Chapter 3

2399 Words
3 Arthur Leighton came into the house with Hugh at his side. The boy had only recently stopped demanding a piggy-back from his stepfather as soon as Arthur stepped out of the car each evening. At eight years old, Hugh was balancing a Tigger-like exuberance with the desire to appear more mature. Evie looked up, smiling, as she moved across the room to embrace her husband. Not a day passed when she didn’t feel thankful that, at last, they were together after their previous marriages, and then separation by the war. She had never stopped believing Arthur was alive, despite evidence to the contrary, and now here they were, living a life Evie had once only dreamed of. It had already turned dark outside, the sun plunging suddenly behind the hills as it did each day in this equatorial region. One moment daylight, the next almost instant darkness. As was their custom, the Leightons sat outside on the long stone-paved terrace for a pre-dinner ‘sundowner’, gazing across open plains towards the distant hills, a sweeping panorama that took the breath away. Beyond the low hedge that defined the property’s extent, zebra moved slowly towards the nearby water hole, their white stripes illuminated by the moon, forming ghostly patterns. When she and the children had first joined Arthur here in Kenya, Evie had experienced a mixture of awe and nervousness at the proximity of wild animals, only ever seen before as a child when her father had taken her to London Zoo. How easy it was to become accustomed to such novelties – but she would never tire of the sight. Hugh was bursting to tell them both his news. He had today come second in the hundred-yard dash, a practice run for his school sports’ day in two weeks. ‘I know I can win it on the day. I was only the teeniest microsecond behind Roger Cunningham and I’m getting faster all the time.’ The boy beamed at his parents. How like his father he was in his looks and his love of sport – but how different in nature. Douglas Barrington, Evie’s first husband, had been a quixotic character, his unpredictable moods swinging from cold aloofness to a desperate affection for Evie that he struggled to express – revealing it rarely and only fully on his death bed. Evie wanted to ensure her son would not develop the bleak, gloomier side of his father’s personality. On the other hand, the heavy dark hair and fine features were going to be assets to Hugh as he grew up and made her think with tenderness of Doug and how hard she had tried to love him and be a good wife in spite of her growing feelings for Arthur. ‘Maybe Roger’s getting faster too,’ said Evie gently, wary of Hugh’s expectations being disappointed. ‘And we’re very proud of you, anyway, aren’t we, Arthur?’ ‘Bursting with pride.’ He tousled the boy’s hair. ‘Perhaps we can do some training together at the weekend. See if we can shave that teeniest microsecond off your time.’ ‘Thanks, Dad! That would be topping.’ Hugh’s eyes widened in delight. The boy was revelling in having a father. It was less than a year since his mother had married Arthur. He had been a baby when Doug died. ‘Don’t we have a tennis game with the Hendersons?’ asked Evie, concerned that there wouldn’t be time for Arthur to keep his promise. ‘Hugh and I can get up early on Saturday and get some practice in before breakfast while it’s still cool, can’t we Hugh? Evie laughed. ‘We’ll all get up early. We can watch you race and then have breakfast on the terrace here. We don’t have to be at the tennis club until ten.’ Arthur looked around. ‘Where is Jasmine?’ ‘She had a headache and decided to have a lie down before dinner.’ ‘She’s been looking rather pale lately. Is she all right?’ Arthur’s eyes were full of concern. Evie sighed. Nodding her head almost imperceptibly in the direction of Hugh, she mouthed the words, ‘We’ll talk later.’ They sipped their drinks, the croaking of tree frogs and the buzz of cicadas competing with the sneering calls of a group of squabbling go-away birds in the trees beside the house. As they were about to head indoors for the evening meal, Jasmine stepped onto the veranda. ‘Hey!’ called Arthur. ‘We missed you, Jazz.’ He flung an arm around her with casual affection. Jasmine jumped away from him as though she’d been burnt and Evie saw the hurt register on her husband’s face. She sent him a look that said not to ask, so Arthur said nothing, and the family went into the cool of the dining room. Jasmine’s mood coloured the atmosphere, and they ate their light supper in silence, punctuated only by the ticking of the clock and the occasional chatter from Hugh about his running training and the form of his rival, Roger Cunningham. Eventually, the boy asked to be excused in order to finish off his homework. As soon as Hugh had left the room Jasmine released a long sigh. She looked across the table at Arthur. Speaking so softly it was hard to hear her words, she said, ‘I’ve been expelled from school.’ There was a moment’s silence. Jasmine stared down at her plate and Evie looked anxiously between her daughter and her husband. Then Arthur burst out laughing. ‘What did you do? Blow up the chemistry lab?’ A smile flitted briefly across Jasmine’s face. ‘They don’t have a chemistry lab. The nuns don’t hold with that sort of thing. Not suitable for girls. The only science we do is Domestic Science.’ Arthur glanced at Evie. ‘Then it’s a good job they’ve expelled you. I’d no idea they believed in such old-fashioned nonsense. We’ll find you a better school. Maybe back in England.’ He looked again at Evie. ‘What do you think, Evie? You’re very quiet.’ Before Evie could answer, Jasmine spoke again. ‘I’m not going to England. And I don’t want to go to another school. I don’t want to go to school at all.’ Evie put a hand on Arthur’s arm. ‘The other girls have been ganging up on her. Ever since Katy Grenville left.’ Jasmine interrupted. ‘I hate them all. They’re stupid and shallow and petty-minded. And I hate being here in Nairobi.’ She began to cry. ‘I’ve tried. I’ve really tried, but it’s no good. I can’t stand it. The dust. The endless plains. And I miss the sea so much. It’s nearly four hundred miles away! In Penang we could go to the beach every day and the sea was all around us.’ She gave a loud sob. ‘Oh, Arthur, can’t you ask them to give you your old job back? Please!’ ‘Jasmine!’ A sudden anger seared through Evie’s body. How dare she ask that of Arthur? How dare she assume that her wishes should be paramount? ‘Stop that at once. You’ve no right to ask Arthur that and I’ve already told you it’s out of the question. You need to grow up and show some common sense.’ Jasmine pushed back her chair and got up from the table. ‘I hate you too. Nobody understands me. I wish I were dead.’ She ran out of the room and her bedroom door slammed a few moments later. Evie let out a long sigh. ‘She’s impossible.’ ‘She’s unhappy.’ Arthur placed his hand over hers. ‘At sixteen there were probably times when you thought the whole world was against you.’ ‘No, I didn’t. Not until seventeen. That was when my father took his own life and my mother abandoned me and I realised the whole world actually was against me. Jasmine is behaving like a spoilt brat.’ Evie cringed. The last thing she wanted was to quarrel with Arthur. He took her hand in his and stroked it. ‘Jasmine is neither spoilt not bratty. And to be fair to her, she’s been through a lot. Apart from anything else she’s had to get used to me butting into your family and–’ ‘Jasmine adores you. She’s certainly not unhappy about us marrying. That’s one thing I have got right in her eyes.’ Evie looked up at him, aware that her eyes were welling up. ‘I’ve been a bad mother to her. I should have seen the signs of her unhappiness and tried to talk to her about it before it got to this stage.’ ‘Stop being so hard on yourself, my darling. You’ve been an exemplary mother to her. But she’s sixteen and that’s what they’re like at that age. Moody. Unpredictable. She’ll get over it.’ ‘But she’s due to sit her School Certificate next year. We can’t let her throw it all away. Jasmine’s far too intelligent for that.’ ‘Better not to rush into any decision. If she stays home with you for a while it will give her time to think and make up her mind what she wants to do.’ ‘That’s not the problem – or rather it is. Her mind is well and truly made up. There are two things she wants to do with her life. Become a painter and return to Penang.’ ‘The painting I understand,’ he said, thoughtfully. ‘She’s very talented. But Penang? She was so young when she lived there. I imagine she’s feeling nostalgic for her childhood not for the island. Besides, nothing is the same in Penang anymore. Not since the j**s ruined it all. And then the British Military Authority made a right mess of things.’ A cloud passed across his face, darkening his features and Evie felt a twinge of pain. She knew he hated to be reminded of the war and whatever he had gone through, fighting behind the lines and then during his subsequent capture and imprisonment by the Japanese. ‘She’s been back there with me since. She’s seen how it is now. It hasn’t deterred her.’ Evie turned her face up to his and kissed him softly on the lips. ‘Besides, I remember someone sitting beside me on a beach once, telling me how Africa was in his blood and how much he missed it and longed to return there.’ Arthur pulled back slightly and looked into her eyes. ‘Do you feel like her too? Do you want to go back to Penang?’ ‘No!’ She could hear the explosive strength of her. ‘Although I’d go anywhere if it was with you, my love. Even back to dirty old London or boring Perth. But I can honestly say that I have never been happier than I am now. Here. I have no wish at all to go back to steamy Penang. If we stay in Nairobi for the rest of our lives, I couldn’t be happier.’ She kissed him again. ‘Now why don’t you go and sort us out a nightcap and I’ll join you in a minute on the veranda. I want to look in on Jasmine first. Try and make my peace with her.’ She turned to go, then called back over her shoulder, ‘The post is on the table in the study in case there’s anything you need to look at urgently. Mostly invitations though, apart from the letter from the school. And there’s one from Mary you may want to read.’ Jasmine was already asleep – or possibly feigning it – when Evie looked in on her. Evie eased the sheet up over her daughter’s shoulders and dropped a kiss on her brow, pushing back a strand of hair from the girl’s eyes. ‘Everything will seem better in the morning, darling,’ she whispered, in a rush of tenderness. When she returned to the veranda, Arthur was reading Mary’s letter, so Evie picked up the drink he’d prepared for her and sipped it while he finished. The sounds of the African night wrapped around them – the frog chorus, the distant soft rumbling and bellowing of animals at the waterhole and the occasional bark of a hyena. Above them the clear inky sky was peppered with stars. She shivered and reached for the shawl Gichinga had laid out for her. Arthur looked up, folded the letter, put it back in its envelope and handed it to her. ‘Well there’s your answer,’ he said. ‘Answer to what?’ ‘To what we need to do about Jasmine.’ ‘What do you mean?’ ‘Send her to stay with Mary and Reggie. Sounds like Mary would love some female company. Jasmine could give her a hand with the baby and the village school. And if we arrange for a correspondence course, she can even keep up with her own school studies. And who better to support her with that than Mary, as a teacher.’ ‘But how can I possibly send our daughter across the ocean, thousands of miles away from us? And what if Mary isn’t prepared to take her on?’ ‘You can let her go because you love her. It doesn’t have to be forever. It will help her get whatever it is she feels about Penang out of her system or if not, it will give her what she truly wants. Would you deny her that?’ Evie let the thought play around her head. ‘Of course, I wouldn’t. But, Arthur, she’s only sixteen.’ ‘She’ll be safe enough with the Hyde-Underwoods.’ He reached for her hand. ‘And you could always make the trip with her. To settle her in. Make sure she’s not having second thoughts. It would be a chance for you to catch up with Mary and meet the new baby. And weren’t you saying there were still some matters outstanding on Douglas’s estate? You could see the lawyer at the same time. You and Jasmine could stay in George Town before you drop her at Bella Vista. Enjoy a few days at the beach.’ ‘I can’t abandon you and Hugh.’ ‘You wouldn’t be abandoning us. It would just be for a few weeks. Hugh and I will get along famously together. He’ll be at school, and at the weekends he can come along to the tennis club and the pool. Not to mention all the running training we can get done.’ He grinned at her. ‘We’ll have a wonderful time together. Even though I’ll miss you like crazy.’ Evie was starting to weaken. He pressed home his advantage. ‘And, of course, Mary would be thrilled to have Jazz staying for a while. Wasn’t she her teacher?’ Evie nodded. ‘And Mary would do anything for you, my love. It’s a perfect solution.’ Evie leaned forward and kissed her husband. ‘You are a clever old thing, aren’t you, Arthur Leighton?’ He pulled her onto his lap and kissed her again. ‘Right. That’s settled then.’ Smiling, he added, ‘Now, how about we have an early night?’
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