No, not me. I never went to boarding school. I’m sure I
would have hated the close proximity of all those other females.
However, One of my new friends is an
ex boarding school girl named Janet Bidston-Clarke with an ‘e’ who joined the
school round about the same time as me. Janet has the most la-di-da speaking
voice I have ever heard. She seems altogether more mature than all the rest of
us. She has quit a boarding school for reasons I never discovered to live with
a really old great aunt (she calls her 'Auntie' almost crushing the word to
make it rhyme with jaunty) called Anita Orlando, which I am told is Italian.
I am fascinated by
Janet, because she manages to cultivate a sense of mystery concerning herself
and her past. She tells you little bits, but never enough to satisfy you. Janet
plays the piano, sings, talks French and wears nylons. At boarding school she
has had a really good time, almost like in 'Lavender wins the day', which was
my very favourite boarding school book until I lost sight of it, and I don't
really understand why she has come to such an ordinary grammar school in an
ordinary sea-side resort like ours, with slot-machines and a permanent
fair-ground. I did dream of boarding schools at the time, not knowing what
sorts of places they really were. I suppose I thought I would have enjoyed the
sensation of coming home for the hols and having everyone making a fuss of you.
Janet drops hints about a mysterious
father who roams about Europe and writes her postcards with love and kisses on
them, and a working mother who apparently lives in Torquay, which is down at
the posh end of England. Fancy living so far away from your mother even when
you aren't at boarding school.
But Janet doesn't seem to be sad. She
loves Miss Orlando and Miss Orlando's Anna, an old parlour maid who lives with
Miss Orlando and Janet and looks after their every need.
One day, after choir practice, Janet
pulls me aside.
'My Aunt wants to meet you,' she
whispers. 'Can you come to afternoon tea?'
This is the chance I've been waiting
for to satisfy my curiosity about Janet's operatic relation and the unusual
domestic arrangements.
Up to now, I've only been inside the
Orlando house once, and then only as far as the front room, which is dark and
shabby, with pompous oil paintings in ornate frames that could be undiscovered
masterpieces by Rembrandt or other Dutch Masters, when I called for Janet one
day to attend a school choir practice in the run up to the Christmas carol
service.
Mama would say the house had seen
better times, and I would have written my name in the dust on the furniture if
I had had to wait much longer. Whatever Anna did, it certainly didn't include
dusting. I didn’t set eyes on her that day.
Now, at long last, I will be able to
explore the rest of the house and even get to know the perpetrator of the
gob-stopping spam doorsteps without ketchup that Janet always eats for lunch.
I'm not even quite sure what an old parlour maid looks like.
Fancy anyone having a servant in a
place like our town.
The mystery surrounding Janet is so
far beyond my previous experiences that it doesn't really matter where we go
from here.
Next day, straight after school,
instead of catching the bus home, I walk with Janet to Miss Orlando's for tea.
Almost before Janet has hammered on
the big front door with the horrible tarnished gargoyle knocker (Anna doesn't
go in for polishing, either), it is quietly slid back to reveal a shrunken,
colourless figure all in black with a kind of afternoon apron hanging loosely
down from her waist, and a sort of cap without a back to it, like the ones
waitresses in cake shops wear. Her hair is grey, sparse, bobbed, and scraped
back behind the elastic band holding the cap together, and she has hardly any
teeth. Is she representative of the profession of parlour maid?
“Ah, Miss Janet. You're back,” she
lisps humbly, like a scurrilous Dickens character, through her unbeautiful
dental stumps, almost curtseying as she does so. “And this is your little
friend?”
I stammer a hello. I'm not little at
all. In fact I'm much taller than Janet and starting to look quite mature, and
I'm allowed to wear stockings instead of socks on a Sunday, though Mama doesn't
allow me thin nylons yet.
All of a sudden I feel like a grand
lady. I can recall the kind of respectfulness that was awarded to me and Aunt
Jane when she was mayoress and I wonder what is expected of me now.
“This is Anna, our guardian angel,”
Janet is explaining in a voice you normally only hear at amateur dramatics.
Fancy saying that about this old
woman, though she's not that far away from the angels, when I think about it. I
wonder in passing if she had an unborn twin and I ask myself what stroke of
fate has brought her into this house.
