I didn't know it that
night, but this was to be the last time I’d see my father. We sat - he, my mother, my brother
David and I - amid the over-the-top tinsel and decorations in a modest hotel
restaurant. My father wore a dark gray suit, stiff white collar and the tie of
the Durham Light Infantry, probably the only person among the forty or fifty
others in the room to be wearing a tie.
This was his way. It was how he'd been
brought up. I can remember him even on sultry August days at Whitstable, a
seaside resort, sitting with his knees drawn up on the crowded beach with a
neatly folded copy of the Daily
Telegraph, and wearing a wool serge suit and highly polished black shoes
with sock suspenders. He may not have looked it, but he was comfortable.
But now it was Christmas Day, 1957. I
was 26, and he'd turned 70 a few weeks before. It was an odd, superficially
festive little gathering. We went through the traditional courses of roast
turkey with sage stuffing, Christmas pudding aflame in brandy, and mince pies.
We pulled the crackers and blew the whistles and read and laughed at the bad
jokes that spilled out of them, and we raised our glasses to the future. But
the sad truth was that the four of us were strangers to one another, and also
that the old man had barely any future left.
David
and I never really knew our parents. We were both sent miles away to a boarding
school when I was eight. I don't remember ever sharing a feeling or fear with
my father or mother. It's not that they weren't kind to us, or even that they
didn't love us. It was simply that neither knew how to show affection. The only
time my father and I ever touched was to shake hands whenever we met or parted.
Nor had David and I ever known each
other well, even though we were together for endless years at boarding school.
He was more than three years older than I, and while I had been outgoing,
cheeky and garrulous, he was a quiet, solitary boy. My parents never seemed to
notice that as a teenager, and later as a man, David had no women friends, and
rarely brought home any of his many men friends, who seemed to have oddly
diverse social and educational backgrounds.
The meal ended, as Christmas and
Easter family dinners always did, with what my father called ‘a nice healthy
walk.' When he’d paid the check, counting out the one-pound notes and
half-crowns and shillings with care and attention like the bank clerk he’d once
been, we faced into the cold sea air, heading for the beach.
It was dark on the steep slope down to
the concrete walkway along the sea-front.
The tide had turned, and now dragged on the coarse, flinty shingle below
us. Out on the horizon the beam of a lightship pulsed. Ahead of my mother and
me, David and the old man walked more briskly.
As
we strolled along together my mother turned to me. "So how do like your
new life, Johnny?"
After nearly a decade as an officer in
the British Army I was on my final leave, and in a few days would begin my
first civilian job. In the service I'd had excitement in action, world travel, comradeship
and the company of friends. But suddenly I was alone, friendless in a rented attic
room in London, and about to start a new life. Though I didn't admit it, I felt
lost, and a little wary of the future.
I lied in reply to my
mother's question. "Fine, Mum. My new life's fine."
"But are you happy?" she
asked.
"Happy enough," I said.
"What about you?"
My mother took my arm as we walked. It
was something she'd rarely done.
"No," she said. "I'm not
happy. But then I haven't been for years. Not since I married your dad. Surely
you must know that."
I
didn't know. I was speechless. Had this happened today, were she still alive, I
might have said "Do you want to talk about it?" But I didn't. We
walked on.
"What are you thinking?" she
asked.
By now we'd fallen back some way behind my
father and brother.
"I was wondering . . . well, why you
married him," I said, "were things so different then?"
"Not
really," she said. "I escaped, you see. You know the story. Your grandfather
had walked out years before. There we
all were. Mother, five unmarried daughters and two sons in that beastly cramped
little house at North Foreland. It was like a pressure cooker. Then I met your
father at a friend's house. It seemed .
. ."
"It seemed what?” I heard a sharp,
involuntary edge in my voice.
She looked up. "You're angry, aren't
you?" She released my arm. "I'm sorry, I've upset you. But, you see,
marrying him just seemed to be the way out at the time."'
My mother changed the subject and we
caught up with the others.
"What are you two chatting
about?" my father asked, smiling.
My
mother laughed. "Oh, you know. Shoes, ships, sealing wax . . .”
Two
days later David and I took the train back to London. For weeks I turned my
mother's words over and over in my mind, but I never told David.
My
father died less than three months later. He went to sleep one night and never
woke up. The circumstances were odd. In their final years together, the old man
snored heavily, and my parents slept in separate rooms. At least, that was the
reason they always gave for sleeping apart.
And there was something else; he'd become almost miserly about money and
had for years locked the bedroom door behind him, hiding his billfold under his
pillow.
Every
morning, at seven, my mother would make a cup of tea and take it to his
door. A month or two later she knocked
and there was no answer. She had to climb a ladder to the open bedroom window,
and found him dead.
Was
it the wine on that Christmas evening that caused my mother's impulsive
admission? Or did she need the release of this tragic secret to unburden
herself, to share her load? She lived
for another 30 years, and died in her 90th year, but she never mentioned it
again.
And nor did I.
oo0oo
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