Thursday 29 November 2007

The day of the ball

The day of the ball began before dawn, with Belle coming into my room with stricken face at four o’clock (I having spent that night at the Macauley house), to tell me that her mother had ‘had some kind of turn’: had cried out her husband’s name in her sleep; had then wakened, insisted upon dressing fully - and was at present emptying all the drawers in her bedroom in frantic search of an old photograph that she said Jack had used to carry his wallet.

“She’s quite beside herself!” Belle urgently whispered, as I struggled to try to remember where I was, and what was happening. “She knows it’s somewhere; she put it somewhere very carefully herself, years ago – and now she must find it, or the ball can’t go ahead, the Orangery will have to be dismantled, and everything will be ruined!”

It took me several moments, but I was finally able to bring to mind that old story: the one about the young Jack Macauley, and the girl called Milly, whom he had worshipped from afar in the days when he was still an awkward grocer’s boy, ashamed of his clumsy boots. I struggled to recall the detail of it; how Jack Macauley had carried an old newspaper photograph of Milly in his wallet for years afterwards; and how Theodora, as his young bride, had stumbled on it, never admitting the fact to him, but remaining haunted by it, at intervals, ever since. I had assumed it must have gone away, years ago; yet here was Belle now, in deep distress, bringing it sharply back into the present, and leaving me wondering what on earth there was that I could usefully say.

“And does it still exist, do you think...?” was the best I could manage, in my still only half-awake state. But “Oh good heavens, no!” Belle exclaimed in reply. “Daddy himself destroyed it years ago. He had gone looking for Milly you see, years afterwards. He had happened to be on business in the area, and he looked her up. Not because he still had feelings for her, but just because he needed to lay that particular ghost. It was idiocy on the part of a grown man, he said, to carry about with him the image of a girl he had once supposed he loved! But he found her grown fat and frumpy anyway! A silly, garrulous woman; not a trace left of that disdainful girl who had stalked his dreams! So that there was no longer the smallest need to keep her picture, and he tore it up. I remember how he laughed at his own foolishness, and said that there was no need to trouble Mummy about it.”

“But did you never tell her this yourself?” was my next, rather inadequate offering. To which Belle replied that no, she never had: supposing, mistakenly as it now turned out, that it would be better if her mother didn’t know that Jack had gone off in search of his long- lost Milly.

“Well, I think you probably ought to tell her now” I suggested. “How else, after all, can you possibly put her mind at rest?”

Bill was up now; had come stumbling into my room to know what the rumpus was; and being apprised of the state of things, agreed with my suggestion; so that together we went to Lady Macauley, and calming her as best we could, put the whole story before her. She listened in silence, unable at first to believe we weren’t making the whole thing up. We were trying to humour a silly old woman, she cried: it was quite the cruellest form of deception! But then she suddenly seemed to think that, yes, that would be just the way it would have been likely to happen! Jack would have felt himself bound to act - and in acting, would have found the truth. The effect was near miraculous. Her face, which had been contorted with grief the moment before, relaxed suddenly; she uttered the longest sigh, and said simply “Oh, thank God then - it was me he loved after all!”

We said all the things that people do say, in such situations. We said that of course he had loved her – only her. How could he not have loved her, when she was everything that Milly had been, and a thousand better things as well!

“He adored you Mummy, as you well know” Belle ended by assuring her. “No woman was ever adored as you were – he thought you just the most beautiful, most perfect woman in the world. And I at least know for sure that he never gave Milly another thought, from that day on.”

It was enough. We could start the day of the ball now; and we started it with a cheerful breakfast of coffee and toast, taken there together in Lady Macauley’s room, while a cold grey dawn slipped in through the slats of the window blinds. We three remained troubled though, by Lady Macauley’s earlier collapse; and Bill at least, was all for calling a doctor – just to make perfectly sure that all was well. But Lady Macauley insisted that no such thing was necessary; she would not hear of it, was perfectly well and calm - and we should see what she was able to accomplish during the course of this day, before the ball began.

What she accomplished was indeed remarkable. She had another long list of people with whom she wished to talk; beginning with Will, alone, at nine o’clock, and progressing, at intervals during the morning, with Jack and Alice, with the Baineses, with Imogen – and even with Frances and Tomek, whom she summoned last; wishing, she said, to thank them for the part they had played in bringing matters to a head, and to entreat them to come to the ball. She spent an hour with Frances and Tomek, in fact – and Frances herself emerged at the end of it quite flushed with happiness, at the hand of friendship that had been extended to her at last..

Lady Macauley would have liked too, to talk with Mrs Wilmot and her daughter. She had become reconciled to them at last, she said. Oh, not that she saw the girl as a contender for Will’s hand – never that! But simply that she saw their part in all this as suddenly rather heroic.

“She stood her ground against all the odds, poor woman!” she observed, of the formerly impossible Mrs Avril Wilmot. “It can’t have been easy for her, received with hostility as she was, on all sides. She must know by now besides, that she too has been the dupe of Rose’s nasty little plot. I want to let her know that I understand that – and that I respect her courage, at least... But perhaps after all it will do better to wait for the ball – when I shall be able to single her out, choose her over Rose, you know, and let her down as gently as I can. Will must speak to her of course - I have told him that. He has created this mess and now he must extricate himself from it. Together, we shall enable that unfortunate woman and her daughter to make their exit with dignity intact - and Rose shall see that every plan of hers has gone hideously awry!”

