ON BOARD THE BERENGARIA
FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1934
I awoke the next morning to a light tap on the door and instead of Queenie a steward came in with a tray of tea and biscuits.
“A brisk day, my lady,” he said. “Would you like breakfast in your stateroom?”
“Thank you. That would be lovely,” I said. “Just a boiled egg and some fruit after that large meal last night.”
As I sat up I noticed the cabin rolling. I got up, went to the window and looked out. It was a gray morning and there were whitecaps on the waves. I rang for Queenie, who staggered in looking rather pale.
“It ain’t half going up and down now, miss,” she said. “I hope I ain’t going to be sick. I don’t want to miss out on the food. It’s bloody good, even in the maids’ dining room.”
“I’ve been told the secret is to eat regular small meals, nothing too rich,” I said. “And if you feel sick go outside into the fresh air and focus on the horizon.”
“I’m feeling a bit Uncle Dick right now,” she said.
“Uncle Dick?”
“Rhyming slang for sick,” she said with a weak smile. She actually didn’t look at all well.
“I’ll manage to get myself ready,” I said. “Go out on deck and then have some tea and toast.”
“Very good, my lady,” she said, which was a good indication of how ill she was feeling.
I realized that I was not feeling at all queasy. I ate my breakfast with relish then went up on deck to explore. A few people were sitting on deck chairs with rugs over their knees. A steward was going around with a tray of hot consommé. A group of young men was bravely attempting a game of quoits. I recognized one of them as Tubby Halliday. He waved when he saw me.
“Come and join us,” he called. “It’s quite a challenge with the ship rolling around like billy-o.”
I hesitated but then decided why not. “All right.” I went over and was handed a quoit. The facts that I had never played the game before and couldn’t always control what my limbs did shouldn’t matter, should it? My first throw released from my hand at the wrong moment, resulting in a quoit that rolled along the deck and had to be chased down before it went over the side. My second went straight up in the air instead of toward the pin. “Whoops,” I said. The men were nice enough to put this down to the pitching of the ship. I managed to relax and soon the pitching and rolling was part of the fun. I even landed a quoit over the pin.
“Jolly good,” said a tall young man, clearly an American by the loud check of his jacket. “I’ll have to nab you as my partner in one of the deck tennis tournaments.”
“Oh, I don’t think so,” I said. “I’m not that good.”
“In case you haven’t noticed there aren’t too many women under forty on the ship,” he said with rather too much candor.
“Thank you. You make me feel so desirable,” I said, rather proud of finding a comeback for once.
He flushed. “Sorry, that wasn’t very diplomatic, was it, and my old man wants me to become an ambassador someday. I’m sure you’d be a delightful partner and you’ve got a good strong right arm. I’m Jerry by the way. Are you staying in town or are you heading out?”
“A few days in New York, I believe, and then we’re going across the country by train.”
“To California?”
“To Nevada, I think.”
“Interesting.” Tubby Halliday had moved closer to me. “The only reason anyone goes to Nevada is to get a divorce.”
“We might be looking at buying land,” I said, giving him a cold stare.
“No land worth buying in Nevada,” Tubby went on. “And I see that the famous Mrs. Simpson is on board. Rumor has it that she’s going home to Baltimore for that very reason.”
“Buying land?” I asked innocently.
He laughed. “Getting a divorce from Mr. Simpson.”
“Gee whiz. Then she does intend to marry the prince,” the young American said. “Wouldn’t that be a turnup for the books. Imagine a Yankee queen. What would you Limeys say about that?”
“It couldn’t happen,” I said. “The Prince of Wales wouldn’t be allowed to marry a divorced woman. When he’s king he’ll become head of the Church of England which does not accept divorce.”
“We’ll see,” the American said. “From what I’ve heard, she’s a lady who likes to get her own way.”
“Not against centuries of English tradition,” I said.
“There’s a way around anything,” the American said, taking an easy drag on his cigarette. “Go ahead. It’s your turn.”
