Weldon, Fay - Novel 07
Page 11
And there, Liffey was pregnant.
“I do love you,” lied Richard.
“I love you,” said Liffey.
“Calm down,” said Tucker to Mabs once again, and, surprisingly, she calmed down. She moved away from the window.
“It’s her I blame,” said Mabs, smiling at Tucker, “not you. Did she wear a bra?”
“No,” said Tucker.
“Well, there you are,” said Mabs, as if that explained everything. And then, “What’s bad news for some is good news for another.” It was something she often said, and her mother too. Dick would say it to Carol sometimes, referring to Carol’s husband, Barry, as a counter-point to their love-making, making Carol laugh.
“Tucker,” said Mabs. “What size shoe does she wear?”
“Little. Three or four, I should say.”
Mabs looked down at her own large feet and sighed. She scraped all the children’s teas into the pig-bin, yelled down the corridor for them to get to bed, and she and Tucker went to their bedroom together, like an ordinary couple, and she not at all hooked up to the hot lines of the universe.
Liffey Inside (6)
Liffey slept. The female nucleus of the ovum and the male nucleus of the sperm, each containing the chromosomes that were to endow her child with its hereditary characteristics, both moved towards the centre of the ovum, where they fused to form a single nucleus. The nucleus divided into two parts, each containing an equal portion of Liffey and Richard’s chromosomes. Liffey’s brown eyes, Richard’s square chin. Her gran’s temper, his great-grandfather’s musical bent. And so on.
That was Friday night. By Sunday night, as they listened to Vivaldi on Richard’s cassette player and toasted their toes by the wood fire, the two cells had divided to make four, eight, sixteen—by early Monday morning, when Richard left for London, there were sixty-four, and could be termed a morula. The process was to continue for another 263 days; and 266 days from the time of conception, when the specialisation of different tissues was complete—some that could see, others that could hear; some to breathe, others to digest, stretch, retract, secrete; some to think, others to feel, and so on—a baby would be delivered, weighing seven pounds or so. If Liffey’s nature and physique were such that she would not abort the child, by accident or on purpose, or die from the many hazards of pregnancy: if Richard’s were such that he could protect it until it was grown; if the combination of genes that formed the child allowed it health and wit enough to survive—a naked, feeble creature in a cold world, with only mews and smiles to help it—and then fulfill its designed purpose and itself procreate successfully—the human race would be one infinitesimal step forward.
Nature works by waste. Those that survive are indeed strong but not necessarily happy. Auntie Evolution, Mother Nature— bitches both!
Inside Richard's Office
Offices do for some instead of families, and for others, more prudent, as a useful supplement to them. Bosses are as parents, subordinates as offspring, and colleagues as siblings. For entertainment there is the continuing soap opera of lives that brush past each other, seldom colliding, seldom hurting.
It does not do, of course, to mistake office life for real life. For if a desk is emptied one day by reason of death, or redundancy, or resignation, or transfer, it is filled the next, and the waters close over the departed as if they had never been. In offices no one is indispensable; in real life people are.
Mother dies, and is gone for good. The personnel officer dies, to be reborn tomorrow.
It does not do, either, to mistake office sex for real sex, least of all to carry the fantasy into the outside world. Secretaries marry bosses, it is true, but must remain secretary and boss for the rest of their lives, hardly man and wife. He parental, she childish. And colleague may marry colleague, but the quality of comradeship inherent in the match, of fraternal common sense and friendliness, keeps them for ever like brother and sister, hardly man and wife.
Miss Martin was in love with Richard. Why should she not be? He was young, he was pleasant, he was good-looking, he was forbidden; above all he was there. He had come to confide in her. She was sorry for him too, regarding Liffey as a bad wife, who could not even consult a railway timetable accurately, and who rang the office at inconvenient times, distracting Richard when he most needed to concentrate, intruding and interfering in a world that was none of her business.
Miss Martin knew that hers was a hopeless love. She could place herself quite accurately in the world. She was sensible but dull. She had a solid, pear-shaped figure that no amount of dieting would make lissom. She preferred to serve rather than be served. She was deserving, so would never get what she deserved. She did not understand her fiance Jeffs regard for her and rather despised him for it. If he loved her, who was not worth loving, how could she love him? He seemed lively and handsome enough now but would soon settle down and be as dull and plain as she was.
Miss Martin, in fact, following the death of her father, was in a sulk that might well last her whole life. She was consumed by spite against the Universe, which had spited her and taken away the object of her love. She would find no joy in it. The determination glazed her eyes, dulled her hair and skin.
In the meantime Richard would do to be in love with. The passion, being forbidden and unrequited, would serve as its own punishment. It made her heart beat faster when he came into the room, and her hand tremble when she handed him his coffee, and her typing perfect, and her loyalty fierce. It was a secret love. It had to be. It would embarrass Richard to know about it. The love of the socially and physically inferior is not welcome, especially if the object of the love is male. Miss Martin, in other words, knew her place.
She knew it, as it transpired, better than he did.
