She has left me. This last, most terrible blow has knocked me out. I don’t seem able to think about it for long enough to gain the slightest inkling of why this has happened. She was in love with me – I’m sure of that – or was she simply sexually infatuated? My experience of women – considerable, for I am, after all, over sixty – had, I presumed, taught me a good deal about how extraordinarily different they are from most men. I except myself here as I feel I have always had an intuitive understanding of the comparatively few women I’ve been in love with, have known them often better than they’ve known themselves. I now think that one reason why I’ve found it difficult to get on with my own sex has been that what I’ve learned of them has been largely through women. It has been through their confidences, and sometimes simply their responses, that I realized long ago how so many of them are mistreated, that that enchanting early awareness of their sexuality and romantic inclination is all too often nipped in the bud. Thus are bred the ice maidens, the termagants, the nymphos, the drab domestic servitors and the hysterically sentimental matriarchs. I blame men for these sad consequences, much as other people blame parents for the delinquent child.
It has been my good fortune, and naturally my pleasure, to undo and heal some of this damage; indeed, I can honestly say that my greatest joy has come from pleasing a woman – in teaching her to inhabit her own body with pleasure and pride. This cannot be achieved by mere sexual prowess; I have no way of, and indeed no interest in, measuring my own against that of any other man. It comes from that mixture of affection, cherishing and loving that cannot be assumed, but once present needs constant expression. Women need not only to be loved; they need to be told so. I believe George Eliot has something to say about that.
But knowing what I do, how has it happened that she has gone? Why? What can have possessed her to do anything so destructive of her happiness? Not to mention my own: I have as much – some would say more – to lose by her defection. It took many months to find her, time and ingenuity to effect a meeting, and then many more months and a quantity of letters to assure and reassure her of my eligibility. I must confess that when I started the whole thing, I was very uncertain of success, regarded her as something of a challenge, but I have a romantic as well as an adventurous nature, and at the time had little or nothing to lose. In the course of a very few months I had lost both my job and my wife, and while these losses were more tiresome than tragic their coincidence was, financially at least, most unfortunate. I was reduced at a stroke to isolation and penury.
I have lived for two years now in a small cabin-cruiser lent by a couple who were going to live abroad and who wanted me to sell it for them. I have my state pension, for some time supplemented by money that I had salted away from the joint bank account with Hazel. I was glad to be shot of her with her cold prying nature, her controlling ways and her carping at everything I did or didn’t do. She had a steady and well-paid job, which fortunately occupied her so thoroughly that for the last few years of our marriage we did not have to spend very much time together. But her resentment at my failure to earn as much money as she, and more, the fact that she was of no importance to me, manifested itself in spasmodic outbursts of bitterness and anger, and my indifference to her congealed to something very like hatred. The boat was a relief. I could stay in bed in the mornings as long as I pleased, eat what I wanted when I felt like it, read all night if I was so inclined, and have my papers undisturbed. Very few people came to see the boat, and it was easy to put them off buying it. I would fill the bilges before they came and explain that I had spent the morning pumping them out, which had become a daily occurrence. No doubt if the boat was taken out of the water, repairs to her hull could be made, but who knew what else might then be found? My frankness was commended and that was invariably the end of that. I had no compunction about this; the owners already had a house to live in when they returned, which would not be for another year. I was content. I am never bored, and when I felt the need for company I could always go to the village pub.
Once a week I would take a bus to the public library to return and collect books. For the past year I’ve been making a study of women novelists, both nineteenth-and twentieth-century authors. Another fascinating light thrown upon the relations between the sexes is often contained in their novels.
But towards the end of my first year in the boat, the future began to loom, as I realized that the present situation had a finite ending. True, there would one day be a divorce from which I might expect some money: the flat that Hazel and I had bought was in my name and she would eventually get a handsome pension from the people she worked for. But this money, in turn, while it would not provide me with enough to live on, might affect the amount I could expect from the state. I would have to do something.
My first attempt led to nothing at all. I began with my local pub, the only place where, apart from shop people, I had any social contact, though that had been of the most casual order. The customers were mostly men, and on the occasions that they were accompanied by a woman she proved always to be a wife or a girlfriend – the wives looking variously like people I was glad not to have had as a mother, and the girlfriends so jealously partnered that it would have been folly to approach them. I did consider the landlady, an ample widow in her late forties, but there was something both mechanical and common about her responses that put me off. I never saw any woman there who was capable of inspiring a spark of romance, and I am someone who cannot function without that. I would have to go further afield than the small village a quarter of a mile up the towpath from my boat.
