Frieseke supervising hen and ducklings, 1924.
Frieseke painting Stellita Stapleton on the first garden terrace, 1924.
SIX
I could not face the wreck of the Norman garden, not first thing, and not this trip. I had only a few days, and my main task at the moment was to make sure the house was habitable. I stumbled out of the garden into the darkness of the house again and crossed the dining room to the west side, prepared to hang on to the casement when I opened those shutters—because on that side of the house, the sky sucks at you, and you’ll go flying if you don’t watch out. It is the continually disorienting genius of this floor to assault you with burgeoning, rampant green where the rooms open on the garden to the east, whereas the windows on the west want to drag you right out over the valley. That window had a hot blue sky in it today. I left the window open, like the garden door, because the house was cold. Then, too, the damp seemed greater than usual, and I hoped it might burn off if enough of the day outside washed through. Once the doors and shutters were open, the dining room became visible. I knew it well, but it felt odd—not so much clean as smeared. It was now, and must always have been, the most used room in the house, originally the big farm kitchen where meat was roasted on a spit and pots were kept boiling over a constant fire in the fireplace that took up most of the wall between this room and what was now the library. Something was wrong in here that I could not put my finger on. I realized that I was tired, discouraged by the state of the garden, gritty from travel, and disoriented by the change of time as well as by hearing someone not saying, in a voice resembling Julia’s, How can we take on this place if you can’t even manage to get the garden trimmed?
Julia had driven me to the plane and seen me off, loquacious with the combined hopes and anxieties that accompany a loved one on a transatlantic flight—a loved one, that is, who has been instructed to buy three hundred thousand dollars’ worth of flight insurance. Because of the time difference, it was still too early for me to call and let her know that I’d arrived safe, and to hear her disappointed exclamation of relief that doom this time was coming in an as yet unimagined form. But I did pick up the telephone to make sure there was a dial tone.
Her first words to me in the past, when I was here without her, had always been, “Is it beautiful?” Because, of course, it was—and that was true rain or shine, and whether or not the garden looked like Jacob’s room and my studio at their worst, combined, and tramped through by extinct and flightless birds of prey. Outside the west window, over the dining table, the blue air wavered with the sound of birds—not just the relentless chorus of doves, which had already so merged with my expectation that I no longer heard it; but songbirds I could not name darting in the orchard, and a cuckoo, and Mme. Vera’s ducks and chickens. Across the road (two hundred feet below, and invisible from here because of the intervening vegetation and the ruin of the cider press), on my level on the opposing hill, half a dozen cows wandered, nosing the edges of a patch of bracken. I heard metal knocking somewhere, sounding like cowbells, but probably only Mme. Vera careening a tin basin; and a tractor trimming the nettles, thistles, and brambles out of a field nearby. This should be done to my fields also—and would be, I told myself, if I were here often enough to cause the farmer renting them to make the place look cared for.
The dining room, looking west across the valley, 1986. Photo Dana Perrone
In spite of the garden, I’m still ahead, I thought. I’ll have a cup of tea and then see to the house. I found the teakettle where the O’Banyons had hidden it in the upstairs kitchen. Unless we were overwhelmed with guests or family, this was the only kitchen we normally used. It had once been a butler’s pantry and was connected to the dining room by a window opening as well as a door. Julia and I found it easier to get by on two propane burners than to run upstairs and down to use the big, dark, cold, and damp downstairs kitchen—so long as we were neither ambitious in our cooking nor too numerous in our eating.
I took the kettle to the sink to rinse it out and found there was no water. The plumber had not come to get it started. Now I understood the persistent smearing I had noticed in the cleaning job. A femme de ménage had come, seen, but not conquered, though she’d done the best she could without water.
