Copyright & Information
The Pillow Fight
First published in 1965
© Estate of Nicholas Monsarrat; House of Stratus 1965-2011
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
The right of Nicholas Monsarrat to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted.
This edition published in 2011 by House of Stratus, an imprint of
Stratus Books Ltd., Lisandra House, Fore Street, Looe,
Cornwall, PL13 1AD, UK.
Typeset by House of Stratus.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library and the Library of Congress.
ISBN: 0755131347 EAN 9780755131341
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This is a fictional work and all characters are drawn from the author’s imagination.
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About the Author
Nicholas Monsarrat was born in Liverpool, the son of a distinguished surgeon. He was educated at Winchester and then at Trinity College, Cambridge where he studied law. However, his subsequent career as a solicitor encountered a swift end when he decided to leave Liverpool for London, with a half-finished manuscript under his arm and £40 in his pocket.
The first of his books to attract attention was the largely autobiographical ‘This is the Schoolroom’. It is a largely autobiographical ‘coming of age’ novel dealing with the end of college life, the ‘Hungry Thirties’, and the Spanish Civil War. During World War Two he joined the Royal Navy and served in corvettes. His war experience provided the framework for the novel ‘HMS Marlborough will enter Harbour’, and one of his best known books. ‘The Cruel Sea’ was made into a classic film starring Jack Hawkins. After the war he became a director of the UK Information Service, first in Johannesburg, then in Ottawa.
Established as a sort after writer who was also highly regarded by critics, Monsarrat’s career eventually concluded with his epic ‘The Master Mariner’, a novel on seafaring life from Napoleonic times to the present.
Well known for his concise story telling and tense narrative, he became one of the most successful novelists of the twentieth century, whose rich and varied collection bears the hallmarks of a truly gifted master of his craft.
‘A professional who gives us our money’s worth. The entertainment value is high’- Daily Telegraph
Book One
Ex Afrika
Chapter One
Johannesburg from the air is not like a miniature New York, whatever the South African Tourist Corporation may claim; but its compactness and modestly tall buildings do vaguely recall a stunted Manhattan Island surrounded by sandcastles. The sandcastles, of course, are grown-up toys; they are mine-dumps, to be exact, the yellow dross of a full half-century’s frenetic burrowing for gold. For the rest, it is a sprung up, counter-jumping town, as brash, nervous and noisy as its newest millionaire.
One could never return to it without wondering who had gone broke, who had shot himself, which of one’s best friends had been raped or robbed, who was sleeping with whom, and who, incredibly, was not. But it was still my town, and I loved it dearly. And to set the record straight, no one who lived there would dream of calling it Joburg.
As we dipped and circled for our landing at Jan Smuts Airport the man in the next seat, who had been trying all the way from Cape Town to project his personality (and much else besides) in my direction, leant across and said: ‘Can I help you with your seatbelt?’
He had called me ‘young lady’ eight times in three hours. He had small boiled eyes, bristly hair on the backs of his hands, and a snake’s-head belt straining across a bulging stomach. For me (and perhaps, desolately, for himself) he was a natural Doctor Fell.
‘No, thank you,’ I answered. ‘I can manage.’
‘Is anyone meeting you at Joburg?’
Reacting to ‘Joburg’, and also to the more rare annoyance that he did not know who I was, I answered curtly: ‘Yes.’
‘Your family, eh?’
‘Yes, my family. One Jew, one Greek, and one Afrikaner pansy.’
‘Ha! Ha!’ His hand reached out to pat my knee, and changed its mind halfway. (One of my dearest friends swears that she stubs out her cigarettes on such hands. Myself, I have never gone further than flicking hot ash on them.) ‘The young lady has a sense of humour, I can tell.’
The young lady busied herself making up her mouth, while the youngish gentleman watched her sideways. Presently, remembering the word ‘Jew’ in my last answer, he said: ‘Well, they call it Jewburg, don’t they?’
I paused – eyes to mirror, lipstick to mouth: ‘Who?’
‘That’s what Joburg is called,’ he laboured. ‘Jewburg. Because of all the Jews.’
‘What Jews?’
I said it like that, because yet another of my dearest friends claims that all you have to do in these circumstances is to keep on asking silly questions, until the intruder shies away from the charge of molesting female lunatics. But suddenly I thought: To hell with this clod … I ran my own advertising business, with three branches and an annual turnover of four hundred thousand pounds. I wrote a weekly column that had half the adult delinquents in South Africa permanently scared into good behaviour. Ihad large grey eyes, and the legs that God allowed me. I didn’t have to give anyone a gentle brush-off, not at any time, and especially not when there were anti-Semitic overtones hanging in the air.
Thus, before he could answer, I jumped in, with the necessary vehemence. ‘The Jews made Johannesburg!’ I proclaimed loudly. ‘In fact, they made most of South Africa, too! We’re proud of that. My father, the Chief Rabbi–’ suddenly, alarmingly, I couldn’t remember whether rabbis were meant to be celibate or prolific; but I took a chance, ‘–was the first man to build an opera house on the Witwatersrand!’ (That sounded unlikely, and not only for the fact that it would make me approximately sixty-two instead of twenty-six; but it was a moment for plunging on. If I was going to be a Jewess, I’d be a damned good one, like Jael …) ‘Both Caruso and Melba made their débuts there. Don’t you think that’s something to be proud of? If there are a lot of us in Johannesburg, it’s a bloody sight more than dirty old fascists like you deserve! What the hell do you mean, “Jewburg”? Are you trying to insult me?’