Over the years I have come to understand that while one should always look out for opportunity, it was equally important to determine what kind of opportunity it was worth looking out for. What I now sought was a woman about ten years younger than myself: anything younger and one would be faced with having to endure their menopause, and the thirty-year-old and younger tended to want more bedtime than I at my age felt willing to provide, or worse, to want children which I have taken the means to make impossible. This may sound cold-blooded: it is not. If you have a temperament as whole-hearted, as passionately absorbed in the object of affection as I know mine to be, a certain caution at the outset repays itself.
The woman I sought proved, after many nights of cogitation, to be someone who had survived the elementary fences and was facing the last straight home in solitude. No longer in her prime, she would have at least to have been possessed of some beauty – to have the air of past romance, like the classical folly in a great park, past its original use and now surrounded by an aura of neglect. I could carry this analogy much further: the ivy of her experience that had been slowly strangling her for years would be gently stripped from her by my experienced touch, et cetera.
She should have had her marriage and her children and have slaked all commonplace ambition in those directions. It would be an added bonus if she had achieved something in her own right, had some profession or career: I’ve always found success aphrodisiac. She must like men and have been disappointed by them. I should not in the least object to her liking women as well – indeed, for a week or two I indulged the fantasy of finding a woman already in love with another woman, and my completing the trio. However, I am able to be realistic, and recognized the improbability of hitting such a sexual jackpot. But I did, of course, fantasize about her appearance, and lived in my mind with a small, full-breasted woman with tiny hands and feet and short, very thick, reddish-gold hair, bobbed to a point at the back of her neck. This was all very well, but imagining such a creature brought me no nearer to finding her.
On one of my visits to the library, it occurred to me that I should look at the personal columns where people advertise their requirements for a partner. It was interesting how similar the advertisements were. All the women seemed to want a non-smoker with a sense of humour interested in the arts and aged between thirty-five and fifty. They were also usually keen on being sent a photograph. I smoke, but am able to lay off it when necessary, and in any case have had to cut down considerably owing to lack of funds. I have a sense of humour, although for a good deal of my life this does not seem to have been appreciated by most of the women with whom I have been connected. I cannot honestly say that I’m interested in all the arts – pictures, for instance, do not make much impression upon me. Whoever it was would have to make do with a mild enjoyment of music and my considerable knowledge of fiction, and although I had accumulated a collection of photographs of myself, including a few as a child, none of them were more recent than ten years ago. Still, if fifty was the top age limit, one of the more recent pictures should do.
I chose one of these in which I’m leaning against a large tree, wearing an open-necked shirt and smiling at the photographer. My hair, which has always been satisfactorily thick and curly, is ruffled by the wind and has all its original colour – a dark brown that is almost black. I look confident, kind and – dare I say it? – sexy. While copies of this picture were being made (I did not expect to strike lucky first time), I began drafting the letter that I would send with them. As my hair has graduated inexorably from pepper and salt to a decent grey, I would have to account for this. It was not difficult. I decided that I should have been recently widowed – not from Hazel, who no stretch of my imagination could render a romantic figure, but from somebody far younger and more lovable than she had ever been. Suddenly the girl at Jane Eyre’s terrible school came to mind – the clever, patient Helen Burns who died, you may remember, from tuberculosis after months of starvation, abuse and general neglect. Helen should be my dead wife whom I had nurtured until her end.
Once I had decided this, thoughts flowed from it in all directions. Helen Burns had been an orphan and so was my Helen. Her life had been difficult and lonely until she met me, when all had changed for her. With me, she flowered. My love for her, my care and ceaseless vigilance of her peace and happiness changed her whole being and what remained of her tragically short life. The bitterness of discovering her illness was terrible. I remember reading that Rex Harrison had concealed the gravity of her disease from Kay Kendall, that she had died without ever knowing that he had married her because he knew that she was to die. So would I conceal the same knowledge from my Helen. It was a short step from this to my having married her with the awful knowledge of her failing health.
I have to say that for a couple of weeks I forgot the reason for my writing this account, so fascinated did I become by making it for its own sake. I wept for Helen as, in the story of her dying, she came more and more alive to me. At the end of two weeks – when I collected the prints of the photograph – there was nothing I did not know about her and I had covered over seventy pages. When I read them through (of course I knew that they could not be a letter to anyone), I realized not only how much I loved her, but how much I had gained from the experience. It was clear to me, first, that I had never loved anyone as I loved Helen, and second, that in order to fulfil and ennoble the deepest part of my nature, I needed such a love. I set to work on the letter with renewed enthusiasm.
