The Cazalet Chronicles Collection

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The Cazalet Chronicles Collection Page 15

by Elizabeth Jane Howard


  By noon, everybody was too hot to go on doing all these things. The fathers felt that they had worked long enough on Teddy’s serve and Simon’s backhand and the boys were both frantic for lunch – still an hour away – and went on their traditional and lightning raid upon the tins of biscuits by their parents’ beds. Today, it was easy; they swiped the lot from Uncle Rupert’s room, knowing he was out, and ate them in the downstairs lavatory.

  Villy, after the ride, had to be taken by William round the new buildings. She was longing to change out of her riding clothes, but her father-in-law, fully dressed in flannel shirt, lemon gaberdine waistcoat and tweed jacket with gaberdine breeches and leather boots, seemed impervious to the heat, and spent a good hour explaining not only what they had done but the alternative plans that had been rejected.

  Louise and Polly, abandoned by Wren who said he had to get back and see the other horses, had one more turn each on Joey, who was sweating a lot and less and less inclined to co-operate; he had taken to ambling and stopping to snatch mouthfuls of grass. ‘He smells lovely, but he’s not very faithful,’ Polly said, as she dismounted. ‘Want another turn?’

  Louise shook her head. ‘If only there were two of him we could go for a proper ride. Hold him while I take the saddle off.’ Polly, who secretly did not like riding nearly as much as Louise, agreed. What she was thinking was that now they could have the rest of the day doing much nicer things. She stroked Joey’s tender nose, but he nudged her impatiently – it was sugar not sentiment he was after. When Louise had heaved the saddle off his back, she unstrapped his bridle and slipped it over his face. He stood for a moment, and then, tossing his head with a theatrical gesture, cantered a few paces until he was out of reach. ‘I’m afraid he really doesn’t like us much,’ Louise said. She felt that she had the reputation for being marvellous with animals and Joey did not behave at all as though he agreed with this.

  ‘He likes you better than me,’ said loyal Polly; although it had never been mentioned, she knew how Louise felt. They trudged on down the cart track from the field to the stables taking turns with the saddle.

  Clary had had a good morning. The sand had all been heaped into an old cold frame in the kitchen garden. The glass lid had long since gone and the bottom made an ideal boundary for her idea. First of all the sand had to be patted completely smooth: they tried with bare feet, but hands turned out to be better. Clary was best at this, and in order to have the peace and quiet to do it properly she sent the others to fetch things.

  ‘What sort of things?’ Neville was getting fractious: ‘What are we trying to do? Why don’t we get some water and make mud?’ he complained.

  ‘Shut up. If you don’t want to play with us, you can just go away. Or you can do what Clary says. She’s the oldest.’

  ‘I don’t want to go away. I do want to play. I want to know what we’re supposed to be doing. I don’t want to waste my time,’ he added rather grandly.

  ‘Your time!’ Lydia scoffed, trying to think of the smallest thing she knew. ‘It’s not worth a hundred or a thousand.’

  Clary said, ‘We’re making a garden. We need hedges, and gravel for paths, and – yes – and a lake! And trees, and flowers – we need everything! One of you collect the gravel, only the tiniest gravel. You do that, Neville. Get a seed box out of the greenhouse for it.’

  ‘What shall I do?’

  ‘I want you to guard the sand. And scrape moss off the wall at the bottom there,’ she added, as Lydia began to look disappointed.

  ‘Where are you going?’

  ‘I’ll be back soon.’

  On her way back from her successful and unnoticed raid in the house – Zoë’s nail scissors out of her manicure set and the small round mirror out of the maid’s lavatory – she came upon a trug full of box clippings (Billy had been called to his dinner). Her mind was a riot of possibilities: with the scissors, she could plant grass and cut it short so that it would be a lawn, and the box would make a tiny hedge to edge the gravel path – or it could be in a pattern for flower beds. There was no end to what she might do to make the most beautiful garden in the world. For once, she was glad that Polly and Louise weren’t about; they might have had ideas, and she wanted it to be entirely her own.

