He said it seriously, but then must have caught the earnestness in his own voice. He blushed harder, put his hand again to his hair, and ducked his head. The gesture, unstudied and a little gauche, was the most appealing thing he’d done. She let herself see, for the first time, how nice-looking he was, how smooth and unmarked. He was young, after all: younger than her.
He still had the pipe and the matches in his hand, but was sitting still, with his hands slackly in his lap. He said, ‘I’m sorry. I only wanted to see you as a way of helping your brother.’
‘Well, I think you might help him best just by leaving him alone.’
‘But, is that really what you’d like? To just leave him there, living with Mr Mundy in that peculiar way?’
‘There’s nothing peculiar about it!’
‘Are you quite sure?’ He held her gaze; and when she looked away he said slowly, ‘No, you’re not, are you? I saw it in your face, last week. And what about that job, that factory? You want to see him working at it for the rest of his life? Making night lights, for nurseries?’
‘People work in factories; it doesn’t matter what they make. My father’s worked in a factory for thirty years!’
‘Is that any reason your brother should?’
‘So long as he’s happy,’ she said. ‘That’s what you don’t seem to understand. I just want Duncan to be happy. We all do.’
Her words, as before, sounded weak. And she knew, in her heart, that he was right. She knew that part of the reason she’d been so dismayed to see him arrive at Mr Mundy’s last week was that she’d looked at the house with him in it, and seen it all as if through his eyes…But she was tired. She said to herself, as she always ended up saying to herself, about Duncan—It’s not my fault. I did my best. I’ve got my own problems to think about.
And even as these words glided familiarly into her mind, she heard the quarter hour struck out on a nearby clock, and remembered the time.
‘Mr Fraser—’
‘Oh, call me Robert, will you?’ he said, beginning to smile again. ‘I’m sure your brother would want you to. I certainly do.’
So she said, ‘Robert—’
‘And may I call you Vivien? Or—what Duncan calls you—Viv?’
‘If you like,’ she said, feeling herself blush. ‘I really don’t care. It’s kind of you to try and help Duncan like this. But the fact is, I can’t talk about it now. I haven’t got time.’
‘No time for your brother?’
‘I’ve got time for my brother; but not for this.’
He narrowed his eyes. ‘You don’t think much of my motives, do you?’
She said, ‘I still don’t know what your motives are.’ And she added: ‘I’m not sure you do.’
That made him colour slightly again. For a moment they sat in silence, both of them blushing. Then she changed her pose, getting ready to go, putting her hands into the pockets of her coat. The pockets had old bus tickets in them, stray coins and paper wrappers—but then her fingers found something else: that little parcel of cloth, with the heavy gold ring inside it.
Her heart gave a jolt. She stood up, abruptly. ‘I’ve got to go,’ she said. ‘I’m sorry, Mr Fraser.’
‘Robert,’ he corrected, getting to his feet.
‘I’m sorry, Robert.’
‘That’s all right. I ought to go, too. But, look here. I don’t like you misunderstanding me. Let me walk with you and we can talk as we go.’
‘I’d really rather—’
‘Which way are you going?’
She didn’t want to tell him. He saw her hesitate, and chose to take it, she supposed, as an invitation. When she started to walk he walked alongside her; once his arm brushed hers, and he made a show of apologising and moving further away. But an odd thing had happened between them. Somehow, in letting him go with her, she’d managed to put their relationship on a subtly different footing. As they headed back to Oxford Street they had to pause at a kerb alongside a window; she saw the two of them reflected in it, and met his gaze through the glass. He started to smile, seeing what she did: that they looked like a couple—a simple, nice-looking, young courting couple.
His manner changed. As they wove through the traffic at Oxford Circus he struggled to keep up with her and said, in a different tone from any he’d used with her yet, ‘You know where you’re going, anyway. I like that in a woman. Are you meeting a girlfriend?’
She shook her head.
‘A boyfriend, then?’
‘It’s nobody,’ she said, to shut him up.
‘You’re meeting nobody? Well, that shouldn’t take long, in a town like this…Look, you’ve got me all wrong, you know. What do you say to us starting again—this time, with a drink?’