Apart from the fact that my instinct told me that the letter should be short, I had the problem of how to present myself in the best possible light without appearing in any way smug. The seventy pages were full of my tenderness, my cherishing and my courage in facing the steadily approaching end. The best way of presenting this must be through the expression of my great love. But it might not be wise to give the impression of too great a love, or the recipients of the letters might feel that they had no hope of taking Helen’s place, and none of us like the notion of being second best. I could, of course, place Helen’s death much earlier in my life, but this meant that I could not send the photograph and claim that my hair had turned grey from grief, which had been my intention. No, it would all have to be in the last ten years, but I could have recovered from it – enough to know that I sought a comparable life with a new partner. The answer, of course, was to make clear my capacity for love in general, rather than dwell upon Helen, but in the end I settled for a simple statement of my marriage, her illness and death.
The months of that winter passed. To begin with, I sent out one letter at a time, but the answers, when they came, were uniformly so disappointing (and sometimes there was no answer at all) that I took to writing about three a week, and sending them off by the same post. Twice I went to London to meet women whose replies had seemed hopeful and endured two separate hours drinking tea in the Charing Cross Hotel.
The first woman, a widow, kept asking impertinent questions about my past career with a barely concealed view to discovering my means. When I said that I had retired, she accused me of insincerity about my age, which I had never told her in the first place. It was clear to me in the first five minutes that we would have nothing going for each other. But feeling it would be rude to say so, I stuck it out until she made some remark about my not seeming to have much of the ambition she liked in a man, but she supposed that at my age I must make do with some hobby. Her look of patronising indulgence filled me with rage. I said that I had probably one of the finest collections of pornography in the country, and that I specialized in bums rather than breasts (both of hers were outsize). She left me at once, to pay for the tea – ridiculously expensive – and get the bus home.
The second woman seemed at first sight more promising: she was younger, better-looking and becomingly nervous, but she had a tiresome laugh that punctuated everything either of us said. She seemed to have lived all her life with a mother who had demanded all her spare time – she worked as a dental nurse – and who had disapproved of any boyfriends. Her mother had recently died, and she had been left the house. She was in some ways pathetic, but she did not attract or inspire me, and our meeting ended with my saying I had to catch my bus and would write to her. ‘You won’t, though, will you?’ she said, and then just as I was beginning to feel sorry for her, she laughed again.
Going back to the boat, I felt that the whole notion of finding someone in this manner was hopeless, and I knew that I deserved something better than the kind of woman who placed advertisements for friendship or marriage.
I wrote no more letters; instead I concentrated upon my Helen, proliferating the happy times we had had, adding innumerable small touches to her appearance and behaviour until she was more real and more dear to me than any woman I had known.
So I passed my second autumn on the boat. I had finished George Eliot by the time the winter set in, and was casting about in the library for a new subject. I ended up by taking one novel each by Iris Murdoch, Virginia Woolf, Ouida and Elinor Glyn – an odd bag you might say, but I like to cast my net as widely as possible, and I’m no intellectual snob. I mention this particular trip to the library only because it was on that evening that, walking back from the village, I noticed the cottage. It was not that I had never seen it before; it had always been an unremarkable part of the landscape of the familiar walk from boat to village and gave every sign of being uninhabited. Now I observed the cottage because there were lights on; I could see that one of the rooms had red walls, which made a rosy glow in the grey autumn dusk, and the contrast between this picture-postcard cosiness and my damp and generally cheerless abode impressed me. If my life had not been so studded with misfortune, I could have owned such a place – more modest than my original ambitions had dictated, but better by far than my present lot.
That evening, while I consumed what was left of a tinned steak and kidney pudding, I did find myself sinking into a depression, which began with a resume of my present condition: in my sixties, living on the state, homeless, or shortly to become so (the owners had written to say that they were returning sooner than expected), and without a lover, let alone a companion of any kind. How had I come to this? When I thought back to my youth and remembered how easy it had been to get any girl who interested me interested in me, it seemed extraordinary that I should end up alone. Women of all ages had succumbed to my attentions. If I had married Daphne, might things have been different? Or perhaps if I had not married Hazel success might have shone. But it had never done that for more than a few weeks, or perhaps months. I could not understand why, when I possessed a talent that from my observation of them was given to few men, I should not have landed myself with all the emotional and other security so necessary to someone of my nature. It was true that, years ago, in the Daphne days, I had had hopes and dreams far beyond any that I might entertain now. I was, though I say it myself, extremely good-looking. I was bright. My English teacher at school told me that I should try for university; she thought, if I worked, I had a good chance of a scholarship. But Daphne had intervened, followed – mercifully as it turned out – by the war. It was really my father who persuaded, or rather bullied, me into learning his trade but to me there has always been something menial about being a gardener, which no quantity of upper-class, middle-aged ladies in green wellingtons can dispel. However much they yap on about old-fashioned shrub roses and white gardens, I know that someone else does the double digging, the muck-spreading, the hedge-cutting, the seed-thinning, the potting-up and other countless tasks that are made wearisome by their repetition. My father ‘put me through it’, to use his phrase, and this meant that I did all those things. It used to take me ages to get my hands clean enough to meet Daphne.