I did not try to turn the water on myself. The piping in this big house was a palimpsest and mystery of interconnected pipes, sluices, conduits, valves, and siphons going back to the Cenozoic, and far beyond my comprehension. When, on a mistaken occasion in the past, I once fell back on my American self-reliance, I succeeded only (working by flashlight) in opening the connection to the town supply, underground in the pasture on the far side of the driveway, as well as the main valve in the downstairs kitchen: water began pouring not only from all the faucets that had been opened to drain the system the previous winter, but also from stopcocks located here and there on walls and ceilings throughout the house. I had to turn the whole thing off and spend a wet night of drought before I could make contact with a plumber.
It occurred to me that the electricity had been running long enough to burn out the empty hot-water tank. I went downstairs, shut off the main switch, and was instantly back in 1493 A.D.
I checked my watch. Everyone else in the civilized world (i.e., France) should now be on the waning edge of lunch, replete and somnolent and therefore at my mercy. I telephoned M. Joffroy’s, four miles down the road, and apologized to Mme. Joffroy for the interruption.
“Ah,” Mme. Joffroy said. I was in France? Good. And I had got into the house this time? Good. There was a problem. Since last winter, the key had been with the plumber, who had given it, as instructed, to the femme de ménage, who in turn had disappeared into the countryside. Therefore, what could the plumber do? It was a good thing I had brought my key, and “all is going well with your family?”
Absconding into the countryside with the house key did not sound like the responsible woman I had met last summer, I said.
Ah, but she was not the one. That one had gone. No one knew where she was. It was another one.
The practical voice of conscience, which often sounded like Julia’s, whispered something in my ear that I refused to listen to. Instead, I telephoned M. Le Planquay, the plumber. He was at home, at table, and spoken for by Mme. Le Planquay, who had her own explanation for the nonexistence of running water in the house, somewhat different from Mme. Joffroy’s but with the same sad ending. But knowing that it was now possible to get inside, she promised to send a gars tout de suite.
I followed the plumber’s gars (workman/stripling) around the house when he came chittering up in the bright-yellow vehicle in which he had been returning from lunch to whatever job he was on. I remembered his car from the previous year, but it now bore a new trophy on its aerial, a woman’s frilly garter of the kind Americans fling at wedding receptions. This was the same man who the summer before had transformed the worst end of the useless upstairs passage closet between bathroom and billiard room into a shower, eventually completing the job by laying tiles directly over the closet door, glass panes and all. One of my hopes for the future was that no one would ever attempt to open the door from the other side.
The gars and I shook hands and agreed about the weather. He was a young man, though already well seasoned in his trade and out of the apprentice stage, fairly short and stocky, with an inch of cigarette living on the right corner of his bottom lip. He let me watch what he did, both of us recognizing that his livelihood was not at risk: it would take years of apprenticeship before I could do this job myself, even supposing I had any aptitude for it. I might come to own this plumbing, but I would never master it. Starting the water involved running back and forth between the house and two underground valves in the pasture, dashing from the wood room on the northwest end of the ground floor to the furnace room on the southwest end, then to the laundry room, the downstairs kitchen, the upstairs kitchen, and the bathrooms on the first and second floors, then finally to the water heater (again in the f
urnace room). The house even boasted valves where no one would have thought to look for pipes—a strange feature in a structure in which all the walls were solid, and nothing could be concealed, plumbing and electricity being very recent additions. We had installed the present systems only at the end of the summer of 1968, intending them to serve as a temporary measure.
The gars, while stopping this cock and releasing that valve, congratulated me on my not having blown up the hot-water heater. He finished, wished me joy of my water and a long prolongation of the good weather, and chittered back down the driveway in his little yellow car. Now that I had running water, I felt I had abolished the dark ages. Civilization would be assured once I had tea. I put the kettle on.
SEVEN
Our practice, when the house was vacated at the end of summer, was to have the rugs rolled and the curtains folded and put away. Once light was admitted, the rooms had a dejected air, needing more color and feel of habitation than were provided by the paintings of mine I kept on the walls. Until a fire could be lit in the dining-room fireplace, that dependable source of heat and comfort was simply big and black—and all in all, the inside of the house was a grim contrast to the belligerent and fecund wallops of green and sky that shoved against opposite sides of the room, from the door and window into the garden on one side, and from the window overlooking the valley on the other, where the sun would set in about eight hours.