They had drawn near a pub on the edge of Soho. She shook her head and kept going. ‘I can’t.’
He touched her arm. ‘Not just for twenty minutes?’
She felt the pressure of his fingers, and slowed, and met his gaze. He looked young and earnest again. She said, ‘I can’t. I’m sorry. There’s something I’ve got to do.’
‘Couldn’t I do it with you?’
‘I’d rather you didn’t.’
‘Well, I could wait.’
The awkwardness must have shown on her face. He looked around, at a loss. He said, ‘Where the hell are you making for, anyway? Your evening job in a leg-show? You don’t need to be bashful, if that’s what it is. You’ll find me a broadminded sort of bloke. I could sit in the audience and keep off the rowdies.’ He pushed back his long hair, and smiled. ‘Let me go a bit further with you, at least. I couldn’t think of myself as a gentleman, and leave you on your own in streets like these.’
She hesitated, and then, ‘All right,’ she said. ‘I’m going to the Strand. You can come with me, if you really want to, as far as Trafalgar Square.’
He bowed. ‘Trafalgar Square it is.’
He offered her his arm. She didn’t want to take it, then thought of the minutes ticking by. She put her hand, lightly, in the crook of his elbow, and they moved off together. His arm was amazingly firm to the touch, the muscles shifting, beneath her fingers, with the rhythm of his walk.
As he’d hinted, the streets they were entering now were rather sleazy ones: a mixture of boarded-up houses and fenced-off ground, depressed-looking nightclubs, pubs, and Italian cafés. The smell was of rotting vegetables, brick-dust, garlic, parmesan cheese; here and there an open doorway or window let out the blare of music. Yesterday she’d come this way on her own and a man had plucked at her arm and said in a phoney New York accent, ‘Hey, Bombshell, how much for a grind?’ He’d meant it as a sort of compliment, too. But tonight men looked but called nothing, because they assumed she was Fraser’s girl. It was half amusing, half annoying. She noticed it more, perhaps, because she was unused to it. She never came anywhere like this with Reggie. They never went to nightclubs or restaurants. They only ever went from one lonely place to another; or they sat in his car with the radio on. She thought of bumping into somebody she knew, and grew nervous. Then she realised she had nothing to be nervous of.
While they walked, Fraser spoke about Duncan. He spoke as if he and she were agreed on the whole issue; as if all they had to do was put their heads together, spend a little time on it, and they’d be able to sort Duncan out. They had to do something, for a start, he said, about his job at that factory. He had a friend who worked in a printing-shop in Shoreditch; he thought this friend might be able to find Duncan a place, learning the trade. Or he knew another man who ran a bookshop. The pay would be negligible, but maybe that sort of work would appeal to Duncan more. Did she think it would?
She frowned, not really listening; still aware of the ring in its parcel in her pocket; conscious of the time. ‘Why don’t you ask Duncan,’ she said at last, ‘instead of me?’
‘I wanted your opinion on it, that’s all. I thought we might—Well, I hoped we’d be friends. If nothing else, we’ll be bound to run into each other again at Mr Mun
dy’s, and—’
They had reached the north-west corner of Trafalgar Square, and begun to slacken their pace. Viv turned her head, searching for a clock. When she looked back into Fraser’s face she found him gazing at her with an odd expression.
‘What?’ she said.
He smiled. ‘You look so like your brother sometimes. You looked like him just then. You really are remarkably like him, aren’t you?’
‘You said that at Mr Mundy’s.’
‘You don’t think so?’
‘It’s one of those things, I suppose, that you can’t really see for yourself.’ She caught sight of the clock on St Martin’s church: twenty to seven. ‘Now, I really must go.’
‘All right. But, just a minute.’
He fished about in his jacket pocket and got out a piece of paper and a pencil. He quickly wrote something down: the telephone number of the house he was living in. ‘You’ll give me a call,’ he said, as he handed it over, ‘if you ever want to talk to me, in private? Not just about your brother, I mean.’ He smiled. ‘About other things, too.’