I remember coming back that evening into the saloon from the galley where I had gone to make a cup of instant coffee and wondering idly what Daphne – or, indeed, any of the others – would think if they saw how I lived now, and at once it was as though I was viewing the scene before me through other, actually critical eyes. It’s true that I have never been much of a one for domestic life (the man who cannot find some woman to clear up and generally administer to him has hardly the right to call himself a man) but really, in this particular case of the boat, I had let things go rather too far. I had fallen into the habit of waiting to do the washing-up until there was not a clean crock left. Anyone who has had to water a boat then boil any they want hot will understand this point. But that autumn I had taken to eating off bits of the Sunday Times when I had run out of plates, or rinsing one mug whose pottery was heavily stained with tannin, and otherwise drinking straight from cans. The place was a litter of paper, crumbs and minor congealed spillages of anything from Guinness to strawberry jam. The small carpet was filthy; the windows clouded with paraffin fumes and condensation. The oil lamps were dull with the greasy black that results from untrimmed wicks. The galley was in a revolting state. In fact, the only bits of the boat that I had kept clean were the toilet and basin (I have never been able to endure squalor in those areas). My books were covered in a scum of untouched dust. I knew, because every time I returned to the boat and unlocked the saloon doors it assailed me, that the place smelt of paraffin, damp, unwashed clothes and tobacco. If I did find anybody, I thought, it would have to be on her ground rather than mine. That I can rise above almost any material circumstances does not mean that I should expect others to do the same. It is not even a question of priorities: for me love has always been the single most important influence in my life.
And now I have lost it – again! It is strange how one’s mind shies away from unbearable reality into past, quite trivial detail; into small pointless pieces of reminiscence or speculation of what might have been if some minor aspect of a situation had been different – anything, I suppose, to protect oneself from more than a second’s endurance of pain as fresh as it is relentless. I know that in the end the freshness will fade. If pictures of her slip across my inner vision with that soundless poignancy that makes one want to cry out, their recurrence (it is curious how repetition is the chief habit of memory) will degenerate into a familiar ache. At the moment, however, the loss of her is too new for me even to contemplate the idea that it may diminish. Worse – and how I recognize this! – I do not want it to: I clutch at my pain as the last straw of feeling I may ever possess before the Ice Age of a vegetable senility sets in, such as I have seen so often in a vacant gaze, a trickle of mucus generated from mumbling jaws, the pointless fidgeting of veined and liver-spotted hands that smooth non-existent hair or shabby clothes. Old age has become something that I dread – far more than death.
I can remember that when I was young, a boy, old age was something that I regarded with a kind of incredulous boredom. It could have nothing to do with me because I was never going to be like that. My horizon then extended merely to my becoming dashingly adult, past the age when people could call me boy and boss me about. It is strange how, when we are very young, we equate growing up with freedom; we think that having escaped parental bondage we shall live thereafter exactly as we please. The business of having to earn one’s living has not impinged. But when we have to start doing that, old age shifts from its distance and settles nearer: at least it was so for me. And since then it has loomed, edged ever nearer, usually – as in that game that the girls at school were so fond of called Grandmother’s Steps – when I was not looking. Shortly before I left Hazel I remember waking early – I had tried to turn over in bed and the pain had woken me – looking at my watch and realising that I couldn’t see what time it was without my specs. Then I understood that at last old age had succeeded in creeping up on me, had woken me with a tap on the shoulder. I was old; in good nick, but indisputably old.
All that day to counteract panic I added up my assets: nothing wrong with my heart or blood pressure; memory not quite what it had been, but still pretty good. My hair was now a steel grey but there was plenty of it. My teeth, apart from a small bridge, were my own, and the use of spectacles for reading was no indictment. And in spite of failing to make much of bed with Hazel (it does take two to tango, and Hazel was no dancer of anything) there was nothing wrong with my equipment in that department either. But anyone meeting me for the first time would dub me old. They might say I was elderly – a kind of genteel pastel version of ageing – but what they would mean was that I seemed to them old.
I knew from experience that I could talk myself past this damning view. Wells was right when he said it did not matter to a woman what a man looked like as long as he could talk. And, I would add to that, listen. Yet whichever way I looked at it, I had not all that much time in which to design a new and delightful life for myself. Give me the woman and I would fall in love with her, but even I could not do this without an object for my affection.
These thoughts came back to me on that dank evening. I remember it in so much detail because it was the last evening I was to spend in that way. When I had drunk my coffee and smoked a cigarette – the last in my pack – wishing I had the cash for some vodka, I boiled a kettle and washed up for as long as the water lasted. This only made everything else look worse, so I boiled another kettleful and set to work upon the rest of the galley. It was four in the morning before I had finished and I fell on to my bunk without a thought for Helen, or indeed anyone else.