  When she got back, she found that Lydia had tired of collecting moss, had picked some daisies, was sticking them just anywhere into the sand. ‘I’m putting in the flowers for you,’ she said. Clary let her do it at one end of the sand. Lydia was small and you couldn’t expect too much and she knew that if you were too small you didn’t like being made to feel it.

  Just as Neville came back with hardly any gravel, but a whole lot of other things that wouldn’t have been the slightest use, they heard Ellen calling them to come in to get ready for lunch.

  ‘It’s a deadly secret,’ Clary warned. ‘You mustn’t say a word to them. Say we’ve been playing in the orchard. We’ll come out after lunch and do all the proper making.’

  ‘We have to have blasted rests,’ Neville reminded her. ‘For a whole blasted hour.’

  ‘It isn’t fair!’

  ‘I used to have to,’ Clary said quickly before Lydia could work herself up. ‘When you’re twelve, you won’t have to.’

  ‘Supposing I don’t get to twelve?’ It seemed to her very unlikely.

  ‘I’ll get to it first,’ Neville said. ‘There’ll be one holiday when you’ll be the only one having a rest.’

  ‘Don’t quarrel. If you go in all smeary with tears, they’ll ask what we’ve been doing.’

  They composed their faces to uniform conspiratorial blandness and went up to the house.

  At one o’clock Eileen sounded the gong for lunch.

  ‘Gracious! I haven’t done the bag!’ Rachel sprang to her feet, felt the familiar twinge in her back that seemed always to be there when she made an unconsidered movement, and went quickly into the house. ‘Don’t worry about the curtains,’ she called, in case Sybil should tire herself trying to fold and carry them. The bag, kept in a drawer of the card table in the drawing room, was a small linen affair with R.C. embroidered in blue cotton chain stitch. It had been Rachel’s school brush and comb bag, but now it contained eight cardboard squares, six of them blank and two marked D.R. As the children came downstairs from washing for lunch, they each pulled a square out of the bag. This ritual was because the Duchy had decreed that two children should be allowed into the dining room for lunch in order that they should learn how to behave at meals with the grown-ups; the method of choosing had been evolved to stop squabbling and the perennial allegations of injustice. Today, Simon got one of the tickets, and then Clary.

  ‘I don’t want it,’ she said, put it back like lightning, and drew a blank. ‘My father’s out, you see,’ she said quickly to Rachel. Really, she was afraid that Lydia and Neville might spill some beans about the garden if she was not there to stop them.

  Rachel let this pass. ‘But next time you must stick to the rules,’ she said mildly.

  Neville was late for lunch. He came down with Ellen holding his hand (a sure sign of humiliation and wrongdoing).

  ‘I’m sorry we’re late. Neville had lost his sandshoes.’

  ‘I only lost one of them.’ The fuss that people could make about one miserable shoe was beyond him. In the end, Teddy got the other ticket for which he was profoundly grateful. He was not ready yet to make the difficult change from an all-male society at school – except for Matron and the French mistress, both objects of continual, covert derision – to eating and talking with all these women and babies.

  He decided to sit next to Dad and Uncle Hugh and then they could talk either about cricket or, possibly, about submarines, in which he had lately become interested. Lunch was hot boiled gammon and parsley sauce (the Duchy had a Victorian disregard for weather when planning menus), with new potatoes and broad beans followed by treacle tart. Simon loathed broad beans, but Sybil ate them for him. She’s a pretty broad bean herself, he thought and then choked trying no
t to laugh at such a marvellous joke; he didn’t want to hurt his mother’s feelings, and nobody would like being called broad except a bean. This set him off again; Dad hit him on the back, and his plate fell out onto the table cloth – a jolly embarrassing meal.

