Nobody's Fool
expel him from their family, but she did know it. She also knew that her husband and son had done this out of jealousy and fear.
What a terrible thing it had been for her to realizeâthat part of her husbandâs devotion to her was predicated on the understanding that no one else shared this devotion, that his love was a gift contingent upon her receiving no other gifts. This was what Miss Beryl had still been trying to forgive him for when Audrey Peach stole from her the opportunity to explain why forgiveness was necessary.
In their worst argumentâthe one Miss Beryl, during the long years of her widowhood, refused to remember and yet could not forgetâClive Sr. had accused her of being unnatural, of inviting âstrangenessâ into their home. This was apparently as close as Clive Sr. could get to articulating what was troubling him. Heâd stood in the middle of their living room and offered the room itself as evidence. African masks and Etruscan spirit boats and two-headed Foo dogs everywhere. âItâs like living in a jungle,â he complained so seriously that Miss Beryl did not smile, as was her habit when her husband became serious. What it all meant, she realized, was that he was unhappy with her, that he regretted his choice, that he blamed her for the son who could neither dribble a ball nor defend himself, and that in addition to all this he also blamed her for not loving this boy more, for instead being so fond of another boy who could have no legitimate claim to their affections, for welcoming the worldâs strangeness into their home to subvert them all. She could still see the look on his face, and Miss Beryl realized that it was this expressionâthis stubborn, injured disapproval that sheâd witnessed in her husband only on this single occasionâthat Clive Jr. had grown into, that made it so difficult for her to feel for him what she knew she ought to feel for a son. It was as if Clive Jr. had been sent to remind her of the terrible moment of his fatherâs unspoken regret at having loved her. âI donât think you know what love means,â Clive Sr. had toldher petulantly, as if to suggest that his affection for her was unrequited. Which, until that moment, it had not been.
But part of what he had said was trueâshe
didnât
understand love. This was what Miss Beryl had been coming back to, all day, all her life probably, to the mystery of affection, of the heart inclining in one direction and not another, of its unexpected, unwished-for pirouettes, its ability to make a fool, a villain, of its owner, if indeed any human can be said to own his heart. âI know this,â sheâd told Clive Sr. that long-ago afternoon. âLove is a stupid thing.â
It was, then and now, her final wisdom on the subject. No doubt, in his own way Clive Sr. already knew this to be true, had realized it when he found himself to be in love with her, a thing nobody would ever be able to understand.
If Sully was horrified by her admission that Clive Jr. was not the star of Miss Berylâs firmament, he gave no sign. With one hand he was holding his cigarette vertically now, its ash having lengthened dangerously, while he leaned forward to untie the laces of his work boots with the other. This effort seemed to sap his last ounce of strength.
Miss Berylâs tea kettle began to sing in the kitchen. When she stood, Sully said, âI heard a rumor you did a good deed.â
Miss Beryl understood that this must be a reference to the house on Bowdon, understood too that it was the subject that would not wait until morning. He was looking at her now with an expression sheâd never witnessed in him before, the expression of a man much harder and more dangerous than she had believed Sully to be.
âYou stuck your nose where it didnât belong,â he said.
âI know it,â Miss Beryl conceded. âIâm an old woman, though. Iâm entitled.â
He didnât reply for a long moment, the hardness remaining in his black eyes until his more familiar sheepish grin released it. âAnyhow,â he said. âI forgive you.â
âThank you, Donald,â she told him, and then neither of them spoke for some time, the urgent whistle of the tea kettle the only sound in the flat. âYouâre certain you wouldnât like a cup of tea?â
Again he didnât answer, though she couldnât tell
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