a habit.
A habit is all it was as far as Fergal and his aunts were concerned but it was habit enough to satisfy Father Costelloe.
7
Julia
FERGAL HAD BEEN in Ireland almost four years when Julia went away to school. He had been twenty-one that summer and his aunts had given him a party at Coolowen. The Second World War had ended the previous year, rationing was still in place and there were great shortages of everything, but that did not deter the sisters in wanting to celebrate for ‘their dear Fergal’. It was at the party that Julia told him that she was leaving him.
‘I’m going away,’ she said, as though she were an heiress jilting her betrothed.
‘Really,’ said Fergal who did not at all believe her.
‘Yes,’ said Julia, ‘to boarding school. In Dublin.’
As with everything which concerned his elder daughter, her father had formed the view that, when it came to her education, only the best would do and, as a result, he had enrolled Julia in the smartest – and the most expensive – Protestant secondary school in Ireland: Adelaide College in Dublin.
‘Pappy is sending me to Adelady to learn to be a lady,’ she told Fergal. ‘That’s what the school does. It’s not for exams and books.’
Fergal was somewhat discouraged by this piece of information as he thought that Julia, although only thirteen, was already quite lady enough. That did not, however, serve to diminish his interest in her and, during the years she was at school, he remained fascinated. In those years Julia passed briskly through adolescence and marched briskly towards becoming an alluring young woman. Six years later, when she went up to university at Trinity College, she cut a striking and sophisticated figure. Long russet hair, very tall and a figure that was sensuous rather than slim she dressed more formally than other undergraduates – cashmere twinsets, tailored costumes and, always, her mother’s pearls. Sharing with a pair of Roedean girls a spacious top-floor flat in a Fitzwilliam Square house where doctors’ consulting rooms took up the lower floors, she settled on reading ‘Mod Lang’. Not that it was her intention to ‘read’ very much: ‘having a good time’, as she explained to Lydia, was more on her mind.
‘College is not about getting a degree,’ she said. ‘Everyone gets a degree. Going to Trinity is more like “coming out” used to be. You are there to meet people and be seen.’
By this time Julia had put her childhood crush on Fergal behind her – in fact she was rather embarrassed by the memory of it – and, although she was very fond of him, it was as a brother rather than as a beau. For his part, Fergal had never declared himself to Julia. He felt that his constancy and devotedness was enough to make her understand that he wanted her and that he would wait for her.
Julia was to be twenty-one in the summer prior to her final year at Trinity and, without much persuading on her part, her father consented to give her a dance. They discussed it months in advance when Julia was home for Christmas.
‘It’s a proud moment my eldest’s coming-of-age,’ her father said.
‘My actual birthday would be no use as a date for the dance,’ Julia said. ‘By July everyone has disappeared for the summer. It’ll have to be earlier, before the vac.’
‘Is that tempting fate?’ said Willis. ‘After Mama, I’m always terrified of the unexpected.’
‘Otherwise it’s the autumn or winter when it would be much too difficult for people to get down here,’ said Julia. ‘I’ll be inviting mostly Trinity friends.’
It had already been decided that the dance would take place at Knockfane.
Thereafter, Julia made all the plans, although she discussed her decisions with her father. The carpet would be lifted in the drawing room and the dancing would take place there. The sofas and chairs would be moved into the hall. The supper would be laid out in the dining room. All the old paraffin lamps would be brought into service as, with every room in the house having to be lit, the generator could not be relied upon. At the end of the evening hot soup would be served.
‘We’ll have it outside, on the gravel,’ Julia announced.
She had copious other ideas, most of them wildly extravagant, for the success of the evening although, in many cases, she was persuaded by her father to drop them; but in spite of such constrictions, by the time she went back to Trinity after the Christmas vac, there was very little in her head except plans for her dance.
When, therefore – unusually – she telephoned towards the end of February to say she was coming down to Knockfane for the weekend, her father and Lydia – who was home from her school in Westport for half-term – assumed it was because she had come up with some other fanciful notion and that she wanted to sound their opinions. They were looking forward to hearing what it might be but on the drive out to Knockfane – they had both gone in to Liscarrig to meet her from the bus – Julia did not mention a thing. It was the same over tea: nothing. As they sat by the fire that night, she was very quiet and not herself at all. Assuming that she was tired after the trip from Dublin, Pappy turned on the wireless and they listened to a play, but when it was half over Julia announced that she was going up to bed.
‘I’ll get you a hot jar,’ Lydia said, ‘the bed might be a bit damp although Rose had the windows open all afternoon to air the room.’
‘I’ll manage,’ said Julia.
She kissed her father.
‘Goodnight Pappy dear,’ she said.
‘She seems out of sorts,’ he said to Lydia when Julia had left the room.
‘She’s probably just tired,’ said Lydia, ‘she has quite a hectic life, from what we hear.’
They returned to the play and listened in silence. When it was over, they turned off the wireless.
‘Time for bed,’ said Willis.
They climbed the stairs together. Lydia had a book with her. Under the influence of the other girls at school, she had lately developed a taste for novels of light romance and it was in just such a volume that she was engrossed that weekend. She was still reading when, at quite a late hour, Julia knocked at her door and came into her bedroom.
‘Darling Lydia,’ she said.
She threw herself into Lydia’s bed. Then she broke down sobbing, clasping Lydia to her, and shivering. She remained like that for several minutes. Lydia’s book fell to the floor.
‘Julia,’ said Lydia, ‘what on earth …?’
She was unaccustomed to such effusiveness from her sister and did not know what to say. Julia continued crying.
‘Is it about the dance?’ said Lydia. ‘Has Pappy refused you something?’
‘There’ll be no dance …’ said Julia.
She wailed.
‘… no party, no twenty-first. None. Ever.’
8
The Law Society Ball
JULIA KNEW THAT Lydia had always admired her. It suited Julia that Lydia did so and it suited her even more to know that Lydia also depended upon her. What Julia did not know was that she also depended on Lydia and at no time did she depend on Lydia quite so much as on the night she came into her sister’s bedroom and announced, amid howling and sobbing, that there would be ‘no dance, no party, no twenty-first. None. Ever.’
Lydia was astonished by the statement. She had been caught up in all the arrangements for the dance and, as she had none of her father’s worries that Julia’s plans were too extravagant and few of Julia’s anxieties that her Pappy’s concerns were too restrictive, she had been borne along on a cloud of enthusiastic impartiality as all the details were decided. Even if it had been her own coming of age that was being planned, Lydia could not have been more excited and