TWENTY-TWO
The muezzin began calling the faithful, his words floating over the dusk like another form of ethereal cloud. In a corner room on the first floor of a Cairo hotel, Eyre Soane turned away from the window. The hotel barber had nicked his skin, stuck a piece of cotton on the cut. Eyre pulled it from his jaw and watched in the mirror as a drop of blood gathered slowly on his flesh, spilled like a tear. He sat down in the leather armchair, loosening the cord of his dressing gown and looking around his suite.
He was delaying dressing for dinner. Hadn’t pared his nails, applied his cologne, oiled his hair. He was off-duty, in the business of being Eyre Soane, son of the late, great Augustus. Inheritor, said the critics, of his father’s wealth but not his talent.
They were wrong on both counts. His father’s talent had been for creating voluptuous, creamy-looking flesh that connoisseurs could feel they might reach into a painting and touch. All instinctively wanted to possess it. It was a formula Augustus had repeated scores of times, in different draperies, with different props. Different eyes, necks, breasts. Eyre favored landscapes. Landscapes never lied.
A high-pitched whine near his ear grew louder and Eyre slapped at the newly shaven portions of his neck with the palm of his hand. He hadn’t wanted to be in Egypt this winter. He’d undertaken the journey only to escape the London season, the matrons of his mother’s acquaintance throwing their female offspring in his path. He’d gotten away, all right, but now that he was here, he couldn’t tolerate the crowds of English idlers and investors and adventurers whose laughter and boasts and pointless games of pinochle filled the downstairs bar.
Mother still hoped he would marry. For years, she’d asked constantly whether he had met a suitable girl, or would allow her to find one. Later, when the question fell silent on her lips, she inquired by means of anxious looks or hopeful ones if a female name was mentioned. Recountings of the weddings of the offspring of her friends. Eyre believed himself unlikely to marry. Not cut out for it.
The whine resumed, and with it came a sharp stinging on the rim of his ear, a hot bump rising. He groped in his whisky glass, hooked out what remained of a lump of ice, and applied it to the bite. The ice slipped from his fingers, dropping down inside the neck of the dressing gown, and he threw the dregs of the Scotch toward the shutters. Lighting a cigar, holding it between his lips, he removed the lid from a pot of sandalwood pomade and began to work the grease into his hair.
Augustus had been dead for a decade but the power he wielded in the family was undiminished. Despite all she’d suffered, Mother still worshipped the old man. She kept the London house as a shrine to him, preserving his correspondence, his handkerchiefs, his pipes and boots and belts, his hats and gloves. The gloves and boots bore the traces of the old man’s bent, stubby hands and feet, like casts in plaster of Paris, the leather hardened around the spaces where he had been. Eyre disliked catching sight of the boots lined up on the rack in the cloakroom downstairs as if Augustus might step out over the floor, leaving his deep, dirty footprints once again, might don a pair of the gloves on the stand in the hall, ready to reach out with a thick gauntlet, take what he wanted.
Mother spoke of Augustus in a hushed voice as if he were asleep nearby and not to be disturbed. She silenced her son with a wave of her hand if Eyre suggested changing anything, clearing the studio.
“Your father visits me every day and has more to say than he ever had when he was alive. I am under strict and particular instructions, Eyre, to disturb nothing.”
The old place on the coast had been sold off decades earlier, when Eyre was still a child, but the London studio remained as it was on the day Augustus died, an unfinished painting of the latest dark-haired muse balanced on the easel. They were all alike, each one indistinguishable from the one before her, the one after. His mother was a saint.
Much of the work had already been sold. Only a few canvases remained. Among them was the Thetis, the sultry, half-clad sea goddess, sitting on the floor in the studio wrapped in an old sheet, along with a few other goddesses and nymphs and some early work that Augustus had disowned. Mother wouldn’t have the Thetis on display in the house; she insisted that Julia, Eyre’s younger sister, shouldn’t see it. Eyre refrained from pointing out that the Thetis was no worse, morally speaking, than any of the others.
Perhaps he would sell the painting to Louisa’s husband. Eyre was not as affluent as his detractors believed. The money was being depleted. The London house, where Mother insisted on remaining, was expensive to keep up, and the price the paintings fetched had dropped in the years since the death of Augustus. His own work rarely sold.
Hair slicked back over his head, Eyre heaved on the bell pull, intending to order another glass of Scotch. There were distractions in prospect. Julia was coming out and Jim Simpson had telegraphed to say that he was arriving with his new wife. Docking Suez 21st, traveling Cairo same day. Meet Shepheard Hotel, 6 p.m. They were probably in the bar by now, waiting for him.
