DOWN HERE AMONG THE women.
I have company on my park bench. Two young girls collapse, all giggles, next to me. They plonk down their parcels and ease their feet out of their boots. They are friends, and look alike. They have the same slight bodies, long straight hair, round fleshy faces, docile eyes and unhealthy skin. They are animated and happy. They look at me out of the corners of their slidy eyes, as if they expect me to slap them down. Why should I? I like them.
One is getting married. She has the bridesmaids’ dresses in a carrier bag. They are yellow see-through.
‘That’ll give the priest something to think about,’ she says, with satisfaction.
They chatter. They gasp and squeak. The bride is pregnant and glad to be. Her only worry is lest her wedding dress doesn’t fit on the day. They talk of the ceremony, the reception, the clothes, the presents. They talk of everything and everyone except the groom. Oh, blessed pair.
In ten years’ time—no, don’t think of it. The tower block where I live is full of women who were once girls like this, now off to Bingo, desperate, with their children left locked up; pale, worried and ageing badly; without the spirit any more even to tuck a free-gift plastic daffodil behind the ear.
At least the priest accords them a soul. At least like Mayflies they have their brief dance in the sun before they go down into the darkness.
They gather up their parcels, wriggle back into their boots, eye me with a certain curious friendliness—they don’t understand why I sit by myself, quiet and respectable, without a friend—and pass on into their future.
I sit on my park bench and cry for all the women in the world.
I think perhaps we are in the throes of an evolutionary struggle which we must all endure, while we turn, willy-nilly, into something strange and marvellous. We gasp and struggle for breath, with painful lungs, like the creatures who first crawled out of the sea and lived on land.
The sun comes out. An old woman, a felt hat on top, and black Wellingtons below, passes by and laughs into the wind, and proves me wrong. Her face is ruddy, lean and cheerful. She seems to be what nature intended. But I do not think Byzantia will look like that when she is seventy-five.
I cry for my own malice, cruelty, self-deception and stupidity.
The children come up. ‘What’s the matter?’ they ask. ‘The wind in my eyes,’ I say. ‘Shall we go home?’ I ask. ‘No,’ they say. ‘Not yet.’
Where did we leave Wanda and Scarlet? Back in the early days and on bad terms, aggravated by Byzantia’s wakefulness.
Wanda is antagonistic to the world. Scarlet is fat and spotty. Byzantia is teething.
But rescue is at hand.
Wanda has a boyfriend.
There has been trouble with the Education Office. Wanda’s job is in jeopardy. Not, as she had predicted, because of her political past, but because she has explained to a class of nine-year-olds how babies are born. She has drawn a diagram on the board. Parents have complained. The press has become involved. The fact that Scarlet is an unmarried mother is cited in anonymous letters to the local Education Authority as proof of Wanda’s unfitness for teacherhood.
‘They are quite right,’ says Scarlet. ‘You aren’t fit. Anyway, why should children know the truth when it’s all so revolting? I would far rather believe I came out of a doctor’s black bag than out of you.’
‘Go and live with your father,’ says Wanda. ‘I don’t want you.’ It is her normal retort when Scarlet goes too far, and can be relied upon to silence her daughter.
Wanda’s boyfriend is a Schools Inspector who has been delegated to investigate the incident. He is a tall, pleasant-faced, rabbit-mouthed, stooping man, with flappy scarecrow trousers and pockets full, Scarlet feels, of string and white mice. He is a stamp collector, and plays the spinet. His wife has left him recently. She has run off with another man.
He shows Wanda photographs of his wife. She is not unlike Scarlet to look at, only without the spots. Wanda remarks on this, and Edwin Barker, who is fifty-five, looks at Scarlet with increased interest. He has a semi-detached house in Lee Green, which is an outer London suburb.