  Teddy ate an enormous lunch – two helpings of everything and then biscuits and cheese. He had decided to make Simon play tennis immediately after lunch because later on the grown-ups would probably hog the court. Dad had said that he could practise his serve on his own, but that wasn’t much fun if there was nobody to return the balls and, worse, nobody to tell him whether they were in or not. If he worked at it, he could end up playing for England. The thought of the board at Wimbledon Cazalet v. Budge made the back of his neck prickle. BRILLIANT NEW PLAYER ANNIHILATES BUDGE! Would be the headline. Of course, it might not be Budge by then, but whoever it was – Hell’s bells and buckets of blood, it would be a pretty exciting week. The thing would be to get Fred Perry to coach him; there couldn’t be anyone better in the world than Fred. It was rotten that one couldn’t play tennis in winter at school, but he’d be able to play squash or racquets to keep his eye in. He decided to write to Fred Perry to see what he would advise. Dad and Uncle Hugh had been no good to talk to: they’d been arguing about whether to get something called a Dictaphone in their office or not. Dad wanted one because he said it would be more efficient, but Uncle Hugh said it took the same amount of time to dictate to a secretary as it did to a machine, and he believed in the personal touch. The women were talking about babies and rotten things like that. God! He was glad he wasn’t a woman. Having to wear skirts and being much weaker – hardly ever doing anything really interesting like going to the South Pole or being a racing driver, and Carstairs said that blood poured out of them in streams from between their legs whenever there was a full moon, an unlikely tale because there was a full moon every month and obviously they’d die from loss of blood, and, anyway, he’d never seen any of them doing it, but Carstairs had a gory nature, he was always on about vampire bats and the Charge of the Light Brigade and the Black Death. He was going to be a detective when he grew up – on murder cases; Teddy was glad he wouldn’t be seeing any more of Carstairs. His new school loomed up in his mind like an iceberg: what he could see of it was frightening enough and that was only a fifth (or was it a sixth?), as frightening as he knew it would be when he actually had to go to it. Ages away – the holidays had hardly started. He caught Simon’s eye across the table and made a batting movement with his right arm which knocked over his glass of water.

  Lunch in the hall was difficult for Clary in ways she hadn’t thought of. Neville and Lydia behaved beautifully, didn’t say a word about their garden, and Clary offered to look for and find Neville’s missing shoe, which went down well with Ellen. But Polly, who felt guilty that she and Louise had again left Clary out by going off and riding together and not even asking her whether she wanted to come, was now suggesting all kinds of things that she and Louise would do in the afternoon with Clary, like go to the stream in the far wood and make a dam, and when Clary didn’t seem very keen on that, a tennis tournament, or making a log house in the wood. ‘Well, what would you like to do?’ she said at last.

  Clary felt Lydia’s and Neville’s eyes fixed on her. ‘Go to the beach,’ she said. The beach meant cars and grownups, so she knew that Polly and Louise couldn’t do anything about that. They gave up; it was common knowledge, Louise said, that they were going to the beach on Monday and not before.

  After lunch, Villy drove Sybil to Battle to buy flannel and white wool. They had made this plan at breakfast, but had a tacit agreement to keep quiet about their trip in order that no children should clamour to join them. Now they drove in a peaceful silence, easing comfortably into their customary summer relationship. They saw each other in London, naturally, but this was more because of their husbands’ affection for one another than from their own choice. But, since they both became life members of the Cazalet family at about the same time, they had had years of natural proximity to develop an undemanding intimacy of a kind they did not either of them have with anyone else. They had married the brothers two years after the war: Sybil in January, Edward and Villy the following May. The brothers had suggested a double wedding, had even mooted a double honeymoon, but this had been averted by Villy having to finish her contract with the Russian ballet, and Sybil wanting to marry before her father’s leave was up and he went back to India. Sybil’s godmother had provided the necessary background (her mother had died in India the previous year), Edward had been best man and they had gone to Rome for their honeymoon – Hugh said France was too full of things that he wanted to forget. Edward had taken them to see Villy dance with the ballet at the Alhambra and Sybil had been deeply impressed by Villy actually being a professional dancer. They had seen Petroushka (Villy had been one of the Russian peasant women) and Sybil, whose first visit to the ballet it was, had been overwhelmed by Massine in the title role. Afterwards they had waited for Villy to come out of the stage door wearing a coat with a white fur collar, and her hair – long in those days – done in a bun and a little silver arrow sticking in the side of it. They had all gone to the Savoy for supper, and Villy seemed the most sophisticated and glamorous person Sybil had ever met. Under the coat, she wore a black chiffon dress embroidered with brilliant green and blue crystal beads that showed her elegant narrow knees, with green satin shoes to match that made Sybil’s beige stamped velvet trimmed with Irish lace seem dull. She had been bubbling with energy and, egged on by Edward, chattered all evening about the Russian company and touring; about Paris, and rehearsing with Matisse dropping paint pots onto their heads, and not being paid for weeks, living on a pint of milk a day and lying in the beds between rehearsals and performances; of Monte Carlo and the glittering audiences; of how Massine and Diaghilev quarrelled, and how some of the company gambled away their salaries in a single night.

