Berthea shrugged. “Well, it would be nice, wouldn’t it? You’re all interested in roughly the same thing—and you all wear similar white outfits, don’t you?”
Terence put down his spoon. “Berthy!” he exclaimed. “You couldn’t be more wrong if you tried! Morris men are pagan—their dances are all about fertility and things like that. We’re above all that. Far above it.”
Berthea inched her untouched plate of soup away from her. “Nobody is above reproduction, Terence,” she said quietly. “Even you and me. We are the result of reproductive passions. We need to remind ourselves of that.”
Terence would have none of it. “Beings of Light do not come about in the same way as ordinary people,” he pronounced. “Our dances are pure. There is no trace of the bodily side. That is the whole point of sacred dance, Berthy, and I thought somebody like you would understand that.”
The conversation drifted on along these lines, and then Terence suddenly said, “You should eat your soup, Berthy. It’s jolly rude not to eat it when your host has spent hours making it for you. Jolly rude indeed.”
“One can’t drink soup that has far too much salt in it, Terence. I’m sorry, but it’s just not possible.”
Terence glowered at her. “You don’t drink soup, Berthy, you eat it. Remember how we were told that when we were really small? Aunty Bee, who knew all about manners. Remember? It’s the same as not saying serviette for table napkin.”
“Nonsense,” said Berthea. “Liquids are drunk, not eaten. You don’t say ‘Eat your coffee,’ do you? You say, ‘Drink your coffee.’ ”
Terence responded hotly, “Oh you think you know better, do you, Berthy? You think you know better than everybody, don’t you? Better than Mummy knew, better than Daddy or Aunty Bee; better even than the Queen, I shouldn’t be surprised.”
“Oh Terence,” sighed Berthea, “I do wish you’d grow up.”
There was silence. Then Terence muttered, “You’re jolly rude, you know. It’s all very well for you. You live in London and have hundreds of friends. I’m stuck here and I haven’t really anything much. You’d think that …”
The words trailed away, and in a sudden awful moment Berthea realised that she had reduced her brother to tears.
“Oh Terence,” she said, rising to put an arm about her brother. “I didn’t mean to upset you. Come, come.”
The volume of the sobs rose. “I know I haven’t done much with my life, Berthy. Other chaps have done much more. But I’m doing my best, Berthy, I promise you I am.”
“Of course you are,” said Berthea. “Of course you are. And I’m really proud of you—I hope you know that. We may have our little disagreements, but I’m so proud of you, Terence.”
He looked up at her, wiping at his eyes with a large blue handkerchief, threadbare and unironed, which he had removed from the pocket of his jacket, where it had been tucked in an attempt at raffishness. “Are you proud of me, Berthy? Are you really?”
“Of course I am,” she said. “You’re my brother, and I’m proud of you.”
He produced a second handkerchief from another pocket and blew his nose. “Well, I’ll make you even prouder, Berthy. Once I start my racing, I’ll make you really proud. Our Frazer Nash is going to be jolly fast.”
“I wonder whether that’s such a good idea, Terence,” said Berthea, her tone at once tentative and tactful.
“It’s too late,” said Terence.
“Oh?”
“We’ve already bought the Frazer Nash. I gave Monty the cheque this afternoon, and he’s going over to see Richard Latcham tomorrow.”
“Who is this Richard Latcham?”
“He’s the man we’ve bought it from,” said Terence. “He’s restored it very well, and he’s promised me that nothing will go wrong with this car.”
He looked at Berthea, his eyes now bright again. “And I’m going to make you proud, Berthy, by winning my first race. You just watch. You just watch.”
34. The Leporine Challenge
WHEN FREDDIE DE LA HAY first picked up the scent of rabbit, he stood motionless, his nose into the wind, his whole body quivering in anticipation. He remembered, of course, that he was not meant to wander; that he must stay within the general curtilage of the house to which William had brought him. He knew that if he interpreted too broadly the permission that William had implicitly given him to investigate the lawn and shrubs around the house, then there would be recriminations. There would be raised voices and other signs of displeasure, and for a dog like Freddie, in whom a conscience, even a merely Pavlovian one, had been instilled, the displeasure of the humans he loved was like a great cloud of thunder: dark, forbidding and centred directly above one’s head.
But this was not an ordinary situation—there were rabbits here; not merely lingering traces of ancient rabbits, but real living and breathing rabbits. Only the best-trained dogs, those disciplined to stay at their owners’ sides whatever the circumstances—experienced gun-dogs, for example—can resist the temptation of readily available prey. Freddie de la Hay was not untrained, but his education, such as it was, had encouraged him to go after significant smells. As a sniffer dog at Heathrow, he had been rewarded for running after a tempting suitcase as it was carried along a conveyor belt; that was the whole point of his being there. So now that he smelled the rabbits, although he knew that he should not go too far, there was also a strong and ultimately irresistible urge to ferret out these annoying creatures and deal with them in the way he felt they deserved.
