going, because her daughter Lucilla regularly monitored the huge official wireless, to suck out information for the Bulletin which the Legation daily put out to give the Hungarians accurate news; good or bad, it had to be accurate – and just now it was appalling.

  The car pulled up well short of the airport, at one end of a small rocky ridge clothed with immature pines – the Minister’s chauffeur had often driven Mrs Eynsham here before. She got out, and walked along a small track between the slope of dark trees and the flat land below it, at the further side of which the airfield lay; a tiny yellow lily starred the grass beside the path – absent-mindedly she picked some, thinking all the time of the Stukas dive-bombing those Flemish roads blocked with refugees, and the German artillery pounding the retreating British troops from the rear. Here all was peace; out to her left civilian planes rose from the airfield, or hummed gently down onto it; between, in the soft sunshine, slender highbred horses, yoked to the plough, turned up the rich brown earth in clean shining furrows, or harrowed the sown ground. Mrs Eynsham, born a country-woman, had been astonished when she first came to Hungary not long before to see such horses doing field-work; some of them looked, she told her husband, almost like race-horses. David Eynsham had laughed.

  ‘You’re not so far out, Rosie. Most of them have some Arab blood – they rather fancy that here, even for heavy work, and keep Arab stallions at stud for the peasants’ mares, if they care to use them.’ And later he had driven her out to one of the State-owned stud farms, where in long sheds hundreds of slender nervous Arab mares, their big veins standing out under their delicate skins, suckled their graceful leggy foals. Rosina remembered now, distraught as she was with her personal anxiety, the words the director of the stud had used to describe the qualities which Arab blood gave to horses: ‘Härte, Adel, Dauer’ – firmness, nobility, endurance. Tears sprang to her eyes. Just what Dick and his men needed at this moment – oh, God preserve them all!

  At its further end the little ridge sloped down into broken ground, with oak-scrub and hazel-thickets in the hollows. These were ringing with the song of nightingales; Mrs Eynsham sat down on a bank to listen to the glorious jug-jug-jugging, and ‘the fervour of the four long notes’– but she could only hear guns. Restlessly she got up, and strolled about; then looked at her watch. Yes, she had better go back; it was the Min’s ghastly jour today, and she must change.

  Sir Hugh Billingshurst, the Minister, was a bachelor, who took his duties seriously; when the Eynshams arrived in Budapest he sized up Mrs Eynsham at once as a person who could help him with his official entertaining, and forthwith instituted a weekly At Home day, at which she acted as hostess. It would make a sort of rallying-point for the few British left in Budapest, he explained, in his cool, half-amused manner – and to the Hungarians and the diplomatic corps it was a way, unobtrusively, of showing the flag – ‘quite a small flag5, he had added, with his sidelong smile.’ But it will only come off if you will play. I can’t do it alone.’ And of course Mrs Eynsham, in duty bound, had had to agree to play – only stipulating that this performance should take place in the middle of the week.

  ‘Oh, why? I understand that in old days the Legation jour was always on Monday.’

  ‘Yes, and wreck all our week-ends! No, dear Sir Hugh– of course I’ll do whatever you want, but do let it be on a Wednesday or a Thursday.’ And on Wednesdays, accordingly, the jour took place.

  During the latter part of the phoney war these occasions were not too bad. Sir Hugh provided strong and excellent drinks, and was rather lavish with his nibbles. But even then the jours served as a sort of barometer for the view taken in Central Europe of England’s chances of success– any reverse, such as the sinking of a battleship or the torpedoing of a convoy always reduced the Hungarian attendance considerably. This used to irritate Mrs Eynsham; she liked the Hungarians for their wit and warmth and gaiety, but was impatient of their ambivalent attitude in a conflict where – to her it seemed so simple – human freedom was at stake. But her husband scolded her when she criticised them. ‘Don’t be a fool, Rosina. These people are in an impossible situation – the frontier is only three and a half hours’ drive away! If we were not to win they would be utterly at the Germans’ mercy. You can’t blame them for watching their step.’

  The Eynshams had rented a house in Buda in the same street as the Legation, and barely 100 yards from it; the car dropped her at her door, and when she had changed she stepped along between the pretty old yellow plastered houses and turned in at the big porte-cochère leading through into the large courtyard round which the Legation was built. It was really an old palace dating from the Turkish occupation in the seventeenth century; a reminder of those days remained in the wrought-iron gates of another archway at the further end of the courtyard, giving onto the garden; the rooms opening off this arched passage, and the garden itself, had once constituted the harem-lik, or women’s quarters. Mrs Eynsham however went through a door within the porte-cochère itself and up the broad balustraded stone staircase to a long, wide upper hall off which the main rooms opened – footmen were lurking at the foot of the stairs; Anton, the Viennese butler, waited at the top and showed her into the still-empty drawing-room. ‘I will inform His Excellency,’ he said.

