"I'm undressing
farther along. I'm going to bathe with Mrs. Harry Kember."
"Very well." But Mrs. Fairfield's lips set. She disapproved of
Mrs Harry Kember. Beryl knew it.
Poor old mother, she smiled, as she skimmed over the stones.
Poor old mother! Old! Oh, what joy, what bliss it was to be
young....
"You look very pleased," said Mrs. Harry Kember. She sat hunched
up on the stones, her arms round her knees, smoking.
"It's such a lovely day," said Beryl, smiling down at her.
"Oh my dear!" Mrs. Harry Kember's voice sounded as though she
knew better than that. But then her voice always sounded as though
she knew something better about you than you did yourself. She was
a long, strange-looking woman with narrow hands and feet. Her face,
too, was long and narrow and exhausted-looking; even her fair
curled fringe looked burnt out and withered. She was the only woman
at the Bay who smoked, and she smoked incessantly, keeping the
cigarette between her lips while she talked, and only taking it out
when the ash was so long you could not understand why it did not
fall. When she was not playing bridge—she played bridge every day
of her life—she spent her time lying in the full glare of the sun.
She could stand any amount of it; she never had enough. All the
same, it did not seem to warm her. Parched, withered, cold, she lay
stretched on the stones like a piece of tossed-up driftwood. The
women at the Bay thought she was very, very fast. Her lack of
vanity, her slang, the way she treated men as though she was one of
them, and the fact that she didn't care twopence about her house
and called the servant Gladys "Glad-eyes," was disgraceful.
Standing on the veranda steps Mrs. Kember would call in her
indifferent, tired voice, "I say, Glad-eyes, you might heave me a
handkerchief if I've got one, will you?" And Glad-eyes, a red bow
in her hair instead of a cap, and white shoes, came running with an
impudent smile. It was an absolute scandal! True, she had no
children, and her husband... Here the voices were always raised;
they became fervent. How can he have married her? How can he, how
can he? It must have been money, of course, but even then!
Mrs. Kember's husband was at least ten years younger than she
was, and so incredibly handsome that he looked like a mask or a
most perfect illustration in an American novel rather than a man.
Black hair, dark blue eyes, red lips, a slow sleepy smile, a fine
tennis player, a perfect dancer, and with it all a mystery. Harry
Kember was like a man walking in his sleep. Men couldn't stand him,
they couldn't get a word out of the chap; he ignored his wife just
as she ignored him. How did he live? Of course there were stories,
but such stories! They simply couldn't be told. The women he'd been
seen with, the places he'd been seen in... but nothing was ever
certain, nothing definite. Some of the women at the Bay privately
thought he'd commit a murder one day. Yes, even while they talked
to Mrs.
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