dust,â she has told me. When I protested to her that in every Indian restaurant Iâve ever been to there are nothing but flouncy curtains with complicated pelmets, she made a face and told me London dust is very nasty stuff, plus nobody bothers to wash such things in this country.
âWhy not a nanny?â asks Stephen now. He is using his most gentle voice, his most loving hands.
âNo. The only thing I like is being with my children.â
âThen why are you so miserable?â he sighs. âItâs ridiculous.â
But it is not ridiculous. I have read how animals react hysterically, sometimes even violently, in the event of imperfect offspring. One night, while watching television, I saw the awful spectacle of a wildebeest born with the tendons in its legs too short. The legs would not straighten and the newborn calf buckled under the clumsy disobedience of his faltering limbs. Five minutes was all it took for a cheetah to find its opportunity. The wildebeest cow circled her crippled calf, bucking and snorting and running her great head low at the lurking cheetah, who seemed almost to gloat at this unexpected opportunity of damaged young. She ran at the cheetah, but the cheetah only dodged and realigned itself closer to the struggling calf. The mother then tried distracting the cheetah, enticing it to chase her. Trotting gently before it, inches from its nose, the wildebeest offered in lieu of her offspring the sinewy meat of her own buckskin hock.
âTurn it off,â I told Stephen. He was sitting in his favouritechair, his feet resting on Emilyâs playtable, his dinner on his lap.
âWhat? Right now? Letâs just see what happens to the calf!â
I took the remote control and pressed the button as though it were a bullet to the cheetahâs heart. âI know what happens,â I said.
3
Stephenâs surname is Marsh. His Uncle Raymond has a family tree that shows the history of the Marsh family right back to a sprawling black-and-white farmhouse in Kent where I was once brought on a sunny August afternoon in order to observe the origins of this great family to which I am wed. The house was a low-ceilinged maze of musty rooms added on over centuries, charming but archaic, a difficult house that needed constant repairs to its thatched roof and, because of planning restrictions, lacked a garage or a paved road to its entrance, which was through a field of cows. The house was impressive, even if it did require a monstrous amount of attention just to remain habitable, and turned my thoughts immediately to such things as lead poisoning and water-borne diseases. What was I supposed to learn from it? I didnât understand. âAh, you wouldnât,â observed Stephenâs father, Bernard, âas you come from a country of immigrants.â
Now the family seat, so to speak, is a post-war brick house in Amersham. It has two bedrooms and a large,anonymous living room with a textured ceiling and lots of ugly brass lamps on the walls; but they can cope with this house, while the other was too much for them now that they are in their later years. Because Bernard is forever spilling tea on the floor, theyâve laid a dark, patterned, low-pile industrial carpet from one end of the house to the other. I am a fan of their new-found practicality, having been subjected to endless numbers of competitively designed terraced houses and roomy flats throughout London. They are owned by Stephenâs colleagues, all of whom have recently had to sell their two-seat sports cars in favour of five-seat Volvos, now that theyâve become parents. As beautiful as I find the fireplaces and polished floors, the thick plaster undulating gently up to vaulted ceilings with all their fine moulded glory, I cannot help being preoccupied with thoughts of inadequacy, as I am indeed a daughter of immigrants. My father, now dead, was the illegitimate son of a Jewish violin
Nikita Storm, Bessie Hucow, Mystique Vixen