“Auntie rescued Anna from an
orphanage that was bombed out in the war,” Janet is saying, as though she has
read my thoughts, while Anna nods her head several times in abject gratitude.
So that's it. Rescued and then faithful to the end of her
days. Well, at least she has a roof over her head. Orphans don't have that many
choices even now, let alone all those years ago, assuming Janet meant the First
World War and not the second.
Rapid mental arithmetic tells me that Miss Orlando must be
Janet’s great aunt. Why didn’t I think of that before? Now I can’t very well
ask her about it.
Anna finishes nodding and wipes a
tear off her cheek. What depths of emotion and tragedy has she experienced? She turns to go back into the house. Dragging her shabby
shoes over the worn wooden floor, she makes her way to the bottom of the
staircase, which curves up the right-hand wall of the house. We leave the front
room behind on our left. The hall is lit by gaslight that flickers and hisses.
The house is cold and damp, since no sunlight could penetrate as far as the
inner part of the house even if the windows were less crusted with dust. The
staircase is carpeted in threadbare Axminster that must once have had a flowery
pattern on it but is now almost see-through. The wooden stair-boards creek like
in a Hitchcock film. I don't suppose anyone can get up and down those stairs
without being heard.
Anna stops at the bottom of the
stairs and stretches out a sinewy arm rather gloriously like Boadicea in her
chariot.
“Miss Orlando will see you now,” she
croaks, the stumpy smile again spreading across the wizened features. “I'll
bring the tray up right away, Miss Janet,” she adds, and this time the curtsey
is not just a figment of my imagination. Then she hobbles to the back of the
house, and I start to ask myself if I have landed on a film set, so weird and
crazy is the whole set-up.
But Janet is cheerful and obviously
thinks everything is normal, for she bounds up the stairs two at a time
shouting: “Jauntie Auntie. We're here!”
That must be here nickname for Miss
Orlando and does rather tie in with my view of the posh pronunciation. I wonder
how jaunty one can be in old age. She must be at least 70 or 80. I follow Janet
rather more sedately up the groaning stairs, peering over the banisters as I
go, straining my eyes in the dim amber light to see if I can make out anything
in the darkness at the other end of the corridor below, into which Anna has
disappeared as if down a coalmine.
At the top of the stairs is a
landing. The house is actually on at least three floors, but I assume that it
is on this first floor (or is it the bel étage?) that Miss Orlando actually
spends her daytime hours. So downstairs must be the servants quarters apart for
the front room, which is presumably used as a waiting room. The lighting on
this upper landing is much better. A bronze and glass candelabra with real
candles has spread its wings and is shedding rather flattering soft light.
Opposite the top of the stairs is the main room, the music room, Janet calls
it. That must be above the front waiting-room because it has the same kind of bay
window and I can see the tree across the road even from where I am standing
now. Then there is a corridor going to the back of the house, presumably
exactly above the one leading to the Black Hole of Calcutta. There's another
flight of stairs up, this time only bare boards, and a bathroom, which Janet
points out to me for obvious reasons. The porcelain there is old-fashioned;
the loo has a chain to pull instead of a modern flushing device; the soap is
green and smells of garden. The bathroom does not invite you to stay longer
than you have to.
We go into the music room. It is
surprisingly comfortably furnished with dark old pieces, Indian rugs on the
wooden floor, and dozens of portraits of splendid looking and grandly dressed
people tucked in among the vast wall-paper flowers. Against one wall there is
an ancient upright piano and in front of it there is a duet stool almost like
the one I have at home.
I wonder if Janet would like to play
duets with me.
Piles of sheet music and vocal scores
take up most of the available surfaces and in one corner of the room there is a
very old gramophone with a handle to wind it up.
This room is also lit by candles in a
hanging bronze and glass candelabra that tinkles whenever there is any movement
or when I crash into it with the top of my head. I am much taller than the
residents here.
But there is no sign of Miss Orlando.
“I'll go and see where she is,” says
Janet. “Why don't you try the piano?”
“Oh, may I? Won't it make too much
noise?”
“Nonsense,” says Janet. “Auntie loves
music.”
She goes out of the room in search of
Auntie and I am left to my own devices.
I slink past some of the portraits.