The dining-room ceiling, like those of the other rooms on this floor, was low—about seven and a half feet. The walls were made of plaster grooved to look like laid stone, and had once been painted accordingly; the ceiling, meanwhile, had been allowed to go black with smoke. After we painted everything white or cream, with the woodwork and window casements a subdued but nevertheless defiant yellow, Julia had announced, “It looks less like a tunnel.” But having been empty so long, the room seemed derelict now, even when stroked by hot daylight from outside. Rugs could wait, and curtains, but the place must have color as well as light, and some dry air. It demanded color the same way a slow brown meal cries out for salad.
While my tea steeped, I threw one of the cloths that Julia had sent with me across the dining table, which wanted to seat ten serious diners. The cloth had bright-red and white stripes. When I sat down, I realized something was missing. The large round wicker tray that should be tucked into its metal rail along the wall, next to my place at the table, was gone. This one missing thing gave me a sensation of disquiet worse than that occasioned by the lack of running water. We’d never used the tray, but for me it preserved the illusion of that uneasy “era of tranquility” that Homer Saint-Gaudens had written about, which he located within the brackets of the Great Depression on one side and the Second World War on the other. I had photographs of my grandparents having tea with friends, using this tray and seated not twenty feet away from where I now sat. Nobody in these photos was dressed for the countryside—that is, not for field work; everyone wore a suit or a nice dress, and a hat of absurd elegance, for all that the nearest cow flop might be no more than seventeen feet away, on the other side of the white gate. You could almost hear the ancestors of Mme. Vera’s chickens gibbering. That era was lost to me, it was true, but at least I’d always had the tray.
That tray belonged here. It was part of the package. Measuring some three feet across, it would be hard for a renter to hide or misplace or carry home in a suitcase. It was above all an emblem of the house, having survived unscathed and unmoved throughout the whole war, being almost the only thing that was still where it should be when we returned in 1968. Back then, my mother had taken its continued presence in the wreck as a good omen; now, its absence prompted in me a nagging awareness of disproportion that made it impossible to sit still for wondering what else was missing or awry. What had the O’Banyons done with the tray? Or had someone else been in here during the winter? I looked around.
Tea outdoors, 1924. (Left to right, Mrs. Hoeveler, Stellita Stapleton, Mrs. Stapleton, Edith Frieseke [Aunt Dithie], Frances Frieseke, Mahdah Reddin, Germaine Pinchon, Mme. Pinchon [seated]).
Not much in the dining room could be mislaid. The table was so large and square and the floor so uneven that there was only one place in the room that it could go, and even so, when diners were numerous, somebody had to compete with one of the posts that held the ceiling up. The other furniture, aside from the chairs, was similarly cumbersome: a contemporary couch that could become a bed, and one and a half wooden armoires to hold china and necessaries. Against one wall was the masonry sideboard on which in the old days dishes could be kept hot over pans of charcoal. Now it housed the telephone.
With all its doors, shutters, and windows open, the dining room had become inhabited by the voices of birds that were not yet aware that anyone was here. A blackbird sang from one of the fruit trees in the garden’s second terrace, which was now striving to become woods again. I followed the sound of one of the fat black flies that had no business in the house, but entered by the garden door and paraded directly through its shade in a distracted beeline to pass out the casement window next to me. It buzzed over the absent wicker tray and into the bright trough of the valley, looking for a cow’s wet muzzle or dropping to belabor.
That busy industry of flies, like the cries of the wood doves and the scent of box from the garden side of the house, and grass and cows from the other side—if all those were right, nothing else could be that far wrong. As long as I was here, I decided, I would not camp out after all but would allow myself to open the rest of the rooms on this floor, and live at least that civilized.