Edwin takes Wanda out three Sunday afternoons running. He forgives her for being a divorced woman, for teaching children the facts of life, and for having an unmarried mother for a daughter, but Wanda is not interested in his forgiveness. He takes her to amateur theatrical productions and for rides into the country in his little car, but she is not interested in amateur drama, and can see no merit in countryside for its own sake. He saves her job, and this she does appreciate. On the third Sunday he parks the car and tries to kiss her, but Wanda finds the prospect distasteful and refuses. He is hurt, and bewildered. All the way home he talks about how he was cheated out of £3. 10s. 0d. by a stamp dealer.
The next day, Monday, Edwin telephones Scarlet while Wanda is at school and asks her and Byzantia over for the day on the following Sunday. Scarlet accepts, but is frightened to confess to Wanda that she has done so.
Six days of thinking about Skinny Winny—as Wanda refers to him—and fearing Wanda, and she is practically in love with Edwin. Well, there is no one else to attach her feelings to.
On Saturday she is particularly nice to her mother, makes her breakfast in bed, tells her how good she is with Byzantia, offers to sew on her buttons, until Wanda asks her what the matter is. They are very fond of each other, these two; they resist their attachment, circle each other at as great a distance as unkind words can put them, but still must orbit round each other.
‘Skinny Winny has asked me and Byzantia over tomorrow,’ Scarlet admits. ‘Well, he likes Byzantia, and he doesn’t want to lose her, and he knows you can’t stand him. So he has to ask me.’
Wanda just laughs.
‘He wants a wife,’ says Wanda. ‘He wants promotion and married men stand a better chance in the rat race than single men do. He resents paying income tax, too, at single rates. He could claim a child allowance on Byzantia. On the salary he’s getting now, it would work out about the same whether he had my wages coming in, or you and Byzantia to claim as dependants. He worries about things like that. You’re a very good bet to a man like him, and he will enjoy forgiving you.’
‘You mean you don’t mind me going?’ Scarlet sounds disappointed.
‘Of course not, my dear,’ croons Wanda, ‘off you go, have a good time. Fuck yourself silly if it’s what you want.’
Scarlet is most put out. But she goes. She and Edwin get on well. She makes tea and butters scones. They hold hands. Scarlet likes the comfortable mediocrity of Edwin’s home. She likes the thought of the toaster. She likes being forgiven. She likes the way he takes Byzantia upon his knee and plans her future. She likes the fact that he is respectable. She longs for respectability.
Later, she discovers that she likes being seen out with him. People stare. He is so old and thin, and she is so young and fleshy. They are mistaken for father and daughter, until he takes her hand, or puts his sinewy arm round her, and proves otherwise. That amuses her.
She even likes it when he parks the car and kisses her. He is so old. She is conscious of his past, stretching back and back, of the whole great mysterious sum of his existence, now being offered to her through the pressure of his lips.
It is not desire that is stirred, it is her imagination; but how can she know this? She feels she loves him. When she thinks of him kissing her, she is simply enchanted.
No one can understand her.
Edwin calls at the flat every day, nods in a slightly, but only slightly, embarrassed way to Wanda, and continues his wooing of Scarlet. He won’t let her go out cleaning any more. Silently, every week he hands her £2. 5s. 0d.
Byzantia laughs and chuckles as he bends over her, his faded blue eyes crinkling. He is a kind man. He is an old man. His back is weak—he has mysterious pains in his spine, for which he consults doctor after doctor. Byzantia doesn’t know this. She holds out her arms to him. He picks her up and tries not to wince. They love each other: old flappy legs and plump, curly, brilliant Byzantia.
Byzantia will not stay in her cot. She will not go to sleep. She is an exhausting child. Wanda is tired. Wanda is tired of Edwin, tired of Scarlet, tired of life, tired of lifting Byzantia back into her cot while Scarlet and Edwin drive down leafy lanes and kiss in their mis-matched way.
Wanda snaps and snarls. Wanda keeps her children in after school.
Edwin proposes.
Scarlet accepts.
People talk. Kim makes a phone-call to Wanda. ‘Don’t interfere,’ says Wanda. ‘Either support her, or keep out of it. Look, he’s a man, he can give her a home. God almighty, I think she loves him,’ Kim keeps out of it.
