The Little Stranger
It was horrible to see. Presently Betty came, to call us to dinner, and in the movement that followed I drew close to Caroline and murmured, ‘Everything all right?’
She glanced at her mother and brother, then gave a tight shake of her head. We stepped out into the passage and she drew close the collar of her cape, against the chill which seemed to rise up from the marble floor.
We were to eat in the dining-room, and Mrs Ayres, in order I suppose to make good her promise to give me a ‘proper, old-fashioned dinner’, had had Betty lay the table rather elaborately, with Chinese porcelain to match the oriental paper on the walls, and with ancient silverware. The ormolu candelabra were lit, and the flames of their candles dipped alarmingly in the draught from the windows. Caroline and I sat face to face across the width of the table between them, while Mrs Ayres took her place at the table’s foot; Roderick made his way to the master’s chair—his father’s old chair, I suppose it was—at the head of it. Almost as soon as he had sat down he poured himself a glass of wine, and when Betty had taken the bottle to the other end of the table and approached him with the tureen of soup, he put his hand across his bowl.
‘ “ Oh, take the nasty soup away! I won’t have any soup today!” ’ he said, in a foolish, jarring voice. Then: ‘Do you know what happened to the naughty boy in that poem, Betty?’
‘No, sir,’ she said uncertainly.
‘No, zir,’ he repeated, mimicking her accent. ‘Well, he was burnt in a fire.’
‘No, he wasn’t,’ said Caroline, with an attempt at a smile. ‘He wasted away. Which is what you’ll do, Rod, if you’re not careful. Though goodness knows, I don’t think any of us would care. Have some soup.’
‘I told you,’ he answered, putting on his silly voice again, ‘ “I won’t have any soup today!” But you may bring back the wine please, Betty. Thank you.’
He topped up his glass. He did it heavily, the neck of the bottle striking the glass and making it ring. The glass was a lovely Regency one, brought out of storage, I imagine, along with the porcelain and the silver; and at the little concussion Caroline’s smile faded and she looked at her brother, suddenly, with real annoyance—so that I was almost startled by the flash of distaste in her eyes. Her gaze stayed hard, then, for the rest of the meal, and I thought it a pity, for in the light of the candles she looked her best, with her heavy features softened, and the angular lines of her collarbones and shoulders concealed by the folds of her cape.
Mrs Ayres, too, was flattered by the candle-light. She said nothing to her son, but kept up a light, smooth flow of conversation with me, just as she had in the little parlour. I thought this simply a sign of good breeding, at first; I supposed she was embarrassed by Rod’s behaviour and was doing her best to cover it up. Gradually, though, I became aware of a certain brittleness to her tone, and I remembered then what Caroline had told me, that time in the library, about her mother and brother having ‘started quarrelling’. And I found myself wishing—what I couldn’t remember ever having done before, at Hundreds—I found myself wishing that I hadn’t come out there, and I began to long for the meal to end. The house, I thought, didn’t deserve their bad feeling; and neither did I.
Presently Mrs Ayres and I fell to talking about a patient I’d recently been treating for the influenza, an old Hundreds tenant who lived a quarter of a mile from the west gates. I said how lucky it was that I was able to use that road across the park in order to reach him; that it made a great difference to my round. Mrs Ayres agreed—then added, cryptically, ‘I do so hope that’s allowed to continue.’
‘You do?’ I asked, surprised. ‘Well, why shouldn’t it?’
She looked pointedly at her son, as if expecting him to speak. He said nothing, only gazed into his wine glass, so she dabbed at her mouth with her linen napkin, then went on: ‘I’m afraid, Doctor, that Roderick’s had to give me some unhappy news today. The fact is, it looks as though we’ll soon be obliged to sell off more of our land.’
‘You will?’ I said, turning to Rod. ‘I thought there wasn’t any more to sell. Who’s the buyer this time?’
‘The county council again,’ said Mrs Ayres, when Rod didn’t answer, ‘with Maurice Babb to build, as before. Their plans are for twenty-four extra houses. Can you imagine? I thought the regulations would forbid it; they seem to forbid everything else. But it seems this government is quite happy to hand out permits to men who intend to break up parklands and estates so that they might cram twenty-four families into three acres of ground. It will mean putting a breach in the wall, laying pipes, and so on—’
‘The wall?’ I said, not understanding.
