Read (16/20)Summer at Fairacre Online

Authors: Miss Read

Tags: #Country life, #Country Life - England, #Fairacre (England: Imaginary Place), #Fairacre (England : Imaginary Place)

(16/20)Summer at Fairacre (4 page)

BOOK: (16/20)Summer at Fairacre
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I read it while I sipped my tea. After suitable greetings the letter continued:

'My dear friend Hazel Smith is trying to raise some money for the Save The Children Fund in Caxley, and is organising an evening meeting which is going to be billed as "Our Children".

'She is asking several speakers to say a few words and then to answer questions from the floor. I know she has a local magistrate who will talk about the juvenile court, and a most eminent educationalist, as well as a local doctor who specialises in children's ailments—a
paediatrician,
I believe is the correct word unless I am confusing it with something to do with
feet,
or even
worse
—but a very nice man indeed who once was on TV in one of those upsetting medical series.

'I took the liberty of mentioning your name to her and she may get in touch to see if you would be a member of the panel. Perhaps you could talk on young children in school? Or children's literature? Anyway, I do so hope you don't mind my mentioning you to her. You would be
so good,
and I know you would love Hazel.

'There would be a cold buffet and wine after the meeting, and a chance to get to know a great many people who are
really caring
about the young, just as you are.'

She was mine affectionately after three pages.

'Oh lor', Tibby,' I said to the cat. 'Now what do I do?'

But that unfeeling animal continued to wash his face vigorously, callous to the sufferings of his mistress.

With this awful prospect before me I spent the evening in a fine state of dithering. My first instinct was to turn down the proposal with a flat refusal. I had no wish to turn out for an evening in Caxley, and a downright antipathy to my unknown panel members.

They were probably all as charming as Mrs Partridge's old friend Hazel. They certainly appeared to be much more public-spirited, unless of course they had been coerced into it and were feeling quite as reluctant as I was myself. But I see far too much of people 'who care for the young' and on the whole I find them exhaustingly earnest. I know I care for the young—look at the floor cloth interlude only that afternoon, and you can't get much nearer the bone of caring than that! Nevertheless, the thought of answering a lot of solemn questions about possible damage done to the young child's ego by thwarting it of some simple pleasure such as flooding the bathroom or jumping on the cat, filled me with horror.

Besides what should I talk about? Even ten minutes' speaking takes the devil of a lot of writing, and I know my limits. No, I should have to decline.

Having decided this, I then remembered the many kindnesses that Mrs Partridge has shown to me and the school, and began to feel a mean-spirited wretch. Would it hurt me to give up one evening? (
Yes,
squeaked my baser self.) Mrs Partridge must consider me capable of the job or I shouldn't have been asked. (Probably the seventeenth person on her list, all the others having sensibly made plans to go abroad, have visitors, contract shingles, and so on.) It would be letting down dear Mrs Partridge if I fobbed off Hazel Thingummy with some weak excuse.

At that moment, the telephone bell rang, and I jumped as though I had been shot. This must be it! Well, better answer it and be guarded. Ask if I might ring her tomorrow when I've thought it over.

I gave my number in a cracked voice. To my enormous relief it was Amy.

'Have you got a cold?' she asked solicitously.

I babbled out my present problems, and Amy forbore to laugh, at least out loud.

'What a funny old thing you are,' she commented, in such a loving voice that I very nearly burst into tears. 'You give the impression of being in command of every situation —'

'Surely not!'

'And yet you go all to pieces over a simple little matter like this.'

'But it isn't a simple little matter, Amy,' I wailed. 'It scares me stiff, the whole idea, and yet I'm so fond of Mrs Partridge, I really don't want to hurt her by appearing disobliging. And, of course, it's a very good cause. Saving the children, I mean. Why, come to think of it, I spend my whole life saving children!'

I told her that sad tale of the floor cloth.

'I should think that is evading Mrs Pringle's wrath rather than saving children,' commented Amy shrewdly. 'But do you know what I'd do?'

