The Grandmothers

The Grandmothers by Doris Lessing Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Grandmothers by Doris Lessing Read Free Book Online
Authors: Doris Lessing
Tags: Fiction, General
and that.
    ‘Then you should let Mary go,’ said Harold.
    ‘Yes,’ said Molly, on behalf of her sex. ‘It’s not fair.’
    ‘I wasn’t aware I had her tied.’
    ‘Tom,’ said his father.
    ‘That’s not on’ said his father’s wife.
    Tom said nothing. Then he was in bed with Mary. He had slept only with Lil, no one else. This fresh young bouncy body was delightful, he liked it all, and took quiet satisfaction in Mary’s, ‘I thought you were gay, I really did.’ Clearly, she was agreeably surprised.
    So there it was. Mary came often to spend the night with Tim in Harold’s and Molly’s house, all very en famille and cosy. If weddings were not actually mentioned, that was because tact had been decided on. And because of something else, still ill-defined. In bed, Mary had exclaimed over the bite mark on ‘loin’s calf. ‘God,’ said she. ‘What was this? A dog?’ ‘That was a love bite,’ he said, after thought. ‘Who on earth …’And Mary, in play, tried to fit her mouth over the bite, but found Tom’s leg, and then Tom, pulling away from her. ‘Don’t do that,’ he said, which was fair enough. But then, in a voice she had certainly never heard from him, nor anything like it: ‘Don’t you dare ever do that again.’
    She stared, and began to cry. He simply got off the bed and went off into the bathroom. He came back clothed, and did not look at her.
    There was something here … something bad … some place where she must not go. Mary understood that. She felt so shocked by the incident that she nearly broke off from Tom, then and there.
    Tom thought he might as well go back home. What he loved about being ‘up here’ was being free, and that delightful condition had evaporated.
    This town was imprisoning him. It was not a large one, but that wasn’t the point. He liked it, as a place, spreading suburbs of bungalows around a centre of university and business, and all around the scrubby shrubby desert. He could walk from the university theatre after rehearsal and find himself in ten minutes with strong-smelling thorny bushes all around, and under his feet coarse yellow sand where the fallen thorns made pale warning gleams: careful, don’t tread on us, we can pierce through the thickest soles. At night, after a performance or a rehearsal, he walked straight out into the dark and stood listening to the crickets, and above him the unpolluted sky glittered and sparked off coloured fire. When he got back to his father’s, Mary might he waiting for him.
    ‘Where did you get to?’
    ‘I went for a walk.’
    ‘Why didn’t you tell me? I like to walk too.’
    ‘I’m a bit of a lone wolf,’ said Tom. ‘I’m the cat who walks by himself. So, if that’s not your style, I’m sorry.’
    ‘Hey,’ said Mary. ‘Don’t bite my head off.’
    ‘Well, you’d better know what you’re letting yourself in for.’
    At this, Harold and Molly exchanged glances: that was a commitment, surely? And Mary, hearing a promise, said ‘I like cats. Luckily.’
    But she was secretly tearful and fearful.
    Tom was restless, he was moody. He was very unhappy but did not know it. He had not been unhappy in his life. He did nut recognise the pain for what it was. There are people who are never ill, are unthinkingly healthy, then they get an illness and are so affronted and ashamed and afraid that they may even die of it. Tom was the emotional equivalent of such a person.
    ‘What is it? What’s wrong with me?’ he groaned, waking with a heavy weight across his chest. ‘I’d like to stay right here in bed and pull the covers over my head.’
    But what for? There was nothing wrong with him.
    Then, one evening, standing out under the stars, feeling sad enough to howl up at them, he said to himself, ‘Good Lord, I’m so unhappy. Yes, that’s it.’
    He told Mary he wasn’t well. When she was solicitous he said, ‘Leave me alone.’
    From the periphery of the little town, roads which soon became tracks ran

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