I tossed the quoit down the deck. He was right, of course. I had thought that I would not be allowed to marry Darcy because he was a Roman Catholic and I was in the line of succession to the throne—albeit only thirty-fifth. But it had been pointed out to me that all I had to do was renounce my claim to the throne and I was free to marry whom I pleased. Since I wasn’t likely to be queen unless the Black Death swept through the country again, this would be an easy decision. We hadn’t announced our plans to marry yet, since neither of us had a penny to our names.
Tubby Halliday had moved closer to me. “So is your mother really going to get a divorce? Who is she actually married to?”
“It’s really none of your business, Mr. Halliday,” I said.
“Tubby, please. We’re all on first-name terms on a ship. I was just interested. She is a public figure, after all, and public figures are fair game, aren’t they?”
“Why this morbid interest in everyone else’s life, Mr. Halliday?” I asked. “It’s not quite done, is it?”
The young American chuckled and gave Tubby a shove. “Don’t you know—he’s a newspaper reporter for the Daily Mail. It’s his job to dig up scoops.”
I felt anger welling up inside me. I have been brought up to control my emotions (a lady is in control at all times; a lady never shows what she is feeling) but I blurted out, “You should be ashamed of yourself. Pretending to be chummy with me just so you can print horrid things in your newspaper about my mother and my family. You can count me out of your quoits and any other game you want to play.”
And I stalked off. I heard Tubby say to the American, “You’ve well and truly put your foot in it for me this time, old sport.”
“I think you did that pretty well yourself,” was the reply.
Thank heavens I hadn’t succumbed to his easy friendliness enough to tell him about Mummy’s Reno divorce trip. She’d never have forgiven me. I decided that she would be up by now and made my way to her stateroom. As I tapped on her door I thought I heard voices. I opened the door cautiously.
“Mummy, are you up?” I called.
“Come on in, darling,” Mummy called. “I’m not only up, I have visitors.”
I came into the room to see Cy Goldman and Stella Brightwell sitting on the sofa opposite my mother. The room was heavy with cigar smoke. Mummy was sitting up, fully dressed, face made up perfectly, looking very prim and proper, not sprawled across the armchair the way she usually sat.
“You remember our table companions from last night, Mr. Goldman and Miss Brightwell, don’t you, Georgie? It seems they have staterooms just down the hall from mine. I must say the accommodations are splendid on the ship, aren’t they?”
“Cy finds them quite cramped.” Stella laughed. “But then you should see the size of Alhambra Two.”
“Alhambra Two?”
Stella gave Cy Goldman a challenging look.
“She means the place I’m building above Malibu. Just because I’m incorporating parts of old Spanish buildings into it Stella has dubbed it Alhambra Two. Actually it doesn’t have a name yet.” He looked up at me and patted the sofa beside him. “You’re just the person we need, young lady. Take a seat. We’re trying to persuade your mother to be in our movie. But for some reason she’s the one person in the world who doesn’t want to be a movie star.”
“So silly, darling,” Mummy said. “What would Max think? What would anyone think? They’d say I was a has-been, trying to make a comeback.”
“On the contrary,” Stella said. “They’d be amazed that you still look so young and gorgeous.”
“Oh, don’t be silly.” Mummy laughed but I could tell she was flattered. Perhaps she was playing hard to get. “Besides, I have no time to be in Hollywood. This is only a short trip then I must return to dear Max in Germany. He hates it when I am away.”
“So where exactly are you going in the States?” Cy asked.
“Reno, if you must know,” Mummy said. “I have been tied to an annoying husband who doesn’t believe in divorce. But my current beau is insisting that we get married, and I’ve been told that a divorce can be arranged simply and easily in Reno.”
“Yes, but not overnight, honey,” Cy Goldman said. “Ask Stella. She can tell you. She went through it when she got rid of Freddie.”
“English husband, darling. Quite impossible. Drank like a fish and went after anything in skirts that didn’t play bagpipes.”
“So how long does it take, exactly?” Mummy asked.
“There’s a six-week residency requirement,” Stella said.
“Six weeks?” Mummy looked aghast. “I have to live in Nevada for six weeks? Why didn’t anyone tell me that?”
“There are ways around it,” Cy said. “Tell her, Stella.”
