“That is just like Uncle Peter,” my mother said, laughing. She was always laughing at that time. “Personally I don’t care what sort of wedding it is.”
Aunt Amaryllis sided with Uncle Peter. She always did.
Benedict Lansdon was in the process of buying the house at Manorleigh. My mother had taken me down to see it. “It will be our home for much of the time, I imagine,” she said. “We shall have to nurse the constituency.”
“What of our house?” I asked.
“Well, I think I shall sell it. We shall have your … stepfather’s house in London.”
I felt my face grow red. My stepfather! I thought. What am I going to call him? I can’t call him Mr. Lansdon. Uncle Benedict? He is not my uncle. But there were a lot of people in our family called uncle although they had no right to the title. Uncle was just a nebulous form of address. It made a mockery of the title, I told Pedrek, who agreed with me. It seemed to be a major problem and I marvelled that so small a thing should matter so much. But what was I going to call him? Father? Never! It would have to be Uncle, I supposed. It was both confusing and embarrassing.
My mother went on trying to pretend she had not noticed my embarrassment and understanding it perfectly.
“We shall have
“What about Mr. and Mrs. Emery …?”
“Oh, I have spoken …
That made me feel a good deal better. There would be those familiar faces near me. Moreover I knew they had been worried about their jobs.
I cried: “Oh, they will be so pleased. I heard them talking …”
“Oh? What did they say?”
“They didn’t know what would happen to them, but they reckoned you would see they were all right.”
“Of course. I’ll tell them at once. Then they can decide whether they want to come. What else did they say?”
I was silent. I could hear the clock ticking and the seconds passing. I was on the point of telling her what they had said about
“Oh, nothing … I can’t remember …” I said.
It was the first lie I remembered telling her.
He had indeed come between us.
My grandparents arrived in London.
I was disappointed that they seemed to be overcome by their admiration for Benedict Lansdon and delighted by the prospect of the marriage.
There was a great deal of excited talk about the constituency and the possibility of a general election.
“Not much chance yet,” said my grandfather. “Gladstone is well in … unless he comes a cropper over Ireland again.”
“It will come in time,” said my mother. “And we don’t want it too soon. Benedict has to make his presence felt before that.”
“He will do that,” added my grandmother with conviction.
She soon noticed that all was not well with me.
We went for a walk in the Park together and I quickly realized that she had arranged it so that we could talk in peace.
It was one of those late autumnal days—the mist only faintly disturbed by the softest of winds which blew from the southwest—dampish, leaving the skin glowing. There was a smell of autumn in the air and a few bronze leaves remaining on the trees.
As we walked by the Serpentine, she said to me: “I believe you are feeling a little … left out. Are you, my dear?”
I was silent for a moment. She put her arm through mine.
“You mustn’t think that. Everything is the same between you and your mother.”
“How can it be?” I demanded. “He will be there.”
“You will enjoy his company. He will be like your father.”
“I can only have one father.”
“My dearest child, your father died before you were born. You never knew him.”
“I know that he died saving Pedrek’s father’s life—and I don’t want any other father.”
She pressed my arm. “It has been a surprise to you. People often feel like that. You think there will be a change. Yes, there will be. But had you thought it might be a change for the better?”
“I liked it as it was.”
“Your mother is very happy,” she said.
“Yes,” I agreed bitterly. “Because of him.”
“You and she have been together so much. The fact that your father died made that inevitable. I know there is a very special relationship between you—and there always will be. But she and Benedict … they have been such good friends … always.”
“Then why did she marry my father?
“Benedict went to Australia. He was out of her life. They both married different people … at first.”
“Yes, and my father died saving another man’s life.
“Why do you say it like that, Rebecca?”
“Like what?”