Old Sins

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Old Sins Page 14

by Penny Vincenzi


  What he did not understand about Eliza’s interest in politics was that it was an area that, in their marriage, she could stake a claim in, something she could know about and enjoy that he did not. Letitia had been quite right, she did feel excluded, ostracized even, from the company, and she was often, before she made friends of her own, lonely, and worse than that, diminished. She tried to become involved, to make Julian discuss matters with her, take her on trips, but he discouraged her, first gently, then more vigorously: ‘The business is mine, Eliza my darling, my problem, my concern; yours is our home, and our life together, and in due course I hope, our family. I need a refuge from my work, and I want you to provide it; I really would not want you to be distracted from anything so important.’

  ‘But I feel shut out,’ said Eliza fretfully. ‘Your work is so important to you, I want to share it.’

  Julian looked at her almost coldly. ‘Eliza, you couldn’t. It’s too complex, and it is not what I want from you. Now please, let us not have any more of this.’

  And so she gave up.

  She learnt very quickly too that she was not going to find very much true friendship from within Julian’s circle. The women were all ten years at least older than her, and although charming and outwardly friendly found very little to say to her; they were worlds of experience away from her, they found her lightweight, boring even, and although the Morells were very generously entertained as a couple and people flocked to their house and their parties, Eliza found herself excluded from the gossipy women’s lunches, the time-killing activities they all went in for – riding in the park, playing tennis, running various charity committees. She had two or three friends from her debutante days, and she saw them, and talked to them, but they had all married much younger men, who Julian had no time for and did not enjoy seeing at his dinner table, and so she kept the two elements in her life separate, and tried not to notice how lonely she often felt. But her political friends were a great comfort to her, she felt they proved to herself as well as to Julian that she was not simply an empty-headed foolish child, incapable of coherent thought; and she also found their company a great deal more amusing and stimulating than that of the businessmen and their wives, and the partying, globetrotting socialites that Julian chose to surround himself with.

  By the time they had been married a year, Eliza was learning disillusionment. In many ways her life was still a fairy tale; she was rich, indulged, admired. But her loneliness, her sense of not belonging, went beyond their social life and even Julian’s addiction to his work. She felt excluded from him, from his most intimate self; looking back over their courtship, she could see that while he had listened to her endlessly, encouraged her to talk, showed a huge interest in everything to do with her, he rarely talked about himself. In the self-obsession of youth and love she had not noticed it at the time; six months into her marriage, she thought of little else. She would try to talk to him, to persuade him to communicate with her, to share his thoughts, his hopes, his anxieties; but she failed. He would chat to her, gossip even, talk about their friends, the house, the antique cars that were his new hobby, a trip they were planning; but from anything more personal, meaningful, he kept determinedly, almost forbiddingly silent. It first saddened, then enraged her; in time she learnt to live with it, but never to accept it. She felt he saw her as empty-headed, frivolous, stupid even, quite incapable of sharing his more serious concerns, and it was a hard thing to bear. In theory he was an ideal husband: he gave her everything she wanted, he was affectionate, he frequently told her she was playing her new role wonderfully well, commenting admiringly on her clothes, her decor, her talent for entertaining, her skill at running the household; and he continued to be a superb lover; if only, Eliza thought sadly, the rest of their life was as happy, as close, as complete, as the part that took place in their bedroom. Even that seemed to her to have its imperfections, its shortcomings; the long, charming, amusing conversations they had once had, when they had finished making love, were becoming shorter, less frequent; Julian would say he needed to sleep, that he had an early meeting, a demanding day’s hunting, that he was tired from a trip, and gently discourage her from talking.

  She had nothing to complain about, she knew; many, most women would envy her; but she was not properly happy. She did not think Julian was having an affair with anybody else, although she sometimes thought that even if he did she could feel little more excluded, more shut out than she did already. But she did not feel loved, as she had expected, hoped to feel; petted, pampered, spoilt, but not loved, not cared for, and most importantly of all, not considered. It was not a very comfortable or comforting state of affairs.

