SUMMER TERM
IIt was the opening day of the summer term at Meadowbank school. The late afternoon sun shonedown on the broad
gravel2 sweep in front of the house. The front door was flung
hospitably3 wide,and just within it, admirably suited to its Georgian proportions, stood Miss Vansittart, every hair inplace, wearing an impeccably cut coat and skirt.
Some parents who knew no better had taken her for the great Miss Bulstrode herself, notknowing that it was Miss Bulstrode’s custom to retire to a kind of holy of holies to which only aselected and privileged few were taken.
To one side of Miss Vansittart, operating on a slightly different plane, was Miss Chadwick,comfortable,
knowledgeable4, and so much a part of Meadowbank that it would have beenimpossible to imagine Meadowbank without her. It had never been without her. Miss Bulstrodeand Miss Chadwick had started Meadowbank school together. Miss Chadwick wore pince-nez,stooped, was
dowdily5 dressed,
amiably6 vague in speech, and happened to be a brilliantmathematician.
Various welcoming words and phrases, uttered graciously by Miss Vansittart, floated throughthe house.
“How do you do, Mrs. Arnold? Well, Lydia, did you enjoy your Hellenic cruise? What awonderful opportunity! Did you get some good photographs?
“Yes, Lady Garnett, Miss Bulstrode had your letter about the Art Classes and everything’s beenarranged.
“How are you, Mrs. Bird? … Well? I don’t think Miss Bulstrode will have time today to discussthe point. Miss Rowan is somewhere about if you’d like to talk to her about it?
“We’ve moved your bedroom, Pamela. You’re in the far wing by the apple tree….
“Yes, indeed, Lady Violet, the weather has been terrible so far this spring. Is this youryoungest? What is your name? Hector? What a nice aeroplane you have, Hector.
“Très heureuse de vous voir, Madame. Ah, je regrette, ce ne serait pas possible, cette après-midi. Mademoiselle Bulstrode est tellement occupée.
“Good afternoon, Professor. Have you been digging up some more interesting things?”
II
In a small room on the first floor, Ann Shapland, Miss Bulstrode’s secretary, was typing withspeed and efficiency. Ann was a nice-looking young woman of thirty-five, with hair that fitted herlike a black satin cap. She could be attractive when she wanted to be but life had taught her thatefficiency and
competence7 often paid better results and avoided painful complications. At themoment she was concentrating on being everything that a secretary to the headmistress of afamous girls’ school should be.
From time to time, as she inserted a fresh sheet in her machine, she looked out of the windowand registered interest in the arrivals.
“Goodness!” said Ann to herself,
awed8, “I didn’t know there were so many
chauffeurs10 left inEngland!”
Then she smiled in spite of herself, as a
majestic11 Rolls moved away and a very small Austin ofbattered age drove up. A harassed-looking father emerged from it with a daughter who looked farcalmer than he did.
As he paused uncertainly, Miss Vansittart emerged from the house and took charge.
“Major Hargreaves? And this is Alison? Do come into the house. I’d like you to see Alison’sroom for yourself. I—”
Ann grinned and began to type again.
“Good old Vansittart, the
glorified12 understudy,” she said to herself. “She can copy all theBulstrode’s tricks. In fact she’s word perfect!”
An enormous and almost incredibly opulent Cadillac, painted in two tones, raspberry fool andazure blue, swept (with difficulty owing to its length) into the drive and drew up behind Major theHon. Alistair Hargreaves’ ancient Austin.
The
chauffeur9 sprang to open the door, an immense bearded, dark-skinned man, wearing aflowing aba, stepped out, a Parisian fashion plate followed and then a slim dark girl.
That’s probably Princess Whatshername herself, thought Ann. Can’t imagine her in schooluniform, but I suppose the miracle will be apparent tomorrow….
Both Miss Vansittart and Miss Chadwick appeared on this occasion.
“They’ll be taken to the Presence,”
decided13 Ann.
Then she thought that, strangely enough, one didn’t quite like making jokes about MissBulstrode. Miss Bulstrode was Someone.
“So you’d better mind your P.s and Q.s, my girl,” she said to herself, “and finish these letterswithout making any mistakes.”