“Some people check into a resort and lounge in the sun and have a good time,” she said, “I did. It was bliss. Lovely swimming pool and gambling at night. But if you’re really against being stuck in the middle of nowhere you rent yourself a little house out in the boonies, make sure you’re seen around and then pay someone to take your place.”
“I can pay someone to take my place?”
“Sure you can. You let them know that because you’re a famous lady you’re steering clear of any bad publicity. You arrange to have food delivered, and ensure you are seen in the distance from time to time. Then you show up again when you go before the judge. They don’t ask too many questions in Reno. It’s a primary source of income for the state.”
Cy thumped one fist against the other. “And during those six weeks you make a picture with us. What could be simpler? We’ll put you up at the Beverly Hills Hotel. You’ll come out to my castle on the hill on weekends. You’ll have a ball. So will the young lady. She’ll meet movie stars instead of cowboys. Much more fun than dreary Nevada.”
Mummy was fiddling with her hair—a sure sign she was nervous. “Is there no way around this six week business?”
“Sure. You can go to Guam. I hear they’ll issue you with a divorce on the spot there.”
“Guam? Where is that?”
“On the other side of the Pacific Ocean,” Goldman said. “A long boat ride. Primitive. Grass huts. Mosquitoes. And no luxury liners like this. Tramp steamers all the way with an Oriental crew who drink.”
“No thank you,” Mummy said with a shudder.
“Or you could hop across the border to Mexico, but not all states would recognize a Mexican divorce.”
I could tell Mummy was weakening. “What part would I have to play in this picture? I won’t be anyone’s mother.”
“Honey, you’ll be a sexpot leading lady. A great foil for my darling Stella. You’re a true-blue British gal and a real actress and that’s what I need. Not some Hollywood type trying to play British.”
“And you said this was a picture about Mary Tudor and Prince Philip of Spain?” She sounded dubious. “Where do I come into it?”
“You’d be Mary Tudor, darling,” Stella said.
“And who would you be?”
“Her sister, Elizabeth. You know, the future Queen Elizabeth I. It’s going to be called The Tudor Sisters, or something like that, isn’t it, Cy?”
Mummy shook her head. “I’m sorry, I don’t quite see . . .”
“Simple, Claire, honey.” Cy Goldman rested his cigar on the ashtray and leaned toward her. “The story is all about romance and rivalry. Rivals for the same man, see.”
“Elizabeth and Mary? Which man?”
“Philip of Spain. It goes like this: Phil comes over to marry Mary, but he sees her little sister Elizabeth and falls in love with her instead. So Mary’s going to put Elizabeth in the Tower of London and have her head chopped off, but she meets Philip’s right-hand man, Don Alonso, and she makes a play for him to make Philip jealous but she falls for him. Then Philip finds out that his guy is fooling around with his new wife and they fight a duel and Don Alonso realizes he can’t kill the king of Spain so he dies valiantly. Philip is remorseful and goes back to his wife. Elizabeth is brokenhearted. Good story, huh?”
“Good story?” Mummy said, looking up at me. “It’s utter rubbish. First of all there was no romance between Mary and Philip. It was entirely political and I don’t think they even slept together, did they? And Elizabeth was much younger and I’m sure she didn’t come into the picture at all.”
Cy threw back his head and laughed—that great big bear laugh of his. “It’s a movie, Claire honey. It’s Hollywood, not a history lesson. When history is too dull, I say we spice it up. And Americans just love your British history with all those old queens and princesses.”
“Cy’s actually going to direct it himself. Think of that,” Stella said.
Cy beamed. “You won’t find a better director than me, Claire honey. It will be a tremendous hit. You’ll be a star. What do you say?”
“And that good-looking boy Juan is to play Philip?”
“Absolutely.”
“But he’s not much older than my daughter.”
Cy leaned across and patted her knee. “Thanks to the wonders of modern movie makeup artists you’ll look as young and gorgeous as he does. I promise. Cross my heart.”
Mummy looked at me again, then shrugged. “What can I say? It’s certainly better than spending six weeks in a Reno motel.”