  She was surprisingly busy; as well as running the London house, she and Julian had also bought a house in West Sussex, Lower Marriotts Manor, a perfect, medium-sized Queen Anne house; it had fifteen bedrooms, a glorious drawing room, and a perfect dining room, exquisitely carved ceilings and cornices that featured prominently in several books on English architecture, forty acres, a garden designed by Capability Brown, and very shortly after they bought it, a stable block designed by Michael McCarthy, an Irish architect who had made a fortune out of the simple notion of designing stables for the rich that looked just a little more than a set of stables. The stables and yard at Marriotts were a facsimile of Queen Anne stables, lofty, vaulted and quite lovely. The horses which Julian placed in them were quite lovely too, five hunters and five thoroughbreds, for he had developed a passion for racing, and was planning to breed as well. Eliza had a horse of her own, an exquisite Arab mare called Clementine (after the Prime Minister’s wife) who she flatly refused to take on to the hunting field.

  ‘I want riding to be a pleasure,’ she said to Julian firmly, ‘for both me and Clementine, and we are both much happier out on the downs on our own.’

  ‘My darling, you can ride her round and round the front lawn, if that will make you happy,’ he said, ‘as long as you don’t begrudge me my hunting. So many wives get jealous.’

  ‘Oh, Julian, I have quite enough to keep me jealous without adding hunting to the list,’ said Eliza lightly; Julian looked at her sharply, but her face was amusedly blank, her eyes unreadable.

  Hunting weekends at Marriotts were legendary; right through the winter the Morells entertained, large house-parties to which came not only the hunting community but Julian’s business associates, many of whom had not been any closer to a horse than donkey riding in their childhood, and their socially climbing wives, all thrilled to be included in what they felt was a very aristocratic occasion, but totally unequipped to participate. Because she did not hunt herself, Eliza found herself forced to entertain these people, and on many a magically beautiful winter afternoon, the red sun burning determinedly through the white misty cold, the trees carving their stark black shapes out of the grey-blue sky, when she longed to be out alone with Clementine she found herself walking along the lanes with two or three women, listening to their accounts of purchasing their winter wardrobes or their cruise wear, or playing backgammon indoors with their loud-voiced, red-faced husbands.

  She loved Marriotts, rather to her own surprise; she had thought to have become a completely urban person, but she found herself missing the rolling downs of Wiltshire, the huge skies, the soft, clear air, and she looked forward to the weekends more than she would have imagined – especially the rare occasions when she and Julian were alone, and could ride together on Sundays, chatting, laughing, absolutely at peace, in a way that was becoming more and more rare.

  In the summer of 1955, though, she had to stop riding altogether; she was pregnant.

  Eliza had very mixed feelings about her pregnancy. She didn’t like babies at all, or small children; she had no desire whatsoever to feel sick or grow fat, and she resented the curtailment of her freedom for nine months. Nevertheless she had not been brought up the daughter of even a minor strand of the British aristocracy without knowing perfectly well that it was the function of a wife to bear sons, and espec
ially the wife of a rich man; she had a strong sense of the continuity of names and lines and she was still country girl enough to be totally relaxed and indeed cheerful at the actual concept of giving birth and mothering.

  As it happened, relaxed and cheerful though she might have been, she was so tiny, so sliver-thin, that Rosamund Morell was born by Caesarean section after almost two days of quite excruciating labour, and Julian was told firmly and bluntly by the obstetrician that he was lucky his wife had not died, and that another child would undoubtedly kill her. Rosamund was therefore an important baby; the heiress apparent to a fortune, and an empire, with no fear of being usurped by a brother at any future date, and the unrivalled focus of her parents’ love and attention.

  The Connection One

  Los Angeles, 1957

  LEE WILBURN HAD just come in from the beach when the phone rang. It was long distance. ‘Santa Monica 471227? Mrs Wilburn? Will you take a person to person call from London? From Mr Hugo Dashwood?’

  ‘Yes, yes I will,’ said Lee, pushing her hair back from her face, feeling her heart pound, her knees suddenly limp.

  ‘Lee? Hello. It’s Hugo Dashwood. How are you?’

  ‘I’m fine, Hugo, thank you, how are you?’