We wished her to rest then, and she said she would. Just as soon as she had made her last inspection of the Orangery, and seen for herself that everything was just as perfect as it could be for the events that were to unfold. She had earlier dispensed with the idea of a separate venue for youthful dancing. No marquee had after all been erected - the young must make shift with the old, she had decided: there were not so many of them after all - she just hoped that some at least of them, would have learnt how to waltz! We went then in solemn procession to the Orangery, where darkness had wrought a magical effect. Everything was beautifully in its place: the instruments for the orchestra stood covered on a dais at the top of the larger of the two adjoining rooms; the new floor sparkled, with the thousand reflected lights - and all the little gilded chairs and tables, the flowers, the scented stillness of the air itself, seemed poised and waiting, for the night’s events to begin...

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

I am glad Lady M found out that Milly is now fat and garrulous. Oh dear,though, I hope she is not preparing for something more final than just the ball by pulling the loose ends of her life together? Very good stuff and I don't mind at all - as many more excerpts as you want!

I Beatrice said...

Good heavens Anon - how did you manage to read that in about ten seconds flat? You must have read it while I was still playing about trying to get the author's note to precede the instalment I think.... But thank you for being so understanding anyway - it helps no end.

Anonymous said...

Yes, the author's note has now magically moved up the page so I must have read it early.

I Beatrice said...

Yes Anon, I'm relieved to see that it worked. It would have been a bit foolish, coming after....

But what of my having been read in Farsi? I'm staggered - it's a language I'm not sure I've even heard of! How is it achieved I wonder - since it must be done instantaneously, at one click of the mouse, so to speak!

merry weather said...

Exciting - wish I was going to this ball Bea, still the way you tell it I feel I'm almost there...

So Milly was an illusion after all, ah, it's a shame Jack didn't tell her himself; but I don't suppose he would have brought the subject up would he?

I'm glad Lady M is making peace with her fellows, that seems right, and especially with the brave Avril Wilmot whom I've grown quite attached to really :)

aims said...

How I wish I had been asked to the ball..the lights - the smells...a romantic can only dream of these things most of the time...

Lady M - she is an excellent character that you have excelled at portraying....

I await the ball almost impatiently - wishing I could at least stand back in the drapery and watch the events unfold..

I Beatrice said...

Thank you Merry - and yes, I have grown quite attached to the Wilmots too. A pity really, that I haven't had time or space to develop them....

There's a kind of virtual sub-category attached to this blog of mine, in fact. It's called "Undeveloped characters for possible consideration later".
One of it's chief inhabitants is Cousin Hortense, who popped-up all uninvited one day - but with whom I'd have liked to be able to 'let rip' at some point. But somehow there just hasn't been time or opportunity

Still, there'll be all the time in the world, AFTER, won't there? So who knows what I might not find it in me to do?

I Beatrice said...

I formally invite you to the ball now, Aims. I just hope it will come up to your expectations!

I have just been over to your site btw, to talk to you about men and their socks.....

debio said...

Your perception is faultless - to allow Lady M to 'dig up' an event so old and long forgotten by everyone else is a coup.

How often are such things raised when a pivotal event is to take place; and how important they are to the person involved, it transpires.

Hope Lady M has recovered enough from the vapours for the ball to proceed. Could I don my ballgown and mingle, do you think?

Anonymous said...

Oh so good - to keep us all waiting. I too want to go to the ball. But what will Beatrice be wearing?

Rosalind x

Omega Mum said...

Had an awful feeling you were about to kill her off. Still have foreboding. What ARE you leading up to now? Wonderful plotting, as always, and with an increasingly assured hand, if I may say so.

I Beatrice said...

Thank you Debio. That old story was crucial to the thing really (slight shades of "there were three of us in that marriage" perhaps?). And in the end I just couldn't squeeze it into the episode of the ball.

You have been very patient - but yes, please do put on your ball-gown and come along! Last house before the river on Ham St, Richmond.... you'll see the lights before the house itself.

My son-in-law is going to Dubai on business next week, by the way. Is to dine at a restaurant that can be reached only by submarine - not entirely chuffed by that prospect...

I Beatrice said...

Dear Rosalind, thank you! And what will Bea be wearing - now there's a question! Whatever it is, you may be sure it has given her considerable heartache - snd many miserable hours spent in changing rooms, under the unfriendly eyes of young shop assistants...

I Beatrice said...

My replies out of sequence again I fear. But thank you too, OM, for your faithful reading almost from the outset.

I have a feeling of foreboding myself now though - that you for one are absolutely not going to forgive me, for what I finally do!

Catherine said...

Jealousy is a strange thing and can catch you unawares. Glad that Lady M can lay that one to rest. Sounds as though Lady M is going through some sort of finalising process, though.

So, the suspense continues, the scene is set! I wish I could go to the ball too.

I Beatrice said...

You too SHALL go to the ball Marianne! Just as soon as I have got it going. It's the oddest thing, but this one instalment is giving me more trouble than all the rest of them put together.

Perhaps I just don't want to let go?