‘She’s made her bed,’ says Susan, unforgivably. ‘Now she’ll have to lie on it.’ And Susan repairs to her own with a migraine, taking Simeon in beside her, clutching him and moaning in pain. He smiles, thinking she’s playing, because it is his time for playing. She hates him, slaps him, and wants her mother. When she remembers that these days it is she who looks after her mother—for Mrs Watson has discovered the existence of Mr Watson’s lady friend—Susan cries. She is having a terrible time, and is sorry for herself.
Audrey writes from the country, to give her blessing. She signs herself as Emma, and mentions that the pottery is giving way to a free-range whole-food chicken farm, says marriage is bliss. She is making a patch-work quilt. She will send it to Scarlet for her marriage bed. She is glad everything has turned out well at last. Children need fathers. (Audrey is six months pregnant, and appears to be rejoicing in her state. Though Jocelyn, visiting her, complains of an atmosphere of chicken feathers, wholemeal bread, and despondency.)
Jocelyn tries to dissuade Scarlet. ‘If you marry him,’ she says, ‘you will become a Lee Green housewife.’
‘I will remain myself,’ says Scarlet, ‘only more comfortable, and without my mother trying to ruin my life.’
‘But you don’t remain yourself when you marry,’ says Jocelyn. ‘You take on your husband’s level in the world. You take on his status, his income, his friends and his way of life. His class, if you like. You become an aspect of him. It’s all right for girls to marry above them, but they should never ever marry below.’
‘You are a terrible snob,’ says Scarlet.
‘Don’t be cross,’ begs Jocelyn. ‘I don’t want to see you ruin your life, that’s all.’
‘It’s pretty ruined already,’ states Scarlet. ‘Anyway, how do you know it’s like that? Perhaps I won’t take on his way of life. Perhaps he’ll take on mine.’
‘He’s twenty-five years older than you,’ says Jocelyn. ‘It’s not likely, is it?’
‘Thirty-two,’ says Scarlet smugly, and Jocelyn is shocked. ‘Anyway, Byzantia needs a father.’
‘But not this one, Scarlet. I’m sure he believes in early potty training and discipline, and shutting children in dark cupboards.’
‘Look,’ says Scarlet, ‘I’m sorry you don’t like him—’
‘It’s not that I don’t like him,’ pleads Jocelyn. ‘It’s just he’s so unsuitable.’
‘He may not be—well, widely cultured, and he’s not really interested in abstract matters, but he’s kind. And by God, he wears trousers and he wants to marry me.’ Scarlet’s voice rises to a shriek. Jocelyn keeps a parrot, which begins to squawk in sympathy. The cat’s lungs were weakened after the incident of the gas fire, and it died a few months later. Philip bought her the parrot to cheer her up.
‘I can always leave him,’ adds Scarlet presently, and Jocelyn is even more shocked. Jocelyn believes marriage is forever.
‘I can’t go on the way I am,’ Scarlet tries to explain. ‘Sleeping around. I don’t really like it. I’ve got to settle down. And I am so tired of worrying about money, and the rent, and Wanda, and everything.’
It is a plea for support and understanding but Jocelyn becomes even more remote, icy and disapproving.
‘It’s all so messy,’ is all she’ll say. ‘You’re not going to be happy.’
‘Byzantia is,’ says Scarlet, pleading mother love. Jocelyn is unmoved. She raises her eyebrows, crooks her little finger and sips tea. She doesn’t take sugar. Scarlet does. Jocelyn has put salt in the sugar bowl and forgotten she has done so.
‘What would you know about being a mother, anyway?’ says Scarlet, when her tea has been emptied down the sink, and a fresh cup poured, and the explanation and apologies are over.
Jocelyn sees this remark as an unprovoked attack, and they part on cool terms.