Caroline spoke. ‘Rod offered them farmland,’ she said quietly, ‘and they didn’t want it. They’ll only take the grass-snake field, over to the west. They finally made up their minds, you see, about the water and electricity: they say they won’t extend the mains to Hundreds simply for our use, but they’ll bring them out if it’s for the sake of new houses. It seems we might just be able to raise the money to lay the pipes and wires the extra distance to the farm.’
For a moment I was too dismayed to answer. The grass-snake field—as I knew Caroline and Roderick had named it, as children—was just within the park wall, about three-quarters of a mile from the house itself. It had been hidden from view in high summer, but with the thinning of the trees in autumn it became visible from all the south- and west-facing windows of the Hall, a distant swathe of green and white and silver, rippling and lovely as fingered velvet. The thought that Rod was seriously prepared to give it up bothered me horribly.
‘You can’t mean it,’ I said to him. ‘You simply can’t break up the park. There must be some alternative, surely?’
And again his mother answered. ‘Nothing at all, apparently, aside from selling the house and park completely; and even Roderick feels that that’s not to be thought of, not after we’ve given up so much already in order to hang on to it. We’ll make it a condition of the sale that Babb puts up a fence around the building-work—and then at least we won’t have to look at it.’
Now Roderick did speak. He said thickly, ‘Yes, we must have a fence to keep out the mob. Not that that will stop them, mind. They’ll soon be scaling the walls of the house at night, with cutlasses between their teeth. You’d better sleep with a pistol under your pillow, Caroline!’
‘They’re not pirates, you oaf,’ she murmured, without looking up from her plate.
‘Aren’t they? I’m not so sure. I think they’d like nothing better than to hang us all from the mainbrace; they’re just waiting for Attlee to give them the word. He probably will, too. Ordinary people hate our sort now, don’t you see?’
‘Please, Roderick,’ said Mrs Ayres uncomfortably. ‘Nobody hates our sort. Not in Warwickshire.’
‘Oh, especially in Warwickshire! Over the border, in Gloztershire, they’re still feudal at heart. But Warwickshire people have always been good business people—right back to the days of the Civil War. They were all for Cromwell then, don’t forget. Now they can see which way the wind is blowing. I wouldn’t blame them if they decided to chop off our heads! We’ve certainly put up a pretty poor show of saving ourselves. ’ He made a clumsy gesture. ‘Just look at Caroline and me, prize heifer and prize bull. We’re hardly doing our bit to further the herd! Anyone would think we were going out of our way to make ourselves extinct.’
‘Rod,’ I said, seeing the look on his sister’s face.
He turned to me. ‘What? You ought to be glad. You’re from pirate stock, aren’t you? You don’t think you’d have been invited along tonight, otherwise! Mother’s too embarrassed to let any of our real friends see us as we are now. Hadn’t you figured that out yet?’
I felt myself blush, but more in anger than anything else; and I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of showing any other discomfort, but kept my eyes on his as I ate—wanting to stare him out, one man to another. The tactic worked, I think, for he met my gaze with a flutter of his lashes,
and just for a moment he looked ashamed and somehow desperate, like a boasting boy secretly daunted by his own bravado.
Caroline had lowered her head, and went on with her dinner. Mrs Ayres said nothing for a minute or two, then set her knife and fork together. And when she spoke again, it was to ask after another patient of mine, as if our earlier conversation had had no interruption. Her manner was smooth, her voice quite soft; she didn’t look at her son after that. Instead she seemed to cut him from the table—to plunge him into darkness, just as if she were reaching and snuffing out the candles in front of him, one by one.
The dinner, by then, was beyond recovery. The dessert was a bottled-raspberry pie, slightly sour, served with artificial cream; the room, after all, was damp and chill, the wind was moaning in the chimney, the table not the sort of pre-war one it was possible to linger over, even if the mood had been better. Mrs Ayres told Betty that we would take our coffee in the little parlour, and she, Caroline, and I rose and put down our napkins.
