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All the Way to Summer Page 3


  ‘Yes,’ said Alice.

  ‘No,’ he said, replacing her skirt. ‘No.’

  He switched on the car engine and reached for her hand. ‘I won’t forget this,’ he said.

  She believed that, too late, he had chosen her over Rhoda.

  Miss Macdonald was pleased with Alice’s progress. She had introduced a new idea into the shop. When a new consignment of dresses arrived, she appraised each one carefully. Then she made out a list and rang a number of farmers’ wives. ‘I’ve got just the dress here for you,’ she told each one. ‘Would you like me to send it out on the rural delivery for you to try?’

  This new service surprised and pleased the customers. Not a single dress was returned. Miss Macdonald said to Alice one morning that it would be a good idea for her to go into town with her to do some buying at the warehouse. She would get an old friend who had helped her out in the past to keep the shop open.

  After they had spent the morning amongst rows of dresses, Miss Macdonald sent her off to look at the shops while she settled the bills. Alice could tell that she was still pleased with her.

  Outside, she saw Rhoda Aukett. She was walking along the street, her shoulders slightly bowed. She didn’t see Alice as her attention was entirely absorbed by a child, a listless, dreamy-looking boy, perhaps four or five years old. Alice knew at once that it was Rhoda’s child. She could not say how she knew, but there was something about the connection between them, and his look of her, that told her. She watched them from a shop doorway, saw the way she turned to him and smiled. Something had worn thin in Rhoda Aukett, but still she smiled, and the child looked back at her with an open trusting face, a face that could still believe that there are reasons for everything and that disappearances are only temporary.

  ‘I saw Rhoda Aukett in town today,’ she told her mother when she got home that evening.

  ‘Did she have her kid with her?’

  ‘How did you know?’

  She looked at Alice, puzzled. ‘Well, Tilly told me. She told everybody when she found out.’ Her mother seemed to have forgotten how recently Alice had crossed over that secret divide between schoolgirl and working woman, and how much might still be hidden from her. All the edges were blurred. Clover Johnston’s parents were sending Clover off to boarding school for another year. It seemed that Clover faced endless childhood, and Alice was sorry for her.

  What she did not ask her mother was whether Tilly knew that Douglas cried when he told Rhoda that she could not bring her child to the farm. For she understood now that this was what was happening the night of the phone call.

  One other thing happened before Alice left the drapery shop. Douglas had been gone for more than six months when he sent her a postcard. Alice did not know that the jungle had already claimed him. Not to instant death but to the illness that would persist for the rest of his life. She believes that he did not know how ill he was when he posted the card; she is sure he believed that, back on the farm, where the grass grew in broad swathes and the trees were cropped into hedges and the birds were no more dangerous than a circling hawk, he would recover his health.

  His postcard came to the shop, and she guessed that this was another of his small ploys to keep his plans to himself. She realised that he must have had news of her, that she was now working at the drapery and was truly grown up and doing well, and she hoped he had also been told that nobody thought she was difficult any longer. His card said, simply, ‘I’m coming home.’ That and his name.

  Alice has come across a phrase about women’s lives that stays with her: the fraught and endless narrative. Who am I? Where did I come from? How did I arrive at where I am now? She conducts these interviews with herself. They are not all, or even often, about Douglas McNaught, for a great many other things have happened to her since then. But he is part of the narrative.

  Alice remembers a time when postcards were a metaphor for a shorthand account of life: the picture and a dozen words, and you have it all, and, in a way, this was true of Douglas’s postcard, although there was no picture and the message was even shorter. But something happened when it came that even now she cannot entirely explain. Miss Macdonald had collected the mail from the post office. Alice was folding a bolt of voile when she brought the card into the shop. Without commenting, she put it down on the counter. Alice read it at a glance. Then she put the material down on the counter and, picking up the card, she walked outside and along the road through the village centre, towards the grassy hills. The narrow valley stretched before her, above her the sky bleached to nothing, around her lay the singing sunlit air of late autumn. Her father might have the son he had wanted. Two farms would become one profitable enterprise. The bloodlines would run cleanly between them. She wanted to squat against the earth, as if pushing out the first child. She smelt the scent of her own desire all over again.