It did not take long, then, for his indecision to be overcome. Uttering a yelp of excitement, Freddie ran straight towards the first of the rabbit holes. This was not very large, and he managed to get his snout into the entrance, but there was not much more he could do. Besides, once he had sniffed the earth at the entrance to the hole, he found that the scent he had picked up so strongly was fainter here. Rabbits had passed this way—there was no doubt about it—but they had done so some time ago.
He sniffed at the breeze, picking up the stronger scent that wafted over from a further point of the field. Giving another yelp, he rushed off in that direction, and soon found exactly what he was hoping for: a commodious, inviting entrance into the main rabbit warren. This hole clearly served a whole colony of rabbits and was easily large enough for even a medium-sized dog such as Freddie de la Hay to penetrate.
In the darkness of the hole, Freddie sniffed at the dank air: there was so much to take in—the smell of earth, of roots, the whiff of other creatures—moles—whose tunnels intersected the rabbit highway. He pushed himself forwards, scrabbling his way past a curtain of hanging roots. These bore the evidence of recent rabbit passage, and the scent served only to urge Freddie on to more frantic burrowing. Had he paused to consider the consequences of his actions—something beyond the intellectual competence of most dogs—he would have realised that the only way he could retreat from the tunnel, which was growing rapidly narrower, would be by going backwards; that is unless he found a chamber of some sort in which he could turn round. But he did not think of this, his mind being completely occupied with the task of getting closer to the source of this rabbit smell—the rabbits themselves, who had to be in there somewhere, taunting him with their proximity.
He moved forwards in the darkness, more slowly now as the tunnel roof grew lower at this point and pressed upon his shoulders and his back. After a few minutes during which he made very little progress, the urge to get back to the light and fresh air became stronger than the urge to find the rabbits. He stopped, and tried to turn round; of course, there was no room, not even enough to make the slightest turn. He tried again, but succeeded only in wedging himself still more tightly in the constricted space.
Next, Freddie de la Hay tried to move backwards. This proved every bit as impossible as turning. He paused, and the realisation dawned on him that something was seriously wrong. He closed his eyes and then reopened them, in the hope that he might simply find himself elsewhere. Such rapid and ine
xplicable transitions could occur; he had once been in a train and had closed his eyes, gone to sleep, and then when he awoke discovered himself in an entirely different place. If such a thing could happen once, then there was no reason why it should not happen again.
But it did not, and on opening his eyes he was in exactly the same place. Now he began to whimper, and these whimpers, soft at first, became louder and louder until they were a full-blown wail. Freddie was not only bemoaning his fate, he was calling for William. In his mind, William was all-powerful and perfectly capable of bringing his durance to an end. William would come, would come down from above, would come with shovels, would come to pluck him from this earthly tomb. William would brush the earth from his coat, take him in his arms and tell him that he was a good dog and that dinner would be ready shortly, would let him be with him, which was all that Freddie had ever wanted, and what he wanted now with all his heart.
But there was no William. There was only darkness and discomfort, and a sense that whatever was happening to him was something final and irreparable. This thing was the death that every creature so instinctively resists. Freddie de la Hay had no word for it, but knew its face, and knew that it was his companion in this subterranean prison. He whimpered, and instinctively licked at his paw, which was tucked up unnaturally under his chin, forced into that position by his attempts to turn round. He licked at his paw as if to comfort himself, but there was no comfort for him, none at all, just a growing terror.
35. Freddie Digs His Way Out of a Hole
IT WAS TERROR that eventually drove Freddie de la Hay to start digging again. He had no alternative but to go forwards, and he did so now with fervent energy, scratching with all his power at the yielding earth, ignoring the showers of debris that covered his head and neck. He closed his eyes; he struggled to breathe; he was as a creature possessed, acquiring from deep within him the strength and determination of ten dogs or more.
For the first few minutes, he made little progress. The ground seemed harder now, and his claws sent stabs of pain shooting up his legs; he ignored the pains, redoubling his efforts when he suddenly felt the ground become more yielding. And then the wall of the tunnel gave way and opened out into a chamber. Freddie de la Hay opened his eyes and saw, at the end of the chamber, a shaft leading upwards. And from this came the smell of fresh air, of grass, of creatures other than rabbits.
Freddie shot forwards, at first entangling and then disentangling himself from a hanging skein of roots. His paws were painful and there was grit in his nostrils, but he ignored these discomforts in the urgency of his efforts. There was light now—not bright light, but a filtered sort of gloaming, a vague glow. He scrabbled frantically, pushing with his hind legs, wiggling to give himself extra purchase on the soft floor of the chamber. He could still smell rabbits, but he ignored them, yearning only to break free and emerge from the nightmare into which he had so foolishly launched himself.
That is not to say, though, that Freddie de la Hay felt any inclination to reproach himself. The past for a dog is just that: the past. A dog sees no point in dwelling on things that have happened; the important thing is that they are not happening now. In that respect, they have something to teach us: we so often feel that then is now, and this leads us to prolong the suffering of yesterday into the suffering of today. Dogs do not do that.
With a final effort, Freddie pushed himself up through the gradually widening opening above his head. He was free, and the sudden evening light made him blink in confusion. Without thinking, he set off across the field in which he found himself as fast as he could manage, giving several exultant barks as he did so. He did not stop until he reached the far side, where a thick hedge blocked further progress. He sat down momentarily, looked up at the sky and then gave another bark before launching himself through a gap he had just spotted in the hedge.