  Mrs Eynsham moved over to the windows and looked across the street at the small greengrocer’s shop exactly opposite. Yes, there they were, as usual,
sitting by the thrown-up windows on the first floor – a small man with a pair of field-glasses, another with a notebook open on the sill; both ready to check on whoever entered the Legation. ‘Schmutz!’ Rosina muttered – she was both emotional and a good linguist.

  ‘My dear, how good and punctual you are,’ Sir Hugh said, coming in. ‘Was it nice out at Buda-Örs?’

  ‘Yes lovely – thank you so much.’ She gestured towards the window. ‘Are those unworthy little spotteurs across the road Gestapo, or just Deuxième Bureau?’

  ‘I simply don’t know – and I think it more prudent not to find out’ he said, with his discreet smile. ‘Is David coming?’

  ‘I don’t know that either’ Rosina replied. Her husband’s allergy to any form of social occasion was one of the many difficulties of her married life – in fact she had become allergic herself to telling white lies in his excuse, merely because he didn’t want to attend some function to which, strictly, he ought to have gone. The jour was not one of these, fortunately.

  ‘Oh well, where should we be without him, whether he comes to parties or not?’ the Minister said. ‘I can’t tell you what it means to me to have someone with his command of this impossible language, and his knowledge of the people. How is his aunt, by the way?’

  An aunt of David Eynsham’s had, rather late in life, married a certain Count Pongracz and gone to live in Hungary; from his preparatory schooldays onwards the boy had stayed with her for long holidays, and thus acquired a mastery of Hungarian very uncommon in western Europe – to say nothing of that peculiar intimacy with a foreign way of life which children find it so easy, and adults so difficult, to achieve.

  ‘She’s getting old–’ Mrs Eynsham was beginning, when Anton announced the first guests.

  The jour was ill-attended, as was only to be expected since things were going so badly for the Allies. There were a few Poles, who had managed to escape to Hungary; some rather pitiful and worried members of the small British colony; a sprinkling of faithful Hungarians who clung to the association with England, come Hell and high water, like the old Marquess Pálfalvy, his son Jenkö, and a Count and Countess Táray – also a few of the Allied diplomats. Mrs Eynsham, who was still a good-looking woman, had put on a really good frock, and moved about, talking cheerfully in English, French and German, trying to bring a still-born party to life. In this effort she was energetically supported by Martha Beckley, whose official job was to edit the Legation Bulletin, but who also acted to some extent as the Minister’s private secretary – a big gaunt black-haired girl in her middle thirties, with an ugly clever face, a lively tongue, and an inexhaustible fund of common sense. She too – in a quite hideous dress– not only mixed with and shifted the rather dreary company about, but occasionally slipped out to tell Anton to put more gin in the cocktails; she really ran Sir Hugh’s household for him. Sir Hugh himself preserved a rather monolithic attitude on such occasions. He stood opposite the door by which people entered, sipping sparingly at a glass of whisky, and shook hands with such of his guests as had the courage to come across to him – but he seldom left his stance except to greet the elderly and important, like the old Markgraf Pálfalvy and the American Minister. These stayed for some time beside him, also drinking whisky – a thing then practically unobtainable in Central Europe except by diplomats; but Sir Hugh went out of his way to go forward and speak courteously to several of the drabber and more discouraged English residents, halted in mid-room.

  Halfway through this wretched entertainment two individuals walked in, a few minutes apart; the appearance of each created an appreciable stir of interest and pleasure. There are people who have this quality, though they are rare; Frances Cornford has described most exquisitely the effect of Sir Philip Sidney’s entrance into a room – the alteration in the whole atmosphere. However neither of these two were men, nor in any sense famous. The first was a very tall girl, beautifully though rather carelessly dressed, with masses of pale gold hair wound closely and unfashionably round her small head, and a classically beautiful face – ‘The Princess Oria Tereny’ Anton announced. She went straight across to Sir Hugh.

  ‘Oh my dear Oria, I had no idea you were up. How delightful to see you. How is your Father?’

  ‘Daddy meant to come, but the Old Boy has kept him. He’s so sorry’ the girl replied, in perfect English. Sir Hugh smiled; he recognised the reference – Prince Willie Tereny, Oria’s Father, always referred to the Regent of Hungary as ‘the Old Boy’.

  ‘Are you up for long? Could you both come to luncheon tomorrow?’ he asked.

  ‘Dear Sir Hugh no, though thank you so much. Daddy has to rush back first thing tomorrow morning. But I popped in; I hoped I might see Lucilla – as well as you. Is she here?’

  ‘Not so far, I don’t think’ the Minister said. ‘I expect she’s glued to that horrible wireless.’

