The little boat which ferried them out from the Dorset coast was filled with visiting relatives. It was Corry’s annual Visitor’s Day, an opportunity for dominant culture briefly to assert its mob superiority over the eccentric. Only one couple – a comfortable parson and his harassed-looking wife, whose nervous hands strayed repeatedly to touch the silver cross round her neck, as though even such plain adornment were too ostentatious – seemed likely family for a nun. The others – parents, married sisters, grown-up children – were stirring up the kind of camaraderie among themselves that implied a shared adversity. The way they brightly swopped holiday plans and public gossip with strangers was a way of making plain to one another that nuns, for them, represented the outmoded and unnatural. The women they were visiting on Corry – their daughters, sisters, mothers, whatever – had turned their back on everything these, their survivors, represented, on family, procreation, domesticity, social achievement. The facts of life, in short. The colourful boatload, with its potted plants, knitting, family snaps, tins of cake and chatter of politics and film stars, was a worldly, see-what-you-missed delegation. Women were wearing their prettiest dresses in much the same way that Sally persisted in carrying armfuls of flowers from The Roundel’s garden to adorn Edward’s hospital ward – behind the cheering display nestled a small thorn, an unconscious sting, to remind the visited of their rightful place.
Miriam dropped the rattle she had been shaking onto the deck with one of her inappropriately triumphant laughs. Having stooped to return it to her hot little grasp, Sally tickled the tempting mound of her child’s belly. Looking up to see their progress, she surprised a faintly covetous smile on the tired face of the parson’s wife and guessed that this woman, after all, had also been nun-thwarted, deprived of the compensation of grandchildren.
Dr Pertwee was waiting well away from the flurry of her sisters on the shore. Sally found her on a rock, deep in conversation with a plump, lively Indian woman whom she recognised from Dr Pertwee’s letters as Miss Bannerjee. Larger than her friend, Miss Bannerjee was furled in a vivid, gold-trimmed sari which flapped in the sea breeze. Even by her bird-like standards, Dr Pertwee had become shockingly thin. Her cheeks had sunk and there were dark stains beneath her eyes. The pair greeted Sally before paying brief, obligatory homage to Miriam.
‘She looks so wise,’ Miss Bannerjee laughed, as the baby devoured her with a stare from beneath her frilly sun hat, ‘and so important. Like an imperial dignitary on a tedious mission.’
Then Miss Bannerjee’s visitors arrived and Sally and Dr Pertwee were left alone together.
So much had passed between them in their recent letters that they said nothing at first. It was as though their physical selves needed time to catch up with the alterations made on paper during their long separation. When they did speak, walking slowly along the shoreline, well behind the boisterous crowd, it was deliberately of practicalities – Sally’s journey, how long she could spare, Miriam’s needs, the older Bankses’ health – and not of emotions. Edward was not mentioned until they had visited Dr Pertwee’s spartan room to fill Miriam’s bottle and collect a picnic the old woman had amassed on the sly to spare them the hectic intrusiveness of a communal meal in the dining hall.
‘Here, my dear, you take the things and let me carry this divine creature.’
‘Are you sure you can manage? She already weighs a ton.’
‘You’re worried I’ll drop her?’
‘No.’
Sally smiled and passed her baby into Dr Pertwee’s confident grasp, noting how huge she suddenly looked in the little woman’s arms. As they left the room, she spotted the small photograph of Miriam she had posted with a letter. It was tucked into a dusty, framed picture of herself, aged about twelve, all hair and travelling teeth. She felt once again the queer ambiguity of being a daughter-elect.
Dr Pertwee led her down a spiral staircase, out of a low door, and through a walled herb and vegetable garden whose air hummed with bees from the community’s hives. Several landed on the old woman’s sleeve and Sally noted with surprise how calmly she brushed them off, unstung. They passed out onto a narrow headland, bristling with gorse and a few stunted pine trees and down to a tiny, sheltered beach.
‘My secret place,’ Dr Pertwee announced, as they settled into a natural sofa where tussocks of coarse grass and stout cushions formed by decades-old sea pinks sank into the sand. Hungry from all the fresh air and an early start, Sally dug in the bag and uncovered a clutch of roast chicken legs. Holding her food with one hand, Dr Pertwee twitched up her skirt a little with the other to let the sun onto her legs. She caught Sally noticing how skeletal they had become and leaned back with a sigh.
‘I’m ill, you know, my dear,’ she said.
‘Yes,’ said Sally. ‘I’d guessed.’
‘A year, they’ve given me. Six months to a year. It’s really of no consequence. Ah the sun, the sun! It feels so good on old bones. I suppose it’s because they’re so much nearer the surface than plump-fleshed young ones.’
Sally stared out at the gentle waves for a moment. She was perturbed at how little pain the news had caused her – no more than a brief chill, as at a momentary clouding of the summer warmth. Had the dreadful months of Edward’s suffering left her with such a hard crust? Perhaps it was simply that her friend’s tranquillity was infectious.
‘God,’ she said. ‘I’m so sorry.’
‘Don’t be. No point.’
‘But can’t I do something? Don’t you want to see someone besides the doctor here? I could find you a specialist or –’
Dr Pertwee silenced her with a gentle touch on the forearm and a deep, kind look from her bottle green eyes as she shook her head.
‘Listen, dear, I don’t want to be kept alive. And for what it’s worth, I’ve already ascertained that the dispensary here has a healthy stock of morphine.’