Now he was on a road—one of those small, winding roads that seem to go nowhere in particular but in fact connect village to village, in their own time. Freddie had no idea where he was, nor did he know where he was going. He trotted along, from time to time sniffing at the verge; not unhappy, perhaps, but not happy either.
There was a noise that he registered as an approaching car. Freddie cocked an ear, listening to see whether he recognised the note of the engine. He did not, and he sat down to wait for the noise to become louder.
There was the squeal of brakes, followed by the sound of a car door opening.
“You silly dog!”
It was a woman.
“Yes, you! I’m not talking to any other dogs—I’m addressing you! You silly, silly dog, sitting there in the road like that. I had to brake, you know, and if I’d been going any faster I would have run over you.”
Freddie looked at the woman who had stepped out of the car. He realised that what she had to say concerned him, but he had no idea what it was. The word “dog,” however, was familiar, and he knew that this, in some vague way, referred to him. It was not his name, of course, but it was close to it, and he wagged his tail in response.
The woman bent down to look more closely at Freddie. “You’re wearing a collar, I see. Let me take a look.”
Freddie allowed the stranger to turn the collar round his neck so that the nameplate, a small steel tag, could be read.
“Freddie de la Hay,” she read aloud. “Now that is very interesting. Are you, I wonder, Freddie de la Hay—an unlikely name for a dog, I’d have thought—or do you belong to somebody called Freddie de la Hay?”
She straightened up, still gazing down on Freddie.
“Freddie!” she called out.
Freddie looked up sharply and gave a bark of recognition.
“That settles that,” said the woman. “So you’re Freddie de la Hay.” She paused. “Well, Freddie de la Hay, you’re clearly lost and so I suppose …” She looked about her, scanning the fields that bordered the road. Although the light was fading, it was clear that there was nobody to be seen. “I suppose I can’t leave you here. So … come along, Freddie de la Hay. Hop in.”
She clicked her fingers and began to make her way towards the open door of the car. Freddie immediately understood what was intended and obediently trotted past her, peered into the car and jumped inside. The woman settled herself in the driver’s seat and slammed the door shut.
This was the signal for Freddie, seated in the passenger seat beside her, to do as he had been trained during his period of indoctrination as a “new dog.” Half turning in his seat, he took the seatbelt in his mouth and drew it across his front. Then nuzzling the red clip at the side of the seat, he pressed the metal connector home.
The woman watched in astonishment.
“Did you just strap yourself in?” she stuttered. “Did I see what I think I saw?”
Freddie smiled at her, his pink tongue hanging out of the side of his mouth. A small stream of saliva dropped down onto the seat. He bent his head apologetically, licked up the spittle and then turned to face his new friend once more.
“Amazing …,” she muttered, slipping the car into gear. “Let’s go, Freddie de la Hay!”
36. An Unrevealed Source
IF FREDDIE WAS about to venture into the unknown, then so too was Barbara Ragg. What she did next was nothing to do with her recent discovery of her gypsy roots, although that revelation had certainly left her feeling quite light-headed; this, rather, was the result of the decision she had already taken to bring Oedipus Snark’s political career to an end. Or, if she could not end it entirely, then she could at least lead it down an alley from which it might never emerge. She had not discussed this plan with anybody—she did not want to talk to Hugh about a former boyfriend—and so she had received no advice about it. Had she sought such counsel, of course, it might well have urged caution: Oedipus Snark was a formidable opponent with a reputation for the ruthless pursuit of self-interest; not for nothing, people said, was he known as the only nasty Lib Dem MP in recent history. But now it was too late for such reservations
, and even though the journalist to whom she had spoken warned her of the possible consequences, she felt that she had gone too far to back-track.
The journalist she had approached was a client of the Ragg Porter Agency. Tom Maxwell was the deputy editor of a popular daily, and a widely read political columnist. Some years earlier he had uncovered a circle of influential freemasons who had been using connections to secure contracts. He had published a book on the subject, which had led to parliamentary questions and an official inquiry. He had used the Ragg Porter Agency to negotiate publication, and it was in this context that he had come across Barbara. They got on well, and she had even wondered at one point if their friendship might become something more. But Tom was not interested; there was somebody, she found out—a woman in Amsterdam whom he had known for years and with whom he lived sporadically. Barbara’s being aware of this woman at least made things easier for her; she could meet Tom and enjoy his friendship without the complication that romantic possibility inserts into any relationship.
They met early one morning in a coffee bar off Brook Street. Tom had an interview to conduct at the Dorchester—he was due to talk to a visiting German businessman who was circling an ailing drinks company and whose real intentions had yet to be uncovered.
“There’s a possibility that he would just close it down,” he said. “It would be one way of knocking out the competition.”
“And throw how many people out of work?” asked Barbara.
Tom shrugged. “Three hundred, give or take a few.”
“Awful,” said Barbara.
Tom sighed. “Yes, but that’s capitalism for you. Money doesn’t sit in a hole, you know.”