As I moved through the rooms, I forced myself not to look for the tray, knowing that could lead only to the serendipitous discovery of other missing links to lost causes. Instead, I pretended to put the tray out of my mind, along with some of the other, more complex questions I would have to entertain while I was here, such as what to do about the kitchen(s).
Next to the dining room, and south of it, was the library, where I would sleep; then, reading northward from the dining room, the half-kitchen, the salon, and the bath and guest rooms, all of which I resolved to open. The remaining space on this floor, next to the central staircase leading up to the next floor, was taken up by the jam closet, which I would not open for as many years as I could put it off.
In my grandparents’ day, the library had been a library. There was no bed in it then as there was now, but the same desk sat at the same perpendicular to the window overlooking the driveway; here my grandmother wrote letters and, when she stood, jostled her husband’s wicker fishing creel, which hung on one of the room’s two supporting posts. Often my grandfather read there while my grandmother sewed or knitted (her generation kept its hands busy). Sitting at that desk to read, an occupation that he favored over painting, my grandfather could see when a visitor came up the driveway, giving him plenty of time to be out the door and into the woods with his book before the knock on the door. He had begun collecting books as a boy in Owosso, buying Horatio Algers from a peddler until his grandmother weaned him onto Dickens’s Oliver Twist, assuring him it was another rags-to-riches story.
After-dinner coffee might be taken in this room, and sometimes there was a painting in progress here, with my grandmother reading aloud if my mother was posing. The smell of the dining room, reaching into the library, was dominated now by the acrid aura of the former’s big damp chimney and its bed of ashes, left behind last fall to foster the initial fire of summer. That staleness I would easily fix tonight by making a fresh fire. I brought my bags up and took possession of the library.
Then I opened the salon, a room elevated by Mayor Isidor Mesnier to this Parisian level from the mere salle it would have been in an honest farmhouse. I passed through its circle of variegated chairs, its sifting bouquets of dried flowers, its little ornamental tables giving in, in different ways, to woodworm and gravity. The salon had once been papered with the Bay of Naples; it still felt damp, though the bay itself had washed away after the war. Nothing untowa
rd met my eye on this first glance, except that all felt damper and colder than I remembered. I noticed mold growing on one of my paintings of the Douet Margot, which was as close as the salon now got to the Bay of Naples. I threw open the garden door.
After Frances married, in 1937, and moved away (“I didn’t think you were that kind of girl,” her surprised and dejected father said), my lonesome grandparents had photographs taken of the house to comfort the young bride should she become homesick amid the excitement of her new life. From those photographs, and from paintings that Frieseke did in this room, I was familiar with the formal and rather eccentric nineteenth-century look it had then, of which almost nothing remained now.
I checked that the huge bathroom next to the salon had cold water. At some point in the future I might go outside to instigate its hot water. The toilet’s tank, up against the ceiling, chuckled and screamed as it always did when it filled, loudly enough to waken, if not the dead, then at least anyone who inhabited the guest room next door. (That charming little paneled room, the same size as the bathroom, tended, despite its fireplace, to be the dampest room in the house.) The loose tiles in the bathroom floor were no more numerous or looser than I remembered. The permanent spiderweb in the exact center of the cold radiator under the bathroom window overlooking Mme. Vera’s was tenanted, as it should be, by this year’s large black spider, which, if I killed it, would be replaced by morning by another exactly like it—one similar to, but different from, the one that always lived in the bathtub drain.
The salon, with Frieseke’s portrait of Frances, 1937. Photo Claude Giraud
Hovering just beneath the smell of the fireplace were the symphonic strains of plaster dust and damp and sifting particles of wood digested by the worms in the furniture; the varied dirts of woods and pastures, blown in under the doors; smoke; linen; mothballs when closets were opened; and old books. The house contained as great a volume of books as it did of torchis, the material used between the timbering. I had mentioned to Julia once, in our continuing argument, that one good reason for us to take on the ownership of all this was to avoid having to answer the question “If we don’t, what are we going to do with all those books?”
A Place in Normandy Page 4