A Quiet Life

‘We must swim,’ Tom ordered, and obediently they shed their outer layers. Tom and Kit swam far out, as if racing one another, but there was a breeze coming off the sea now and Laura stayed standing in the shallows, goose pimples coming up on her arms. ‘Don’t you swim?’ Kit said to her as he came back in, and Laura told him not to worry about her. They wanted to recreate something from their past, and although they were polite to her, she felt that she was a drag on their enjoyment. Soon after a picnic lunch they decided to return; Laura wondered whether they would have stayed longer without her.

When the boat was moored, it was a long walk back up the shore to the house. Laura excused herself and went in, going upstairs without talking to Mother and Ellen, whom she could see on the lawn. This week, she had gotten into the lazy habit of sleeping for a while in the afternoon, and she pulled off her slacks and her bathing costume and slid into bed, realising as her sandy legs rubbed against the linen that she would have to shake the sheets out later. She had already fallen asleep when she heard a hard rap on the door – ‘Laura?’ For a moment she wasn’t sure where she was, coming too quickly out of unconsciousness into this high, hard bed and the sunlit room, but then she saw Edward standing by the bed.

‘I wasn’t expecting—’

‘I know – I managed to get away, things had quietened down for the weekend, but I have to get back Monday morning. I called from the station – your brother-in-law picked me up. Is there room for me there?’

Laura rolled to one side and opened her arms. ‘I’m all sticky and sandy,’ she said, with happy expectation, as Edward pulled off his tie and his shoes, but as soon as he got into bed he simply said, ‘I’m so tired,’ and, putting one hand on her shoulder, he closed his eyes. Laura watched his face as he fell asleep. She could relax now. Nothing in the past could touch her, not now she had her present and future beside her.

She was full of easy anticipation when they went down to dinner that evening. How patrician Edward looked, pausing at the foot of the stairs to wait for her to come down, his light hair luminous in the shadows, his green gaze resting on her. Now that they could see the quality, the beauty, the intelligence of the man who loved her, she would take on a different value in her family’s eyes. She felt released, finally, from the burden of being the old Laura as they went into the living room.

It was odd, though, to see how pale and tired Edward looked next to the other men; Kit must have picked up his bronzed sheen on the ship and Tom from the beach. What’s more, the other two were in soft-coloured shirts, without ties or blazers, and when Kit crossed his legs you could see the flash of a bare ankle above his loafers, but Edward had dressed as he always did at weekends, in a flannel jacket and white shirt and tie. In England, Laura realised, Edward had always worn precisely what all the other men of his class did, right down to the design of his shoes and the colour of his tie. There, he knew line by line whatever unspoken codes governed men’s clothes, but here he seemed to be working in another language, and its formality made him look absent-minded, as if he had not expected to find himself here, in the heat of summer and the languor of a vacation.

Tom and Kit were quick to include him in their conversation, asking him about work and telling him about people they knew in Washington. As Laura listened to them talk, she remembered how struck she had been when she first met him by the glacial pace of Edward’s conversation, and how the chatter of his friends slowed down to meet his rhythms. But what had seemed part of his unquestionable authority in London now seemed less sure-footed. Kit soon overtook his slow responses with a quick anecdote he had heard about the editor of a Washington newspaper, and when they moved to the dining room to eat, Ellen and Mother seemed to be struggling to get anything out of Edward. ‘And your ambassador?’ Kit suddenly asked, throwing a conversational ball down to Edward’s end of the table, to Laura’s relief, continuing something that Tom had said about the effect of the war. ‘What does he think of the future of the empire?’

Laura knew that Edward would shine, as he always did, with his inside knowledge of the powerful players in British government. But he simply forked up another piece of duck, and said in a rather toneless voice, ‘There’s an inevitability about the way things are moving.’

Kit said something about Halifax’s point of view being moulded by his own career, and when Tom asked him what he meant, he explained that Halifax had once run India.

‘I heard someone say that the Indians are the biggest problem that Britain will face after the war,’ Tom said.

‘I don’t know about that,’ Edward said in his slow manner. ‘You don’t have any problem with your Indians, of course. You killed them all.’

For a moment Laura did not pick up the extraordinary rudeness of his statement, as it was delivered with such diffidence, but when she did she turned to Mother and said, ‘It was so lovely going out sailing today. You should try it before you go. It’s a pity we never learned to sail.’

‘There are so many things we didn’t learn,’ said Ellen. ‘I can’t even play tennis.’

Natasha Walter's books