Scarlet asks Jocelyn and Philip to the wedding, but they don’t come. Jocelyn gets the date wrong. When they discover the error, they are relieved rather than distressed. Jocelyn does describe Edwin to Philip, and he takes a prurient interest in the union of these two such disparate bodies, but he is really not concerned in Scarlet’s fate. In his view, she long ago turned into a slut and opted out of the world of serious people. He hopes her marriage will keep her more out of Jocelyn’s way. He does not like to associate with unfortunate people. He fears the ailment may be catching, like measles.
Sylvia is glad that Scarlet is getting married. She sees marriage as a desirable state. Butch’s divorce drags on and on. But she won’t come to the wedding. She is frightened that Jocelyn will be there. Butch has made up the quarrel with Philip. Now it is Sylvia who hangs back. Butch has expressed recently an unnerving appreciation of Jocelyn’s arse—Sylvia finds his language these days, crude. Once she had found it stimulating. She is very thin, and her eyes dark and wide.
Helen simply says of Scarlet, ‘She is doing the proper thing. He will be a good father to her.’ And of Jocelyn, ‘The more frustrated the lady, the more expressive the backside.’
Wanda can hardly bring herself to speak to Scarlet. Was this what she has endured so much privation for? To see her daughter in the hands of this grey and stooping philatelist? To lose Byzantia to the back streets of Lee Green?
In the schools, her reputation goes before her. ‘Miss Brown is ill. Miss Rider’s coming.’ The absentee rate soars. Little children clutch their stomachs and convince their parents they are ill.
Elderly Edwin takes Scarlet to see his even more elderly father, a retired railway worker with a gold watch to prove it. The old man can scarcely see Scarlet, for his eyesight is failing, but what he does see he does not like. He cannot comprehend the existence of Byzantia. He thinks, in his confused way, when they try to explain her, that she is some foreign visitor who refuses to leave.
The wedding arrangements proceed. Edwin cannot understand why Scarlet’s father does not pay, since surely the bride’s father bears the cost of the wedding? Scarlet begs and pleads with him not to approach Kim, but Edwin does. Edwin writes to Kim asking for £57. 10s. 0d. Kim, too astonished to resist, sends a cheque for £50. Edwin refrains from asking again for the £7. 10s. 0d., and points out to Scarlet, at length, his generosity and understanding. She believes him.
A slight difficulty arises for Scarlet, however. Edwin, relating after the fashion of lovers the high-spots of his life, tells Scarlet an anecdote of how, as a young man, he and a friend both managed to seduce and make pregnant a farmer’s wife—and then left the district. As they had given her false names, the woman had no means of tracing either of them, and thus trouble was avoided. He tells this story as an example of his ingenuity and presence of mind.
Scarlet pushes Byzantia in her pushchair for hours and hours, trying to recover her love for Edwin. Byzantia has holes in her woollen bootees. Her little pink toe pushes through. Even as Scarlet watches, another strand of wool gives, and lo, there is half Byzantia’s naked, chilly, infant foot. Scarlet recovers her love for Edwin.
Weddings plans proceed. Edwin takes Scarlet away for a week’s holiday. They book into a boarding house on the south coast under a false name—‘Johnson, to make a change from Smith’, explains Edwin. ‘We couldn’t have gone abroad, you see. They ask for passports.’ He is delighted at the subterfuge. It affords him an erotic pleasure, and they make love on the first night they are there. ‘The non-event of the year,’ Scarlet describes it to Jocelyn years later. But the next day he has bad back pains—the cold sea winds, he supposes—and asks the landlady if they can be transferred to a room with twin beds. ‘So I’m not tempted,’ he explains to Scarlet.
On the way back to London he stops the car to relieve himself. Scarlet watches his tall grey stooping figure—back carefully to the wind—suffers total revulsion, and knows she is mad. But she won’t stop. She won’t.
The wedding day comes. It is a dismal affair in a registry office. The Registrar, or so Scarlet likes to think, looks dazed. He is used to marrying rich and vigorous older men to pretty young girls, but Edwin looks like a death’s head. Edwin’s pain is bad on his wedding day.