Not that Ann was in the habit of making mistakes. She could take her pick of secretarial posts.
She had been P.A. to the chief executive of an oil company, private secretary to Sir MervynTodhunter,
renowned14 alike for his erudition, his
irritability15 and the
illegibility16 of his handwriting.
She numbered two Cabinet Ministers and an important Civil Servant among her employers. But onthe whole, her work had always lain amongst men. She wondered how she was going to likebeing, as she put it herself, completely submerged in women. Well—it was all experience! Andthere was always Dennis! Faithful Dennis returning from Malaya, from Burma, from various partsof the world, always the same,
devoted17, asking her once again to marry him. Dear Dennis! But itwould be very dull to be married to Dennis.
She would miss the company of men in the near future. All these schoolmistressy characters—not a man about the place, except a gardener of about eighty.
But here Ann got a surprise. Looking out of the window, she saw there was a man clipping thehedge just beyond the drive—clearly a gardener but a long way from eighty. Young, dark, good-looking. Ann wondered about him—there had been some talk of getting extra labour—but thiswas no
yokel18. Oh well, nowadays people did every kind of job. Some young man trying to gettogether some money for some project or other, or indeed just to keep body and soul together. Buthe was cutting the hedge in a very expert manner. Presumably he was a real gardener after all!
“He looks,” said Ann to herself, “he looks as though he might be amusing….”
Only one more letter to do, she was pleased to note, and then she might stroll round thegarden….
III
Upstairs, Miss Johnson, the matron, was busy
allotting19 rooms, welcoming newcomers, andgreeting old pupils.
She was pleased it was term time again. She never knew quite what to do with herself in theholidays. She had two married sisters with whom she stayed in turn, but they were naturally moreinterested in their own doings and families than in Meadowbank. Miss Johnson, though dutifullyfond of her sisters, was really only interested in Meadowbank.
Yes, it was nice that term had started—
“Miss Johnson?”
“Yes, Pamela.”
“I say, Miss Johnson. I think something’s broken in my case. It’s
oozed21 all over things. I thinkit’s hair oil.”
“Chut, chut!” said Miss Johnson, hurrying to help.
IV
On the grass sweep of lawn beyond the gravelled drive, Mademoiselle Blanche, the new Frenchmistress, was walking. She looked with
appreciative22 eyes at the powerful young man clipping thehedge.
“Assez bien,” thought Mademoiselle Blanche.
Mademoiselle Blanche was slender and mouselike and not very noticeable, but she herselfnoticed everything.
Her eyes went to the procession of cars
sweeping23 up to the front door. She assessed them interms of money. This Meadowbank was certainly formidable! She summed up mentally the profitsthat Miss Bulstrode must be making.
Yes, indeed! Formidable!
VMiss Rich, who taught English and Geography, advanced towards the house at a rapid pace,stumbling a little now and then because, as usual, she forgot to look where she was going. Herhair, also as usual, had escaped from its bun. She had an eager ugly face.
She was saying to herself:
“To be back again! To be here … It seems years … ” She fell over a rake, and the younggardener put out an arm and said:
“Steady, miss.”
Eileen Rich said “Thank you,” without looking at him.
VI
Miss Rowan and Miss Blake, the two junior mistresses, were strolling towards the Sports Pavilion.
Miss Rowan was thin and dark and intense, Miss Blake was plump and fair. They were discussingwith
animation24 their recent adventures in Florence: the pictures they had seen, the sculpture, thefruit blossom, and the attentions (hoped to be dishonourable) of two young Italian gentlemen.
“Of course one knows,” said Miss Blake, “how Italians go on.”
“Uninhibited,” said Miss Rowan, who had studied
Psychology25 as well as Economics.
“But Guiseppe was quite impressed when he found I taught at Meadowbank,” said Miss Blake.
“He became much more respectful at once. He has a cousin who wants to come here, but MissBulstrode was not sure she had a
vacancy27.”
“Meadowbank is a school that really counts,” said Miss Rowan, happily. “Really, the newSports Pavilion looks most impressive. I never thought it would be ready in time.”
“Miss Bulstrode said it had to be,” said Miss Blake in the tone of one who has said the lastword.