I slept late; the heavy white mist that makes the canal look as though it is smoking had almost dispersed. Condensation had dampened the outside of my sleeping-bag, and I lay for a few minutes contemplating the familiar, boring and uncomfortable interval there must be between getting out of a warm bunk and sitting in the saloon with a scalding cup of tea. The thought of another winter in the boat was not cheering. While I was pulling on my jeans and oiled-wool jersey the evil thought occurred to me that I could, actually, smarten up the boat and make a real effort to sell her as mine. Then I could scarper with the money and start somewhere else. Naturally I did not pursue this idea: I am by nature rather more honest than most, but it is sometimes amusing to consider notions that are so out of one’s behavioural orbit as to be fantastic.
I have nothing against fantasy per se. Indeed, it seems to me one of the most harmless ways of enriching one’s life. I can always remember as a child the shock of teachers or parents accusing me of ‘day-dreaming’, as though this was some kind of offence. However, this particular morning – an ordinary, humdrum, end-of-Indian-summer Saturday morning – required me to be dully practical. I had to water the boat. This involved hauling it about a hundred yards the other side of the first bridge, to the lock cottage whose owner had a hose that reached to my water tank. I had also to do some shopping for food, and to fetch my laundry from the woman in the village. I made a shopping list of the usual things: eggs, bacon, sausages, corned beef, potatoes, onions and carrots, a large loaf, tomatoes, milk and a jar of Nescafe. I also needed more cleaning materials; it looked like more than one trip.
I noticed as I passed the cottage that the curtains were drawn in the upstairs windows and that there was no sign of life. I also observed that the garden, what I could see of it, was a total wilderness filled with sodden hay, nettles blackened by the frost, old man’s beard, thistles and even ragwort. Then at the far side of the cottage, past the hedge that surrounded its garden, I noticed the most beautiful car I had ever seen. It was a two-seater, drop-head Mercedes, probably over twenty years old, its black canvas roof set off by the metallic green-grey bodywork. It was a car that could only belong, I felt, to a rich romantic, a Gatsbyish car made for the privileged few. I could not help giving it a closer look. It was in excellent condition; its long sleek lines polished, its chrome trim gleaming. Inside it had a walnut dashboard and black leather upholstery. Whoever owned that car was not short of a bob or two. It was probably some film director or pop star, I thought: country cottages and expensive cars were all part of their equipment, and the state of the garden was just what one would expect from some nouveau riche townie. For the rest of the walk I indulged myself with straightforward envy. It was not so much that I wanted particularly to own a car like that Mercedes, but that I wanted to be in a position to choose whether I owned one. The worst thing about poverty was the lack of choice. I imagined myself having to choose whether I would have either the cottage or the car – even that was a choice wildly beyond my present means.
While I was shopping I asked who lived in the cottage near the canal bridge. A lady from London – just moved in – a Mrs Redfearn. I asked if there was a Mr Redfearn, but that was not known. Looking back, I realize that even then I was considering the possibility of Mrs Redfearn as I then thought of her. If there was a Mr Redfearn I would go no further. Experience has taught me that there is very little point in pursuing women who are seriously, or even socially, married. You have to battle with their better natures – always the dullest part of them – and there is the danger that the husband will cotton on at the wrong moment. In any case there are quite enough women on their own to make pointless the pursuit of those already spoken for. I suppose when I was far younger, I did not understand this: the presence of a husband made romance more exciting and, of course, there were women, although with one exception I hardly encountered them, whose position in life made reckless effort worthwhile. Poor Charley, I thought: poor rich Charley! It was extraordinary how relatives’ interference was invariably destructive. But in Charley’s case they thought of nothing but money, which was why, I suppose, they had so much of it, and they were prepared to pretend that the drunken sod to whom she was married was a better bet than I could ever be. Anyway, after that débâcle, I avoided married women.
As I trudged back to the boat with the first consignment of shopping I saw that the car had gone. On the other hand, there was smoke rising from the chimney, so presumably Mrs Redfearn had simply gone out to lunch. Or they had gone out. I had suddenly an intense desire to walk through the jungle garden up to the cottage and see what I could of the inside. If there was anyone in the cottage and they accosted me, I would say I had come to enquire whether they needed a gardener. The sitting room did actually have red walls and clashing pink curtains. There were two very large sofas and, in the middle of the floor, several tea chests that seemed to be full of books. I noted also a number of very large cushions with bits of glass in their embroidery. A fire smoked reluctantly on an enormous hearth but there was no sign of anyone.
