Gideon said, 'You and Tamar get the car. There's no point in carrying the cases. We'll put them out on the landing. I'll I wait here. Violet might even emerge.'
`She won't. 0 K. Come on, Tamar.'
Gideon and the priest looked at each other. The priest, raising his eyebrows, motioned slightly with his head toward the closed bedroom door. Gideon, expressionless, continued to hold the door open onto the stairs. He said, 'Thank you very much. We'll talk again.'
'Yes.' Father McAlister sighed, then with a wave of his hand set off down the stairs and into the street.
Gideon waited until he heard the front door close. Then lie carefully closed the flat door and went to Violet's bedroom and knocked.
`Violet! They've gone. Come out now.'
After a short time Violet emerged. She had changed her clothes, combed her hair, powdered her nose, removed her glasses. She had evidently been crying, and elaborate powdering round her eyes had made the wrinkled skin pale, dry and dusty. She peered, frowning, at Gideon and he saw over her shoulder the chaotic room which had defeated Pat. She walked across to Tamar's tidy room, moved the table a little, then lifted the plate of'cakes and oflered it to Gideon. He took a cake. They both sat down on the bed. Gideon felt, for the firs time for many years, a sudden physical affection for his old friend, a desire, to which he did not yield, to hug her and o,
Violet's hair, like her daughter's, needed cutting but had been neatly combed and patted into shape. It was still brown, its lustre here and there embellished by single hairs of'a pale luminous grey. Her nose was slightly red at the nostrils, whether from a cold or recent weeping. Her small mouth, now touched by lipstick, was at its sternest. She stroked down her fringe over her brow, over her indelible frown, moulding it inoo shape with a familiar gesture. She had, Gideon reflected, het higher civil servant look. She looked in no way like a defeated woman. In taking Father McAlister's gamble Gideon had feared, perhaps wanted, something rather more weak and pliable. It was a moment for Violet to surrender to fate,
`They'll be back,' said Gideon, 'at least Pat will ring the bell and I'll carry down the cases. The car is a good way off. We've got ten minutes. But of course I'll come in tomorrow.'
Violet said, 'Why did you spring this loathsome charade on me? That creep McAlister was the last straw.'
`It was his idea,' said Gideon not entirely truthfully. The strategy had been the priest's, the tactics certainly Gideon's. `It was a device, you understand.'
`To get Tamar away.'
`Yes.'
`But she could have gone any time, I wasn't keeping her a prisoner!'
`You know, in a way, you were. You had taken away her will. She had to have moral support -'
`To get out in a definite intelligible manner, with a reasonable explanation.'
`You mean sponging on you?'
`She couldn't just cut and run. There had to be a raid by a respectable rescue party.'
`It shows you think nothing of me, you think I'm not a person. That mob pushing their way in here without any warning! You wouldn't do that to anyone else. You feel contempt for me.'
`No, Violet -'
`All of you acting well-rehearsed parts.'
`You were acting too.'
`You think so? It was designed to humiliate me. All right, it was clever. My reactions could have been predicted, all my lines could have been written beforehand. It was like – it was -an attempt on my life.'
`I'm sorry,' said Gideon, 'but look, you don't really mind my paying a bit for Tamar at Oxford?'
`I don't care a hang -'
`Good, that's out of the way -'
`So long as I never see her again.'
`Then there's you.'
`I don't exist.'
`Oh shut up, Violet,
`She hates me. She's always been cold as hell to me, even ito a small child. Obedient, but icy cold. I don't blame her. I hake her, if it comes to that.'
`I don't know about Tamar, I want to deal in certainties. Let's say I'm a person, possibly the only person, who not onk knows you, but loves you. 0 K so far?'
Violet this time, instead of returning a cynical reply, said, `Oh Gideon, thanks for loving me – not that I believe ii actually – but it's useless – it's sour milk – only fit to be thrown away.'
`I never throw anything away, that's why everything I touch turns to gold. Let me help you. I can do anything. just by sheer will power I drove Gerard out of that house in Notting Hill. Look, let's sell this flat, Pat's right, it's awful, it's haunted. Come and live at our place.'
`With Tamar? Being the housemaid? No thanks.'
`You and Tamar must make peace, you both need peace never mind the details – you must live, you must be happy- what's money for after all?'
`It's no good. You're a happy person. Someone like you can't just manufacture happiness for someone like me. I’m finished. You can look after Tamar. That's what this is all about.'
The door bell rang.
`I'll come in tomorrow.'
`I won't be here.'
`Don't terrify me, Violet. You know I care for you -'
`Don't make me sick.' She went out into the hall, opened the flat door, then disappeared once more into her bedroom and locked herself in.
Gideon, hearing Pat call below, lifted the cases out onto the landing. He closed the door of the flat. He said to himself, she won't kill herself. I'm glad I said all those things to her. She'll
Later on, over the gin bottle, she thought, perhaps I
Father McAlister, who had of course no one living nearby to see, was now concerned with getting back to his parish. He was sitting, in an unhappy state of mind, in an underground train. It was easier to set people free, as the world knows it, than to teach them to love. He often uttered the word 'love', he had uttered it often to Tamar. In the thick emotional atmosphere generated by frequent meetings between priest and penitent Tamar had declared