Part 13 (1/2)
”Want to see Eustace, do you? He's up in the vegetable garden at the back, digging me a bucket of potatoes.” She smiled down at Cara. ”Do you like the little p.u.s.s.y cat?”
”Yes, she's sweet.”
”She's got kittens in the barn. Do you want to go and see them?”
”Will she mind?”
”She won't mind. Come along, Mrs. Thomas will show you where to find them.”
She made for the barn, with the children at her heels; not a backward glance did they spare for their mother, so intent were they on seeing the kittens. Left alone, Virginia went up on the garden path, through a wicket gate, arched in Ivy. Eustace's blue s.h.i.+rt could be glimpsed beyond the pea-vines, and she made her way towards this and found him forking up a drill of potatoes. Round and white and smooth as sea pebbles, they were, caked in earth the same colour and consistency as rich, dark chocolate cake.
”Eustace.”
He looked over his shoulder and saw her. She waited for him to smile, but he did not. She wondered if he had taken offence. He straightened up, leaning on the handle of the spade.
”Hallo,” he said, as though it were a surprise to see her there.
”I've come to say thank you. And I'm sorry.”
He s.h.i.+fted the spade from one hand to another. ”What have you got to be sorry for?”
”I didn't realize it was you who'd brought the wood and lit the fire and everything. I thought it was Alice Lingard. That's why we haven't been down before.”
”Oh, that,” said Eustace and she wondered if there was something else she should be sorry about.
”It was terribly kind. The milk and the eggs and everything. It just made all the difference.” She stopped, terrified of sounding insincere. ”But how did you get into the house?”
Eustace drove the p.r.o.ngs of the fork into the ground, and started towards her. ”There's a key here. When my mother was first married, she used to go over sometimes, do a bit of work for old Mr. Crane. His wife was ailing, my mother used to clean the place up. He gave her a key to hang on the dresser and it's been there ever since.”
He reached her side, and stood, looking down at her, then he suddenly smiled, his blue eyes crinkled with amus.e.m.e.nt and she knew that her fears were unjustified, and that he bore no grudge. He said, ”So you decided to take the house after all.”
Ruefully, Virginia said, ”Yes.”
”I felt badly, saying those things, and you so upset about everything. I lost my temper, but I shouldn't have.”
”You were right. It was all I needed to make me make up my own mind.”
”That's why I brought up the logs and stuff ... I thought it was the least I could do. You'll be wanting more milk ...”
”Could you let us have it every day?”
”If someone comes and fetches it.”
”I could, or one of the children. I hadn't realized, but over the fields and the stiles it's no distance at all.”
They had begun to walk back towards the gate.
”Are your children here?”
”They've gone with Mrs. Thomas to see some kittens.”
Eustace laughed. ”They'll fall in love with them, so be warned. That little tabby got caught by a Siamese up the road, and you've never seen such pretty kittens.” He opened the gate for Virginia to go through. ”Blue eyes they've got and ...”
He stopped, watching over her head as Cara and Nicholas came, slowly, carefully, out of the barn, their cupped hands held cradled to their chests, their heads bent in adoration. ”What did I tell you?” said Eustace and shut the gate behind them.
The children came up the slope of the lawn, ankle deep, knee deep, in plantains and great white daisies. And all at once Virginia saw them with fresh eyes, with Eustace's eyes, as though she were seeing them for the first time. The fair head and the dark, the blue eyes and the brown. And the sun blinked on to Cara's spectacles so that they flashed like the headlights of a little car, and their new jeans, bought too big, slipped down over their hips and Nicholas's s.h.i.+rt-tail hung out over his firm, round little bottom.
A love-like pain caught at Virginia's throat, unshed tears p.r.i.c.kled at the back of her eyes. They were so defenceless, so vulnerable, and for some reason it mattered so much that they should make a good impression on Eustace.
Nicholas caught sight of her. ”Look what we've got, Mummy; Mrs. Thomas said that we could bring them out.”
”Yes,” said Cara, ”and they're tiny and they've got their eyes ...” She saw Eustace, behind her mother, and stopped dead, where she was standing, her face closed up, her eyes watching him from behind her gla.s.ses.
But Nicholas came on . . . ”Look, Mummy you've got to look. It's all furry and it's got tiny claws. But I don't know if it's a boy or girl Mrs. Thomas says she can't tell.” He looked up and saw Eustace and smiled engagingly into his face. ”They've stopped sucking their mother, Mrs. Thomas says, she was getting too thin, and she's put a little saucer of milk out for them, and they lap and their tongues are tiny,” he told Eustace.
Eustace put out a long brown finger and scratched the top of the kitten's head. Virginia said, ”Nicholas, this is Mr. Philips, you're meant to say how do you do.”
”How do you do. Mrs. Thomas said that if we wanted one we could have one but we had to ask you, but you wouldn't mind, would you, Mummy? It's so little and it could sleep on my bed and I'd look after it.”
Virginia found herself coming out with all the cla.s.sic arguments produced by the parents of children, in the same situation as herself. Too young to be taken from its mother yet Still needs her to keep him warm. Only at Bosithick for the holidays, and think how he'd hate the train journey back to Scotland.
Eustace had put down the bucket of potatoes and now went over to where Cara stood, clutching her kitten. Virginia, in agony for her, saw Eustace squat to Cara's height, loosen her lingers gently with his own. ”You don't want to hold him too tight, otherwise he won't be able to breathe.”
”I'm frightened of dropping him.”
”You won't drop him. He wants to look out and see what's happening in the world. He's never seen sun as bright as that.” He smiled at the kitten, at Cara. After a little, slowly, she smiled back, and you forgot the ugly spectacles and the b.u.mpy forehead and the straight hair, and saw only the marvellous sweetness of her expression.
After a little he sent them to put the kittens back, and, telling Virginia to stay outside in the suns.h.i.+ne, went into the house with the potatoes for Mrs. Thomas, only to emerge a moment or so later with a packet of cigarettes and a bar of chocolate. They lay where they had lain before, in the long gra.s.s, and were joined there by the children.
He gave them the chocolate but talked to them like adults. What have you been doing? What did you do yesterday in all that rain? Have you been swimming yet?
They told him, voices chiming against each other, Cara, her shyness over, as eager to impart information as Nicholas.
”We bought raincoats, and we got drenched. And Mummy had to go to the bank to get more money, and Nicholas got a bucket and spade.”
”But I haven't been to the beach to dig yet!”
”And we swam this morning at Mrs. Lingard's. We swam in her pool. But we haven't swum in the sea yet.”
Eustace raised his eyebrows. ”You haven't swum in the sea and you haven't been to a beach? That's all wrong!”
”Mummy says there hasn't been time . . .”
”But she promised me,” Nicholas reminded of his grievance, became indignant. ”She said today I could dig with the spade, but I've not been near one grain of sand.”
Virginia began to laugh at him, and he beet me, naturally, angrier than ever. ”Well, it's true, and it's what I want more than anything.”