I moved past the sitting room and the front door to the side where the kitchen must be. If I could see cups or mugs lying about, I might have some idea of how many people had had breakfast.
The kitchen had windows front and back, was two rooms knocked into one. It had, apart from the usual kitchen things, a round pine table on which the remains of breakfast for one still lay. Of course, all that told me was that Mrs Redfearn had come here alone; for all I knew she might be fetching him from the station at this minute. Somehow (and this is not hindsight, I do remember the feeling very clearly) I had the intuition that she lived alone, was either divorced or a widow.
I remember so well the curious prickling that comes after that little shot in the dark when one knows a small piece of something without the slightest reason for knowing it. For a split second, I knew that Mrs Redfearn was going to be of paramount importance in my life. I need look no further: here she was going to be.
In the middle of these discoveries, I heard the car return. I had just time to get back down the path and outside the gate before she appeared round the corner of the hedge. She was tall, wearing a long raincoat and boots, and a man’s black felt hat set rather far back on her head. She was carrying shopping-bags and stopped a moment when she saw me.
‘What can I do for you?’
‘I thought there might be something I could do for you.’
‘Oh?’ She had reached the gate and we were face to face. Her eyes were grey and she looked wary. I launched into my garden bit.
‘I suppose I do,’ she said. ‘I hadn’t got round to thinking about it. Let me just go and dump these.’
As she walked into the cottage, I heard the telephone ring, and after a few minutes she reappeared and asked if I could come back in the afternoon at about three.
I agreed to that, reflecting as I went about my domestic chores that most, if not all, women are addicted to the telephone. At that point I wanted to find something ordinary about her to still some of the violent surging of excitement that seeing her had engendered. It may seem extraordinary to an outsider, but I had only to look on her face to find it beautiful. I have a theory about this, because it is something I have found several times in my life and when I have told the woman concerned she has always questioned – and in some cases totally misunderstood – me. It has something to do with looking for the first time at someone with no preconceived notion, picture, image, whatever you want to call it, of them at all. I can, if I choose, look at a new face and experience a sense of complete discovery and at the same time recognition. Then I know them – for the duration of my looking – and so, inevitably, I love what I see and know. One woman argued that this could only be true if I was predisposed to love them anyway, to which I simply replied that something did not have to be true with everyone to be true with some. I certainly don’t love everybody, but I also see very few people and those who I see I love, or have loved.
And now Mrs Redfearn had joined the club.
Another thing about this kind of seeing is that it imprints itself indelibly on my mind. With all the pictures that I have of her now, I can at any time shut out the present and conjure that first sight – when I was within two or three feet of her and our eyes met. I knew that she was sizing me up, or trying to do so, but there was something more to her look than wary appraisal – a wildness, a fear, a familiarity with disappointment, these things so instant and glancing that most people would never have caught anything of them, but after a lifetime of passionate interest in the nuances of response I am finely tuned; nothing of the kind escapes me. I think I knew then that more of her life had been endurance than enjoyment.
I observed other things ... I estimated her to be in her mid-fifties: her complexion was pale and clear but it was inscribed with myriad tiny lines, round her eyes, round her mouth, and deeper marks between her eyebrows that had in turn the narrow arched symmetry often seen in Elizabethan portraits. I could go on like Shakespeare: item, one nose of a shape known as aquiline; item, one mouth – or pair of lips – small, also pale and rather prim excepting when she smiled. But I am anticipating: she had not yet smiled at me, nor had she taken off her hat.
Naturally I got to know all kinds of details, physical and other, but nothing I subsequently learned altered or belied my first impression.
I went back to the cottage at three. It was still, not a breath of wind, and the chilly sunlight made every leaf in the hedgerow and on the towpath livid. From the bridge, I could see her slated roof; the road sloped steadily downhill from the bridge to the village nearly a mile away. I could not see any smoke from the chimney, and for a moment I thought that perhaps she was not there. Then I thought, no, people from London were not used to open fires. I would offer to relight it for her.
I was right about the fire. She had taken off her mac, but she was wearing a black, roll-necked jersey that looked like cashmere and over it a jacket of thick wool embroidered with poppies.
‘Oh – hello. Thanks for coming back. Sorry about the telephone, only it was long distance and I didn’t want to have to ring them. What do you think you could do about the garden, then?’
‘I haven’t looked at it yet. I thought that was something we should do together.’
I felt rather than saw her glance at me and then she said, ‘Oh, well, it can’t be much colder out than it is here.’
We walked out into the middle of the overgrown path.
‘I’ve only just bought this place.’ She sounded doubtful, as though this might have been a mistake.
‘It’s this jungle round it,’ I said. ‘Cottages need their setting and that means their garden, however small. Think of Lark Rise. Cottages always have a garden. In the mind’s eye.’
‘What?’