Only Rod hung back. At the door he said moodily, ‘I shan’t come with you, I’m sure you won’t mind. I’ve some papers I need to look over.’
‘Cigarette papers, I suppose,’ said Caroline, going down the passage to open the door to the little parlour for her mother.
Roderick blinked at her, and again I had the feeling that he was trapped in his own bad humour and secretly abashed by it. I watched him turn away from us to begin the short, gloomy journey to his room, and I felt a rush of angry pity for him; it seemed brutal of us to let him go. But I joined his mother and sister, and found them adding wood to the fire.
‘I must apologise for my son, Doctor,’ said Mrs Ayres as she sat. She put the back of her wrist to her temple as if her head ached. ‘His behaviour tonight was unforgivable. Can’t he see how unhappy he makes us all? If he means to start drinking now, on top of everything, I shall have to ask Betty to keep back the wine. I never saw his father drunk at the table … I hope you know how very welcome you are in this house. Will you sit here, across from me?’
I did sit, for a time. Betty brought us our coffee, and we talked more about the sale of the land. I asked them again if there were no alternative, pointing out the disruption that the building-work would lead to, and the impact such a thing would inevitably have on life at the Hall. But they had thought it through already, and had evidently surrendered themselves to the idea. Even Caroline seemed curiously passive about it all. So I thought I would try Roderick again. It was bothering me, too, to picture him alone and unhappy on the other side of the house. Once my coffee was finished I put down my cup and said I would just look in on him to see if I could be any help with his work.
As I’d suspected, the work was all bluff: when I went in he was sitting more or less in darkness, with only the fire to light the room. I hadn’t knocked this time, so as not to give him the opportunity of refusing me, and he turned his head and said sulkily, ‘I thought you’d come.’
‘May I join you for a while?’
‘What do you think? You can see how frightfully busy I am.—No, don’t put on the light! I’ve rather a headache.’ I heard him setting down a glass and moving forward. ‘I’ll stoke this up a bit instead. God knows it’s cold enough for it.’
He caught up a couple of pieces of log from the box beside the fireplace and flung them clumsily into the hearth. They sent sparks flying up the chimney and cinders leaping out of the grate, and had the effect, for a moment or two, of damping the fire and making the room even darker. But by the time I had picked my way over to him and drawn up the other armchair the flames were beginning to lap and crackle around the damp raw wood and I could see him clearly. He had slouched back in his chair and stuck out his legs. He was still in his evening clothes, his woollen waistcoat and fingerless gloves, but he had loosened his tie and taken out a collar-stud, so that one side of the collar sprang up like a comedy drunk’s.
This was the first time I had been in his room since he had told me that fantastic story in my dispensary, and as I sat I found myself glancing uneasily around. Away from the light of the fire the shadows were so thick and so shifting as to be almost impenetrable, but I could just make out the rumpled blankets of his bed, with beside it his dressing-table and, close to that, his marble-topped washing-stand. Of the shaving-glass—which I’d last seen sitting on the stand along with his razor and soap and brush—there was no sign.
By the time I looked back at Roderick he’d begun fiddling in his lap with papers and tobacco, rolling himself a cigarette. Even in the shifting glow of the firelight I could see that his face was flushed and thick with drink. I began to talk, as I’d intended, about the sale of the land—leaning forward, speaking earnestly, trying to get some sense into him. But he turned his head and wouldn’t listen. At last I gave the subject up.
Sitting back, I said instead, ‘You look terrible, Rod.’
That made him laugh. ‘Ha! I hope that’s not a professional opinion. I’m afraid we can’t afford it.’
‘Why are you doing this to yourself? The estate’s falling to pieces around you, and look at you! You’ve had gin, vermouth, wine, and’—I nodded to his glass, which was sitting on a mess of papers on the table at his elbow—‘what’s in there? Gin again?’
He cursed quietly. ‘Jesus! What of it? Can’t a bloke get lit up now and then?’
I said, ‘Not a bloke in your position, no.’
‘What position’s that? Lord of the manor?’
‘Yes, if you want to put it like that.’
He licked the gum of his cigarette paper, looking sour. ‘You’re thinking of my mother.’
