Daisy

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Daisy Page 13

by Beaton, M. C.


  It was then he remembered that he hadn’t even proposed.

  Everything from the government to the Boers had been blamed for the freakish unseasonal summer that year, but as Daisy’s train steamed into Brinton it seemed as if all the year’s storms, fogs, and clouds had rolled away, leaving nothing but an endless blue, pristine sky. The small station was set on a rise above the town and as Daisy waited on the platform for the arrival of the carriages, she was able to see the whole of the resort spread out at her feet.

  The old town huddled at one corner of the cove as if crouching at the feet of the aristocratic villas which lay spaced along the long line of the beach. The sea was as blue and as perfect as a painting, with little white sails dotted here and there on the horizon.

  There was a fresh scent of pine and roses mingled with the smells of new-baked bread and strong tea from the stationmaster’s cottage.

  The villas were set back behind a row of white sandy dunes topped with sharp razor grass, looking in the distance like tiny strokes of an artist’s brush.

  Daisy stood enchanted, feeling the warmth of the sun through her striped cotton blouse and the light breeze tugging at her boater.

  “You look most awfully pretty.” It was Bertie at her elbow. Daisy turned and smiled at him indulgently, the way one does at the friendly importuning of a pet dog.

  “Thank you, Bertie. Oh, look at that darling little cottage over there.” Bertie sighed and looked and then looked at Daisy again. He tried to work up his courage to make another gallant remark, but Daisy was now in ecstasies over a row of brightly painted bathing machines. She had never seen the sea before. Could she bathe? Would the water be cold? Of course Bertie would know. And Bertie puffed out his thin chest and answered her questions and felt like a god.

  It was a cheerful, frivolous party which finally debouched from the carriages outside the Nottenstones’ villa. It was more of a mansion with wooden balconies and towers and a long colonnaded terrace running along the front of the house.

  The Earl and Countess, when informed that the Duke of Oxenden had already arrived, looked at each other in some surprise. “Really, my dear,” said Angela to her husband. “We must have charms we did not know of.” She gave a silly little laugh and blushed and her husband colored angrily, and pinched the bottom of the between-stairs maid as soon as ever he could.

  Daisy, Bertie, and Amy went off to explore the town and the little pier. When Bertie was hanging over the pier to see if he could spot any fish, Daisy put a halfpenny in a machine called What the Butler Saw and began to crank the handle. She took her head away from the machine with her face flaming. Those had been photographs. That meant a real live woman had taken off most of her clothes in front of a photographer. How on earth could anyone…? Then she remembered her adventure in the cellar and felt an unmaidenly pang of regret. She would never be on such terms of intimacy with the handsome Duke again. She had met him briefly on the stairs and had been treated to his best bow. Bertie had been treated in exactly the same way. But Bertie had merely laughed and called the Duke a stuffed shirt.

  They pottered about the shops stocked with musical boxes made of shells, brightly colored postcards, and buckets and spades. Little eddies of sand twisted over the cobbles of the main street. Somewhere in one of the flats over the shops a child was thumping out “Nola” on the piano, an old man was selling whelks and cockles from a barrow with a sign that read PLEASE RETURN PINS in curly script, and at the corner of the street the town drunk was roaring out “Bobbing Up and Down Like This” to the vast entertainment of a group of street urchins.

  Bertie bought them a bag of whelks, but Amy ate the most. Daisy extracted one small creature with her pin and popped it into her mouth, but it tasted like salted rubber. Amy had stopped “walking out” with her young man some weeks before and now her large brilliant eyes were ever on the flirtatious alert for fresh game. She popped the shellfish into her mouth, tossing back her long curls and giving many sidelong glances toward a group of young men on the corner.

  Bertie whispered to Daisy, “I say, Daisy, can’t you keep that maid of yours under control? She’s attracting the attention of that group of mashers.”

  Daisy began to explain that Amy was really more of a friend than a maid, but the sharp Amy had already caught Bertie’s reproving look and immediately became the epitome of the respectable lady’s maid, freezing the mashers with a disdainful stare.