Are they family heirlooms? I can't see any other evidence of past riches,
though the pictures could be valuable, of course. There are so many poor people
with aristocratic family trees in Britain that doesn't even matter whether you
have money or not. It's the connections that count.
Now I'm starting to
understand what Mama means by having a heritage and why she didn't let me go
tap dancing at the local dance hall with the girls from Albert Street when I
was small. It was one thing going to school with them, where you were
supervised, and quite another sallying out to spend your free time doing
something nobody with any class would dream of doing, according to Mama.
But I did so want to tap dance.
All Miss Orlando’s sheet music is
classical and the opera scores include all the Puccini and Verdi operas and a
whole lot of obscure Italian and French stuff. Miss Orlando used to be a
professional singer, of course. While I am thumbing through the repertoire, Janet
comes back with Miss Orlando. Or rather, Janet comes into the room and
announces the imminent arrival of 'Auntie'.
Miss Orlando is a nice, tiny old
lady.
I'm not expecting a nice old lady. In
fact, I don't know what I'm expecting after the vision of poor Anna, with her
scuffed up shoes and gnarled fingers and gaping gums.
In complete contrast to her
'servant', Miss Orlando is dressed in shiny, well-worn velvet of various hues.
Her skirts are long. She is wearing several layers of clothing. Nothing
matches, either in colour or style, and some of it looks as if it has come from
a theatrical costumier's, but the effect is nevertheless harmonious. She is
wearing a long pearl necklace and carrying a flat embroidered bag with a white
lace hankie hanging down over the side. Her hair is very grey and set in
parallel waves, and she has little sparkling slides to hold back it out of her
face. Janet isn't much bigger than her. Maybe Miss Orlando has shrunk. But she
is nevertheless a lady with dignity and self-assurance and it is now I who
feels the urge to curtsey.
Miss Orlando goes over to the
fire-place and jerks energetically at a long heavy cord with a tassel on the
end of it.
Hardly has she walked back across the
room and taken her place at the small round table in the bay, unrolled her
starched linen napkin and spread it over her knees, gesturing graciously to us
to do likewise, than we hear the creaking of the wooden stair treads as Anna
approaches arduously from below, bearing the tea things.
“Ah, there you are, Anna,” says Miss
Orlando in a regal, Queen Mother type of voice.
“The tea, Miss,” Anna replies humbly
as she arranges cups, saucers, spoons, milk, sugar, teapot and a plate of
small, dry, elderly biscuits in front of us. Her fingers tremble as she
performs these duties. Miss Orlando appears not to notice.
“Thank you, Anna,” she says with
incredible formality.
“Will there be anything else?” Anna
asks wearily, rubbing her chafed, bluish hands together and looking distinctly
chilled.
“No, thank you,” replies Miss
Orlando. “Anyway, Janet can get it if there is.”
“Thank you,” says Anna gratefully,
and backs awkwardly out of the room as if she were leaving the throne room at
Buckingham Palace.
“Anna used to be a very beautiful ballet
dancer before she wore out her feet and her teeth,” says Miss Orlando. “You
can't get servants like that these days.”
I'm quite sure you can't, I'm
thinking. Why isn't she pensioned off? She's as old as the hills. And she could
have easily got herself some dentures on the National Health.
“I expect you're wondering why she's
still working for me,” Miss Orlando queries.
I blush. She has read my thoughts. I
hope she isn't going to make a habit of it.
“Well,” I stammer. “It's just that
she's very old to be working.”
“Don't worry about it,” says Miss
Orlando. “She's devoted to me and she would not want to leave me.”
Janet jumps up and goes to the
window.
“She's gone to do the shopping now,
Auntie,” she announces.
“I hope she doesn't forget the spam,”
Miss Orlando says, helping herself to sugar.
“We used to have mortadella in
Italy,' she goes on, rolling the ‘r’ with relish, “but you can't get anything
like that here.”
Miss Orlando sighs as she stirs her
over-sweetened tea. I have been counting the lumps. I think she has put eight
into the small china cup.
“What's mortadella?” I whisper to
Janet.
“Italian spam,” she hisses back.