‘Yes,’ she said, stuffing the paper in her pocket. ‘Yes, all right. I—’ She gave him her hand. ‘I’m sorry, Mr Fraser. I’ve got to go, now. Goodbye!’
And she turned and left him, went hurriedly across the rest of the square without looking back. Probably he stood and watched her running, wondering who on earth she was meeting, and why; she didn’t care. She ran on, through a break in the traffic, and headed into the Strand.
The evenings were drawing in at last. The street was darker than it had been when she’d driven through it that time with Reggie: the thickness of the twilight gave everyone flat, featureless faces and she found herself peering at people, as she hurried, with a mixture of frustration, excitement, dread. It wasn’t true, what she’d told Fraser. She didn’t have an appointment to keep. She was looking for Kay, that was all. This was the fifth or sixth time she’d come here in the past two weeks. She was hoping to see her; just hoping to pick her out of the crowd…
She drew close to the Tivoli cinema, keeping to the north side of the street, where the view was widest. She slowed her step, then moved into a doorway, out of the way.
She must have looked crazy to anyone watching, gazing so keenly from face to face. She kept seeing figures she thought were Kay’s; she kept moving forward, her heart thudding. But each time, as they drew nearer, the figures turned out to be not Kay at all, turned out to be wildly unlikely people, teenage boys or middle-aged men.
The cinema queue dwindled. The programme, she guessed, must have already begun. But there’d be the news-films first, and then, say, Mickey Mouse. Maybe it was silly, standing here. She might have missed Kay already. All that mucking about with Fraser! She tapped her foot. Perhaps she should cross over, buy a ticket, go inside; go up and down the aisles; or find a spot where she could watch the latecomers, more closely, as they came in.
But then, she thought suddenly, what was the point? Was it really likely that Kay would come back here? She might have come just that one time, for that one film. She could be anywhere in London! What were Viv’s chances of seeing her, really?
The queue had shrunk to nothing now. A group of boys and girls came hurrying up to the doors, and that was it. Viv put her hand again to her pocket, feeling the ring in its bit of cloth, turning it over and over with her fingers, knowing it was stupid to keep waiting, but not wanting to leave, unable just to give it up, go home—
Then a man’s voice sounded, close beside her.
‘Still looking for nobody, I suppose?’
She jumped. It was Fraser.
‘God!’ she said. ‘What do you want, now?’
He put up his hands. ‘I don’t want anything! I’ve been sitting where you left me—in Trafalgar Square, watching the pigeons. Awfully soothing on a bloke’s nerves, those pigeons. I found myself quite losing track of time. Then I thought I’d be like Burlington Bertie, and walk down the Strand. I didn’t expect to find you still here, honestly. And I can see by your face just how welcome I am. Don’t worry, you’ll find I’m quite the gentleman in matters like this. I won’t hang about, and spoil your chances with the other bloke.’
She was looking over his shoulder, still scanning the faces of passers-by. Then she took in what he’d said—and the contrast between what he was thinking and the real reason she was here seemed, all at once, to defeat her. She lowered her head and said, ‘It doesn’t matter, anyway. The person’s not coming.’
‘Not coming? How do you know?’
‘I just do,’ she said bitterly. ‘It was stupid, my waiting here at all.’
She turned away. He put out his hand, just touched her arm. ‘Look here,’ he said quietly, seriously. ‘I’m sorry.’
She drew in her breath. ‘I’m all right.’
‘You don’t look all right. Let me take you in somewhere, get you a drink—’
‘You mustn’t trouble.’
‘It’s no trouble.’
‘You must have somewhere to be, don’t you?’
He looked rueful. ‘Well, as it happens, I said I’d look in on your brother, at Mr Mundy’s. He won’t mind waiting an extra hour, though, I’m sure. Come on.’
He drew at her arm. She’d gone back to looking up and down the street; she couldn’t help it. But she let him lead her along the pavement. He said, ‘There’s a pub just up there.’
She shook her head. ‘Not a pub.’