“Oh,” she added in a startled kind of way.
The door of the Sports Pavilion had opened
abruptly28, and a bony young woman with ginger-coloured hair emerged. She gave them a sharp unfriendly stare and moved rapidly away.
“That must be the new Games Mistress,” said Miss Blake. “How
uncouth29!”
“Not a very pleasant addition to the staff,” said Miss Rowan. “Miss Jones was always sofriendly and
sociable30.”
“She absolutely glared at us,” said Miss Blake resentfully.
VII
Miss Bulstrode’s sitting room had windows looking out in two directions, one over the drive andlawn beyond, and another towards a bank of rhododendrons behind the house. It was quite animpressive room, and Miss Bulstrode was rather more than quite an impressive woman. She wastall, and rather noble looking, with well-dressed grey hair, grey eyes with plenty of humour inthem, and a firm mouth. The success of her school (and Meadowbank was one of the mostsuccessful schools in England) was
entirely32 due to the personality of its Headmistress. It was avery expensive school, but that was not really the point. It could be put better by saying thatthough you paid through the nose, you got what you paid for.
Your daughter was educated in the way you wished, and also in the way Miss Bulstrode wished,and the result of the two together seemed to give satisfaction. Owing to the high fees, MissBulstrode was able to employ a full staff. There was nothing mass produced about the school, butif it was individualistic, it also had discipline. Discipline without
regimentation33, was MissBulstrode’s motto. Discipline, she held, was
reassuring34 to the young, it gave them a feeling ofsecurity; regimentation gave rise to
irritation35. Her pupils were a
varied36 lot. They included severalforeigners of good family, often foreign
royalty38. There were also English girls of good family orof wealth, who wanted a training in culture and the arts, with a general knowledge of life andsocial facility who would be turned out agreeable, well
groomed39 and able to take part in intelligentdiscussion on any subject. There were girls who wanted to work hard and pass entranceexaminations, and eventually take degrees and who, to do so, needed only good teaching andspecial attention. There were girls who had reacted unfavourably to school life of the conventionaltype. But Miss Bulstrode had her rules, she did not accept
morons40, or
juvenile41 delinquents42, and shepreferred to accept girls whose parents she liked, and girls in whom she herself saw a
prospect43 ofdevelopment. The ages of her pupils varied within wide limits. There were girls who would havebeen labelled in the past as “finished,” and there were girls little more than children, some of themwith parents abroad, and for whom Miss Bulstrode had a scheme of interesting holidays. The lastand final court of appeal was Miss Bulstrode’s own approval.
She was
standing44 now by the chimneypiece listening to Mrs. Gerald Hope’s slightly whiningvoice. With great
foresight45, she had not suggested that Mrs. Hope should sit down.
“Henrietta, you see, is very highly strung. Very highly strung indeed. Our doctor says—”
“Don’t you know, you idiot, that that is what every fool of a woman says about her child?”
“You need have no anxiety, Mrs. Hope. Miss Rowan, a member of our staff, is a
fully20 trainedpsychologist. You’ll be surprised, I’m sure, at the change you’ll find in Henrietta” (Who’s a niceintelligent child, and far too good for you) “after a term or two here.”
“Oh I know. You did wonders with the Lambeth child—absolutely wonders! So I am quitehappy. And I—oh yes, I forgot. We’re going to the South of France in six weeks’ time. I thoughtI’d take Henrietta. It would make a little break for her.”
“I’m afraid that’s quite impossible,” said Miss Bulstrode, briskly and with a charming smile, asthough she were granting a request instead of refusing one.
“Oh! but—” Mrs. Hope’s weak
petulant50 face wavered, showed temper. “Really, I must insist.
After all, she’s my child.”
“Exactly. But it’s my school,” said Miss Bulstrode.
“Surely I can take the child away from a school anytime I like?”
“Oh yes,” said Miss Bulstrode. “You can. Of course you can. But then, I wouldn’t have herback.”
Mrs. Hope was in a real temper now.