Suddenly I get the feeling that time
stands still in this house. The only source of heating is an ugly gas fire
hissing ineffectually in the discoloured grate. The interior decoration is
ancient and there isn't even electric light. I ask myself if there's any
running water, and decide I'd better make do with one cup of tea, just in case
there isn't. A vision of aged Anna carting rusty tin buckets of water in from a
pump in the back yard slides into my consciousness and I begin to ask myself
what other sacrifices Anna has made so that I might sit here and drink afternoon
tea like this.
“And you play the piano, Faith?” Miss
Orlando asks suddenly.
I am chewing on one of the dry old
biscuits and don't have enough saliva to swallow it. Mama says that swilling
food down with liquid is unladylike, but I'm forced to do this, because not
speaking when you're spoken to is impolite.
“Yes,” I finally bring out in a
scratchy voice that quite startles me.
“And how long have you been playing
the piano?” Miss Orlando continues in slow, structured tones.
“I can't remember,” I reply truthfully.
“Silly,” Janet chips in. 'Auntie
means how long have you been having lessons.”
“Oh...ummm....about eight years, on
and off.”
“Then you must be very good,” Miss
Orlando concludes.
“Well...” I am modest about my piano
playing. “I broke my elbow when I was seven and sometimes I have problems with
the sinews.”
“Your right elbow?”
“Yes.”
“Like what's her name in the Mikado,”
Miss Orlando says in a giggly sort of voice.
I can't laugh, because I don't know
what she's talking about.
“And now you'd like to learn to sing
opera,” Miss Orlando is saying.
I'd what? How did she get that idea?
Janet smiles at me, nodding and
encouraging me to nod, too.
“Well, I have thought about it,” I
admit.
I'll get you, Janet Bidston-Clarke
with an ‘e’, I'm thinking. Of course, I'd told her my dream about the opera and
she had told me about her aunt being a singer, but I hadn't actually connected
the two until this moment.
“Katisha”, Miss Orlando remembers out
of the blue, leaving me as puzzled as ever about this opus. “That’s the
name...... So how long have you been singing?” Miss Orlando asks me, helping
herself to some more sugar lumps and tea.
“Since I was little,” I reply.
“Well, that is most interesting.”
Miss Orlando gets up and goes to the
piano.
“Would you like to sing something
now?”
I'm on the point of saying no when
Janet catches my eye. Go on, she seems to be saying. This is your chance. Do
it. She's a singer. Perhaps she can give you some tips.
“I don't know any opera,” I say,
looking around at the piles of vocal scores, “unless you mean Mimi.”
“Well, a thirteen year old who sings
Mimi is something quite out of the ordinary. Let me see if I can find the
music.”
Miss Orlando reaches out to the
nearest pile.
“Ah, here we are. Which bit would you
like to sing?”
I take the score from her. I turn
over its yellowing pages but don't recognise anything on them.
“I think this is the wrong opera,” I
venture to say.
“Nonsense. There's only one Mimi and
only one La Bohème,” Miss Orlando insists.
“La Bohème?” I am genuinely puzzled.
“I mean Siegfried's Mimi.”
Miss Orlando suddenly hoots with trained
operatic laughter.
“Ta! Ta! Ta! Ti! Ti! Ti!” she declares in a surprisingly high voice.
When she has calmed down a bit she
looks at me pityingly.
“You poor girl,” she starts off.
“Where did you get the idea that Mimi sings in a Wagner opera?”
“Well, Mama's got a pile of piano
transcriptions of the operas, and some of the singing bits have the words in
and there's a super bit for Mimi in the Siegfried book.”
Miss Orlando nods sympathetically.
“If you take a closer look at this
score,” she says gently, “you will see that my Mimi is spelt with two ‘I’s. But
the Mimi in your book is spelt M-I-M-E.”
Of course it is, now I think about
it. I used to think it meant mime as in pantomime, which is just about the
opposite of singing, before I asked my Uncle Horace. He told me it must be
Italian and you could say it like 'me me'. But he obviously hadn’t told the
truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth and now here I was, making a
fool of myself in front of this cultured lady.
“Well, I didn't sing any Wagner in
Italy,” Miss Orlando regrets, “so I haven't got the music. But you can bring
yours and we'll look at it together.”
She doesn't tell me then that Mime is
a dwarf and is always sung by a tenor. I expect she doesn't want to embarrass
me any further.
