A Little Stranger
A LITTLE STRANGER
CANDIA McWILLIAM
To Clara Henderson
On clear days I can see
Green acres, far below,
And the red roof where I
Was Little Trinculo.
There lies that solid world
These hands can never reach;
My history, my love,
Is but a choice of speech.
A terror shakes my tree,
A flock of words fly out,
Whereat a laughter shakes
The busy and devout.
Wild images, come down
Out of your freezing sky,
That I, like shorter men,
May get my joke and die.
‘Trinculo’s Song’
W. H. Auden
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
About the Author
By the Same Author
Chapter 1
She was positive.
‘No. Never. Not at all.’
‘And boyfriends? Or do you have someone in particular?’
She put her small hand up to her short neck, took strength from the goffered angora she found there, to fortify her against my too-direct question, and spoke.
‘I am engaged.’
I imagined the lock on an old-fashioned lavatory giving the same information, with similar blankness. But I do not mean to suggest she was vacant. I was pleased to observe her behaviour. I had always believed that simple people have more hope of virtue, not plotting to attain it in the complicated ways of the faulty and sophisticated.
‘You don’t wear a ring?’
‘I don’t wear jewellery for work. It can scratch the little skins.’ She made of children grapes, easily popped out of their plumpy skins.
I felt raisin-like myself that day, and very much older than the young woman whom I was interviewing for the post of nanny to my son.
She looked quite at ease in the tall pale room, but she was keeping her personality within the space she occupied physically. It was my room, filled with my books, my flowers, my way of being, into which she had not so much fitted as inserted herself, neatly, not in parenthesis but clearly marked by the pointed caret provided by her scent. It was a smell of blossom and powder, not pungent but very strong. It was as chemically pink as the wad of filling in a sweet biscuit.
For lunch I had eaten approximately seventy black olives, of the type which is wrinkled and black as tar on a summer road. I accompanied them with a jug of black coffee. My back teeth were sandy with its grounds. The girl had refused coffee or tea, saying she drank no stimulants.
‘None? Ever?’ I had asked, receiving that vehement triple negative, of which she was so certain. ‘No. Never. Not at all.’ She said that she and the boy – he was her age, twenty-two – would marry when they had saved for a house. He worked with animals, she said. She told me her father was a policeman, her mother a part-time teacher. It might be said that Solomon, my husband, also works with animals.
He was not usually able to come home in the middle of the day, though he did not have to go far for his work. Most days I ate a plateful of something he disliked for lunch, so we could share the sort of food – good plain food – he wanted for dinner. I would read at the same time as I ate, but never the periodicals which my husband might want to read in case they got spattered with smoked roes or raw steak or the vinegar of capers. Sometimes I even managed to find the gelatinous pinkish herring, ‘haring’, of my Dutch childhood. John would find me out at once. ‘Kissing a seal,’ he would say. Our child ate separately, real food of a nourishing and unsubtly appetising nature. His palate was too clean for the food I favoured. But his old nanny, who had kept his plate bright with planks of fish and discs of carrot and bright green peas, was going, and I must find a successor.
I could see nothing wrong with this girl. She was the first applicant for the job who was pretty. Children notice appearances. Her references were excellent and she had brought with her a small valise of toys and projects she had made for her last charges, of whom she also brought photographs. They appeared well maintained and happy.
She was a country girl, she said, so she would not be lonely in this house. We lived at the heart of possessed lush land, not near anywhere, a large working estate flanked by others.
‘There are nannies all around,’ I said. It was true. Just here, at this prosperous county’s rich core, children came like the seasons, annual, beautiful, and wanted in their time. Some of our neighbours had six children, none fewer than three. I, with just our son, was only beginning. The nannies came and went, their importance inexaggerable. All these children lived at a nannied remove from their parents. It kept both children and parents younger than their years. The benediction bestowed by money was to be seen all about. It was unquestioned as the fresh air.
Her name was Margaret Pride. She had become a nanny because she loved children, all children. I did not ask why, in that case, she had not become a nurse, to look after those children who need extra care, children not just less fortunate than my son, but also sick. There are people who cannot bear illness, seeing it as a weakness. She was short and I guessed that she had trouble with her figure. She had the round wrists and belted midriff of one who has trouble shifting the puppy fat which makes young women appear middle-aged before time. She had a clean look and was unexceptionably dressed, something I do not find easy to achieve. She looked as though she would be able to enter a chain store and select a co-ordinated outfit, and then only when her building society account would stand it. Over her angora piecrust-necked jersey she wore a suit jacket, teamed with its skirt, both the pale green of sherbet limes. Her shoes and handbag were the pale yellow-grey of destroyers seen from afar. They were of a style too old for her. The bag closed with the short locked tusks of a graminivore. Her legs ended in feet; there were no ankles.