  ‘Oh, what a pity.’ The girl turned and greeted the American Minister and the old Marquess, who kissed her hand – an unusual gesture in Hungary to an unmarried girl; but Oria’s Father was a Durchlaucht, a Prince, though not of royal blood, and an important figure. ‘I will go and see Martha,’ Oria said, and moved away. Even as she did so, Lucilla Eynsham slid into the long drawing-room through a door from the small morning-room at one end. Lucilla presented the greatest possible contrast to Oria Tereny. She was very small indeed, exceedingly slender, with immense grey eyes in an almost colourless face under curly hair of a warm brown, and heavy brown eyebrows– but she was extraordinarily pretty, with a delicate grace of figure and movement that arrested the attention. Sir Hugh always said that Lucilla had ‘a thread of silver’; this perfectly described her curious cool and aloof charm. At her entrance also heads turned, smiles appeared involuntarily on people’s faces – and she too went fearlessly up to Sir Hugh.

  ‘Sorry I’m so late, Min dear – that wretched Betty wasn’t up to time, and I couldn’t leave the machine. Oh, how do you do, Mr Milward? And you, dear Marquess?’ She made a mocking inflection on the last syllable – the old Hungarian laughed and tapped her pale cheek. ‘You are saucy!’ he said, in English as good as her own.

  ‘Yes I know – but you don’t really mind, do you? Dear Min, is Oria here? She rang up to say she might come. Oh yes – there she is; how good.’ Lucilla flitted away.

  ‘Such a pretty child!’ the old Markgraf said benignly. ‘And even her impertinences are well-bred.’

  But the advent of Oria and Lucilla could not really save the party. Mrs Eynsham, in this prolonged act of failure, wondered privately which was worse? – open commiseration on the disastrous news from France, or the polite ignoring of some diplomats. As she took a cocktail from one of the footmen – goodness, how these awful affairs made one want to drink! – an Englishwoman married to a Hungarian came up to her, with the disturbed expression which seemed to be common form today.

  ‘Oh good evening, Mrs Eynsham. I hope you don’t mind my asking, but do you think there’s anything in these rumours in the Hungarian Press about a Scottish regiment being in difficulties on the Flemish coast? You see I have a nephew in the Argylls.’

  ‘I’m so sorry, Mrs Starnberg, but I’ve no idea. I’m not being diplomatic! – only I can’t read Hungarian.’ As she spoke Rosina was conscious of an acute sense of guilt – Lucilla’s fiancé, Hamish MacNeil, was in the Argylls, but in her anxiety about Dick she had quite forgotten him, out at Buda-Ors that afternoon.

  ‘Oh, there’s Mr Milton! Let’s go and ask him – he’s sure to know’ Mrs Starnberg said eagerly.

  ‘Yes, do’ Rosina said. But she let Mrs Starnberg go alone to accost the Press Attaché, who had just come in. She had what she considered good reasons for disliking and distrusting Geoffrey Milton. He was married, but his wife was in England, and no one knew what, exactly, their relations were; meanwhile Budapest gossip, usually as well-informed as it was free, credited him latterly with living with Sonia Marston, an English journalist representing the Anglo-Global News Agency. But recently he had show
n marked signs of pursuing Lucilla, greatly to her Mother’s vexation – married men were the worst of all! And Milton was an obvious womaniser, and ‘lefty’ to boot. Lucilla’s Mother glanced across, with marked distaste, at the tall, dark, handsome but rather fleshy man who now bent his immense melting eyes – like giant gooseberries, she thought irritably – on Mrs Starnberg. He was being polite, she could see – which was something; but the gooseberry eyes strayed down the long narrow room to where Lucilla was laughing with Oria Tereny in a corner.

  It was an understood thing, considerately laid down by the Minister, that except for Martha and Mrs Eynsham the members of the staff were under no obligation to attend the jours – so if the Press Attaché had come, he had come for his own purposes. However these were thwarted, for even as he shook off Mrs Starnberg and began to move down the room, Oria and Lucilla came up it and joined Rosina.

  ‘Daddy is so glad that you will come down on Sunday – Siraly is looking lovely just now’ Oria said.

  ‘Yes – I’m looking forward to it very much. You realise that David can’t come?’ Mrs Eynsham said – her husband would never stay in Hungarian, or indeed any other country-houses if he could avoid it.

  ‘Oh yes; Daddy knows how busy he is’ Oria said with calm politeness.

  ‘Mummy darling, I must flash home and get a bite, and then go on the job’ Lucilla said, giving her Mother a kiss. “Bye.’ ‘Oh, good evening’ she said in a light chilly voice to Milton as he came up. ‘I’m just off.’

  ‘Can I see you home? Good evening, Mrs Eynsham.’

  ‘See me a hundred yards? – what rubbish!’ Lucilla said laughing, and slipped out.

  The party ended at last. It had become a habit for the Minister, Mrs Eynsham, and Martha to repair to the boudoir to conduct a sort of post-mortem on the afternoon over a last whisky, while the men-servants cleared up the drawing-room; they did so now.

 

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