‘Not a pub, all right. A café? Here’s one, look, with a window on the street. We’ll go in here. And then, if your friend turns up after all…’
They went into the café and found a table near the door. He ordered coffees, a plate of cakes. And when, after a few minutes, another table became free, right next to the window, he moved her to that.
The café was busy. The door kept opening and closing as people passed in and out. From behind the counter there came the regular clatter of crockery, the hiss of steam. Viv kept her head turned to the street. Fraser sometimes looked with her; more often, though, he kept his gaze on her face. He said once, to try and make her laugh, ‘I’ve changed my mind about you. I don’t think you work in a leg-show at all. I think you’re a private detective. Am I close to the mark?’
She let her coffee sit in front of her and grow cool. The cakes arrived, nasty-looking things, the colour of luminous paint in daylight, each with a swirl of artificial cream on top, already turning back to water. She wasn’t hungry. She still kept seeing, from the corner of her eye, people she thought might be Kay. She almost forgot about Fraser; she was vaguely aware that he’d fallen silent, that was all…But after another few minutes he spoke again; and his voice, this time, was quite flat.
He said, ‘You know, I hope he’s worth it.’
Viv looked at him, not understanding. ‘Who?’
‘This guy you’re waiting for. From where I’m sitting, to tell you the truth, it rather looks as though he isn’t. Since he’s put you to all this trouble—’
‘You think it’s a he, of course,’ she said, turning back to the window. ‘It’s like a man, to think that.’
‘Well, isn’t it a he?’
‘No. If you must know, it’s a woman.’
He didn’t believe her at first. But she could see him thinking it over. And then he leant back, nodding, and his expression changed. ‘Ah,’ he said. ‘I see. The wife.’
He said it in such a cynical, knowing sort of way; and his comment was so far from the truth—yet in another way, so near it—that Viv felt stung. She wondered what Duncan might have told him, about her and Reggie. Her face grew warm. She said, ‘It’s not—it’s not what you’re thinking.’
He spread his hands. ‘I told you before, I’m a broadminded bloke.’
‘But, it’s nothing like that. It’s just—’
His eyes were on her. They were blue, still rather knowing but, apart from that, quite guileless; and as she gazed into them it struck her that he was the first person, in what mu
st have been years and years, to whom she’d spoken for more than about a minute without telling some sort of lie. When the café door opened and a couple of boys came in and started joking with the man behind the counter, she said quietly, under cover of their laughter, ‘I saw someone here. I saw someone here, the week before last; and I’ve been hoping to see her again. That’s all it is.’
He could tell she was serious. He moved closer to the table again and said, ‘A friend?’
She looked down. ‘Just a woman. A woman I knew once, when the war was on.’
‘And you made an arrangement with her, for tonight?’
‘No. I just saw her there, outside the cinema. I’ve been back, and waited, on different nights. I thought, if I did that—’ She grew self-conscious. ‘It sounds barmy, doesn’t it? I know it does. It is barmy. But, you see, when I saw her here, before, I sort of—ran away. Then I wished I hadn’t. She was kind to me once. She was terribly kind. She did something for me.’
‘You lost touch with her?’ Fraser asked, in the little silence that followed. ‘That happened all the time in wartime.’
‘It wasn’t that. I could have found out where she was if I’d wanted to; it would have been easy. But what she’d done for me, you see, made me think of something else, that I didn’t want to remember.’ She shook her head. ‘It’s stupid really, because of course I remembered it, anyway.’
He didn’t press her to tell him more. They sat with the silly-looking cakes between them; he stirred the remains of his cooling coffee as if thinking over her words. Then he said, still rather musingly, ‘Wartime is a time of kindness. We all tend to forget. I’ve worked with people in the past few months, people who’ve come here from Germany and Poland. Their stories—God! They told me terrible things, atrocious things; things I couldn’t believe an ordinary man, in ordinary clothes, in the world I knew, could be telling me…But they told me marvellous things, too. The courage of people, the impossible goodness. I think it was having heard stories like that that made me, when I saw your brother again—I don’t know. He was kind to me, in prison; I can tell you that. Just as it sounds like your friend, this woman, was kind to you.’