Louisa

I Never Grew Fond of my mother-in-law, but sometimes I remember things she said and I find myself agreeing. ‘Always keep something back that they’ll want; that’s how not to be lonely in old age,’ she said to me when she was as old as I am now.

Grace Shield wants answers. She was here not long ago; yesterday she tells me now. ‘I’m being a bore,’ she says, ‘but I just thought I’d ask again if you might have remembered something … about Forbes.’ And she waits, her hands folded, good-girl fashion, in her lap. Large hands just like mine. Like most young people she has no patience. ‘He produces a painting as fine as the one I’ve got and that’s it; nothing more. No one’s heard of him. There’s no record of him anywhere. No mention, not even an A.L. Forbes Appreciation Society on a small island outpost off Newfoundland. It doesn’t make sense. The more I think about it, the less sense it makes.’

I want to tell her to give me time. Everything takes longer when you are old. It seems unfair, as time is what you have so little of. I know what she wants from me, but I have tried for so long not to remember; and now, when nature is on my side, she wants to rake it up again. In any case, I need answers too. ‘How did you get your painting? Where did it come from? Do you know who owned it last?’

‘It was bought for me in an antique shop, actually. By someone I loved a great deal. He died before he could give it to me but eventually it reached me, two years after his death, on my birthday, although the person who sent it to me didn’t know that.’

‘Do you know the shop?’ I ask.

She shakes her head. ‘He said it was in Chelsea although his geography was pretty shaky. As soon as I get back to London I’ll go there, ask around.’

We sit in silence for a while. Long-buried feelings stir and flutter. I’ve been cold for so long.

Then Grace says, ‘Did you see the Sunday papers?’

I tell her I prefer the television. ‘There’s a man I quite like. He used to be funny. Cold over England.’

‘There was a piece about me. A very stupid piece. Then there was another one yesterday. This time they had asked my exmotherin-law about me. Talk about not giving someone a chance.’

‘If my mother-in-law had been asked to sum me up,’ I say, ‘I believe she would have done it in one word: disappointing.’

Seventy years ago, years that have vanished like small change. There she is, Lydia, tiny in her vast bed, ‘Louisa, remember that now you are someone.’ Impossible, I thought when I first saw her, that she could be Arthur’s mother, he who has the height and strength of a Viking. But I have come to learn that what she lacks in stature she makes up for in resolve, so I imagine that she simply willed her frail body to produce the big bouncing baby boy who had grown up to be my husband. She had used her nine months well, getting the most out of the time. She hated waste, even the waste of breath. ‘I shall call you Louisa,’ she said when we first met. ‘I can’t be bothered with fancy double-barrelled names.’

And now I am to remember that I am someone. It is a new thought. Nuisance. Anyone. Nobody: all of these I was suited to; but someone. There are people who draw attention towards themselves as effortlessly as a window draws daylight. Such people have the right to consider themselves someone. But I was like a glass of water on a hot afternoon; worthy of notice only by my absence.

But maybe it has all changed since I met Arthur. He spotted me in a room full of people and did not leave my side that evening. And the strangest thing, or as strange at least as this wondrous man giving me all his attention, was that suddenly I became visible; people who had walked past me in corridors and lecture halls or at parties now found me worthy of notice.

I knew people who could make others laugh three times or more during a conversation and I had always thought what a fine thing it would be to have that gift, the gift of being able to make someone’s face crumple up in merriment, sending lines from the corners of the eyes to the cheekbones like rays of sunshine, to make them throw their heads back in helpless laughter. I told Arthur and he took my hands and looked at me so intently that my cheeks coloured as if I had been sitting too close to the fire. ‘You are my funny serious girl,’ he told me. ‘Don’t try to be like everyone else. Always just be yourself.’ He grinned and, big bearded man that he was, he looked like a boy. ‘Anyway, I make enough good jokes for two, don’t you think, my most perfect, my most solemnly delightful young friend?’ Then he laughed and all around us people turned and looked and saw me.

And here I am, Mrs Arthur Blackstaff: someone.

‘Don’t slouch, girl. You’re tall; you can’t pretend otherwise. Whole county’s turning up just to meet you. Make the best of yourself. No need to look like a startled rabbit.’

It was too early yet for me to decide whether my mother-in-law was plain mean, or just bluff with a kind heart underneath. It was the same with the house: Northbourne House, my home now. This evening as I descend the wide oak staircase I find it benevolent. I feel welcomed by the mulled-wine papered walls, embraced by the oak panelling, drawn to the many leaded windows. Other times, when the light comes in bright from the south and west, I shiver in the warmth and feel, great tall woman that I am, afloat in unfriendly seas. Maybe it’s the house that can’t make its mind up about me. What had previous brides done to pacify it? A sacrifice perhaps; a son and heir to all these contradictions, all this light and dark.

Arthur is calling me. The guests have started to arrive. I suspect that, however much Arthur is admired for his success, his charm and handsome looks, and my mother-in-law is feared for the sharpness of her tongue, most of our guests have come tonight because word has got round that the bride is unaccountably plain!

Arthur tells me he has an eye for hidden treasure.

I have uncommonly good hearing. I hear them; the county matrons with their floury cheeks and braying voices. Try as they might, it’s not in their nature to speak in anything less than these loud assured tones. It was bred into them, the confidence of knowing they were born to the best seats in the house of life.

‘But who is she?’

‘One of those bluestockings. Apparently he found her in some dusty lecture hall at Cambridge. Both parents dead. Quite a scandal. I expect she’s one of these clever gals.’

‘What a refreshing change.’ The speaker has a soft voice with an edge of laughter and I want to see to whom it belongs. Until now the guests had not seen me standing there, just outside of their circle, so when I appear amongst them their faces are too comical; I might have materialised through the sturdy walls, stepped out from the wallpaper like a ghost. I am introduced and I watch the women arrange their lips into tight little smiles, all but she with the soft voice and the kind words. She is much younger than the rest, shorter than I – but then most women are – with dark brown hair cut squarely at the chin and a straight fringe cut short across her wide forehead. Her eyes are brown, almost black. She puts her hand out to shake mine. ‘I’m Viola Glastonbury.’ I smile at her and take her hand.

We are joined by my mother-in-law. ‘So you gals have met? I’m pleased. Viola is the kind of friend I want for you, Louisa. Viola paints. Sweet little pictures.’

But now I’m looking towards the windows where Jane Dale is standing, her gaze fixed on my husband’s tall figure some distance away. ‘A treasure. Good family. Bad luck. Straitened circumstances,’ my mother-in-law explained to me when I first arrived. ‘Great help to Arthur. I want you to be kind to her.’

My husband is undressing before me and I do not take my eyes off him. ‘You were a great success, my dear,’ he says.

I cannot stop smiling; not so long ago he was my dream and now here he is, flesh and blood, naked before me, his chest and legs covered in soft golden hair, his penis rising from the tangle of darker curls just for me. ‘I did meet someone I liked.’

‘Later,’ he says, taking me in his arms. ‘Later.’