‘Your mother would be miserable,’ I said, ‘if she saw you like this.’
‘Do me a favour then, old chap, will you? Don’t tell her.’ He put the cigarette into his mouth, and lit it with a newspaper spill from the fire. ‘Anyway,’ he said, as he sat back, ‘it’s a bit late for her to begin acting the devoted matron. Twenty-four years too late, to be exact. Twenty-six, in Caroline’s case.’
I said, ‘Your mother loves you dearly. Don’t be stupid.’
‘You know all about it, of course.’
‘I know what she’s told me.’
‘Yes, you’re great chums, you and she, aren’t you? What has she told you? How frightfully disappointed I’ve made her? She’s never forgiven me, you know, for letting myself get shot down and lamed. We’ve been disappointing her all our lives, my sister and I. I think we disappointed her simply by being born.’
I didn’t answer, and for a time he was silent, gazing into the fire. And when he spoke again, it was in a light, almost casual tone. He said, ‘Did you know I ran away from school when I was a boy?’
I blinked at the change of subject. ‘No,’ I said reluctantly, ‘I didn’t know that.’
‘Oh, yes. They kept it quiet, but I bolted twice. The first time I was only eight or nine; I didn’t get far. The second time, though, I was older, maybe thirteen. I just walked out, no one stopped me. I got as far as the public bar of an hotel. I telephoned Morris, my father’s chauffeur, and he came and got me. He was always a pal of mine. He bought me a ham sandwich and a glass of lemonade, and we sat at a table and talked it through … I had thought it all out. I knew he had a brother who ran a garage, and I had fifty pounds of my own, and I thought I might go shares in the garage—live with the brother and be a mechanic. I really knew, you see, about engines.’
He drew on his cigarette. ‘Morris was awfully good about it. He said, “Well, Master Roderick”—he had the most terrible Birmingham accent, just like that—“Well, Master Roderick, I think you’d make a fine mechanic, and my brother would be honoured to have you, but don’t you think it would break your parents’ heart, you being heir to the estate and all?” He wanted to take me back to school, but I wouldn’t let him. He didn’t know what else to do with me, so he brought me back here, and gave me to Cook, and Cook got me quietly up to my mother. They were imagining that Mother would look after me, make things e
asy with the old man—like mothers do in the pictures and on the stage. But, no: she just told me what a great disappointment I was, and she sent me down to Father, to explain to him for myself what I was doing here. The old man ramped like the devil, of course, and thrashed me—thrashed me right by the open window, where any outdoors servant could have seen.’ He laughed. ‘And I had only run away because a boy was thrashing me at school! A beastly boy, he was: Hugh Nash. He used to call me “Ayres-and-Graces”. But even he had the decency to whip me in private …’
His cigarette was burning itself out in his fingers, but he sat still, and his voice dipped. ‘Nash went into the Navy in the end. He was killed off Malaya. And do you know, when I heard he’d been killed, I felt relieved. I was already in the Air Force by then, and I felt relieved—just as if I were still at school, and another boy had told me that Nash had been taken out of class by his parents … Poor Morris died, too, I think. I wonder if his brother did all right.’ His voice grew harsh. ‘I wish I had gone shares in that garage. I’d be a happier man than I am now, pouring everything I’ve got into this bloody estate. Why the hell am I doing it? For the sake of the family, you’re going to say, with that wonderful insight of yours. Do you really think this family’s worth saving? Look at my sister! This house has sucked the life out of her—just as it’s sucking it out of me. That’s what it’s doing. It wants to destroy us, all of us. It’s all very well my standing up to it now, but how long d’you think I can go on like that? And when it’s finished with me—’
‘Rod, stop it,’ I said, for his voice had risen suddenly and he was becoming agitated: realising his cigarette had gone out, he’d leaned forward to put another paper spill to the fire, and he had thrown the spill violently down so that it bounced back over the marble fender and lay burning at the edge of the rug. I picked it up and tossed it into the grate; then, seeing the state of him, I reached for the edge of the fire-curtain—for his was one of those fireplaces that had a piece of fine old mesh hung across it, like a nursery guard—and drew it closed.