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The Lushingtons started eating their way through the slices of mutton, the roasted potatoes, the baked pumpkin, the wads of bicarbonated cabbage. They obviously enjoyed the feudal glory in which they lived.

‘Is Prowse your friend?’ suddenly Mrs Lushington saw fit to ask the jackeroo.

‘We haven’t quarrelled,’ Eddie answered cautiously.

‘Why should they? Poor Don!’ Mr Lushington murmured.

‘A quick-tempered, a passionate man,’ retorted Mrs Lushington, fitting a little of everything on her fork.

They were being watched more intently than ever, Eddie realised, by Mrs Edmonds against the sideboard, and the rather more animal eyes through the hatch.

‘Poor Don — his wife left him,’ Mr Lushington continued.

Marcia replied, ‘We all know that — even Eddie, I imagine, by now. Her leaving was to everyone’s advantage, surely?’

Greg Lushington had spilt some gravy on his already spotted smoking-jacket. He sat rubbing at the place with a napkin.

‘They were wrong for each other,’ he murmured, as though nobody else ever had been. ‘She hated him.’

‘He hated her.’

‘I think he was hoping the little girl might bring them together.’ The litany unfurled, more, you felt, for the Lushingtons’ benefit than their guest’s.

After a while they fell silent, mashing at a shambles of potato and gravy. Mrs Edmonds replenished the glasses with Burgundy of an impeccable French vintage.

On the walls of the mock-Tudor dining room there were several photographs of Greg holding stud rams by the horns, vaguely smiling in the direction of the camera, and one of Marcia astride a show hack, his arched neck almost wholly swathed in ribbons. From beneath the brim of what might have been the dead-green velour at the beginning of its career, she was looking moody in spite of her success. (It surprised Eddie; for Australian women were usually photographed grinning from ear to ear.)

There was a baked pudding with strawberry jam and clotted cream. From his nursery days he seemed to remember it as Queen of Puddings.

‘Don’t you adore food?’ Marcia asked through a mouthful, and only just prevented a trickle of cream from escaping. (A woman of importance, she was allowed sloppy table manners.)

It was obvious that her husband loved, her servants admired her, Mrs Tyrrell enjoyed her patronage, and Prowse considered her a ‘good sort’. It was he, Eddie, who must be wrong in having doubts, while drawn to her as part of an exercise in self-vindication.

It was perhaps how her husband was drawn to undertake those journeys, in Patagonia, down the China Coast, through the foothills of the Himalayas, of which he told at length over coffee and liqueurs afterwards in the drawing room. His wife, who must have heard it many times, yawned an accompaniment to his narrative. The guest listened intermittently.

‘… in Russia they serve tea in glasses. They hold the sugar in their mouths, you know …’

Russian sugar, Swedish fishskin: these were the incidentals which intrigued dear Greg Lushington. While Eddie found himself fascinated by the Oriental poppy in crumpled silk, ever more insufficiently arranged in Marcia’s beige cleavage. She seemed to realise. She kept glancing down, giving the petals a tweak to spread them. The brilliant coat had slipped sideways off one shoulder. She shivered, and righted it. Greater nakedness might have come more naturally to her, but not in midwinter in the Monaro.

Greg Lushington was straying somewhere along the Nevsky Prospect; he closed down after draining his brandy.

Remembering one of his mother’s conventions, Eddie murmured, ‘Delicious coffee’ of the watery stuff they were drinking; then, louder, ‘Any fishskin, sir, to bring out the flavour?’

But Greg Lushington’s rosy jowls had subsided on his velvet lapels.

Marcia sighed. ‘That old Swedish fishskin!’

Seated beside the fire, irritably agitating an ankle beneath her broad sable hem, she bent and picked up her sleeping Maltese dog, to comfort one who was in no need of comforting.

She said, ‘You must find it all very boring.’

‘Why should it be?’ he asked.

It was her turn not to know the answer.

‘I could lend you books,’ she said, ‘if I knew your tastes.’

‘I haven’t felt any inclination to read since coming to “Bogong”.’

‘Then we’ve properly seduced you!’ Her wry smile was directed at the collapsing fire.

As the only conscious male present, perhaps he should put on another log, for Greg had let out the faint sizzle of a snore, followed by a short, querulous fart.

Marcia immediately raised her voice. ‘Don’t you think you ought to go to bed, darling? We know you’re tired. Eddie will forgive you.’

The old boy rose, tottering like an enormous cherubic baby, and said after sliding his hand down one of his protégé’s shoulderblades, ‘Anyway I think I’ll — take a little nap. See you later, everyone.’

After that there was an opening and closing of doors, a lavatory flushed, and a final closing.

Marcia said, ‘He’s taken a great fancy to you. Greg badly wanted a son. I failed him. But he doesn’t hold it against me. He’s a good man in all his instincts. That’s what makes it more dreadful.’

‘Why should it?’ His teeth were chattering.

‘If a man is truly good, he rises above hurt. We’re the ones who are hurt.’

She sat watching her own tossed ankle. ‘What do you think of Prowse?’ she asked.

‘I haven’t thought about him enough.’ He wondered whether she would know he was lying.

‘No,’ she said. ‘Prowse is a human animal. No more. But the poor brute has suffered.’

Marcia too, was shivering, hugging herself more closely inside her Oriental coat.

He bent down and began clumsily stacking logs on the fire.

‘Rather extravagant!’ she twittered.

The fresh logs spat and cracked.

Marcia was leaning forward in the direction of the renewed flames. ‘Do you know about the bogong moth?’

He did of course, but was not allowed to resist the reprise she was launching into, ‘… up into the mountains at a certain time of year, to eat this moth. It’s said to taste rich and nutty …’

Hunched above the crumpled poppy in her beige cleavage, she had parted her lips on the strong teeth, in the gaps between which the downy sacs of moths might have been disgorging their nutty cream.

Marcia herself at that moment was not unlike a great downy moth irrationally involved in an obscene but delicious cannibalistic rite; in which she must involve some other being for his initiation or destruction.

She said, in a very intimate voice, for they were both crouched over the fire, ‘No one has been able to explain to me why you came here. There’s something too fine about you for this kind of life.’

He was balanced again on the razor-edge of motives, between truth and lies. ‘I wanted to live simply for a while. To think things out. Yes, to think.’

She said sourly, ‘You’ve come to the very worst place! It numbs thought, or pinches it out. We’ve hardly one between us.’

‘There’s the country.’

‘Oh, yes, there’s the country!’ She threw back her thick, creamy throat, and closed her eyes, and smiled with the expression of fulfilment which explained what Prowse had said of her. ‘The country itself is what makes it possible — even at its worst, its bitterest. But one needs more than that, surely?’ She opened her eyes and looked at him. ‘Wouldn’t you agree, Eddie Twyborn?’

How false was Marcia Lushington of the grand piano for standing things on, the Spode tureen, the French Burgundy, and mock-Tudor dining room? He couldn’t very well decide for being something of a fake himself.