LOVE SONGS IN AGE
A gentle romance. The sex, when it arrives, is relatively short but hopefully sweet - I suspect, just as in life, you'll wish there was a tiny bit more of it
At the end of the summer it was clear that David was too sick to manage on his own, so I packed in my job and moved in with him. He protested, of course, but I told him it was a horrible school and I was planning to leave anyway. This wasn't really true and he knew it, but he pretended to believe me.
I got a few small jobs doing private tuition. Mainly English, some history, even a little mathematics. A mixture of students, aged between fourteen and eighteen. Some brats, some nice ones. About what you'd expect. Even with my modest savings it wasn't quite enough and after a couple of months the money was starting to run out fast.
So I was on my best behaviour when I was summoned to meet the Haverstocks. They lived in a very smart part of London where property prices started at eye-watering and moved up from there into the region of the utterly obscene.
I like to think I'm open-minded but, as I waited for their door to open, I suspected that: a) Mr Haverstock worked in the City, b) Mrs Haverstock would be one of those younger wives who enjoyed spending their husband's money, and c) their offspring would be spoilt, unpleasant and probably unteachable.
I was immediately proven right on the first of these. Mr Haverstock did work in the City. He was a monosyllabic man in his sixties, given to staring at you in a cold, unfriendly way, like a butcher eyeing up a side of beef. Mrs Haverstock -- "call me Gillian" -- more than compensated by gushing endlessly about how frightfully interesting everything was and how fortunate I was to be able to spend so much time reading books and studying. I resisted the temptation to say that she probably had much more leisure time than I did. And yes, she was a good twenty years younger than her husband.
And then there was Isobel, who sat quietly and sullenly and said next to nothing. She was tall for a girl. I'm over six foot and the top of her head would easily have been level with my shoulder. I glanced at her a few times as we spoke about what they were looking for but only once did she hold my gaze and then just for a moment before looking away again. She was slim and moderately pretty but there was a kind of unattractive lethargy about her. Her eyes, for that split second, were vacant and contemptuous. I sensed -- no, I knew - that lessons with her would be frustrating and unrewarding.
But we needed the money and so I smiled and said what I hoped were the right things. Yes, I could cover both English and history up to pre-university level. Yes, I could work with Isobel over the next three months to coach her for the re-takes of her examinations. Yes, I would be happy to do extra sessions each week to try and give her the best possible chance of passing. Yes, I could give them references.
We all smiled rather falsely at each other as the interview concluded. They had some other tutors to see and they would be in touch. I suspected that, unlike most other parents, they would actually follow up on my references. Mr Haverstock had that air of somebody who didn't leave things to chance. Half of me hoped that actually I wouldn't get the job. Still... double sessions meant quite a lot of extra money coming in. And the possibility, I suspected, of a bonus if I got her through the exams. Though that seemed a tall order.
I went home and told David all about it. He was more positive -- he always was -- and said that not only would I get the job, it wouldn't be anything like as bad as I feared.
"So... you're not saying it'll be good? Just... not as bad as all that?"
"Kind of." David grinned at me. "I mean... it'll probably be shit. Just not as shit as you think it'll be."
"Thanks," I said. "You're a real rock."
Then I kissed him, and helped him undress and get to bed.
**
"OK," I said. "You got an E in English and an E in history and an A in art."
She nodded. Though the lethargy was still there, even more pronounced now, and it was a very faint nod.
"An A in art is very impressive," I said. "I'd like to see some of your work sometime."
She just looked at me, more openly contemptuous now.
"And in order to get into college, you need to get those E's up to at least C's."
I knew this already, she knew I knew it, but I was trying to get some kind of conversation going, to establish some kind of common goal we could work towards. It wasn't working.
She sighed. "It's a waste of time. It's OK if we just sit here. Read a book or something. Whatever."
"Why is it a waste of time?"
She fiddled with her hair. "Because I'm stupid. There's no way I can do it. The only reason they even let me go to college to sit these exams is because Daddy's got so much money. But I'm never going to pass history or English. Not in a billion years."
I nodded thoughtfully.
"Do you read?" I asked.
"What?"
"Do you read? Books."
"Yeah. Of course. But... I just read crap. Mummy always says I read total trash, but she likes it herself too, I know she does.
"Me too," I said. "Sometimes a good trashy book is just what I want."
"Wow," she said sarcastically. "We're really connecting, aren't we? Well done!"
I laughed at that.
"You're right," I said. "We have nothing in common. Except... we both read books. And that's something. That gives you a chance, if you want to take it."
She looked at me, contempt still predominant but a little more questioning this time. "That's bullshit. And you know it."
"I don't think so. But we've got three months to find out. What are you reading at the moment?"
She looked surprised. "What does that matter?"
"Just tell me, if you don't mind. So - what are you reading at the moment?"
She reached into the bag beside her and rather diffidently pulled out a battered paperback.
The Gatekeeper's Daughter.
By an Elizabeth Jones. I picked it up and read the blurb on the back. Apparently it was a "racy historical romance." It sounded completely awful.
"You've nearly finished it," I said, noting the folded down page corner about three quarters of the way through. "Are you a fast reader?"
"Stuff like this, sure. I'll probably finish it tonight."
"Good. I'll pick up a copy on the way home. We can discuss it tomorrow."
For the first time she looked genuinely surprised. "What's the point of that? They're not going to ask me questions about that in the exam, are they?"
"Humour me," I said. "It'll be more fun than talking about Shakespeare, don't you think?"
She shrugged. It was a gesture I was becoming familiar with. "Fine. You're the... teacher." This last word was delivered with an icy scorn.
"One more question. Of the books you did have to read for the exams, which one did you like best? Or... which one did you hate the least, if that's easier."
She twiddled with her hair, suspicious of the question but not able to find an immediate reason not to answer it.
"
The Rainbow
was OK. I mean, it was boring in places, but... yeah, it was OK."
I wanted to press her for more, I sensed there had been something else lurking in that sentence that she'd decided not to say. But that could wait.
"OK," I said. "I'll see you tomorrow."
Again she looked surprised. "You're going already? I thought you were supposed to be here for three hours."
It was my turn to shrug. "Not today. I want to go and read that book you're reading. And I need to go through my notes on
The Rainbow
again."
I got up to go. She looked indignant.
"Are you going to charge my Dad for the whole three hours?"
"Are you going to tell him he shouldn't pay me?"