Despite his desire to remain in Alexandria, to press on with his plan, Eyre had been obliged to come and meet them. He’d promised over an inebriated dinner before Christmas that he would act as his old friend’s guide. Jim had set his heart on a crocodile twenty feet long. Eyre disliked hunting, the paraphernalia of guns and shot, the whole pointless palaver of it.
He intended a hunt of a different kind. He lifted one hand, pointed two straight fingers toward an alabaster statue of an Egyptian princess, and released a single shot in a whistle from his lips. Seeing Miss Heron looking back at him from across the dining saloon on the steamer, he’d remembered something Jim once told him of the way hunters trapped elephants. They rounded up the young, then waited for the mother to approach, tethered by invisible chains to her offspring, willing to act against every instinct to stay close to the calf.
He must write the girl another note. Assure her of his passionate intentions and explain his obligation to escort his old friends up the Nile. It spoke well of a man, to have old friends.
My dear Henrietta. He screwed up the sheet and threw it in the wastepaper basket. It was on the tip of his tongue. Helen. Hannah. He found her name impossible to remember, slipping away like soap in the bath.
There was a knock at the door and he opened it to see a fellow done up in a black-and-white-striped robe, a tarboosh faded to an insipid pink, pointed red slippers. Eyre resented the silent plea in his eyes. There was no dignity in poverty. He took the glass from the tray, signed the chit with an extravagant scrawl and shut the door.
My dear Miss Heron—
Probably best to observe the formalities. The time to play the ardent lover would come later.
Forgive my silence. I have been called away to Cairo. How I wish that you might be here in the same city! Some old friends . . .
Eyre Soane continued to write, his attention only half on the lines forming under his hand. Near his head, the insect whined.
• • •
“There you are at last,” said Jim Simpson.
“Hello, Eyre,” said his wife, putting down her book.
Soane nodded at them. Jim was leaning on the bar; next to him, his wife perched on a high apparatus that was half chair, half stool. They both bore the hallmarks of the newly arrived, their complexions gray from the London winter. Mrs. Simpson was attired in a dress that might have suited a London drawing room but here appeared fussy, and Jim wore a tropical suit made for a taller man.
Jim looked out of place wherever he was, Eyre thought. He’d looked just the same on his first day at school, drowning in a new uniform, his face pink. He could still picture him.
Jim ordered a whisky for Eyre from the barman. “We’ve been waiting. Expected you at six.”
“Did you, old man? Chin-chin.”
When discussion of the hire of the dahabeah river cruiser, the likelihood of increasing temperatures on the journey south to Luxor, and the pleasure each felt at the prospect of seeing the antiquities had run its course, Eyre judged the moment right to begin.
“I’ve met a girl,” he said, putting down the glass on the shiny surface of the bar, drawing it along the wood, watching the trail of moisture in its wake.
“Oh, Soanie,” Effie Simpson said, leaning forward on her stool, her features expressing a mix of interest and concern. “Tell us everything about her. Where did you meet her?”
His new wife had begun to use Jim’s schoolboy nickname for him at the same time that Jim had abandoned it. Eyre glanced up to meet Jim’s skeptical eyes, the woman’s widened ones.
“On the voyage out, as a matter of fact, Mrs. Simps—”
“Oh, please, do call me Effie.”
“She’s traveling with her mother and aunt.”
“How romantic.” Mrs. Simpson’s eyes shone. “To meet on the voyage out. Did you hear, Jim?”
“The pity of it is that the mother’s set against me.”
“What possible reason can she have for that?” Effie Simpson’s voice was flooded with a sudden and excessive loyalty. “She’s only got to get to know you, Eyre. That’ll set her mind at rest.”
Jim Simpson shifted from one foot to the other and his wife glanced at him.
“Stop fidgeting, Jim. Eyre’s telling you something of significance. Is she beautiful? What’s her name?”
Eyre lifted the glass again. The lumps of ice had shrunk to the size of peas. He drank it to the watery, unsatisfying end and ordered another, felt in the inside pocket of his waistcoat for his cigar case.
“She is . . .” He couldn’t come up with a word. The truth was that he had no thoughts about Miss Heron. “She has red hair.”
Jim Simpson drank pale ale from a glass-bottomed pint pot, his Adam’s apple protruding like an elbow. The new Mrs. Simpson sipped from a glass of chilled champagne. She left lip prints on the rim of the flute, creased marks in pale pink.
“Well,” she said. “It can’t be helped. And anyway, it’s not her fault.”
“I’d like you to make her acquaintance. Perhaps you’ll put in a word for me if we happen to meet them.”
Effie clasped her hands against her chest, tilted her head to one side.
“Of course I will. Jim, you might congratulate Eyre.”
“Indeed,” said Jim, his eyes shifting to a point behind Eyre’s shoulder. “Congratulations, old chap. It’s about time you settled down. If you really are serious this time.”
Idiotic fellow had blushed like a woman.