526 William Trevor
people like you and I are so unpopular?'
She didn't answer, but sighed instead. He would go on and on,
she knew; and there was nothing she could do. She always meant
not to protest, but when it came to the point she found it hard to
sit silent, mile after mile.
'You know what I mean, Miss Fanshawe? At Ashleigh Court they
say you have an awkward way of walking. And I've got no charm:
I think that's why they don't much like me. But how for God's sake
could any child of Mrs Carruthers have charm?'
'Please don't speak of your mother like that —"
'And yet men fancy her. Awful men arrive at weekends, as keen
for sex as the Reverend Edwards is. "Your mother's a most elegant
woman," a hard-eyed lecher remarked to me last summer, in the
Palm Court of a Greek hotel.'
'Don't drink too much of that wine. The last time —'
'"You're staggering," she said the last time. I told her I had 'flu.
She's beautiful, I dare say, in her thin way. D'you think she's beau-
tiful?'
'Yes, she is.'
'She has men all over the place. Love flows like honey while you
make do with waiters on a train.'
'Oh, don't be so
silly,
Carruthers.'
'She snaps her fingers and people come to comfort her with lust.
A woman like that's never alone. While you —'
'Will you please stop talking about me!'
'You have a heart in your breast like anyone else, Miss Fan-
shawe.'
The waiter, arrived again, coughed. He leaned across the table
and placed a warmed plate in front of Miss Fanshawe and a similar
one in front of Carruthers. There was a silence while he offered
Miss Fanshawe a silver-plated platter with slices of roast beef on it
and square pieces of Yorkshire pudding. In the silence she selected
what she wanted, a small portion, for her appetite on journeys with
Carruthers was never great. Carruthers took the rest. The waiter
offered vegetables.
'Miss Fanshawe ironed that blouse at a quarter to five this morn-
ing,' Carruthers said. 'She'd have ironed it last night if she hadn't
been so tired.'
'A taste more carrots, sir?'
'I don't like carrots, Mr Atkins.'
Going Home
527
'Peas, sir?'
'Thank you. She got up from her small bed, Mr Atkins, and her
feet were chilly on the linoleum. She shivered, Mr Atkins, as she
slipped her nightdress off. She stood there naked, thinking of an-
other person. What became of your predecessor?'
'I don't know, sir. I never knew the man at all. All right for you,
madam?'
'Yes, thank you.'
'He used to go back to the kitchen, Mr Atkins, and tell the cook
that the couple from Ashleigh Court were on the train again. He'd
lean against the sink while the cook poked about among his pieces
of meat, trying to find us something to eat. Your predecessor would
suck at the butt of a cig and occasionally he'd lift a can of beer to
his lips. When the cook asked him what the matter was he'd say it
was fascinating, a place like Ashleigh Court with boys running
about in grey uniforms and an undermatron watching her life
go by.'
'Excuse me, sir.'
The waiter went. Carruthers said: '"She makes her own clothes,"
the other waiter told the cook. "She couldn't give a dinner party
the way the young lad's mother could. She couldn't chat to this
person and that, moving about among decollete women and out-
shining every one of them." Why is she an undermatron at Ashleigh
Court Preparatory School for Boys, owned and run by the Rever-
end T. L. Edwards, known to generations as a pervert?'
Miss Fanshawe, with an effort, laughed. 'Because she's qualified
for nothing else,' she lightly said.
i think that freckled waiter was sacked because he interfered
with the passengers. "Vegetables?" he suggested, and before he
could help himself he put the dish of cauliflowers on the table and
put his arms around a woman. "All tickets please," cried the ticket-
collector and then he saw the waiter and the woman on the floor.
You can't run a railway company like that.'
'Carruthers —'
'Was it something like that, Miss Fanshawe? D'you think?'
'Of course it wasn't.'
'Why not?'
'Because you've just made it up. The man was a perfectly ordi-
nary waiter on this train.'
'That's not true.'
528.
William Trevor
'Of course it is.'
'I love this train, Miss Fanshawe.'
it's a perfectly ordinary —'
'Of course it isn't.'
Carruthers laughed gaily, waiting for the waiter to come back,
eating in silence until it was time again for their plates to be cleared
away.
'Trifle, madam?' the waiter said. 'Cheese and biscuits?'
'Just coffee, please.'
'Sit down, why don't you, Mr Atkins? Join us for a while.'
'Ah no, sir, no.'
'Miss Fanshawe and I don't have to keep up appearances on your
train. D'you understand that? We've been keeping up appearances
for three long months at Ashleigh Court and it's time we stopped.
Shall I tell you about my mother, Mr Atkins?'
'Your mother, sir?'
'Carruthers —'
in i960, when I was three, my father left her for another
woman: she found it hard to bear. She had a lover at the time, a
Mr Tennyson, but even so she found it hard to forgive my father
for taking himself off.'
'I see, sir.'
it was my father's intention that I should accompany him to his
new life with the other woman, but when it came to the point the
other woman decided against that. Why should she be burdened
with my mother's child? she wanted to know: you can see her
argument, Mr Atkins.'
'I must be getting on now, sir.'
'So my father arranged to pay my mother an annual sum, in
return for which she agreed to give me house room. I go with her
when she goes on holiday to a smart resort. My father's a thing of
the past. What d'you think of all that, Mr Atkins? Can you visu-
alize Mrs Carruthers at a resort? She's not at all like Miss Fan-
shawe.'
'I'm sure she's not —'
'Not at all.'
'Please let go my sleeve, sir.'
'We want you to sit down.'
it's not my place, sir, to sit down with the passengers in the
dining-car.'
Going Home
529
'We want to ask you if you think it's fair that Mrs Carruthers
should round up all the men she wants while Miss Fanshawe has
only the furtive memory of a waiter on a train, a man who came to
a sticky end, God knows.'
'Stop it!' cried Miss Fanshawe. 'Stop it! Stop it! Let go his jacket
and let him go away —'
'I have things to do, sir.'
'He smelt of fried eggs, a smell that still comes back to her at
night.'
'You're damaging my jacket. I must ask you to release me at
once.'
'Are you married, Mr Atkins?'
'Carruthers!' Her face was crimson and her neck blotched with
a flushing that Carruthers had seen before. 'Carruthers, for
heaven's sake behave yourself!'
'The Reverend Edwards isn't married, as you might guess, Mr
Atkins.'
The waiter tried to pull his sleeve out of Carruthers' grasp, pant-
ing a little from embarrassment and from the effort. 'Let go my
jacket!' he shouted. 'Will you let me go!'
Carruthers laughed, but did not release his grasp. There was a
sound of ripping as the jacket tore.
'Miss Fanshawe'll stitch it for you,' Carruthers said at once, and
added more sharply when the waiter raised a hand to strike him:
'Don't do that please. Don't threaten a passenger, Mr Atkins.'
'You've ruined this jacket. You bloody little —'
'Don't use language in front of the lady.' He spoke quietly, and
to a stranger entering the dining-car at that moment it might have
seemed that the waiter was in the wrong, that the torn sleeve of
his jacket was the just result of some attempted insolence on his
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