'No, tell me quickly,' I urged.

'Forget it for this evening. Go to bed early with a nice juicy book to read. Ten chances to one you'll know your own mind in the morning.'

'Thank you, Amy,' I said humbly and put down the receiver.

Within a minute the telephone rang again. It was Amy.

'Don't be so swift putting the phone back,' she said. 'I didn't have a chance to tell you why I was ringing.'

I apologised.

'I just wondered if you'd decided on any of the Caxley Festival items. I ought to start booking, I think.'

'Amy,' I began, 'I'm afraid I haven't got round to—'

'Never mind, never mind! Just tuck it away in your subconscious with Mrs Partridge's proposition, and you can deal with both tomorrow.'

It was her turn to replace the receiver. Her tone had been kindly and forgiving, and I returned to my fireside thanking the gods for the good friends whom I hardly seemed to deserve.

3 Henry Mawne Needs Company

AFTER a night of solid sleep I felt robust enough to accede to Mrs Partridge's proposal, and decided to telephone after school that day to say how delighted I should be if her friend Hazel needed my services on the panel. Really, civilisation has a lot to answer for! What would happen if we all spoke the unvarnished truth?

As my egg boiled that morning, I turned March over on the wall calendar and read the new motto. It said:

A man's reach should exceed his grasp,
Or what's a Heaven for?

Could this refer to my brave decision? Should I find myself the most knowledgeable member of the panel on that fateful night? Would
The Caxley Chronicle
have a paragraph about the brilliance of repartee, breadth of knowledge, personal charm and, of course, the innate modesty of the head teacher of Fairacre School? Fame could go no higher.

While I dallied with this day dream, I noticed two things. This was April Fool's Day, so I must be on my guard in school this morning, and my egg had cracked and was fizzing all over the stove.

When I came to eat it, I found, predictably enough, that it was hard-boiled. Not that I minded. To me, an egg is an egg however it turns up, but I am always amused to hear people say scathingly that they know someone 'who couldn't boil an egg', as though this act of cookery is the simplest thing imaginable.

Strangely enough, it is jolly difficult to get an egg with a firm white and a delectably moist yolk. It all depends on size, freshness, thickness of shell, and naturally, on the accuracy of the egg-timer or clock. Being called to the telephone does not help either, as I know to my cost.

Well, now, I wondered as I spooned mine down, what little tricks would my naughty children have been up to? One April Fool's Day I had managed to stop them from tying a rope just above floor level at the lobby door. Their victim then would have been Mrs Pringle, without doubt, and the consequences not in the least humorous, as I pointed out to them. A little clean fun was one thing. Injury to people was another. They were suitably chastened, and since then have found minor ways of celebrating the day.

At first sight, all seemed as usual in the school room. I opened my desk, alert to find a mammoth spider or even a grass snake, but there was nothing of that nature there. My chair had no drawing pin or blob of glue on it. The piano keys were clean, the hymn book unsullied. Their little jokes are usually perpetrated in the first half-hour at school. Could they have forgotten? After twelve o'clock the magic was supposed to have vanished, and any larking about was reckoned invalid by ancient tradition.

We ploughed gently on through arithmetic and reading. Playtime passed without incident, and I had quite forgotten to be on my guard, as no doubt my wily flock had intended.

At twenty to twelve, before the dinner lady arrived, I set them to copy Robert Bridges' adorable poem 'Spring Goeth All In White' from the blackboard. This was to be a combined exercise in learning a poem and engaging their skills in handwriting.

It was while I was concentrating on my own fair hand, as I wrote the last two lines, that Ernest's voice rang out with horrid urgency.

'Miss! Quick! Patrick's fainted!'

This has happened before, so that I dropped the chalk, and was at Patrick's side in one second fiat. The child had his head on the desk, and as I bent to attend to him the roar of delight nearly raised the roof.