“Considering the size of the fees I pay here—”
“Exactly,” said Miss Bulstrode. “You wanted my school for your daughter, didn’t you? But it’stake it as it is, or leave it. Like that very charming Balenciaga model you are wearing. It isBalenciaga, isn’t it? It is so
delightful51 to meet a woman with real clothes sense.”
Her hand
enveloped52 Mrs. Hope’s, shook it, and imperceptibly guided her towards the door.
“Don’t worry at all. Ah, here is Henrietta waiting for you.” (She looked with approval atHenrietta, a nice well-balanced intelligent child if ever there was one, and who deserved a bettermother.) “Margaret, take Henrietta Hope to Miss Johnson.”
Miss Bulstrode
retired53 into her sitting room and a few moments later was talking French.
“But certainly,
Excellence54, your niece can study modern
ballroom55 dancing. Most importantsocially. And languages, also, are most necessary.”
The next arrivals were prefaced by such a
gust56 of expensive perfume as almost to knock MissBulstrode
backwards57.
“Must pour a whole bottle of the stuff over herself every day,” Miss Bulstrode
noted58 mentally,as she greeted the
exquisitely59 dressed dark-skinned woman.
“Enchantée, Madame.”
The big bearded man in Oriental dress took Miss Bulstrode’s hand, bowed over it, and said invery good English, “I have the honour to bring to you the Princess Shaista.”
Miss Bulstrode knew all about her new pupil who had just come from a school in Switzerland,but was a little
hazy62 as to who it was escorting her. Not the Emir himself, she decided, probablythe Minister, or Chargé d’Affaires. As usual when in doubt, she used that useful title Excellence,and assured him that Princess Shaista would have the best of care.
Shaista was smiling politely. She was also fashionably dressed and perfumed. Her age, MissBulstrode knew, was fifteen, but like many Eastern and
Mediterranean63 girls, she looked older—quite mature. Miss Bulstrode spoke to her about her projected studies and was relieved to find thatshe answered
promptly64 in excellent English and without
giggling65. In fact, her manners comparedfavourably with the awkward ones of many English school girls of fifteen. Miss Bulstrode hadoften thought that it might be an excellent plan to send English girls abroad to the Near Easterncountries to learn courtesy and manners there. More compliments were uttered on both sides andthen the room was empty again though still filled with such heavy perfume that Miss Bulstrodeopened both windows to their full extent to let some of it out.
The next comers were Mrs. Upjohn and her daughter Julia.
Mrs. Upjohn was an agreeable young woman in the late thirties with sandy hair,
freckles66 and anunbecoming hat which was clearly a
concession67 to the seriousness of the occasion, since she wasobviously the type of young woman who usually went hatless.
Julia was a plain
freckled68 child, with an intelligent forehead, and an air of good humour.
The preliminaries were quickly gone through and Julia was despatched via Margaret to MissJohnson, saying cheerfully as she went, “So long, Mum. Do be careful
lighting69 that gas heater nowthat I’m not there to do it.”
Miss Bulstrode turned smilingly to Mrs. Upjohn, but did not ask her to sit. It was possible that,despite Julia’s appearance of cheerful common sense, her mother, too, might want to explain thather daughter was highly strung.
“Is there anything special you want to tell me about Julia?” she asked.
Mrs. Upjohn replied cheerfully:
“Oh no, I don’t think so. Julia’s a very ordinary sort of child. Quite healthy and all that. I thinkshe’s got reasonably good brains, too, but I daresay mothers usually think that about their children,don’t they?”
“Mothers,” said Miss Bulstrode grimly, “vary!”
“It’s wonderful for her to be able to come here,” said Mrs. Upjohn. “My aunt’s paying for it,really, or
helping70. I couldn’t afford it myself. But I’m
awfully71 pleased about it. And so is Julia.”
She moved to the window as she said
enviously72, “How lovely your garden is. And so tidy. Youmust have lots of real gardeners.”
“We had three,” said Miss Bulstrode, “but just now we’re shorthanded except for local labour.”
“Of course the trouble nowadays,” said Mrs. Upjohn, “is that what one calls a gardener usuallyisn’t a gardener, just a milkman who wants to do something in his spare time, or an old man ofeighty. I sometimes think—Why!” exclaimed Mrs. Upjohn, still gazing out of the window—“howextraordinary!”