Scarlet thinks he won’t last long. She is horrified at herself. She takes his hand, presses it, willing him health and happiness, protecting him against evil. Yet she would like that little Lee Green house all to herself. It has carpets, red Wilton patterned with yellow zig-zag stripes.
Wanda doesn’t come to the wedding, either. She says she will stay home and look after Byzantia.
The reception, in a Lee Green hotel, is a forlorn affair. There is warm sweet white wine, slices of ham, potato salad, and trifle. People stay for as short a time as possible; leave without discussing the marriage. There is nothing to say.
The marriage is not consummated for some months. Edwin discovers undisclosed debts of Scarlet’s—£30 run up on a Budget Account at a department store—and takes the view that she has wilfully deceived him. He sulks for days. Scarlet offers to go out to work to pay the debt, but that makes him angrier still. No wife of his goes out to work. It is the first time Scarlet has heard of this.
She looks into a blank future. But at least Byzantia has a little room to herself; and Edwin has bought a frieze of dancing lambs to go round the picture rail. Scarlet puts it up. They are crude and vulgar lambs, but they do dance; and Byzantia, Scarlet thinks, will need all the gaiety she can muster in the coming years.
Edwin passes out of his sulk into another attack of back pains. Scarlet asks for details. ‘The doctors are fools,’ he says. ‘They know nothing. There’s some foreign body pressing between a couple of discs. I know there is. I can feel it. Something that ought not to be there. They say there’s nothing. They say I imagine it.’
‘But if it hurts, there’s something wrong,’ says Scarlet.
‘Of course there is,’ he says. ‘But try getting them to admit it. I even got sent to a psychiatrist once.’
‘What did he say?’
‘He? It was a she. The world’s gone mad.’
‘What did she say, then?’
‘She said I was a repressed homosexual.’ And he laughs. He can laugh. He has a sweet smile, in fact, like a little boy’s, who knows only too well how to be endearing. Scarlet laughs too.
‘What would having a pain in my back have to do with me being a repressed homosexual, even if I was, which of course I’m not? How extraordinary people are! Why, I’ve been married twice.’
‘What kind of thing do you think it is, trapped between your discs?’ asks Scarlet.
‘A bit of grit, I should think. A little bit of dirt. Probably something quite tiny. I’m sorry. Not much of a honeymoon for you, is it?’ and he laughs nervously. He feels friendly towards her, and protective, and has forgiven the £30 altogether, now that his back is hurting, and he is relieved of his sexual obligations.
For a time Scarlet does not mind. She sleeps in Byzantia’s room—Edwin says it would be better. His tossing and turning might disturb her. Scarlet makes toast in the toaster. She takes Byzantia to the swings. She shops in the high street. She smiles graciously to the neighbours. She, who is accustomed to feeling worse than other people, now feels better than they. As an educated, cultured girl, she is superior to her husband, who is old and ill, superior to her neighbours, and superior to her fellow shoppers.
Edwin leaves the house at 8.30 in the morning and returns at 5. He is a man of regular habits. He pays bills the day they come in. Her housekeeping money is regular. Sometimes he travels the country for the Education Authority, but always makes sure she is properly provided for in his absence.
She feels well looked after.
It is not surprising, she thinks, that he is an inspector. It is in his nature to inspect. He runs a finger over door-ledges; he turns down the gas flames as he comes into the kitchen. He cannot bear to see them high. He inspects Byzantia’s hair, nails, neck for dirt.
Scarlet waits for him to die.
Months pass.
The marriage is consummated, astonishingly, rapidly, one night, in a south coast boarding house. Edwin and Scarlet have gone to visit a spiritualist healer who is an old friend of Edwin’s. Scarlet presents herself to him with confidence thinking that if this old man has any kind of extra-sensory perception at all he will perceive that she is an exceptional person. But the spiritualist responds to her badly. He clearly does not like her. He is on Edwin’s side.