  Harmony restored, the threesome headed down to the beach and all social conventions were forgotten as they became schoolchildren again, searching for shells and ferreting in the small rock pools. Bertie had never been happier in his life. He was alone—well, nearly alone—with the girl he loved on this jolly beach, with no horrible society peers around to poke fun at him and make him feel like a fool.

  With his hair hanging over his eyes, he gazed at Daisy with utter devotion and Daisy thought for the hundredth time how like a nice dog he looked and longed to scratch him behind the ears.

  Sandy and happy, they rolled back to the villa in time for tea.

  Angela and the Duke were seated alone at a white cane table in the garden. The Duke was impeccable in blazer and flannels and Angela managed to look incredibly seductive in a loose, flowing tea gown of sulphur yellow with a pattern of bronze flag iris. One of her long sleeves trailed over the Duke’s arm. Daisy could not remember seeing him more amused and felt dusty and grubby.

  “There you are, my children,” cried Angela. “Leave your buckets and spades in the hall and go upstairs this minute and wash behind your ears.”

  She then turned and looked full into the Duke’s eyes, cleverly establishing an intimacy that did not exist. Her husband, who had been about to join them, caught the look and retreated into the house instead where he bestowed a golden guinea on the buxom betweenstairs maid in the hope of favors yet to be received.

  Daisy dressed for dinner with elaborate care, in a scarlet- and black-striped dinner gown, cut very low on the bosom, with enormous frilled and ruched sleeves. There was to be dancing after dinner and Angela had hired the minstrel band from the pier especially for the occasion. Perhaps, Daisy thought, she would feel the Duke’s arm around her again.

  But it seemed that the only arms she was going to feel about her were Bertie’s. With no little irritation she noticed that everyone expected them to spend their time together. Really, how could one take Bertie seriously? And the Duke, noticing Bertie’s shining face and shining eyes, hoped that Daisy knew what she was doing.

  A little dance platform had been raised under some weeping willows beside an ornamental pool. A willow pattern bridge spanned the pool and Japanese lanterns were strung through the trees.

  Ann Gore-Brookes was wearing an elaborate kimono and the Honorable Clive Fraser, a quilted mandarin coat. He had waxed his mustaches into two long curves, but little tendrils of luxuriant British mustache kept escaping, so that he looked as if he had two hairy caterpillars crawling up either side of his mouth.

  Bertie, much to Daisy’s mortification, had decided to appear as that well-known aristocratic tramp of the music hall, Burlington Bertie. His evening dress was flawless, his silk hat shining, but his fingers were sticking out of his gloves and his toes out of his shoes. And he had a monocle stuck in his eye. Daisy was just beginning to wonder whether or not she should be in fancy dress when the Duke appeared, impeccably elegant in formal evening dress. Angela was hanging on to his arm, a vision, in pale-gold tulle of a deceptively modest cut. Daisy felt overdressed and blowsy in comparison.

  The Duke disengaged himself from Angela and crossed to Daisy’s side at a moment when Bertie was talking to the band. “I think your young man is about to perform for us,” remarked the Duke.

  “He’s not my young man,” said Daisy crossly.

  “Then may I point out that you are giving him a great deal of encouragement. While you are going ’round searching for true love, you seem to be forgetting that someone might fall in love with you and get badly h
urt in the process.”

  “Bertie!” said Daisy in amazement. “Don’t be so silly. Why, just look at him.”

  Bertie had launched into the opening lines of his song:

  “I’m Burlington Bertie

  I rise at 10:30

  And go for a walk down the Strand…”

  The Duke smiled down at her. “Remember, Daisy, that the soul of Pagliacci may beat beneath the boiled shirt of the most correct young Englishman.”

  Bertie reached the end of his song:

  “Nearly everyone knows me

  From Smith to Lord Roseberry

  I’m Burlington Bertie from Bow.”

  Loud applause greeted his efforts and Bertie rushed immediately to Daisy’s side. “What did you think, Daisy? Was I all right?”

  “Yes yes,” snapped Daisy in the manner of a mother whose child has tugged at her skirt for attention once too often. “Now you will be able to take off your hat and those terrible gloves.”

  Bertie looked crestfallen. “Suppose I look a bit of a fool, what? Sorry, Daisy.”