  Then she turned around and retraced her steps. She wondered whether his card was a warning to make ready, or whether it was offering her a chance to go. It was one thing to come home when you already knew what lay beyond the valley; it was another thing to stay without the chance of ever leaving. This, too, he might already know.

  Besides, there had been Rhoda Aukett.

  Alice could tell any of this to Kathryn, but she doesn’t. She might tell her that if she had been her daughter her name might have been Catherine spelled with a C and an I, or that her name might not have been that at all. Instead, she tells her that it is difficult to remember much more because she left the valley so soon after she finished school, when a cadetship in broadcasting came up, and she moved south to the city. She has only passed through Fish Rock once or twice since then. She has seen Douglas’s grave, and she is sorry about what happened to him. She might, but she does not, tell his daughter that when she rang and said who she was, a shiver like violets shaken before a spring wind had passed through her. She thinks of Kathryn’s father as tenderly as she thinks of any man.

  Hats

  Like turning your hand over, things could go either way with the weather. Six a.m. and the bay is turbulent and green, but at that hour of the morning anything can happen. Standing at the window, just listening, the whole house is a heartbeat. Looking at the bay, the water, the clouds, I think I can hear the busy clink and chatter of the rigging on the boats parked on the hard at the bay, but that can’t be right, it’s too far away. Oh, you can hear anything, see anything on a morning like this, it’s the day of the wedding. Our son’s getting married.

  There is a stirring in the back rooms; there is so much to do, I will never get done, it’s crazy this, but the wedding’s to be here, not at her place but mine. I am speaking now of the bride’s mother and myself. Well, it’s a long story, how the wedding comes to be here instead of there, but that’s the way it is. She’s bringing the food later in the morning, and there’ll be crayfish and scallops like nobody ever had at a wedding before, and mussels of course. They are mussel farmers from the Sounds. They. Well, I mean the bride’s parents.

  I love our daughter-in-law to be, I really do. You might think I don’t mean that, mothers-in-law rarely do, but it’s true. Our son’s on a win. I want to see him married.

  Perhaps they know that. There are times when I think they haven’t been so keen. Perhaps they think she could have done better. I don’t know. It hasn’t been easy, getting this wedding together. But, if you knew him, our son, you’d know she wouldn’t settle for anyone else. Anyone less. Now there’s a mother talking, but I’ve fallen for it, that same old charm of his, and I’ll go on forever, I guess. He puts his arms around me and says, ‘Love ya, Ma’ and I’ll forgive him anything.

  It’s true. He brings out a softness in me. That and rage. But the anger never lasts for long.

  There is no time to go on reflecting about it this morning though. There’s the smell of baked meats in the air, I need to open up the house and blow it through, I’ve got the food warmer to collect from the hire depot, and the tablecloths aren’t ready, and I have to s
et up a place for the presents, and there’s his mother, my husband’s to be got up, and there’re relatives to be greeted, and oh, God, I am so tired. Why didn’t anyone tell me I’d be so tired on our son’s wedding day, it doesn’t seem fair because I want to enjoy it. Oh, by that I mean, I want it to be all right, of course, and I want to do it graciously. We’ve been at it a bit over this wedding. Them and us. But I want to make sure it goes all right today. They’re bringing the food and the flagons of beer; we’re providing the waiters and waitresses in starched uniforms, and the champagne. You have to cater for everyone at a wedding.

  Eleven a.m. The food hasn’t come. The flagons haven’t come. She hasn’t come. That’s the bride’s mother. The wedding is at two. I am striding around the house. The furniture is minimal. We’ve cleared everything back. There’s hardly going to be standing room. That’s if there ever is a wedding. There is nothing more I can do. Nothing and everything. If only we had another day. It would have been better if we’d held off another month. The weather would have been better. Not that it’s bad, but the breeze is cold. It’ll be draughty in the church.