‘Flora Thompson’s book. Lark Rise to Candleford. Village life at the turn of the century. Very different from now.’
‘Oh, yes. Yes, I did read it – years ago.’ Again I felt her looking at me – and looking away. ‘I was wondering why on earth I did buy it.’
‘I know you were.’
Another covert glance, and then she said distinctly, ‘Of course, I would need a price for doing the whole thing.’
I sensed that reading her mind – understanding her – would only make her shy like a nervous horse.
‘I just want a few rough measurements, and then we can discuss what you would like indoors. If you like.’
‘The fire’s gone out and I’ve run out of firelighters.’
‘I don’t need them.’
She said nothing to this, but held one end of the tape while I measured and wrote down the dimensions on the back of an envelope with Charley’s gold pen, which I was pretty sure she would notice. Nothing was said, however, until we had finished (the measurements were hardly extensive or difficult) and she had led the way back into the cottage. I said, ‘I apologize if I was pushy just now, but I’m one of those people who leap at any chance to light a proper fire.’
‘Go ahead. There’s some newspaper and sticks in that basket.’
‘And logs?’ There seemed to be only one lying about – far too large, like a great rafter.
‘I think in the back of the garage. And there is a wheel-barrow, because I found one full of logs outside the back door.’
‘Right, I’ll get them.’
All the time I was collecting the logs and wheeling them cottagewards, I thought about her voice. I hesitate to use the word girlish, but it was high and very clear. Somehow it was a shock coming from her, instantly making me imagine her much younger and more vulnerable than her present appearance implied. But it was a very pretty voice, ageless, and charming to me.
I must say here that I am very sensitive to voices – to pitch, to timbre, to accent. I can imitate other people, including myself in earlier days; having adapted my way of speaking considerably. For the last twenty years of his life my own father would not have recognized me on the telephone. At any rate, I was fortunate that she had a voice that could charm me. At that point I wanted, was determined, to be charmed. I was also nervous – at this stage a very small thing could jeopardize the enterprise entirely. This was also a time (which, of course, I knew from past experience) when getting Mrs Redfearn to take an interest in me was a challenge, an adventure, more of an exciting game than an affair of the heart. So the first aim must be to encourage one thing to lead to another.
I returned with the logs and set about the fire. She offered me a cup of tea; I accepted. I asked if she had paper on which I could draw her garden for her. I sensed that formality reassured her. I spent longer than I needed sitting back on my heels watching the fire, and then watching her as she went to and fro from the kitchen for the tea and some shelf paper, which was all she had, she said, for me to draw on. She put the tea-tray on to one of the glass-embroidered cushions. ‘Haven’t got a table for here,’ she said. ‘Got to get one.’
The firelight made the room feel warmer at once. Outside dusk coloured the sky and I knew that there was going to be a frost. I noticed the sky because she was drawing the curtains, ‘to keep the warmth in’.
Eventually we were each sitting on a sofa opposite one another, and she offered me a cigarette. I had to get up to light hers for her.
‘Do you always wear a hat?’
‘Of course not. I forgot it.’ She pulled it off and tilted her face for the light.
She had the most amazing hair of a kind I’d never seen before in my life. It was dark, brindled with pure white, and sprang richly from her head in small curls that, if her hair had been longer, would have been ringlets. But the most unusual thing about it was its fineness. It looked like gossamer or the hair of a fairy and must have made anyone seeing it for the first time want to touch it.
She asked me to switch on the lamp that stood by my sofa, which was good because the light from the new fire was romantic but unrevealing. She poured the tea into two striped mugs and started to talk about her garden. She had always loved the idea of having one, but knew next to nothing about gardening. She didn’t want anything elaborate. ‘You made me feel rather nervous when you said you wanted to draw a design – I can’t afford to spend thousands of pounds on it, you know.’
‘Of course not. It was more for me to find out what you want.’
‘I told you, I know so little about it that I don’t even know what I like.’
‘Like art critics, you mean? They never seem to me to have the faintest notion of what they actually like.’
She threw back her head and gave a little shout of laughter.
‘What on earth made you think of that?’
‘I read.’
‘I wasn’t laughing at you. It’s just so true.’
‘Does the truth make you laugh?’
‘Very much, sometimes. Why not?’
‘Isn’t the truth important to you, then?’
She gave me a look that was both incomprehensible and daunting, and threw her cigarette into the fire. ‘I’m not much in the market for philosophical forays. We’re meant to be talking about my garden.’
‘Right.’ I became at once professional. I know enough about gardens to know that I don’t know nearly enough, but I still know more than most people or, with many of them, have been able to give the impression that I do.
So I plunged into things like aspect, soil tests, high or low maintenance, the pros and cons of deciduous or evergreen foliage . . .
