Part 15 (1/2)

Out on Regent Street, there were introductions of a sort - this is Edna, this is Ursula, this is Gwen (a different Gwen), this is Tony, Mark, Andrew. They all began walking. They had pulled on an a.s.sortment of capes, outdated military overcoats, one bearskin coat so worn the pale hide showed through in patches. The boy in the French working-man's jacket was now seen to be wearing rope-soled shoes, as well.

'Is it a party?' Denton said.

One of the young men - was it Andrew? - turned and said, 'The d.u.c.h.ess of Devons.h.i.+re's evening salon.' There was laughter.

Denton spent little time with young people. These seemed to him rather puppyish, innocent, the women apparently more mature than the men. There was no sense of who belonged to whom, if such arrangements in fact existed. They seemed rather jolly overall.

Gwen John walked next to him as if he had become her responsibility. Denton said, 'I expected to see your brother at the Cafe Royal.'

'He's in Liverpool.'

Despite himself, Denton laughed. It seemed a strange place for Augustus John, with his earrings and his gypsy hats. She said, 'He took a job teaching. He got married, you know.' It seemed to make her cross; perhaps this was simply her manner, as she and her brother's wife were, she said, old friends. Still, she said, 'Ida's had to give up her painting. I could never do that.'

'Gave it up to be a wife?'

'She's going to have a child.'

They were heading for Charlotte Street. They were all good walkers, and, despite their sometimes overstated idea of themselves as 'different', as decorous as the middle cla.s.s they despised but from which they'd sprung. They stepped aside for other pedestrians, shushed each other when somebody got boisterous, guided an old woman through the Oxford Street traffic. Their goal was a big house that must have once been somebody's prize. Now a rooming house, it had a studio at the top, he was told, although they weren't going that far: their destination was a big, seemingly unfurnished room on the third floor A cheer rose as they came in, the dozen or so people already there clearly eager for these older, real real artists to validate their gathering. The room, he found, was not quite bare (his first sense had been that it was empty except for the dim figures), the walls partly covered with pinned-up drawings 'from the life', the floor with pillows made from the sort of bright sc.r.a.ps the women wore. Two crates were holding up a board with a jug of beer, a large bottle, and a dozen or so mismatched cups and gla.s.ses. Denton found it politic almost at once to pay for a second pitcher of beer, which somebody fetched from 'the Fitz', apparently the local. He was offered a gla.s.s, only slightly grubby, with something from the bottle that was brown, sweetish and disgusting, ostensibly Madeira. artists to validate their gathering. The room, he found, was not quite bare (his first sense had been that it was empty except for the dim figures), the walls partly covered with pinned-up drawings 'from the life', the floor with pillows made from the sort of bright sc.r.a.ps the women wore. Two crates were holding up a board with a jug of beer, a large bottle, and a dozen or so mismatched cups and gla.s.ses. Denton found it politic almost at once to pay for a second pitcher of beer, which somebody fetched from 'the Fitz', apparently the local. He was offered a gla.s.s, only slightly grubby, with something from the bottle that was brown, sweetish and disgusting, ostensibly Madeira.

'Are you the chap looking to identify a girl from some dreadful drawing?' a plump young woman said to him after he'd been around the room once.

'News travels fast.'

'Gwen's told us. I'm Caroline. This is my room.'

'You're at the Slade?'

She guffawed. 'Can't you tell?' She waved at the walls. 'Let's see your horrible drawing.'

She didn't recognize it, but she put her hand through his arm and led him through the crowd, now pretty well filling the s.p.a.ce. One or two of the young men were lolling on the pillows now (in the left ear of one of them, a glint of gold - homage to Augustus John); other men and women were sitting on the floor with their backs against the wall, most of them smoking cigarettes. There was a lot of talk, some laughter. Denton found himself bending down, then squatting as people looked at the drawing. There was only one gas lamp, but candles seemed to be everywhere, the photographic print gaining several spots of wax.

'Oh, I know her,' a small girl with a cat's face said. She had furry eyebrows and light-brown hair that was very like a mane. 'She was in first-year drawing. Tonks made her weep. Of course, Tonks makes everybody weep.'

From across the room, a young man called, 'He never made me weep!'

'You just turned white as a sheet instead, Malcolm.'

'My sheet's grey.' More laughter.

Three other girls crowded around. He had lost Caroline. They remembered Mary Thomason - called by one of them first Thomas then, no, was it Tomkins? - but they knew nothing about her. She had been 'very private', 'young, that's what I kept thinking, she seemed like a child', 'really quite stand-offish - you'd never have found her at something like tonight'.

'Well, n.o.body ever invited her.'

'She was stand-offish.'

Denton said, 'Has anybody seen her in the last two months?'

They talked that over, decided they hadn't, although they were vague about the idea of two months. They were sure she hadn't come back for the new term, but most of them had been gone for the summer. They called to others in the room. n.o.body had seen Mary Thomason for a long while. One rather languid young woman got up off a cus.h.i.+on and came over to him. She had a cool, appraising stare that he decided was really laziness. 'She was doing some modelling, if that matters.'

'Posing?'

They laughed. 'We call it modelling. It's extra money.'

'How did you know she was doing it?'

'We used to chat. She had something new - a hat, I think. She said she'd made some money modelling for a painter and bought the hat. She didn't say which one. There are hundreds.'

'Thousands!' another girl said. People laughed again.

The languorous girl leaned against the wall. 'She said she'd been modelling for an RA. She said he was ”good”. I don't think she knew good art from fried plaice.'

By then, Caroline had brought out a parlour guitar and was singing in some other language, sitting on the floor. This evolved into a form of charades when one of the men draped a shawl over himself and said he was John Singer Sargent's Spanish dancer. People started to make references that Denton didn't understand. He knew it was time to go.

'I want to thank you,' he said to Gwen John, whom he found near the door.

'Did you learn anything?'

'A little. She was modelling for somebody.'

She shrugged. 'We're going to get thrown out soon.' The charades had got noisy.

'I'm going.'

'Wise man.'

He put out his hand. 'I hope we meet again.'

'Perhaps.'

Her steady, genderless gaze reminded him of somebody else. Only when he was in the street did he realize the somebody was Janet Striker.

CHAPTER TWELVE.

'Actually, they were kind of sweet - more like a church social than an orgy.'

Janet Striker chuckled. 'What on earth is a church social?'

'My G.o.d, don't you have those here, either? They're gatherings, socializings, in the church or arranged by the church so people can meet.'

'I don't think the Church of England do that sort of thing.'

'We were Congregationalists. Sometimes there were box lunches - each woman would make a lunch and then they'd be auctioned off - you got to eat with the woman, sort of a picnic-Why are you laughing?'

'I can't picture you at such a thing.'

'Well, I was a kid. In Maine, before the war.'