  The church, ah, the church. It looks so beautiful. The flowers. They are just amazing. Carnations and irises, low bowls of stocks … There are the cars now, all the relatives bearing trays and pots and dishes, straggling up the steps. The food looks wonderful. God, those crays, there’re dozens of them. I’m glad they’ve done the food. I could never have done it so well. And the cake. Our daughter-in-law’s aunty has made the cake and it’s perfect too.

  Everyone’s exhausted, it’s not just me, they’ve been up all night. Still, I wish they could have got here a bit sooner, and we all have to get dressed yet. It’s cutting things fine. I feel faint, even a little nauseous, as if lights are switching on and off in my brain. She can’t be as tired as I am, nobody could be that tired. How am I going to make it through the rest of the day?

  ‘I’d better be getting along,’ says the aunt to the bride’s mother. ‘I’ve still got to finish off your hat.’ The aunt has a knack with things, clothes and cakes, she’s the indispensable sort.

  Inside me, something freezes. ‘Hat,’ I say, foolishly, in a loud voice. ‘You’re wearing a hat?’

  There is a silence in the kitchen.

  ‘Well, it’s just a little hat,’ she says.

  ‘You said you weren’t going to wear a hat.’ I hear my voice, without an ounce of grace in it, and I don’t seem able to stop it. There is an ugliness in the air.

  The aunty, her sister, says, ‘She needed a hat to finish off the outfit. It wouldn’t look right without it.’

  ‘But we agreed,’ I say. ‘You said you couldn’t afford a hat, and I said, well, if you’re not wearing one, I won’t.’

  The silence extends around the kitchen. She fumbles a lettuce leaf, suddenly awkward at my bench.

  ‘It’s all right,’ I say, ‘it’s nothing.’ My face is covered with tears. I walk out, leaving them to finish whipping the cream.

  ‘Where are you going?’ my husband says, following at my heels.

  ‘Out. Away.’

  ‘You can’t go away.’

  ‘I have to. I’m not going to the wedding.’

  ‘No stop. Don’t be silly.’ He’s really alarmed, I’m right on the edge, and he’s right, I might go off at any moment and make things too awful for everyone to endure. At the rate I’m going, there mightn’t be any wedding.

  ‘Come into the shed,’ he says, speaking softly, like a zookeeper talking down a wild animal. ‘You’re tired, just tired.’

  I follow him. Inside the tool shed I start to cry properly. ‘I want a hat,’ I say, ‘I wanted to wear a hat all along, but I promised her. I promised I wouldn’t get a hat.’

  ‘I’ll get you a hat. Come along, we’ll go into town and buy you a hat.’

  ‘It’s too late, the shops will be shut.’

  ‘We could just make it to James Smith’s,’ he says. But it is too late, I can see that. Even if we broke the speed limit, I’d only have five minutes, it being Saturday. The shops are due to close in half an hour.

  ‘I can’t go without a hat. What’ll I do?’

  ‘You’ll think of something,’ he says. ‘You always do. Hey, we can do anything, can’t we?’ He pulls my fists out of my eyes. ‘What can we do? We can …’ He waits for me to join in the refrain with him.

  ‘We can walk on water if we have to,’ I chant.

  But I’m not sure how I will.

  Back in the kitchen everyone is tiptoeing around. ‘It looks wonderful,’ I say heartily. ‘Just great. Don’t you think you should be getting along, I mean, if you’re going to get dressed?’

  They nod. They are not deceived, but they are glad to be excused. They have been afraid to take their leave in my absence.

  They are gone, and our son and his best man are dressed, preening in their three-piece suits. Oh, they are so handsome. It calms me, just seeing them. As for him: I want to stroke him. My boy. In a suit. Oh, I’m square, when it all comes down to it. But he’s proud of himself too.

  ‘Y’okay, Ma?’

  He doesn’t know what’s been going on, but he sees I’m pale.

  ‘Of course I’m okay,’ I say, and for his sake I must be. I must also have a hat.

  I ring our daughter. ‘What about all those hats you bought when you were into hats?’ I ask. I think of the op shops where she has collected feathered toques and funny little cloches. I have a feeling that none of them will suit me. She is so tall and elegant. ‘I think they’re in the baby’s toy box,’ she says.

  ‘Have a look,’ I command.