‘I’m perfectly happy for you to wear jeans,’ I said. She turned her head and gave no grin at the incongruity of a woman only a few years older than herself and dressed as a scarecrow telling her she might dress casually.
‘I prefer to be neat,’ she said. She implied no criticism of my appearance. It was as though she accepted that my position as mother of her source of income, wife of her source of payment, gave me licence to dress as I pleased. I dressed as an ex-beauty, though it was not clear to me whether this was appreciated by others. I wore that day, as I almost always did by then, a pair of men’s jeans, a huge jersey and trodden-down party shoes. My dressing-room was full of duplications of this uniform.
‘I would be perfectly happy to wear a uniform,’ she said.
‘I don’t think we need go that far,’ I replied, and made a face whose message was that I would never impose the sort of behaviour which that implied on anybody. ‘But there is one thing I do mind about,’ I continued. I wanted to tell her I did not like her scent, but I didn’t have the stomach to say it.
‘Yes?’ she enquired.
A
little disarmed by her eagerness to please, I became confiding. ‘I may not look it, but I am fanatically tidy, about drawers and clothes and food and the nursery and so on. Sort of the opposite to a whited sepulchre, I suppose; something like a blackened bassinet, or a . . .’ Sometimes I talked too much, not having spoken to anyone for a time. When I did talk to people, they were frequently the wrong ones. I was abuzz with words, which would not always swarm about their proper hive. I was not often alone but I was never precisely more than accompanied.
Margaret gave a warm, calming smile. ‘Some people,’ she responded, ‘have said I am too tidy myself. I find it satisfying to see everything in its place. And I love lovely things. I’m like that.’
‘Would you like to see the nursery part of the house?’ I asked. I wanted to please her. ‘Leave your bag, it’ll be fine.’ She left it, rather reluctantly.
We went up the front stairs; the back stairs were those our child and his nanny always used. Everything was white and blue and tall. The hallways smelt of flowers and no dust. On the walls were pictures, at which she did not look. Although the child’s voice was audible, she did not follow it. I found it hard not to go to him when I heard his voice. We went on upstairs and into the room which might be hers. It looked out over fat, green fields which swelled under the July heat. The grey tower of the church showed among shimmering crowns of trees. The room was full of light and pleasantly furnished with a green-painted wooden bed, a curtained wash basin, two tables, a television, a sofa. It was decorated with a sad, pretty chintz, as though for a maiden daughter.
She came to no spoken judgement. I took her to the nursery kitchen where the nanny cooked her own food and the child’s and where other children and nannies were entertained. The smocked curtains moved at the bright window, from which the formal garden was visible, its hedges enclosing rain-clouds of grey lavender. She looked around like someone wondering whether or not to buy, and again said nothing. Sensible, really, not to be beguiled by things. After all, the child was the point. In ‘her’ sitting-room and the nursery bathroom she also passed no remark. She must perhaps be shy. Her last job had been in much the same sort of place, but perhaps I intimidated her. I am told I can. I am taller than most and have more hair. I also look at other people very hard. In the nursery bathroom, she said, ‘Where do you change?’
I could not understand the question at first. Did she think I was a werewolf?
‘Nappies,’ she explained.
‘He’s out of them,’ I said.
‘For a baby.’ She was unblushing. This really did disconcert me.
‘Do you have a baby up your sleeve?’ I asked, making light of her shawled question.
‘I am sure you will have another,’ she said, and the sense that she was accustomed to command made me leave her to her certainty, for the moment.
In John’s room, she looked around, standing in the room’s dead centre, as though the round blue nursery rug were a little pond and she a solid Grace in the middle. He played at the rim of the rug, angling for glances from me and his nanny. He had the stagey concentration of a pampered cat watching goldfish, neck bent, eyes down, nerves rehearsing real hunger. When Margaret and I came in, he and his nanny had been together on the floor; now she was in a corner of the room, folding white squares as though for a mass surrender.
John waited to hear the stranger speak.
‘Cat got your tongue?’ asked Margaret. He looked up. Her smile was all dimples and comfort. He flopped towards her on the blue, just a child again, his fair head in his hands and the bare soles of his feet waving, in the immemorial pose of a boy whose attention has been hooked.
Later, I went downstairs, leaving her to get to know the child. After a time the nanny who was about to leave came down and we sat in the kitchen. She liked black coffee too. I liked her, but she was leaving to be married, and was sorry to go, so I did not make it harder for her by talking about her departure. She was a sensible girl who made things with her hands and enjoyed masochistic sports – potholing, freefalling and such. I had even worked a little while she was with us, though I listened too much for the child.
‘What do you think?’ I asked.
‘She brought a packet of sweets for him,’ she said. ‘So he thinks she’s great.’