Scarlet is depressed. The consummation of the marriage—though the event is not repeated—does not cheer her up at all. On the contrary. It means she now can’t get the marriage annulled.
Edwin becomes more critical, more anxious to find fault. They have rows. He does not take baths. They hurt his back, he says. He sits for hours and hours on the lavatory.
‘You impotent dirty old man,’ she screams.
‘You oversexed whore,’ he snarls.
When they are calmer he claims that sexual activity is a small part of normal life. Her experience of life to date has been faulty. She has simply associated with a peculiar and perverse group, from which he has rescued her. He cites various couples he knows, in their fifties, who, to use Edwin’s language, ‘never do it’. His parents never did it, either.
‘How did you come to be born?’ asks Scarlet.
‘There was only the one occasion,’ Edwin claims. ‘That was not for pleasure, that was to conceive a child. You don’t want another child,’ (he asserts, though he has never asked her). ‘Byzantia is quite enough for you as it is—and incidentally, when she goes to nursery school don’t you think she should be registered under a more normal Christian name? Linda, for example. It’s not just that one does not wish to underline her somewhat unconventional start in life, for her sake—but she does bear my surname, and is known as my child. No, I don’t really understand your complaint. You must be a strange person. If you do feel yourself to be sexually deprived I can only suggest you go out for the night every now and then. It will break my heart,’ he adds, ‘but if you feel like a whore that is my cross and I must bear it.’
At other times he feels he has failed her. Tears come into his eyes. (Edwin cries easily. He is a sentimental man, easily moved by kindness. He cries when Byzantia—who is fond of him, in spite of his inspectorial habits—draws him a birthday card, or makes any gesture of affection.)
‘I know I am no good to you,’ says Edwin. ‘But I am an ill man. I haven’t much longer in the world. Be patient with me just a little.’
‘Yes,’ she says, and is.
At other times he accuses her of waiting for him to die in order to inherit his money. £400 in Gilt-Edged. The house, worth £2,500 with a £1,500 mortgage still to pay. Or at other times he suspects her of trying to send him mad, by twisting his words. When he speaks like this he sounds like a mad man, and she could dismiss him as such, except that she knows that what he says is true.
She wishes him to die: she wants him locked up, put away, buried, gone.
Yet when he is in fact taken to hospital for an exploratory operation, she visits him daily, prays for his recovery, fights doctors, sisters, nurses for his comfort, worries for him, feels for him, nurses him back to health to the limit of her capacity.
He has a little song he sings while he convalesces; a cheerful time. Scarlet has been good to him and he is happy:
‘Uncle Alf and Auntie Mabel,
Fainted at the breakfast table.
Let it be an awful warning,
Never do it in the morning.’
And he looks at Scarlet slyly to see if she is shocked. She is. Her mother sang rude songs. Must this man do the same?
Scarlet’s friends do not visit her. Lee Green is a long way, and besides they cannot get on with Edwin. They write to her, sometimes. Scarlet does not reply. Jocelyn gives parties, and asks Scarlet. Scarlet does not turn up. She does not want to be pitied.
Edwin and Scarlet see very little of Wanda. Wanda has joined the C.N.D., thus frightening Edwin. And she is brisk and formal if they do meet, thus frightening and upsetting Scarlet.
Wanda can only be happy when she is not thinking about her daughter. It is not too difficult for her not to think, these days, for she has a lover. He is a twenty-year-old lorry driver she met in the pub. The liaison offends everyone—Kim, Susan, Scarlet, Edwin, even Lottie in her last few months—which gives it a cheerful momentum. Scarlet thinks if she can, I can—but she doesn’t.
Wanda is further displeased with her daughter’s behaviour, when, instead of justifying her existence by starting a Lee Green branch of the C.N.D. (though can you imagine Edwin allowing any such thing?) Scarlet joins the Lee Green branch of an anti-communist organisation.
For Edwin has discovered that Wanda was once a communist, and though he could forgive her teaching innocent children the facts of life, he cannot excuse her political past, which, the times being what they are, puts his own position in jeopardy.