  It had seemed to her then incredible and heroic of Villy to give up such a life for marriage, but Villy, who seemed as much in love with Edward as he was with her, made light of it. They were married from Villy’s home in Albert Place, and her father composed an organ suite for the service which was noticed in The Times. Villy had cut off her hair and was fashionably shingled for the wedding, which Sybil had attended feeling terribly queasy with her first pregnancy – the one that had ended with a stillborn son. Apart from being married to brothers, they had little in common to begin with but with the Cazalets, being married to brothers meant steady, continuous meetings: evenings when the brothers played chess, winter holidays when they went skiing – Sybil was hopeless at that, invariably twisted an ankle, once broke her leg, while Villy whirled down the most daring runs with a verve and skill that earned her much local admiration. They played bridge and tennis. They went to theatres and to restaurants where they dined and danced. One evening, at the Hungaria, Villy said something in Russian to the leader of the orchestra, and he played some Delibes and Villy danced by herself on the cleared floor and everyone applauded. When she returned to their table and Edward said perfunctorily, ‘Well done, darling.’ Sybil had noticed tears in her eyes, and wondered whether giving up her career had turned out to be so easy for Villy after all. Villy never mentioned her dancing days again, continued in her role of wife and, subsequently, mother of Louise and then Teddy and Lydia as though it had never happened. But Sybil had observed her restless energy, which, like water, streamed out in any direction it could find. She got a loom and wove linen and silk. She learned to play the zither and the flute. She learned to ride, and was soon exercising horses for the Life Guards – one of the two women in London allowed to do so. She worked for the Red Cross, took blind children to the seaside. She sailed a dinghy in small boat races. She taught herself Russian; for a short time she joined a Gjieff sect (Sybil only found out about this because Villy tried to make her join it too). Some of the crazes – like the sect – did not last long. Resisting a sudden urge to say, ‘Are you happy?’ she sai
d, ‘I suppose the shops in Battle may be shut.’

  ‘Good Lord! Of course, they will be. How stupid! We could go on to Hastings.’

  ‘The shop at Watlington’ll be open.’

  ‘Will it?’ Villy had slowed and was looking for somewhere to turn.

  ‘It somehow always is. They’ll have white wool. And almost certainly flannel.’

  ‘Right.’ Villy stopped at someone’s drive and then backed into it.

  ‘It seems so inefficient. If only I’d kept Simon’s things. But I never thought I’d need them again.’

  ‘I chucked everything out, too. One can’t keep everything,’ Villy said. ‘I’ll help you, if you like.’

  ‘It would be angelic. I’ll never forget that christening robe you made for Teddy.’ It had been the finest white lawn, embroidered in white thread with wild flowers, and all the seams joined by drawn threadwork. The sort of work usually done by nuns.

  ‘You can borrow it, if you like. There won’t be time to make another of those.’

  ‘I didn’t mean that. I’m just aiming at four flannel nighties and a shawl.’

  They were passing the white gates of the house on their way up the hill to the shop at Watlington. Villy said, ‘I’m sure the Duchy would help.’

  ‘She’s making one of her lovely tussore smocks for Clary’s birthday.’

 

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