Thursday 18 October 2007

Lady Macauley takes the alarm

I stayed only ten minutes or so after Will Macauley had appeared so unexpectedly the other day. It was long enough to tell me that he was a tall young man with charming eyes, and a rather unruly mop of dark brown hair; that he smiled with what looked like genuine warmth at everyone to whom he was introduced – but that he was constructed, physically, along the kinds of long, lean, loose-jointed lines more suited to the sporting field perhaps, than to his grandmother’s drawing room. His grandmother herself however,was instantly so very absorbed and pleased with him, that it seemed to me the kindest thing a mere outside observer could do was simply to murmur her farewells, and slip quietly away. I have since then developed the kind of wretched, sneezing, streaming cold that makes it essential I stay far away from Lady Macauley, and have had to depend for further bulletins upon visits from Bill, who breezes in here every morning to bolster my spirits, and make sure I have everything I need.

He gives me an engaging picture of young Will Macauley; who is an amiable youth, he says, with an easy, uncomplicated character, and an apparently boundless fund of goodwill for all men. His only fault, so far as Bill can see (apart, that is, from his determination to introduce his grandmother to a girl whom she’s certain to deplore), is that way he has of entering a room as if it were a rugby field, and then of crossing it with his eyes fixed resolutely on the ball. The ball in this case being the person or persons towards whom he happens to be advancing at the time: he takes the most direct route, Bill says; it’s an endearing trait, but one that has little regard for objects likely to be encountered on the way – so that cabinets, and chairs, and random coffee tables are always more or less at peril of a direct hit. It’s an affliction Bill recognises, having suffered from something very similar throughout his own life; and it does seem to have inclined him very firmly in favour of the young man.

He sees its possible downside very clearly nonetheless. “He gives the old lady a scare whenever he enters a room” he told me when he called this morning. “And with good reason, as it turns out. A marble head went flying yesterday – the poor lad had only bumped a table as he passed, and off it went. It was a fraught moment – Lady M uttered a little shriek, I seem to remember, and Belle obviously feared the worst. Luckily, Will caught it just before it hit the ground - he’s an accomplished cricketer apparently, and his catching skills served him well on that occasion...

"But his granny has taken fright, and given orders that every free-standing object in his path be moved, lest irreparable damage should be done. It’s clear she simply dotes on him for all that. He apologises profusely for every mishap, and you see her melting. He has just that habit his father and grandfather had before him, she says, of running his hands through his hair whenever he fears he’s made a gaffe. He makes it stand on end, just as they did – and then he throws at you a smile of such regret, of so much honest penitence, and desire to make amends, that you forgive him everything on the spot, and the whole thing is forgotten.”

Will’s stock of goodwill has been put to its severest test, apparently, in his efforts to prepare his grandmother for what she will find when his girlfriend and her mother arrive tomorrow. He has come down a day or two ahead of them just for that. “It’s not so much Angelica herself” he tells them: she being well named, in that she is “beautiful as an angel, and just as good” - his granny and his Aunt Belle will adore her on sight! No, it’s her mother, Mrs Avril Wilmot, who might take what Will calls quite a bit of getting used to. He’s sure they’ll ‘come round to her’ in the end however: she barks a bit, he says, but has never been known to bite!

He is at pains to assure them that what might seem to them at first like gruffness - by which he means that she never seems especially pleased with anything you do: that she has a certain way of looking at you as if she thought you’d said a mouthful, and had really much better have shut up.... Well, it could be disconcerting, that was all; he’d discovered that for himself. But really, it was just her way of trying to look out for her daughter’s interests, didn’t Granny and Aunt Belle see? She’d been the most ‘amazing’ mother, and that was a fact: there was absolutely nothing in the world she wouldn’t do for her darling girl! Everything she did and said arose from that - to most marvellous effect, as they would see when they saw Angelica. So that what might seem to them like surface gruffness, actually concealed a heart of gold.

Bill had seemed to find all this rather entertaining, but Lady Macauley was apparently very little reassured by Will’s stout defence of the lady whom he hopes will become his mother-in-law. She thinks he made a very poor show of it in fact, and fears it does not augur well for any legal career he might have it in mind to follow (he has recently been called to the Scottish bar); since so far as she could see, he succeeded only in sinking his client deeper in the mire with every word he uttered.

She has taken deep alarm at the idea of the lady who ‘barks a bit but doesn’t bite’. This was not the sort of thing she had been expecting at all. She had expected plumpness, garrulity - extreme vulgarity even; and with all or any of these she would have known how to cope. But with someone angular and grim, who would come down to breakfast punctually every morning, the better to glower at one over the coffee pot .... why, with such a one as that there was simply no way that she knew, of contending; and she’s wondering what kind of dreadful mistake they must have made, in consenting to open their doors to her?