She is bound to be jealous, it’s a difficult time, I thought.
I said, and felt disproportionately disloyal as I did so, ‘Do you approve?’
‘Not of sweets,’ said the girl who was to depart, knowing that a part of her life was coming to an end, the important part just beginning.
Chapter 2
Margaret Pride came to live with us and to look after our child. My husband was especially pleased. ‘She’s smartly turned out,’ he said. I thought of a jelly, arriving entire on the dish from its mould, not a curve out of place, sweetly buttressed. John seemed to love her. He was an easy boy, with no temper and a desire to please. He was curious and affectionate and big for his age. He had astonishing looks which caused people to talk to whoever accompanied him in the street. He had brown eyes and white hair and he fell over often because his feet were large and he thought most of the time about private matters. He was a little timorous, and easily shamed. He did not like to be laughed at. He enjoyed bringing new words into his vocabulary, where they would be altered by his lisp and his accent, which combined the country voices of his familiars – cook, nannies, gardeners and so on – with the vowels of his parents and our friends. He also had a trick of substituting ‘f’ for ‘v’, as in ‘ferry nice’. It was as though his grandparental Dutchness was coming out. Excellent linguists, they yet trip on English ‘v’s and ‘w’s. Where the idioms are most contiguous, the Dutchman speaking English is most likely to reveal himself. Asked how many peas are in a pod, he will reply, ‘Ten, of so’ for ‘Ten, or so’. Margaret’s standard English was the off-white kind favoured by hotel receptionists and vendeuses of posh slap.
John’s fourth birthday fell in the first week of Margaret’s employment, also, coincidentally, the beginning of the grouse season. John was gun-shy so far, and I did not want to go north in Margaret’s first weeks; so he, she and I were living in the house. She did not use my Christian name. On the whole I found this an advantage.
John had spoken to his father on the telephone on the eve of his birthday. I had kissed him goodnight; his hair smelled of puppies and milky tea, sweet and smoky, the scent of toy-gun caps held in a soaped hand. Margaret was present during both John’s valedictions to his parents that evening.
She had a position for waiting, which was suggestive of the not sufficiently swift passage of time. She would turn and turn a lock of her own hair, having isolated it from the soft moss standing over her forehead, and turn her right foot over too, so its ankle, or rather leg, touched the ground. Her invariably high heel would in this way be turned inwards like a spur.
Certainly, she drove herself. The buzz of her activity filled the house. She got up early and did laundry and ironing until very late. I knew these things because I listened. Big houses carry sound as water does; the sound is clarified by the space. But she was also quite unmuffled in her activity. Her shoes tapped her presence. She behaved as though I suspected her of sneaking off for a lie-down or a cigarette, and would tell me what she had been and what she intended doing. ‘I’ve just done the ironing and I’m off to sort through the toys.’
‘Don’t take on too much,’ I had said to her. ‘Only do John’s stuff, and please tell me if anything’s not right, if anything doesn’t suit. I can’t always guess everything.’
I had not guessed anything when she surprised me in the nursery kitchen that evening. I had made him a tree, composed of sweets. The trunk was of flaky logs of chocolate, and the leaves and fruits were boiled sweets in twists of coloured paper. My idea was that he would be allowed one sweet after lunch each day until it was finished. By that time it would be autumn.
I was putting his tree beside his place at the nursery table, which Margaret had
already laid for breakfast. She was good at thinking ahead. Events did not catch her out. She kept a collapsible umbrella in the back of the car. When it rained she wore a hood of transparent plastic. After the morning walk she always cleaned her gumboots. They put ours to shame. Hers were small and black and shiny. Like all her possessions, they were marked with her name, ‘M. Pride’. Such items as her hairbrush, difficult to label, she had identified with pink nail varnish, ‘M. P.’. She favoured babyish objects of adult necessity: a vanity case with a teddy bear upon it, an electric toothbrush in the shape of a chipmunk, bedroom slippers whose toes were the masks of mice, with grey crewel whiskers. These things were also named, although they could only have been hers.
I was looking about the nursery kitchen, happy with what I saw. Margaret was as orderly as she had claimed to be and as I had stipulated. Nothing was out of place, nothing missing. It was surely in such a rational and ordered state that John’s spirit would grow confident and free, untroubled by chaos.
‘Just before I do this little lot,’ came the voice of Margaret, accompanied presently by her body, hugging a red plastic basket of clothes, and wrapped in an apron. The apron enquired, ‘Have you hugged someone today?’
‘Yes?’ I asked, pleased that she was perhaps about somewhat to fill the hours ahead, maybe with talk of John. I would not have minded contact rather greater than we had. After all, the child was a very personal conduit for conversation. I did not want her to tell me her hopes and fears. I would not tell her mine. Surely we could discuss the boy without danger.