On Monday, Richard arrived in the office and hung his coat upon the hook provided. (Later Miss Martin would re-arrange it so that it hung in more graceful folds.) She had waiting for him upon his desk a list of the day’s appointments. There was mud upon his shoes, and she tactfully remarked upon it so he could attend to it before encountering his boss.
“That’s country life,” said Richard. “All mud and stress. But Liffey loves it. Have you ever lived in the country, Miss Martin?”'
“I’m a suburban sort of person,” she replied. “Neither one thing nor the other.”
“I need a nail file,” he remarked, and she provided it. She did not find these attentions to his physical needs in any way humiliating. They set him free to attend to matters that by common consent were important—the making of the decisions that kept them all employed. She could have made the decisions as well as he of course, but nobody would then have believed they were important, let alone difficult.
Messengers came, telephones rang and files were circulated. Currently obsessing Richard’s department was the maximising of the salt content of a particular brand of chicken soup and the growing conviction that some kinds of salt acted saltier than others, a fact verifiable by common experience but not scientific experiment. Pleasing the public palate is not easy.
“Of course Liffey would have everyone keeping their own chickens and boiling them down for soup,” said Richard. “She’s not a great one for packets.”
“I wouldn’t have the heart,” said Miss Martin. “Poor chicken!”
Before lunch Richard took out an unlabelled bottle of white wine.
“All this talk of salt has made me thirsty,” he said. “Will you have some, Miss Martin? It’s home-made. A neighbour of ours made it. Mayflower. It’s supposed to be unlucky for women to drink it, and Liffey won’t, but you’re not superstitious, are you?”
“No,” said Miss Martin, drinking too. Richard noticed the stolid fleshiness of her behind as she bent to a filing cabinet, and found himself rather admiring it. Liffey’s buttocks proclaimed themselves to the world, moving in open invitation, cheek by cheek, beneath tight jeans. Miss Martin had something to hide. But what? He took another glass.
“I love you,” said
Miss Martin two glasses later. The love induced by the mistletoe, parsley, and mystery ingredients in the wine was of an elemental, imperative kind and over-rode inhibitions induced by low self-esteem.
Richard flinched, as if physically assaulted, but quickly recovered. Miss Martin was an excellent secretary, he liked her, and for some reason pitied her, as he pitied certain kinds of dogs who look at humans with yearning eyes, as if able to conceive of humanness but know they can never aspire to it and are doomed to creep on four legs for ever.
“That’s just the wine talking,” said Richard more truly than he knew. “You’d better not have any more.” But he poured her another glass even as he spoke.
“I don’t see why I shouldn’t love you,” complained Miss Martin. “No skin off your nose.”
“Well,” said Richard, “since it’s sex that makes the world go round—”
Miss Martin felt argumentative. She often did, but was accustomed to keeping her arguments to herself. “I’m not talking about sex,” she said, “I’m talking about love.”
“You’re only not talking about sex,” said Richard, “because I suspect you know nothing about it.”
“I’m a virgin,” she said.
Miss Martin rang up the colleague with whom Richard was supposed to be lunching and said he had been delayed by a crisis, and they went off to lunch together, oblivious of those who saw them. He strode on long cheerful legs, and she trotted alongside on her little dumpy ones. It wasn’t right. He was a kestrel, she was a sparrow doomed to pick at leavings. In Nature everyone knows his or her place.
Mabs would have been pleased at the unrightness brought about by her mother’s potion, and would certainly have thought it served Miss Martin right. Mayflower wine is unlucky for women to drink, and she had been warned.
“I think,” said Richard blindly, “I would be doing you a kindness in saving you from suburbia and a life of proper propriety.”
And in a room at the Strand Palace Hotel after lunch, for her sake rather than his, or so it appeared to him, he did not so much as save her from these things as make them intolerable to her for ever.
By five o’clock both were back in the office: Miss Martin was pale and stunned and at her typewriter, and he was trying to catch up with his work. Neither could quite believe that it had happened, and Richard certainly wished that it had not.
Miss Martin told no one. There was no one to tell. “I was drunk,” she told herself. “You know what home-made wine is.”
Justifications
Richard quite wanted to tell Bella about the astonishing episode of himself and Miss Martin, but prudence forbade it. She would have laughed at him, from her lordly position, sitting astride him on the study sofa, exacting response from him, payment, this pleasure for that, as if she were the queen and he the subject. Boadicea. Knives on the wheels of her lust, cutting into self-esteem.
“I took her virginity,” he could have said. “It seemed my right, even my duty. She certainly expected me to.”
“ ‘Took her virginity,’ ” Bella would have sneered. “A poor Victorian dirty old man, that’s all you are at heart.”
But he knew there was power in it. That he would never be forgotten: that his life lasted as long as hers. He would keep that to himself.
“Don’t you worry about all this?” he asked Bella. He had to ask her something. She demanded rational conversation until the very last minute of their love-making, and question and answer seemed the least troublesome means of providing it.
“Why should I worry?”
“In case Ray finds out. He might come home early.”
