Alexander drops by to see the pair twice a week, more often than is strictly necessary now. Afterwards he accompanies the group to the pub. He stays late, drinks a pint or two more than the driving limit, to no ill effect. Sylvia remains polite and careful, though always marginally guarded, and occasionally must join her father for a regional dinner party, a wedding in London. Once or twice Rachel has seen her getting out of the helicopter with Thomas — her other life. There seems to be no boyfriend, or she is very discreet. They are all celibate, as far as Rachel can tell, like a band of secular monks. A strange group, too, almost the beginning of a joke: the vet, the Earl’s daughter, the Buddhist South African, and the pregnant wolf-keeper. As for Rachel, she is enjoying the second trimester, the energy, people telling her she is looking well — radiant, even. The extra blood and the weather act like aphrodisiacs. Her libido is high. At night, in the soft-boiled heat of the cottage bedroom, lying on top of the sheet, she imagines all manner of scenarios. The man in the pub in the village near Willowbrook, or Huib’s tent, conveniently located. Idle thoughts, nothing serious in them. It is Alexander who watches her across the table in the pub. It is he who, if she is honest with herself, she fantasises about most often. Her desirable type. Broad, swinging. His reading glasses unnatural on his large face when he signs the quarantine paperwork, a Mallen streak in his hair behind his right ear. He unearths memories of her first times — the unabashed northern lovers of her teenage years. What are the rules now? She is single, though clearly her status is not so simple.
And what of him, his life? He is unsentimental. His wife has been dead three years, of ovarian cancer; he speaks of it intermittently: a two-year decline, the drives to get chemotherapy a county over. Awful, but endured; he is still here, and life rolls on. There is a daughter, who lives with him part-time, and also with a relative nearby — the maternal grandmother. He watches Rachel, sees the obvious, but sees the rest too. His work and war stories are directed at her.
It’s all specialist cattle now on the farms. Belted Galloways. They look very chic in the pasture, but they topple over in the heat like Victorian ladies.
Everyone laughs.
How do you treat them? Sylvia asks gamely.
A tincture of lavender and a nosegay, he says.
More laughter. Rachel returns his gaze. He drains his pint glass and stands.
Right, that’s me. The Westmorland Show starts tomorrow. Ribbons and hats and enormous bollocks. Anyone want a lift home?
You alright to drive? Huib asks.
I surely am.
He is six foot four, substantial, built for it: an agricultural drinker, as they used to say. Rachel stands, too.
I’ll call it a night as well.
Shall I drop you?
I’ll walk.
You sure?
It’s a nice night.
OK. Night, all.
Not disappointment in his tone, nothing so obvious. The opportunity passes.
But the next week, having parked near the enclosure for a legitimate quarantine visit and opting to walk with them to The Horse and Farrier, he is at liberty to accompany Rachel back. Another warm, rusk-scented night. Bats careen in and out of the trees as they walk the wood-lined mile, missing them by inches. The leaves are sibilant in the breeze, and the head of the moon looms on the horizon like an alien silo. It is luxurious walking without coats, without jumpers, as if in another country. At the pub there is a debate about Scottish independence. The polls have tipped — for the first time the majority lies with the yes camp. Austerity measures and healthcare mismanagement have left Mellor, and his government, weak. Surprisingly, Sylvia defends the nationalists; Rachel had assumed her conservative, or at least part of the old order, not a devolutionist.
I’d like to see a shift to more regional power, too, she says. A lot of Cumbria’s needs are not London’s, or Cornwall’s. My concern is what happens in England if they go. Daddy’s party is really struggling as it is.
There’ll definitely be a Tory apocalypse, Alexander says.
Huib, who has been unusually quiet during the conversation, finally comments.
Freedom is exciting — the idea of it. It becomes a force in itself. In South Africa we were really excited about the election in ’94. It’s what happens next that counts. I’m not sure the born-free generation understands what the original plan was when they vote.
The windows of the pub are open; warm night air circulates in. Rachel has never seen Huib look so serious. But neither has she met a South African who is blasé about politics.
Since Mandela’s death, aren’t people reassessing, Alexander asks, about whether or not the vision has been accomplished? What to do to get things back on track?
Well, that’s easily answered: it hasn’t. We have some pretty terrifying youth leaders. Terrifying and popular. It’s a different mindset completely; it’s not pedigree politics.
The mood becomes sombre. They finish their drinks and troop back to the Hall. Huib bids them goodnight and walks towards his river campsite, Sylvia to the big house. Rachel and Alexander head towards her cottage and his car. As they get closer a feeling of disinhibition descends; she offers him some tea.
I’d have a cup of tea, he says.
His tone is not convincing: polite and reserved — perhaps she has misread the signs. He follows her inside and she puts the kettle on, fiddles with cups and teabags. He leans on the counter, looks about. He seems very tall in the low-ceilinged room. She is aware of her plain decorating tastes. The walls are not elaborately adorned: a calendar, on which there are midwife appointments marked, the Chief Joseph carving, an embroidered cloth from Spain — thoughtful souvenir from Lawrence. On the kitchen table is a laptop and a few printed sheets — the eternally unfinished book chapter.
Nice place, he says.
Yes. I was going to look for something else, but I’ve settled in, and there doesn’t seem to be any pressure to leave. I think it probably suits Thomas to have me on site.
Too right, stay put, he says. You won’t want to move when the baby comes, anyway.
His shirt is partially unbuttoned, dark hair beneath. There’s the faint discolouration of sweat in the blue cotton under the arms, a brownish smudge on one of the rolled-back sleeves — something the plastic veterinary apron has failed to deflect, perhaps. She mashes the teabags against the sides of the cups with a spoon, drops them into the sink, bends, and gets the milk out of the fridge. She catches his look as she stands — the bump is sitting entirely to the front and she has not gained weight elsewhere yet; her backside is still as it was. She feels surer.
Not a miffy then, he says.
What?
Milk in first. The Keighley method, as my mother would have said.
No.
I don’t mind. I’m not a true Yorkshireman, just a halfie. It’s been scientifically proven, though — the tea stays hotter if the milk goes in first. So, you’re, what, six months now? Must be an interesting phase. Lots of weird stuff happening?