Edwin accuses Scarlet, yet once again, of concealing information detrimental to his interests. Edwin points out, at length, long into the seven nights of a full week, that she has married him on false pretences. He, a much respected man with a position in the community, has out of the kindness of his heart seen his way to marrying a fallen woman and taking her illegitimate daughter into his home. Is this how she repays him?
Scarlet is perfectly happy to join the anti-communists if it will stop Edwin talking. Wanda can’t forgive.
Years pass.
Scarlet walks like a zombie. Regard Scarlet’s personality as if it were a plant. Come the winter it goes underground. Come the spring it will force its way up, cracking concrete if need be, to reach the light.
Scarlet’s spring seems a long time coming. No sun rises to bathe her world with warmth.
She is deserted by, has deserted, Wanda, Kim, family, friends.
She makes no new acquaintances here in Lee Green. They think she is snobbish, and they are right. Only Byzantia smiles and grows and talks, beginning to feed back to her mother the nourishment she has sapped for so long.
Suez. English, French, Israeli troops—shooting at Egyptians? It seems, in those naïve days, incredible, monstrous, dangerous, unfair.
Scarlet is frightened. She thinks the nuclear holocaust is imminent. She wants to take Byzantia and flee to Cornwall, where she imagines she will be safe. Edwin won’t give her the fare money. Edwin is shocked.
‘You are mad,’ he says. ‘If there is any danger, which there isn’t, it is your duty to stay here.’
‘Why?’ she asks.
‘You can’t run away,’ he says, indignant.
‘But I want to,’ she says.
Suez passes, nations subside; but the fact that Scarlet wants to run away, once spoken, stays in her mind. It feeds, grows, nourishes the roots of her being. Is spring coming?
A stall-holder at the Saturday market where Scarlet shops, a dealer in fabrics, forty, a short, fat, lively villain, propositions her as she buys elastic for Byzantia’s knickers. Scarlet is shocked; she laughs it off. He renews his request the following week. She refuses. But she quite likes him. He is insistent.
‘Why me?’ she asks.
‘You’re my type,’ he replies.
‘A fat, spotty, dreary housewife?’ asks Scarlet—and indeed she is all these things, and looks a good thirty-five as well—‘Your type?’
‘You’re posh,’ he says. ‘I’ve got a little room round the corner—’
‘I’m not like that,’ she says. ‘I’m a married woman.’
‘What do you want? Money?’
‘No,’ she says, shocked.
‘I’ll tell you what,’ he says. ‘Nylons.’
She looks down at her stockings, as he does. Stockings are always a problem to Scarlet. When Edwin goes through the accounts, he questions the amount she spends on nylons, and reproaches her for not taking more care of them. She goes round, always, with laddered stockings.
‘All right,’ she says.
Spring is coming.
They rendezvous one evening, the barrow boy and Scarlet. She has told Edwin that she is going to the pictures: she has checked the stills outside the cinema during the day to make her story stick in case she is questioned later. The film is The Nun’s Story. She likes that. Deceit comes easily to her.
Alone with this stranger in a neat clean chintzy bed-sitting room in a private house, she talks nervously about his wife, which disconcerts him.
‘We didn’t come here to talk,’ he says. ‘Take your clothes off.’
She does.
Two pairs of cut-price nylons the richer, Scarlet walks the Lee Green streets, until it is time for the cinema to end. Then she joins the crowd as it leaves and walks home.
Scarlet feels she is at last a whore. She need no longer resist Edwin’s accusations. She can accept them gracefully and have some peace.
The next Saturday Scarlet goes to the market seeking her client, who, apparently pleased with her performance, has asked her thus to meet him. His stall is empty. Where once the gauzy laces and the brilliant trimmings dangled, is now just a bare dusty platform. He has gone. Gone to another market, another part of London, to buy another posh lost lady housewife for two pairs of cut-price nylon stockings.