She has already drawn up contingency plans for getting rid of her, should she prove quite impossible. Bill could take the car to fetch her every day, she thinks – or at least for as many days as her presence was considered essential to anyone’s happiness. Or, she and her daughter could take a bus – or as many buses as it might take to get them from wherever it was they lived, which was in a part of London of which Lady Macauley herself had never even heard ... And if those measures failed, well they would both, the girl and her mother, simply have to go and stay with Rose. She had a spare bedroom, hadn’t she? She had two spare bedrooms in fact; and had always said how glad she would be to help out in any way required....

Bill seems to think that on the whole, the Rose option will provide the most satisfactory outcome. Which only goes to prove, to me at least – though also to Pamela, who called here later to give me her version of events - how little men understand the nuances of these things, and how very gravely all at sea we should be, if the entire range of social intercourse were to be left to them.

11 comments:

aims said...

Dearest B - I hope you get over your cold very soon - they are no fun at any time of the year.

You had me laughing with Lady M's thinking Will wouldn't be suitable as a lawyer - very good.

Aren't older women - or even women with money and power - so conniving and willful? I love it!

I Beatrice said...

Yes Aims, they can be awful. People say you shed inhibitions as you get older - though I can't say it has done anything much of that sort for me.

I do sometimes wonder if I make these women just too dreadful though? And try to leaven it with a good one now and then. Trouble is, the good ones aren't anything like so much fun!

Catherine said...

Love your closing statement about men and social intercourse. It would be a very different world indeed.

So Will is a Bull in a china shop? How unfortunate. A bit like having a toddler around the house. Poor Lady M. Look forward to meeting the awful potential mother-in-law.

merry weather said...

This is an amusing development - I like the thought of Will rocking Lady M's establishment and catching things in the nick of time. Very bracing for her!

Well your female characters are intrinsic to your storytelling charm Bea I think - they're so well observed and funny. It'll be interesting to meet Mrs Avril Wilmot... Lovely name :)

Thanks for your tip about Manuka honey btw - I must try that. My blog's a clean slate at the mo if you're doing the rounds - hope I'll get back to it one day - maybe try a little story or something.

Looking forward to the next episode!

I Beatrice said...

Thank you Merry - and yes, I have come up against the Closed sign
over at your place! Always rather sad when someone goes away - but at least there's a promise of your coming back.

Are you doing anything exciting? There's always the feeling - to me at least - that when people neglect their blogs, it must be because they have something ever so much more interesting to do instead!

I Beatrice said...

It doesn't seem to matter how carefully I try to position my reply, putting it directly below the comment to which it relates... it always comes up somewhere else entirely! Is there a logic to it, I ask myself? But if there is, then it's one I have yet to grasp.. (I'll watch now, to see if they come up alphabetically perhaps?)

But this one is for you Marianne, to thank you for your continuiing interest and your very nice comment. And yes, I guess you could say Will is a bull in a china shop... But a very nice one, don't you think? And as you see, his granny bears him no ill will at all, for breakages.

Anonymous said...

I can't wait for Avril and Lady M to meet, and I'm rather hoping the Lady gets a run for her money!

I Beatrice said...

A run for her money, Anon? Well, I daresay she'll get something of the sort. Though whether she'll see it as good VALUE for money is anyone's guess!

The word 'Avril' however - (especially when pronounced with the kind of soft 'g' that Mrs W insists upon) - is unlikely ever to pass her lips. It will be Mrs Wilmot and Milady all the way I fear.... And a pretty bumpy way it promises to be, at that.

Omega Mum said...

Ooh, that Will. I sense England rubgy team here, best of....Yum.

debio said...

Will reminds me of a puppy - so endearing, but a disaster waiting to happen. Some people are just too big for rooms, aren't they, even the size of Lady M's chambers.

Each new character a gem, iBeatrice.

Many apologies for late comment - read this piece days ago but have been suffering power cuts so keep getting cut off in my stride!

I Beatrice said...

OM and Debio:

Thank you both so much! I was afraid I might have gone too far with poor Will - made him a sort of no-hoper, really... And hadn't wanted to do that at all!

And yes, there's almost certainly a rugby element. Though more All Blacks than Lions, I think. My loyalties in such matters are sorely tested - but I've known an All Black or two (been bridesmaid to one of the most distinguished of all time, as a matter of fact) ... But have never met a Lion.

Written in haste, as I'm struggling to arrange a meeting with Marianne and Merry Weather, who are coming over to do the 'Macauley tour'! (Lovely prospect, don't you think? I know I do.)