  ‘Very very well. I’m coming to New York next week. Can I come over the following weekend and see you both? Will Dean be there?’

  Lee thought very quickly. ‘Yes, to both. You’ll be very welcome. Come on Friday night if you can get away. I’ll – we’ll look forward to seeing you.’

  ‘Yes, I should make it. I have an early meeting on Friday morning, then I could leave. I’ll get a car from the airport, don’t worry about meeting me.’

  ‘OK. Bye, Hugo.’

  ‘Goodbye, Lee. And thank you.’

  She put the phone down; she was shaking all over. That had done it; there was no going back now.

  She walked slowly through into the kitchen and poured herself a cold beer. Then she went into the living room, opened the full-length windows and looked out at the ocean for a long time. It was the most perfect of Californian evenings, the sky a bright, almost translucent blue, the sun sending a golden dusting on the sea. The beach was still busy, the white sand covered with people; the surf was gentle, almost slow-motion. Lee never got tired of this view, this time; relaxed and at peace from the sun and the sea, she would sit there, enjoying it, drinking it in, and go into an almost trancelike state, wishing she need never move again. A lot of her friends were taking up yoga and meditation but she never could see the point in that. Half an hour on the patio with a beer and the ocean, and she felt as relaxed as anybody.

  The phone rang again, disturbing her peace; she frowned, went into the kitchen and picked it up, aiming her beer bottle at the trash can as she passed. It missed, and slithered into the corner.

  ‘Hi,’ she said into the phone.

  ‘Lee? Hi, honey, it’s Dean. You OK? I’ll be home in a couple of hours. It’s going to be a great weekend. You missed me? I sure have missed you.’

  ‘You know I have, Dean,’ said Lee, smiling into the phone, and it was true, she had. ‘And I have your favourite dinner for you.’

  ‘You’re my favourite dinner. Now honey, you haven’t forgotten I’ll be away next weekend, have you? I’ve tried to wriggle my way out of it, but I can’t. Is that really going to be OK?’

  ‘I think I can just about handle it. We’ve got this one after all. Don’t be late, Dean.’

  ‘I won’t.’

  She put the phone down, left the beer bottle where it was (she was not an over-fastidious housewife) and went slowly through the hall and towards the stairs. She caught sight of herself in the long mirror at the end of the room: long streaky blonde hair, blue eyes, freckled face, wearing denim overalls and an old white shirt of her husband’s. She looked like a college kid, not a married woman about to commit adultery . . . she grinned into the mirror and went on upstairs.

  Standing in the shower, alternating the hot and cold water (it was good for the bustline and the skin – and the bowels, Amy Meredith had told her, for heaven’s sake, now how could that be true? Stimulation, maybe – ) soaping the salt out of her sun-drenched skin, she wondered what actually brought people to the edge of adultery, or tipped them over it and into the bed. Not unhappiness, she couldn’t claim that; she and Dean were perfectly happy, had been ever since they married seven years ago. Boredom? No, not really. Of course after seven years drums didn’t roll and stars leap out of the sky every time she saw him, and the earth didn’t exactly rock around every time they had sex, which anyway wasn’t very often these days, nor very satisfying either, but he was still fun, still jokey, and she still enjoyed his company. So – what? What excuse did she have? I’m just bad, maybe, she thought, stepping out of the shower and wrapping herself in a huge white towel. I’m greedy. I want more than I ought to have. It was not an entirely nice thought. She drenched her skin all over with body milk (otherwise it got so dry and flaky) and then sprayed herself liberally with Intimate, the new Revlon fragrance she liked so much; it was sexy and it stayed with you, didn’t fade like a lot of those much more expensive ladylike scents. She felt very interested in sex at the moment. She supposed it was because of Hugo Dashwood and the way he was disturbing her; anyway, so far it wasn’t doing Dean any harm, she could hardly keep her hands off him, and he wasn’t to know that it was a different face from his own that swam into her head as he laboured over her, grunting with pleasure; a thinner, more handsome face, with brown eyes, and a beautiful dancing smile.

