‘Surely you don’t imagine that I’m keeping him,’ said Julia, with a ringing laugh.
‘I don’t imagine anything, darling. Other people do.’
Julia liked neither the words Dolly spoke nor the way she said them. But she gave no sign of her uneasiness.
‘It’s too absurd. He’s Roger’s friend much more than mine. Of course I’ve been about with him. I felt I was getting too set. I’m tired of just going to the theatre and taking care of myself. It’s no life. After all if I don’t enjoy myself a little now I never shall. I’m getting on, you know, Dolly, it’s no good denying it. You know what Michael is; of course he’s sweet, but he is a bore.’
‘No more a bore than he’s ever been,’ said Dolly acidly.
‘I should have thought I was the last person anyone would dream would have an affair with a boy twenty years younger than myself.’
‘Twenty-five,’ corrected Dolly. ‘I should have thought so too. Unfortunately he’s not very discreet.’
‘What do you mean by that?’
‘Well, he’s told Avice Crichton that he’ll get her a part in your next play.’
‘Who the devil is Avice Crichton?’
‘Oh, she’s a young actress I know. She’s as pretty as a picture.’
‘He’s only a silly kid. I suppose he thinks he can get round Michael. You know what Michael is with his little bits.’
‘He says he can get you to do anything he wants. He says you just eat out of his hand.’
It was lucky for Julia that she was a good actress. For a second her heart stood still. How could he say a thing like that? The fool. The blasted fool. But recovering herself at once she laughed lightly.
‘What nonsense! I don’t believe a word of it.’
‘He’s a very commonplace, rather vulgar man. It’s not surprising if all the fuss you’ve made of him has turned his head.’
Julia, smiling good-naturedly, looked at her with ingenuous eyes.
‘But, darling, you don’t think he’s my lover, do you?’
‘If I don’t, I’m the only person who doesn’t.’
‘And do you?’
For a minute Dolly did not answer. They looked at one another steadily, their hearts were black with hatred; but Julia still smiled.
‘If you give me your solemn word of honour that he isn’t, of course I’ll believe you.’
Julia dropped her voice to a low, grave note. It had a true ring of sincerity:
‘I’ve never told you a lie yet, Dolly, and I’m too old to begin now. I give you my solemn word of honour that Tom has never been anything more to me than just a friend.’
‘You take a great weight off my mind.’
Julia knew that Dolly did not believe her and Dolly was aware that Julia knew it. She went on.
‘But in that case, for your own sake, Julia dear, do be sensible. Don’t go about with this young man any more. Drop him.’
‘Oh, I couldn’t do that. That would be an admission that people were right in what they thought. After all, my conscience is clear. I can afford to hold my head high. I should despise myself if I allowed my behaviour to be influenced by malicious gossip.’
Dolly slipped her feet back into her shoes and getting her lipstick out of her bag did her lips.
‘Well, dear, you’re old enough to know your own mind.’
They parted coldly.
But one or two of Dolly’s remarks had been somewhat of a shock to Julia. They rankled. It was disconcerting that gossip had so nearly reached the truth. But did it matter? Plenty of women had lovers and who bothered? And an actress. No one expected an actress to be a pattern of propriety.
‘It’s my damned virtue. That’s at the bottom of the trouble.’
She had acquired the reputation of a perfectly virtuous woman, whom the tongue of scandal could not touch, and now it looked as though her reputation was a prison that she had built round herself. But there was worse. What had Tom meant by saying that she ate out of his hand? That deeply affronted her. Silly little fool. How dare he? She didn’t know what to do about it either. She would have liked to tax him with it. What was the good? He would deny it. The only thing was to say nothing; it had all gone too far now, she must accept everything. It was no good not facing the truth, he didn’t love her, he was her lover because it gratified his self-esteem, because it brought him various things he cared for and because in his own eyes at least it gave him a sort of position.
‘If I had any sense I’d chuck him.’ She gave an angry laugh. ‘It’s easy to say that. I love him.’
The strange thing was that when she looked into her heart it was not Julia Lambert the woman who resented the affront, she didn’t care for herself, it was the affront to Julia Lambert the actress that stung her. She had often felt that her talent, genius the critics called it, but that was a very grand word, her gift, if you like, was not really herself, not even part of her, but something outside that used her, Julia Lambert the woman, in order to express itself. It was a strange, immaterial personality that seemed to descend upon her and it did things through her that she did not know she was capable of doing. She was an ordinary, prettyish, ageing woman. Her gift had neither age nor form. It was a spirit that played on her body as the violinist plays on his violin. It was the slight to that that galled her.
She tried to sleep. She was so accustomed to sleeping in the afternoon that she could always drop off the moment she composed herself, but on this occasion she turned restlessly from side to side and sleep would not come. At last she looked at the clock. Tom often got back from his office soon after five. She yearned for him; in his arms was peace, when she was with him nothing else mattered. She dialled his number.
‘Hulloa? Yes. Who is it?’
She held the receiver to her ear, panic-stricken. It was Roger’s voice. She hung up.
19
NOR did Julia sleep well that night. She was awake when she heard Roger come in, and turning on her light she saw that it was four. She frowned. He came clattering down the stone stairs next morning just when she was beginning to think of getting up.
‘Can I come in, mummy?’
‘Come in.’
He was still in his pyjamas and dressing-gown. She smiled at him because he looked so fresh and young.
‘You were very late last night.’
‘No, not very. I was in by one.’
‘Liar. I looked at my clock. It was four.’
‘All right. It was four then,’ he agreed cheerfully.
‘What on earth were you doing?’
‘We went on to some place after the show and had supper. We danced.’
‘Who with?’
‘A couple of girls we picked up. Tom knew them before.’
‘What were their names?’
‘One was called Jill and one was called Joan. I don’t know what their other names were. Joan’s on the stage. She asked me if I couldn’t get her an understudy in your next play.’
At all events neither of them was Avice Crichton. That name had been in her thoughts ever since Dolly had mentioned it.
‘But those places aren’t open till four.’
‘No, we went back to Tom’s flat. Tom made me promise I wouldn’t tell you. He said you’d be furious.’
‘Oh, my dear, it takes a great deal more than that to make me furious. I promise you I won’t say a word.’
‘If anyone’s to blame I am. I went to see Tom yesterday afternoon and we arranged it then. All this stuff about love that one hears about in plays and reads in novels. I’m nearly eighteen. I thought I ought to see for myself what it was all about.’
Julia sat up in bed and looked at Roger with wide, inquiring eyes.
‘Roger, what do you mean?’
He was composed and serious.
‘Tom said he knew a couple of girls who were all right. He’s had them both himself. They live together and so we phoned and asked them to meet us after the show. He told them I was a virgin and they’d better toss up for me. When we got back to the flat he took Jill into the bedroom and left me the sitting-room and Joan.’