Greybeard by Aldiss, Brian. Chapter 6. London

The attraction of the house was that it was small, yet had a fairly long strip of ground behind, which led down to the river and a little landing stage. The place would suit them both; Arthur was a keen gardener, she loved the river. It had been so lovely, earlier in the summer, when both she and Algy were feeling a little better, to bundle up in warm clothes and sail on one of the pleasure steamers from Westminster Pier, up or down the river, watching the city slide past. On the river, the feebleness of convalescence had taken on almost a spiritual quality.

She unlocked the front door and moved in, with Venice behind her. Algy trotted off round the back of the house.

“Of course, it looks a bit ghastly at present,” Patricia said, as they walked through the echoing rooms.

“The last owners were nuts on white paint – so colourless! But when it’s redecorated, it’ll be a different proposition. I thought we might knock this wall down – nobody wants a breakfast-room nowadays – and then there would be this lovely view down to the river. Oh, I can’t tell you how glad I’ll be to get out of Twickenham. It’s a bit of London that gets worse every year.”

“Arthur still seems to like it,” Venice said, observing her friend closely as Patricia peered out of a window.

“Arthur’s… well, I know that we’re closer to the factory than we should be here. Oh, of course times are difficult, Venice, and this beastly radiation sickness has left everyone a little depressed, but why doesn’t Arthur buck up a bit? It may sound awful, but he bores me so much nowadays. He’s got this new young partner now, Keith Barratt, to cheer him up…”

“Oh, I know you’re sweet on Keith,” Venice said, smiling.

Patricia turned to her friend. She had been beautiful before her illness and before Frank died; now that her vivacity had fled, it was noticeable that most of her beauty had resided in that quality.

“Does it show? I’ve never said a thing to a soul. Venny, you’ve been married longer than me. Are you still in love with Edgar?”

“I’m not the demonstrative type that you are. Yes, I love Edgar. I love him for many things. He’s a nice man – kind, intelligent, doesn’t snore. I also love him because he goes away a lot, and that eases the relationship. Which reminds me, he’ll be back from his medical conference in Australia this evening. We mustn’t be too long here. I must get back and do something for dinner.”

“You do change the subject, don’t you?”

Through the kitchen window, they had a glimpse of Algy running in long grass, on a pursuit no one else would ever know about. He ran behind a lilac tree and studied the fence which divided this garden from the next. The strangeness of the place excited him; he had spent too long in the familiar enclosure of his bedroom. The fence was broken at one point, but he made no attempt to get into the next garden, though he thought to himself how enjoyable it would be if all the fences fell down in every garden and you could go

where you liked. He ran a stick experimentally along the fence, liked the result, and did it again. A small girl of about his own age appeared on the other side of the gap.

“You’ll knock it down better by pushing it,” she said.

“I don’t want to knock it down.”

“What are you doing, then?”

“You see, my Daddy’s going to buy this house.”

“What a mouldy shame! Then I sha’n’t be able to creep into the garden and play any more. I bet your mouldy old father will mend the fence.”

Leaping to his father’s defence, Algy said, “He won’t, because he can’t mend fences. He’s not a handyman at all. He’s completely useless.” Catching a clearer glimpse of her through the bushes, he said, “Gosh, you’re bald, what’s your name?”

“My name is Martha Jennifer Broughton, and my hair will all grow on again by the time I’m a big girl.”

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