‘Look,’ she said in the middle of my spiel, ‘all I want is a simple, nice cottage garden. You know, roses growing up the walls and lavender and those tall flowers with long spikes that people used to embroider on tea cosies – holly-hocks! Them. I don’t want anything grand or elaborate. I shan’t be here much for the next few months anyway.’
This was bad news.
‘Were you thinking of it as a summer place, then?’
‘Not particularly. Just somewhere I can bolt to when I’m free.’
When she said this, I had the distinct impression that she did not expect this to be often, and as the implications of this began to sink in I wondered whether I had made the wrong choice in Mrs Redfearn. Then she said, ‘I suppose you don’t happen to know somebody round here who could look after the place for me – the garden, I mean – while I’m away?’
‘I might. I’ll think,’ I said.
‘Are you going to do a drawing?’
‘I don’t think there’s any need. You’ve been very clear about what you want. Of course it would be nice if you could choose about the planting. When are you going away?’
‘Oh – on Monday. I’ll be leaving here tomorrow evening.’
It’s amazing how fast and how much one can think in a split second. I thought, It’s no go, there’s not enough time, if I agree to do the garden I’m keeping my options open, if I do the garden for her I could make her spend quite a lot of tomorrow with me, find out more about her, she’ll be back, you don’t buy a cottage and then never live in it, I think she does like me in a wary sort of way and that’s a start. Anyway, there’s nothing to be lost by going all out for the hours that are left. Limitations – of any kind – are simply a challenge. You used to enjoy them, remember? I got to my feet so that I could look down at her.
‘I’ll do your garden for you – dig it and plant it and then keep it tidy. But I’ll need some tools, a fork and so on. Perhaps if we went to the local garden centre we could get them and you’d have a chance to pick out a few plants – and bulbs, it’s not too late for them.’
‘I’ve got an awful lot to do tomorrow. The book-unpacking and the kitchen things.’
‘I happen to be entirely free tomorrow, and there’s hardly anything I like better than getting a look at other people’s books.’ Then, because I sensed at once that I had gone too far (and whenever I recognize this I also know that it is essential to seem utterly unaware of it), I added, ‘I know it’s always embarrassing to talk about money, but I charge four pounds an hour – for the gardening, of course, not for getting tools et cetera.’
‘How do I know how many hours are involved?’
‘Well, I reckon it would take me about a week to clear the garden and replant, and then I suppose half a day, say four hours a week, less in winter and possibly more in the spring and summer. That’s the dicey part of it. If you are away, you would have to trust me to put down my hours.’ I let myself smile fleetingly at the very idea of dishonesty, before saying, ‘I could, of course, produce some quite splendid references if required.’
‘By splendid, I take it you mean snobbish.’
‘That’s it.’
‘Don’t bother. You’re on.’
She was on her feet now, and walking me to the door.
‘What time would you like me to come tomorrow?’
‘About ten?’
‘Fine. Thank you for the tea.’
I walked down the weedy path to the gate and when I turned she was in the process of shutting the front door – as though she had been watching me but did not want me to see.
A fairly conventional encounter, that; nothing remarkable had been said by either of us; nothing, or nothing very much, had happened. It had been studiedly impersonal, we had not even exchanged names.
That evening I ran and reran the events of the day. I have a good memory, particularly for dialogue, and remembering exactly what someone has said can often spark perceptions that I had been unaware of at the time. Not only do the words recall the voice, they recall the eyes, the posture, the whole set of the body (body language is, I believe, the modern term for it), thus providing a quantity of retrospective information. And that was what I was after, what, given the short time available, I desperately needed. One cannot expect to be successful in pursuit of a shadow or ghost. Her going away so soon (and for how long?) made speed and accuracy of the essence. Her going was a blow; on the other hand her appearance had been a delightful shock.
Every now and then, during that evening and night, I would stop all thoughts and plan to recapture her face as I first saw it, the wary grey eyes that were shaped, I could recollect, like horizontal diamonds from a pack of cards. Far into the night, as I was wondering what shape they would become when she smiled, I realized that she hadn’t. She had laughed when I had made the remark about art critics, but then she’d thrown back her head and, anyway, I’d thought she was laughing at me and when that happens I can’t think or observe anything at all. But she said she hadn’t been, and she had not smiled once. Was she deeply, chronically unhappy? Or had she simply never experienced carefree pleasure (true of far more women than is generally known)? Who was Mr Redfearn? I had a strong feeling that, alive or dead, he was not with her. None the less, it was one of the first things I must find out. The second was what she was going away for, and for how long. And, come to that, where?
I finally slept, with several possible but, of course, no certain answers to these questions; the one thing that I knew was that I was on the brink of what I prayed would turn out to be the adventure of my life.