  “What for?” said Daisy cruelly. “What you do has nothing to do with me, Bertie Burke.”

  The Duke had just wandered off with the Countess. Her dress flickered like a pale flame in the darkness and then disappeared under the trees.

  Daisy had an overwhelming desire to spy on them. Bertie had shuffled off and no one else seemed to be looking at her. Not stopping to analyze her motive, she slipped off into the darkness. Angela was wearing a very heavy, musky perfume which wafted across on the still night air, mingling with the faint tang of salt from the sea. She was so intent on her pursuit that she nearly stumbled into them. Angela’s white arms were wound around the Duke’s neck and he was kissing her. Daisy gave a little cry and turned and ran off back to the dance.

  She felt immeasurably hurt and could not understand why. The Duke has no right to philander with a married woman, she thought savagely. She had underrated the affections of poor Bertie. She would show the Duke of Oxenden that she did not care a rap. By the time he returned to the dance floor, Daisy was flirting outrageously with Bertie, who looked as if all his dreams had just come true. Daisy was just leaning forward to take a sip of wine from Bertie’s glass when she was suddenly jerked onto the dance floor by a strong arm.

  She stared at the Duke’s waistcoat, breathless and shy, and aware of his eyes staring down at the top of her head. He began without preamble: “I have been kissed by Angela before and it means absolutely nothing to me. Or to her for that matter. But your case is different. I would advise you not to flirt so assiduously with that young man, unless you mean to marry him.”

  “Marry! Marry Bertie,” laughed Daisy. “You must be mad.”

  “Look, Daisy, I warn you…”

  “You warn me.” Daisy broke away from him. “Let me tell you, my lord Duke, you are not my father and I shall do exactly as I please.”

  Trembling with rage, she walked away from him and joined Bertie who threw the Duke a triumphant look. “Let’s get away from them for a bit, Daisy,” he said. “Let’s go for a stroll on the beach.”

  Daisy gladly agreed. Anything to get away from the Duke’s angry stare and Angela’s mocking eyes.

  They climbed up over the dunes and stood together for a moment, looking down on the beach. The water was still and quiet like black glass, with only a thin white line of foam moving on the empty beach. A long line of light from the lighthouse stabbed across the bay. Daisy stood silently, breathing in the peace of the night and idly counting the flashes of light.

  “Let’s go down on the beach,” said Bertie.

  “There’s something I must say.” Daisy smiled vaguely and moved slowly along beside him over the dunes, the stiff taffeta of her petticoats making a steady whish-whishing sound like the incoming tide. Probably Bertie wanted to discuss another of his many plans for her amusement.

  They walked side by side to the edge of the water and stood looking down at the little waves curling gently over the sand. Daisy burst out laughing. “Whatever are you doing, Bertie, kneeling on the sand like that? You’ll ruin your trousers.”

  Bertie stared up at her, his face glistening with sweat in the moonlight. “Daisy, will you marry me?”

  Daisy stepped back in alarm. She had an absurd desire to say, “This is so sudden.” Instead she blurted out, “Oh, Bertie. Stop acting the fool and let’s get back to the party.”

  “I mean it, Daisy,” said Bertie slowly and earnestly. “You’re the prettiest gel I’ve ever seen. Honest. I’m most awfully, terribly in love with you.”

  Daisy shook her head slowly in a wondering way. This could not possibly be Bertie proposing to her.

  He rose to his feet and flung his arms around her and tried to kiss her. His whole body was trembling, his breath smelled of wine and cigars, and she could feel his damp, cold hands on her shoulders. She wrenched her face away and found herself stammering, “P-please, B-Bertie. Leave me alone. I didn’t think you were serious. Please leave me alone. I can’t feel anything for you.”

  “But you must. You must!” babbled Bertie. He sank to his knees again and buried his face in her skirts. She wrenched her dress away and he stayed, kneeling on the sands, his head bent. Bertie felt his heart break and Daisy felt as if some pet dog had suddenly gone into heat and started making love to her foot.

  “I’m leaving, Bertie,” she said, starting to move away. “You’ve had a bit too much to drink, that’s it. You’ll see things quite differently in the morning.”