Miss Bulstrode paid less attention to this sudden
exclamation73 than she should have done. For atthat moment she herself had glanced
casually74 out of the other window which gave on to therhododendron shrubbery, and had perceived a highly unwelcome sight, none other than LadyVeronica Carlton-Sandways, weaving her way along the path, her large black
velvet75 hat on oneside, muttering to herself and clearly in a state of advanced
intoxication76.
Lady Veronica was not an unknown hazard. She was a charming woman, deeply attached to hertwin daughters, and very delightful when she was, as they put it, herself—but unfortunately atunpredictable
intervals77, she was not herself. Her husband, Major Carlton-Sandways, coped fairlywell. A cousin lived with them, who was usually at hand to keep an eye on Lady Veronica andhead her off if necessary. On Sports Day, with both Major Carlton-Sandways and the cousin inclose attendance, Lady Veronica arrived completely sober and beautifully dressed and was apattern of what a mother should be.
But there were times when Lady Veronica gave her well-wishers the slip, tanked herself up andmade a beeline for her daughters to assure them of her
maternal78 love. The twins had arrived bytrain early today, but no one had expected Lady Veronica.
Mrs. Upjohn was still talking. But Miss Bulstrode was not listening. She was reviewing variouscourses of action, for she recognized that Lady Veronica was fast approaching the
truculent79 stage.
But suddenly, an answer to prayer, Miss Chadwick appeared at a brisk
trot80, slightly out of breath.
Faithful Chaddy, thought Miss Bulstrode. Always to be relied upon, whether it was a severedartery or an
intoxicated81 parent.
“Disgraceful,” said Lady Veronica to her loudly. “Tried to keep me away—didn’t want me tocome down here—I fooled Edith all right. Went to have my rest—got out car—gave silly oldEdith slip … regular old maid … no man would ever look at her twice … Had a row with policeon the way … said I was unfit to drive car … nonshense … Going to tell Miss Bulstrode I’mtaking the girls home—want ’em home, mother love. Wonderful thing, mother love—”
“Splendid, Lady Veronica,” said Miss Chadwick. “We’re so pleased you’ve come. I particularlywant you to see the new Sports Pavilion. You’ll love it.”
Adroitly82 she turned Lady Veronica’s unsteady footsteps in the opposite direction, leading heraway from the house.
“I expect we’ll find your girls there,” she said brightly. “Such a nice Sports Pavilion, newlockers, and a drying room for the swim suits—” their voices trailed away.
Miss Bulstrode watched. Once Lady Veronica tried to break away and return to the house, butMiss Chadwick was a match for her. They disappeared round the corner of the rhododendrons,headed for the distant loneliness of the new Sports Pavilion.
Miss Bulstrode heaved a sigh of relief. Excellent Chaddy. So reliable! Not modern. Not brainy—apart from mathematics—but always a present help in time of trouble.
She turned with a sigh and a sense of
guilt83 to Mrs. Upjohn who had been talking happily forsome time….
“ … though, of course,” she was saying, “never real cloak and
dagger84 stuff. Not dropping byparachute, or
sabotage85, or being a courier. I shouldn’t have been brave enough. It was mostly dullstuff. Office work. And plotting. Plotting things on a map, I mean—not the story telling kind ofplotting. But of course it was exciting sometimes and it was often quite funny, as I just said—allthe secret agents followed each other round and round Geneva, all knowing each other by sight,and often ending up in the same bar. I wasn’t married then, of course. It was all great fun.”
She stopped abruptly with an apologetic and friendly smile.
“I’m sorry I’ve been talking so much. Taking up your time. When you’ve got such lots ofpeople to see.”
She held out a hand, said good-bye and departed.
Miss Bulstrode stood frowning for a moment. Some instinct warned her that she had missedsomething that might be important.
She brushed the feeling aside. This was the opening day of summer term, and she had manymore parents to see. Never had her school been more popular, more assured of success.
Meadowbank was at its zenith.
There was nothing to tell her that within a few weeks Meadowbank would be
plunged86 into a seaof trouble; that
disorder87, confusion and murder would
reign37 there, that already certain events hadbeen set in motion….