‘Oh. Well. Good.’
Sally managed a smile and took Miriam back into her arms to let her suck at her bottle while her companion poured them each a glass tumbler of tart, slightly warm white wine with a homemade label on it. She admired the way the sun caught the faint down where the baby’s pale hair began.
‘A pity he isn’t here to share this,’ Dr Pertwee said. Sally caught her eye and looked back to Miriam but her daughter pulled back from the bottle with a miniature grimace and stared at her too, as if to say, ‘Well?’
Sally sighed, wiped Miriam’s mouth with a handkerchief and set her on the sand between her knees. She drew together some largish pebbles for her to play with. Miriam grasped one with both hands, laughed, dropped it, grasped another, laughed, dropped that. She seemed to be weighing them, divining against some mysterious scale which was the best, which was most quintessentially pebble. Occasionally one of the small waves broke with a slight crash and Miriam would start, threatening to lose her balance in the effort to face the source of the noise.
‘I wish I knew what to do,’ Sally began. ‘It’s so unlike me to be so indecisive. At first I was so scared. I only told them about him trying to kill himself. I didn’t like to say anything about him hitting me or going for Miriam like that. I mean, Thomas knows, of course, and you, but I thought if I told Ernest Waltham he’d be. Oh. I don’t know. I’m rambling aren’t I?’
Dr Pertwee smiled kindly.
‘Yes. Go back to when you were scared.’
‘I was scared. Being on my own back in the house, just me and Miriam, I felt so safe. But when I went to see him he seemed so harmless, and desperate. I suppose, if I’m honest, I feel I’ve failed him. Thomas keeps saying the specialists know what they’re doing and I should trust them, but in a way I still think of Edward as my patient as well as my lover.’
‘You haven’t failed him in love.’
‘Haven’t I? Well I’ve failed him as a doctor. I managed to get Mum to take Miriam for a day last week and I spent an afternoon in the medical faculty library. I read up on ECT. It seems it affects memory. Some researchers claim it can wipe out whole tracts of memories. Well I may not be a specialist, but even I can see that he needs to come to terms with whatever’s in his past if he’s to be well again, not lose it altogether. I think memories could be the key. They’ve tried drugs on him. They’ve tried vitamins. I know depression can be purely chemical and I know it’s sacrilege for a doctor to say so, but in this case I think their approach is just too bloody scientific. When someone cries, you don’t say shut up, have a pill, you try to find out why they’re crying, surely?’
‘And aren’t they trying?’
‘Oh I think Caldecott tries to talk to him, but you know how cold Waltham is.’
‘A human fish.’
‘Caldecott’s pretty feeble too, anyway. The ward’s so crowded that no-one can get proper attention. And the other thing I can’t stand is Mum’s attitude. She manages to imply that it was somehow my fault. She can’t bear people knowing. I found out she’s been telling them he’s gone to Hollywood for a bit. She seems to think I should have soldiered nobly on in private, cured him with sex or better cooking or something.’
Dr Pertwee chuckled. Sally went on.
‘And last week she was daring to say we should never have had Miriam, that it could be genetic. I hate leaving Miriam with her, even this young. I can’t bear the thought of what she might pick up.’
‘You didn’t pick up much.’
‘I picked up more than you suppose,’ Sally said with a grin. ‘The apples don’t fall so far from the tree. Anyway, I had you to counteract her. And why are you laughing? It’s not funny.’
Dr Pertwee opened her penknife and began to peel a pear. Its juice ran over her gnarled fingers and plopped into sudden dimples in the sand. She stopped laughing but made no response until she had cut off a slice and eaten it thoughtfully.
‘We survive,’ she said at last. ‘It’s the harshest lesson of all; worse than sickness, worse than losing the one you love – and believe me, dear girl, I’ve lost plenty one way or another. I don’t know how we do it, but we survive. Compared to the perfected simplicity of the lower animals, man seems expressly designed to suffer, punish his fellows and destroy himself. He’s been given faculties to make every bad thing worse by analysing it and comparing it with the bad things that went before. Worst of all, he remembers so acutely that he can relive any suffering he might be in danger of forgetting. But he survives. Exhausting really, but there it is. It will be a relief to stop, frankly. Oh Sally Banks you are a sweet fool, but no-one could ever change your mind for you. Anyway, I can see, beneath all this hand-wringing, that it’s already firmly made up. Now please don’t cry. I said don’t! Oh hell. Here. Use mine.’
Sally’s handkerchief was too damp with milk to be of much use. She took Dr Pertwee’s with mumbled thanks and blew her nose. Miriam looked up at her mother briefly then returned happily to clicking her pebbles.
‘I don’t want you to die,’ Sally said at last.
‘Well thank you very much. I moan about what hell life has been and you say you want me to have more of it. Such selfishness!’
‘Sorry. But you know what I’m trying to say.’
‘Yes,’ the older woman said quietly. ‘And thank you.’
‘What did you mean just then about me making up my mind?’
Dr Pertwee busied herself peeling another pear.
‘You’re going to take him away from the doctors and try to care for him at home,’ she said.
‘But I never –’
‘And it’s going to be hell, but gradually it’ll get better and then you’ll hardly notice you’re suffering at all.’ She held out a chunk of dripping fruit for Sally to take and watched her bite into its delicious, sun-warmed flesh. ‘You’re a sweet fool,’ she said again, suddenly serious, ‘but you’ll live.’