  Bertie began to cry. Great, racking sobs shook his thin body and the ugly, choking sounds filled the still night air.

  Daisy made a half move toward him and then abruptly turned and ran headlong up the beach. She did not stop running until she had reached the safety of her bedroom and poured the whole story into Amy’s ears.

  “He must have been drunk, Amy,” she wailed.

  Amy shook her head slowly. “He’s awfully keen on you, Daisy. I thought to warn you but then you seemed to like his company and went everywhere with him…well, be honest, Daisy. You did give the poor chap a lot of encouragement.”

  “How—how was I to know,” cried Daisy.

  “I think,” said Amy, “that you’re so keen on finding love for yourself, that you forget that someone might be falling in love with you. Where did you leave him?”

  “On the beach.”

  Amy wound a shawl around her blonde hair. “I’d better go and make sure he does nothing silly.”

  “Silly!” cried Daisy. The weight of guilt within her seemed already too heavy to bear.

  “There, there,” said Amy. “The damage is done and there is nothing more you can do. I’ll go.”

  Daisy sat miserably by the window for a long time after Amy had left. Up till now, her life had seemed very unreal and the various people she met, merely players in it. There was no one else to blame but herself. Hot tears of shame began to burn down her cheeks. She had a longing to see the father she had never known. She would go to France. Nothing would stop her now.

  Her white shawl flying about her shoulders like wings, Amy fled through the sleeping town of Brinton. The beach had been deserted, but heavy footprints had marked a stumbling path up and over the dunes to the shore road. The cobbles of the town shone in the moonlight, a stray cat made a sudden dash across the road, but apart from that, no other figures moved. Amy was just about to give up the search when she remembered the pier.

  The long white sanded boards stretched out into the bay. The flags at the entrance hung motionless in the still air. The slot machines stood against the rail on their squat legs, like some fantastic army lined up for review. Amy ran lightly along the pier, her slippered feet making no sound on the boards, past the theater where the coming attraction of “Romeo and Juliet” featuring that well-known actor, Bertram Dufresne, was billed in large ornate letters, and out to the platform at the end.

  Bertie Burke stood at the very edge, his forehead pressed against a p
ost and his thin chest heaving with great sobs. Amy did not find Bertie in the least ridiculous. She was happily at home in the English caste system and Mr. Burke was a gentleman.

  Moving gently so as not to frighten him, Amy said very quietly, “What are you doing out here, Mr. Burke?”

  He turned around. Seen through a mist of tears, with her white shawl, and the moonlight shining on her blonde curls, Amy looked like a vision.

  Then he blinked his eyes and registered that the vision was none other than Daisy’s maid. His humiliation was complete.

  Pulling himself together with pathetic dignity, he said, “I’m about to make a great, big hole in the water.”

  “You’d be very much missed,” said Amy, moving cautiously as close to him as she dared.

  Bertie looked at her with contempt. “Who’d miss me? Daisy?”

  “Well, now, I suppose she would. She ain’t in love with you. But she likes you a lot.”

  Bertie began to cry again. He tried valiantly to stop, but seemed unable to.

  “Then there’s all your friends,” said Amy. “Oh, I know they tease you a bit. But they’d miss you. Why, only the other day I heard his lordship, the Earl, say, ‘That Bertie always makes me laugh. He’s a jolly good sport.’”

  Bertie wiped his weak eyes with a sodden handkerchief and looked at her suspiciously, but Amy went on, “You see, you’re always so merry and the life and soul of any party, that people don’t think you’ve got feelings same as them. Us cheery ones always get the sticky end. Take me now…I was walking out with a fellow and we had an understanding like. Then he starts on as how he wants to be a butler and how nobody recognizes his worth…on and on he’d go. I’d try to sympathize and say I understood and he’d sneer at me and say ‘How can you understand the feelings of a chap what wants to make his mark in the world? You’re always laughing. Always got a cheery word. You don’t know how to suffer.’ Well, maybe I don’t. But I don’t go around making everyone else miserable and taking myself too seriously, if that’s what he means by suffering.”

 

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