I'm quite disappointed that I can't
think of anything else to sing except hymns. And I don't really like singing
them because I think they are boring compared with Wagner. But Miss Orlando
suddenly decides she will teach me anyway.
I'm very surprised because I haven't
even asked her yet. I don't know what to say. So I don't say anything.
The tea-party is quite suddenly over.
Miss Orlando tells me to come back at 11 o'clock the following Saturday. Then
she closes the lid of the piano and leaves the room.
Janet immediately starts gathering up
the tea-things and I help her to take them downstairs. Maybe I'll get a peek at
the back of the house now.
Although it's only about six o'clock,
it's very dark in the long gas-lit corridor downstairs. I don't think Janet
notices what a bad state the place is in. She certainly doesn't seem to mind my
seeing it. Anna is probably still out, I am thinking, when I hear a door open
and suddenly she is standing right next to me. I think she has stepped out of
the broom cupboard.
“Was the tea all right, Miss Janet?”
“Yes, perfect thank you, Anna. And
the biscuits were delicious.”
Janet gushes rather
a lot at school, too. I don't feel able to rave about the biscuits.
“Would you like to see the rehearsal
room before you go?” Janet asks me, and in so doing seems to be deliberately
putting a time-limit on my visit. That's all right by me. I still have to get
the bus home and will have to do my homework whatever time I get there.
“Well... yes,” I reply. So I won’t
get to see the kitchen, after all.
“We'll have to go outside and round
the back. You can get there through here, but Anna doesn't like anyone going
through her kitchen. And anyway, when the ladies' choir comes, there are too
many of them.”
I follow Janet out of the front door,
round the side of the house, past about three very narrow, high windows along
the otherwise blank house wall and into the back yard. From there we go through
a French patio door into a surprisingly light room with about three rows of
kitchen chairs and another upright piano.
“This is where Auntie rehearses with
her ladies' choir,” Janet explains proudly.
“It's very nice,” I find myself
saying. “How many ladies sing in the choir?”
“About 20, I think, though it could
be more.”
“Do you sing in it, too?”
“Yes, of course. I couldn't let
Auntie down. Would you like to join?”
“I'll have to ask first,” I reply,
thankful that this is probably true.
Things are moving
just a shade too fast for me.
Later, back home, I'm subjected to
twenty questions by my curious parents. I explain in great detail what the
house looks like, as much about Miss Orlando as I know myself, and a whole lot
about poor Anna that is enhanced by my fertile imagination.
“Well, I think that Anita Orlando's
probably as poor as a church mouse,” Mama decides. “Fancy not even having electricity.
I wonder how they get their clothes clean?”
I happened to know that Janet washes
her own clothes because one day we had a discussion at school about domestic
chores. I remember being astonished that she had to do all her own washing and tidying
and even some of the shopping.
“But this servant woman...”
Mama is persevering
with the questioning, though I'd rather get on with my homework now.
”... Did you say
she's been with Miss Orlando all her life?”
“Well, sort of,” I answer.
“I'd just like to know when Miss
Orlando was in Italy,” Mama perseveres. “Somehow there are flaws in her story.
Does she speak with a foreign accent?”
“I don't think so,” I shrug. Come to
think of it, her painstaking diction could be foreign, I suppose. But then, how
did she come to be related to Janet?
At some point in the conversation I
break the news that Janet is trying to get me to have singing lessons with her
aunt.
Surprisingly, my
parents think this is a good idea, especially Dada. As far as the choir is
concerned, they are prepared to leave that decision to me. So I decide to give
it a try at some time in the future. I'll have to wait until after Saturday,
anyway. Maybe Miss Orlando might not want me in her choir when she's heard me
sing!
Over my homework, I ponder on today's
events. Mama is suspicious of Miss Orlando, because she's suspicious of
everyone. But apart from Miss Orlando's life-style, which is genteel poverty, I
can think of nothing particularly negative about her. She obviously lives by
her wits. I'm sure she only has the fees from her teaching, though Janet hasn't
yet told me what it costs to belong to the choir. Dada has volunteered to come
with me to my first singing lesson, to get the financial side sorted out.
So now there's nothing for it but to
wait for Saturday to arrive.
No comments:
Post a Comment