This is an instalment of an as-yet unnamed autobiographical series that started in Australia in 1975.
Click here for the first instalment.
The full list of instalments so far is in the sidebar to the right.
The
next morning John’s younger brother came over. He was tall and spindly with a
cheeky grin, similar to John T when he was younger as far as I could judge from
the photographs Mollie had shown me. He was working as a trainee journalist at
a local newspaper.
I didn’t meet his elder sister. She was yet
another who’d ‘had’ to marry in their teens because she was pregnant. She was
now a single mother with three daughters, her husband having left her on the
birth of girl number three.
I hinted to Mollie how scared I was about
visiting my parents and she gave John a 1950s’ book called ‘Lady Behave: a
guide to modern manners’ – what sort of invitations to use for different sorts
of parties, where to seat people around a table, how to address a lord or a
bishop, what to wear when – and he’d hooted with laughter.
‘Does anybody actually live like this?’ he
spluttered.
Mollie and I looked at each other.
After
lunch, as we set off down the A1 for Kent, which was the same distance south of
London as Bedfordshire was north, I ruminated on the encounter to come.
I’d written to my parents saying, ‘I’ve met
someone and he wants to marry me. I told him he was unsuitable!’
The exclamation mark was important. I thought
it might introduce a note of levity to the proceedings. I hoped it would
suggest that it was stupid to be concerned about things like that.
My parents were young once. They must
remember what it was like. They must be human somewhere. I wanted to give them
a chance. But, at the same time, I wanted to warn them.
My
mother came from an aristocratic family which had lost its money several times
over the centuries, the most recent being in my mother’s early twenties. Her
mother had died of cancer around the same time and the family had broken up.
She’d returned from the Sorbonne in Paris where she was studying and found a
job.
She never talked about that time. I’d had
to glean what I could from her sister who was only six when their
mother died and who’d lived with us.
My mother’s golden years were the three she
spent studying at Oxford University, where women were in the minority and the
men older, back from the war. There, it seemed, her emotional life had stopped.
She
made a good choice in my father. He may not have been quite her class or have
her education but – unlike her family – he was solid.
He’d built his
business on trust and honesty, he said. He was traditional. He believed in politicians and the police.
Marriage and children was the correct order of things. ‘Capital’ - money saved
- was the key to happiness.
His mother had
died of pneumonia when he was six and he went to an all-boys school, but he did
have two sisters so women weren’t a complete enigma to him. But he considered
them an inferior species. Frivolous, inclined to spend money unnecessarily, and
without proper judgement.
Nine months after they married I was
born and then four more children in the next seven years. On my sixth birthday
we moved from a moderate dwelling to a farm with a seven-bedroomed Regency house as well as thirty acres of fields, stables with a flat above them, an orchard and a walled 'kitchen' garden.
This was where John and I were now headed.
I’d been lying to my parents from an
early age. Well, not lying, but certainly hiding my real self. I wanted, of
course, to be loved and with each new brother or sister it seemed that I was
loved less. Or at least I got less attention. There must be something wrong with me, I concluded, so I tried to
be perfect.
My parents believed that children should be docile and compliant. So
that’s what I became.
They knew nothing about my real life.
I had no practice whatsoever in standing up to them.
I was the first of the children to do so.
By my parents’ standards, John failed
on every count. He wasn’t upper class. He wasn’t rich. He didn’t have the sort
of job that either of my parents would understand. He didn’t actually have
anything in common with them at all.
I loved my family and I couldn’t bear the thought of losing them. And
that's what I risked, I thought, if I told my parents about John. But I didn’t
want to carry on lying to them for the rest of my life.
There were two of them and only one of me. They both in their different
ways had the weight of the establishment behind them. I was young, alone and a
woman to boot. Who was going to respect me? What were my opinions and needs
worth anyway?
But, if I
didn’t believe that blue-sky voice that spoke in my head on the night of the
supper party, what was there left?
It was an impossible
dilemma. A nightmare come true.
We reached the village, lumbered up the half-mile drive and came to a stop in front of the house. As we scrunched across the gravel towards the
primrose-yellow front door, I felt as if I was walking to the guillotine.
I saw John’s long hair, green trousers and dusty Mini through my
parents’ eyes and wondered if I was making a huge mistake.
I had no idea how I was going to handle the imminent situation.
To be continued