  ‘God, I’ve got to get dressed too.’

  I hold grimly onto the phone. She comes back. ‘There’re three: the black one with three feathers, the sort of burgundy one, and the beige one with the wide brim.’

  ‘That’s it, the beige one. I’m sending Dad over for it right now.’

  ‘But Mum.’

  ‘It’ll be all right. Well, look, I can try it anyway.’

  ‘But Mum,’ — this time she gets it out — ‘the baby’s been sick on it.’

  ‘How sick?’

  ‘Really sick.’

  No one is going to put me off now. I think she is conspiring with the odds to stop me making a fool of myself. I won’t let her save me though. ‘Dad’ll be right over,’ I say.

  But it’s true. The baby has been very sick on the hat. I’m sure our daughter shouldn’t have put it back in the toy box like that. I resolve to speak to her at some later date.

  In the meantime, there is work to be done. I fill the sink with hot soapy water and get out the scrubbing brush. In a few moments, the sick has gone. I have a soggy felt hat dripping in my hands, but at least it is clean.

  The husband and wife team, available for cocktail, waitressing and barman duties in the privacy of your own home, has arrived. ‘Don’t worry about a thing,’ they say. ‘You just enjoy yourselves, and we’ll take care of everything from now on.’

  In the clothes drier, the hat whirls around.

  Our son has left for the church. Soon we’ll have to go too. My husband is resplendent. He wears his father’s watch-chain across his waistcoat. His father was a guard on the railways, back in the old days. That watch has started a thousand trains on country railway stations. Sometimes I remonstrate with my husband for wearing it; it doesn’t always seem appropriate. Today it is exactly right. The spring in the watch has given up long ago, but the watch will start the wedding on time. Sooner or later.

  My hands shake so much, he has to do up the buttons on my Georgia Brown silk dress. ‘It’s time we were going,’ he says tentatively. I know he’s thinking about the hat and wondering if he can get me away without it.

  But it’s dry. Dry and softly drooping around the brim so that it swoops low over my right eye when I put it on. I stare at myself in the mirror, entranced. I feel beautiful. I glow. I love hats. This hat is perfect.

  Our son’s wife-to-be is late. I don
’t mind. It gives me time to relax, breathe deeply, smile and wave around the church. Across the aisle, I see her, the mother of the bride. She is not wearing a hat.

  Instinctively, I touch the brim of mine. I have shamed her into coming without her hat. I should feel jubilant, but I don’t. I feel bad, wonder how to take mine off without drawing attention to myself. But it’s impossible. At the door to the church, the priest has said first thing when he sees me, ‘Oh, what a beautiful hat.’

  I look away, embarrassed. I tell myself I must not think about it. The wedding is about to happen, and we can’t repeat it when I’m feeling better, so I’ve just got to stop thinking about it, the hat on my head.

  And then they’re there, the two of them coming into the church together, which is what’s been arranged, and it’s not quite the same old responses, because the priest has said that some of that wouldn’t be suitable — he’s rather conservative this man, a little disapproving — but they say nice things to each other, making promises to do things as well as they can, and they’re so young, so very young, and that’s all you can expect from anybody, to do their best, isn’t it?

  The couple is facing the congregation now. Our daughter stands up at the lectern and reads from the book of Ecclesiastes and then some Keats, Oh brightest! Thou too late for antique vows, — and she’s pale and self-contained and not showing any signs of things turning over inside her, and so lovely; she and the boy, her brother, look at each other, and it’s as if they’re the only ones in the church for the moment — Holy the air, the water, and the fire — like a conversation just for the two of them, putting aside all their childish grievances, though a few people in the church who haven’t done English Lit. look a trifle confused, but it doesn’t matter, these two know — … so let me be thy choir … thy voice … thy lute … — and then the baby of our son and his new wife cries at the back of the church where he’s being held by the aunty, and the spell’s broken as the two parents look anxiously after their child. The wind rises in the funnel where the church stands, and a plane roars overhead, and the light shines through the stained-glass window on to the same spot where my father’s coffin stood last year, and with all the light and the sound I don’t hear any more of the service, I just smile and smile.