'April Fool, miss! You're April Fool!'

Patrick sat up, rosy with health and mirth, and I joined in the general hilarity.

It seemed to me, remembering the rope in the lobby, the odd spider and stickiness, that I had got off lightly this year.

That evening, full of noble thoughts, I rang Mrs Partridge to say that I should be willing, if needed by her friend, to take my place on the panel.

'How lovely!' boomed Mrs Partridge. 'I've no doubt Hazel will be as delighted as I am, and I'm sure she will be in touch very soon.'

I replied suitably, and rang off, wondering if a well-deserved bolt from the blue would descend upon me for downright untruthfulness. It is to such passes, I thought gloomily, that Doing One's Duty, commits a frail body.

Far too often, it seems to me, I am prevailed upon, as in this instance, to undertake some task which I abhor. Why do I do it? And how best can one minimise these occurrences?

I suppose that one could give up belonging to certain clubs or activities that engender these minor irritations. For instance, if I were not a member of the Women's Institute I suppose I should not be roped in for providing something for teas, or for manning a stall, or for entering some competition for which I have no natural aptitude but give in weakly, to such strong characters as Mrs Partridge, because they have not enough entries.

On the other hand, should one retreat and become a self-imposed hermit, simply to avoid trouble? After all, I like living in Fairacre, and I am a quite important member of its little community, I suppose, although Mrs Pringle would no doubt think otherwise. Consequently, I must take on my share of the burdens.

I remember an aunt of mine saying once: 'Now that I've turned seventy, I'm not going to join anything which has
meetings!'

It must be a family failing, I think.

Later that evening I was somewhat taken aback to find Henry Mawne on my doorstep again. He was carrying a fine bunch of daffodils, and came indoors with a beaming smile.

'Thought you'd enjoy these. They're always early in that dell of ours, and everyone likes daffodils.'

'They do indeed,' I said. 'The most cheering flowers of the spring, I always think. Mine are nowhere near ready. I often wonder what variety Shakespeare's were that took "the winds of March with beauty". Pretty early, I suspect.'

'Poetic licence. After all, he couldn't have had "winds of April". It would've put out the rhythm,' said Henry, sitting down heavily. 'Are you busy? Things are a bit quiet at home without Elizabeth, and I felt in the need of company.'

I could hardly say that he was a confounded nuisance, I certainly was busy, and how soon would he be off, when I was holding a bunch of the daffodils he had so kindly given me. Here was civilised behaviour rearing its ugly head again!

'Would you like a drink?'

'No thanks, I don't tipple much these days. Tends to repeat, like radishes.'

'Or cucumber. Excuse me for a moment. I'll go and put these in water.'

I have a nice Coalport vase shaped like a trumpet which is invaluable for a non-arranger of flowers like me. Drop a bunch into it and the flowers obligingly fall comfortably into place. I carried it back to my sitting room with real pride.

'Good lord,' said my guest. 'That was quick! Elizabeth takes half an hour to arrange a vase of flowers.'

'She does the thing properly,' I told him, 'and gives everyone a great deal of pleasure too. My arrangements are of the Fairacre Primitive school.'

'And none the worse for that,' he said kindly. I began to warm to the man.

'I'm giving a couple of lectures during the Caxley Festival,' he went on, 'and I wondered if you would care to come.'

'It sounds lovely,' I said. 'Which dates would they be?' I added, playing for time.

'I haven't brought the programme, but I think it is on a Thursday. One in the first week, and one in the second week of May.'

'Well, thank you very much. May I let you know?'

'Of course. Elizabeth ought to be back before then, but it's not at all sure. Aunt Thora is giving her the deuce of a time. No nearer getting her into a nursing home, I gather, from what Elizabeth said on the phone.'

'Old people like their own way.'

'That's putting it mildly. As long as she doesn't arrive in Fairacre with Elizabeth, that's all I ask.'

BOOK: (16/20)Summer at Fairacre
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