  She studied herself in the mirror, as she stood there naked; her body was pretty good still, she thought, it didn’t look twenty-nine years old, tall (five foot eight), slim (a hundred and ten pounds), with a stomach so flat it was practically concave, and surprisingly, lusciously full breasts. Her bottom was her greatest pride: flat and neat, firm as a drum; she worked hard on that bottom, she did exercises twice a day, and swam for at least half an hour. It wasn’t a particularly sexy bottom – men fondling it hopefully at parties were slightly repelled by its firmness, its lack of yieldingness – but she didn’t care, and besides her breasts made up for it. The line of her bikini was dramatic: clearly carved out of her suntan. It was quite modest, her bikini; she didn’t really like the ones that were cut so low you could see the line of the buttocks disappearing into them. Kim Devon’s was like that and Lee thought it was vulgar. She wondered if she ought to trim her pubic hair for Dean’s return; it was looking shaggy, and he did like things to be neat. That reminded her, she must clear up the kitchen a bit, pick up that beer bottle, wash the floor. Although, she thought, smiling at herself suddenly in the mirror, she could easily distract him away from the kitchen floor.

  Which did mean trimming the pubes, she supposed . . .

  She and Dean had met Hugo Dashwood at a conference in New York on advertising a couple of months ago. It had been a real treat for her to go; Dean was away such a lot, in his job as representative for an own-label marketing company, and not to have to stay at home and on her own for once, and to see a bit of New York, was just too good to be true. The conference was at the Hyatt, and the delegates were all scattered round the city; Lee and Dean were staying just off Broadway; it was an undeniably tacky hotel, but as Dean kept pointing out to her it was all a freebie, and tackiness was the last thing in the world Lee cared about anyway.

  The wives had their own programme for a lot of the time, and she had taken the Circle Line tour, gone up the Empire State and explored the wonders of Bergdorf’s and Macy’s (ducking out of the more cultural outings on offer, like the Museum of Modern Art and a tour of New York’s churches) but on the first day there had been a buffet lunch, so that they could all get to know one another; she hadn’t actually taken too much to many of them, older than she was, most of them, formally and forbiddingly dressed, and very self-consciously good American wives, talking with huge and ostentatious knowledge not only about their husbands’ companies, but the advertising industry in g
eneral, exchanging telephone numbers and addresses, discussing their husbands’ career patterns, comparing company benefits, and constantly interrupting the men’s conversations to introduce them to their own newfound acquaintances. Lee could positively feel them looking her up and down, examining her and discarding her, as being young, flighty, and altogether too attractive to be included either in the earnest merry-go-round or the introductions to the men, and decided she preferred her own company; she was standing in the queue for the buffet waiting for Dean to finish an interminable conversation with someone about the rival virtues of supermarkets and drugstores as an outlet for cotton wool balls when a voice that was just like English molasses, as she confided to Amy Meredith later (‘If you can imagine such a thing, all dark brown and treacly, but so refined’), asked her if she would be kind enough to keep his place while he went and retrieved the book he had been foolish enough to leave in the conference hall. ‘I don’t want to lose it, I am enjoying it immensely, and besides, I’m on my own here, I’m not fortunate enough to have a wife to keep me company, and I may need it if I can’t find anyone to talk to during lunch.’

  ‘Oh, my goodness,’ said Lee, ‘we can certainly help you there, my husband and I, but do go and get it anyway, before they clear it away. I’ll hold your place.’

  She looked at him thoughtfully as he disappeared into the crowd; he was exactly as she would imagine an upper-class Englishman to be (she could tell he was very upper class, he spoke with that David Niven accent everybody had in English films, with the exception of the comic characters, rather clipped and drawly at the same time). He was wearing a grey pinstriped suit, a white shirt, a white and grey spotted tie; he was tall and very slim, with long legs and the most beautiful shoes, in very soft black leather. His hair was dark and slightly longer than she was used to, and he had velvety brown eyes and the most beautiful teeth. She couldn’t, she thought, have possibly asked for a more desirable lunch companion, and felt pleased that she had decided to wear her red sheath dress and pin her hair up in a French pleat, so that she looked more sophisticated rather than leaving it hanging down on her shoulders the way Dean liked it.

 

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