Scarlet walks home with Byzantia holding her hand. Scarlet cries. Scarlet sings ‘Tammy’s in love’ to Byzantia. It is a commercial love-song. It was playing on the radio—he had turned the volume up so that his landlady, of whom he seemed nervous, would not know he had a visitor—while he obtained his nylons’ worth from Scarlet.
Scarlet loves her client. Scarlet will love anything, anyone, so long as it’s impossible and not actually Edwin, whom she married for what he could give her and now finds that this is nothing.
Poor Edwin. To grace him with her presence in his house, eating his food, spending his money, though wearing her own nylons, is hardly enough.
Scarlet cries herself to sleep for a full week. Tears water the ground. All is ready for the sun.
It doesn’t dawn.
But one day there is a knock at the door. The milkman? Scarlet shuffles down, wearing Edwin’s slippers. It is Susan.
Susan has driven to visit her in her little Morris Minor. Simeon sits in the back, a neat, clean little boy, even neater and cleaner than his mother or his grandmother before him.
Scarlet asks them in. Scarlet looks round her house with their eyes. It is a dim and dusty place. Edwin will have nothing in it changed. When she Hoovers the carpets she must put the furniture back exactly where it was before. The legs of the three-piece suite (1932) have worn twelve small neat holes through the carpet in the living-room.
Byzantia trips Simeon up. She is not used to other children in the house. Edwin does not encourage them.
‘This is our house,’ he will say. ‘Not a stage-post for strangers. You, me, Byzantia—shall we call her Edna?—we are happy just by ourselves.’
Simeon, tripped, does not cry. It is not man-like.
Susan cries.
‘It’s all my fault,’ she says, ‘I’ve felt so bad about it, Scarlet.’
‘Bad about what? I’m all right.’
‘You’re not all right,’ says Susan. ‘You’re fat and miserable and you live in this horrible place with that horrible man.’
‘How do you know he’s horrible?’
‘Wanda says so.’
‘You talk to each other, then?’
‘Yes, actually.’
Susan has had a nervous breakdown. She trembled and cried, and could not stop. Kim took her to a psychiatrist; she still visits him weekly; now she visits Wanda and talks to her instead of to her mother. She feels better these days. She dreams about Scarlet, and feels she must make amends, somehow.
‘It was me would never let Kim send you money,’ says Susan, in an agony of remorse. ‘It was me made him so nasty to you. I was angry about Byzantia.’
Scarlet is baffled. Susan explains she is seeing a psychiatrist and Scarlet assumes that Susan is a little out of her mind.
‘You’ve got to get out of here,’ says Susan.
‘Why?’
‘It upsets me too much,’ complains Susan.
Susan cannot escape, these days, in the manner she used to. Just before her breakdown, when she fell asleep it was as if her eyes stayed open. The night worlds would be closed to her. She would sleep, that was all. And waking in the mornings in her new house—for Kim has grown rich and they have moved to Kew—she would think she was still back in Baker Street and would stumble round the bedroom trying to find her bearings. Now at least she knows where she wakes, and she dreams of Scarlet, and has steeled herself to come visiting.
Edwin returns, and is introduced to Susan. Susan leaves as quickly as possible, but not before Edwin has reminded her that her husband owes him £7. 10s. 0d.
‘It is not the money,’ he says. ‘It is the principle. A father must take responsibility for his daughter, whatever the daughter may be like. I am sure I will take responsibility for Marjorie—’
‘Marjorie?’ asks Susan, confused.
‘My name for Byzantia—although she is not even mine by blood. I take it Scarlet is Kim’s daughter, although knowing Wanda’s habits one can forgive him for perhaps doubting it? Was that why he failed to pay me the £7. 10s. 0d? I have sometimes thought so.’
Susan writes a cheque. Scarlet is humiliated.
It takes Scarlet a week to move such belongings as she has out of the house, suitcase by secret suitcase, to an astonished Lee Green neighbour. Then she steals seven pounds from Edwin’s wallet in the middle of one night, wakes Byzantia early in the morning, and they leave together.
She means never to return.