“Ray never comes home early.” She was bitter, but he could see her logic. Bella was doing what she was because Ray came home late: it was the grudge she bore against him. It circled and circled in her mind—words rather than meaning. Ray Comes Home Late. Ray could not, therefore, come home early or she would not be doing this. He could see that the logic might well apply to Bella, making her husband inaudible and invisible if he returned early from his visit to the nubile Karen and her homework problems—perhaps taken ill, or overcome with emotion—but would hardly save him, Richard, from Ray’s anger and upset.
He said as much.
“Ray wouldn’t be angry or upset,” said Bella. “Why should he? He likes me to enjoy myself. And what else can he expect, the way he never comes home until late. And you’re a friend after all.”
“You don’t think this is an abuse of friendship?”
“It might be a test of friendship. Whenever I go away, my friend Isabel sleeps with Ray. She and I are still the best of friends.”
“I expect you compare notes,” said Richard gloomily.
“Of course,” said Bella.
“I don’t want you to talk about me,” said Richard.
She sighed and raised her eyes to heaven, revealing an amazing amount of white.
“I don’t think Ray treats you very well,” said Richard.
“In what way?” Bella was interested.
“The way he talks about other, younger women in front of you. And complains about your tits.”
“That’s just his insecurity.”
“He calls you ‘the old bag.’ ”
“He projects his fear of ageing on to me,” said Bella, “that’s all.”
“Well,” said Richard, “I do feel bad about doing this, in spite of what you say.”
“Of course you do. It’s the only way you can get it up.”
He found her crudeness horrific and fascinating and was unable to continue talking.
On evenings when Richard did not accompany Ray and Bella on some gastronomic jaunt or was keeping Bella company on
Ray’s late nights out, he ate simply enough, with the family. The staple food of the household was fish fingers, baked potatoes, and frozen peas. Food, except on special occasions, was regarded as fuel. Tony and Tina, the children, watched television and read books while they ate.
“Today’s children have no palate,” mourned Bella.
The Nash household was for the most part quiet, as if saving its strength for uproar, or recuperating its strength from the last outburst. Helga, the au-pair, washed and cleaned and fried fish fingers and ironed, the children did their homework, Ray wrote in the attic, Bella and Richard silently worked or studiously made their secret love.
Sometimes it reminded Richard of his parents’ home: the semblance of ordinariness, of kindness and consideration and warmth, as passions gathered and dams of rage prepared to burst.
Married to Liffey, in the little sweetness of their love, he had forgotten all that. He had learned as a child to smile and please and be out of the way when storms broke. Liffey had learned the same lesson.
Richard would do things with Bella which he believed debased the pair of them.
“No such thing as a perversion,” Bella would say, “so long as both enjoy it.”
But Richard knew that she was wrong, that in dragging the spirituality of love down into the mist of excitement through disgust, he did them both a wrong. He would never do such things to Liffey. She was his wife. But he had to do them with someone or be half alive.
All Bella’s doing, thought Richard. Bella’s fault.
Or he could have lived with Liffey for ever in the calm ordinariness of the missionary position, as had his mother and father before him, and known no better.
Miss Martin had trembled and moaned so much he’d simply got it all over as soon as possible.
Richard could see that Miss Martin too might come to enjoy it. Perhaps it was his duty to ensure that she did, to bring her to the enjoyment of sex before casting her back into the stream of life from which he had so tenderly fished her? The more
Richard contemplated the notion the more attractive and the more virtuous such a course appeared.
There were, Richard thought, three kinds of women and three kinds of associated sex. Liffey’s kind, which went with marriage, which was respectful and everyday, and allowed
both partners to discuss such things as mortgages and shopping on waking. Bella’s kind, which went with extra-marital sex and self-disgust and was anal and oral and infantile and addictive, and so out of character that nobody said anything on waking if only because the daily self and the nightly self were so divorced. Miss Martin’s kind, which involved seduction, the pleasure of inflicting and receiving emotional pain: in which the sexual act was the culmination not to physical foreplay—for orgasm was in no way its object—but of long, long hours, days, weeks of emotional manipulation.
It would not be possible, nor indeed desirable, Richard thought, to find these three different women in one body; he could never satisfy his needs monogamously. Could any man?
On Wednesday morning Richard said to Miss Martin, whose hand shook more than ever when she handed him his coffee, whom he had had to reprove more than once for carelessness in typing, and who was now wearing her hair curled behind her ears, “I like your hair like that.”
It was the first personal remark he had made to her since their return from the Strand Palace Hotel.
Miss Martin blushed. Later he asked her out to lunch. He knew she would not refuse, that she would make no trouble for him and make no demands. She was born to be a picker-up of other people’s crumbs. Well, he would scatter a few. She needed the nourishment, and the more wealth that flowed from him the more there would be to flow. Richard knew that in sexual matters the more you give out, the more there is to give.
Mature
Inside Liffey a cystic space appeared in the morula of her pregnancy, which now could be termed a blastocyst. It grew sprout-like projections, termed chorionic villi. It drifted down towards the cavity of the uterus. So each one of us began: Nature sets us in motion, Nature propells us. It is as well to be acknowledged.