If he hadn’t been strapped in, I swear he would have jumped straight out of the window. Admittedly, I had the advantage, as girls who are prepared to scream and wa
ve their arms always have; but still, I could not repress a warm feeling of accomplishment … His mouth made a wet and foolish ‘O’, which God knows was all I wanted it to do: and then he hunched away from me without another word, while the heads that had swung in our direction turned regretfully back again. In silence we glided down and touched the tarmac, making the sort of landing that South African Airways pilots reserve for their nicest passengers.
I was first off the plane (a man called out: ‘Miss Kate Marais, please!’ and I obeyed, but hesitantly, as a shy young lady should). The wonderful Johannesburg air surrounded me with an immediate, insistent relish as I went down the steps. Johannesburg is 6,000 feet above sea level; it is hot and dry during the day, cool and dry at night; like Mexico, it is ideal for eating, drinking, lovemaking, working, or doing nothing in comfort and elegance.
Only occasionally – say, once every two years – does the roof fall in; then lightning strikes and burns up rows of houses, hailstones as big as the traditional pigeon’s egg shatter tiles and windows, tornadoes rip through the native locations, killing and mutilating anyone who gets in the way.
But today was not one of those days, and as I crossed the airport apron, I felt that fabulous climate invading my lungs, caressing my skin, pricking my spirit. It was no wonder, I thought, that they all behaved so badly here. What else could happen, when one had this daily and nightly injection of potency?
The three figures I had been expecting to see were waving to me from behind the barrier. I waved back, and kissed my hand to my family, the one I had described to the short-winded Casanova on the plane as consisting of a Jew, a Greek, and an Afrikaner pansy. A few moments later, I was with them.
Perhaps only in Johannesburg would one be met at the airport by three men named, respectively, Joel Sachs, Eumor Eumorphopulos, and Bruno van Thaal.
Joel Sachs was all that his name implied: a young, brown-eyed, Johannesburg Jew, smart, hardworking, uniquely honest, capable. He was the Johannesburg representative of Kate Marais Advertising, and I could not have wished for a better man – nor, incidentally, for a nicer person. The Jews in Johannesburg (and I had not been far wrong when I told the man on the plane that they had built this city) fell roughly into three categories: the old-time magnates, who fifty years ago stole more money before breakfast than latter-day, mundane thieves do in an entire lifetime of crime, but who were now monumentally respectable; the cultural strata, who made of this city an oasis of entertainment; and the youngish, smartish operators who knew a good thing when they smelt it.
Joel Sachs, of course, was one of the last. In the cut-throat world of advertising, his knife had so far proved the sharpest, his own throat the most durable, and his sense of timing the most acute. I was very glad to have him on my side, and I hoped – or let’s say I knew – that the feeling was mutual.
Eumor Eumorphopulos was really my favourite man, if a young woman of twenty-six heavily involved in business must have a favourite. He was a Greek (what else, indeed?), about fifty-five, small, compact, indestructible, wonderfully crafty. I don’t know what had brought him to Johannesburg, with empty pockets, thirty years earlier, but he was certainly an asset to this city, and incidentally to me.
Eumor did a little of everything: he owned finance companies, tea-shops, hotels, landscaping firms, bicycle repair shops, garages, bad racehorses, good asbestos mines. Starting from nothing, he still had nothing – in the sense that if you possess or control a million pounds’ worth of property, owe eight hundred and fifty thousand to your creditors, and play the stock market, the horses and the chemmy tables with the balance, you still have nothing.
Eumor had an impeccable financial sense; I had once watched him leaf through a dozen assorted balance sheets, of companies ranging from marginal gold mines to semi-derelict tyre factories, and pick out the only two which, a year later, proved to be solvent. Naturally, those had been the ones that he himself had bought – and, again naturally, he had made his choice in the interval between the second and third acts of an Old Vic production of Hamlet at the Empire Theatre.
We had never been in business together, though four years earlier, when Kate Marais Advertising had just been incorporated, he had been generously helpful. He was always pretending to be my lover, though privately he lamented an uncertain virility with the recurrent and memorable words: ‘But Kate, dar-r-r-ling, it won’t t-r-r-ravel!’ Little wonder that Eumor was my favourite man.
Bruno van Thaal, my ‘Afrikaner pansy’, certainly had no concern about his virility; he had long disdained to put it to the test. I must confess to an inherent affection for homosexuals; they are amusing, well-groomed, gossipy, and above all no bother to a girl. Bruno was that somewhat rare thing, an Afrikaner of taste and sensibility; he was small, slim, good-looking and fundamentally kind-hearted.
His family and mine had landed on these dubious shores about two hundred years earlier; the Marais descendants took to gold-mining, the van Thaals to farming and land speculation. Now (and a student of heredity would doubtless find it intriguing) the last of the Marais was in advertising, and the last of the van Thaals did almost nothing at all, with perverse and continuous enjoyment.
There was, however, one thing which Bruno van Thaal did, and he did it for me, extremely well. My weekly gossip column, carried by the three Sunday newspapers which was all that God and the Dutch Reformed Church allowed us, needed local contributors; although I lived and worked in Cape Town, I tried to cover also the varied misconduct of Johannesburg, Durban, Bloemfontein, and Pretoria. My ‘locals’ (of whom Bruno was one) had to work undercover; there was really no other way in which they could attend the necessary parties, report accurately on what happened, and still be invited out in the future.
Of the four people I had working for me in the field, Bruno was certainly the most dependable, the most observant, and the most malicious. But of course, he had the best material to work on.
My column was written for my own pleasure, and for the edification of those people interested in misbehaviour – a wide readership indeed. Personally, I subscribed to the reputed motto of that merry monarch, King Edward VII: ‘I don’t mind what people do, as long as they don’t do it in the streets and frighten the horses.’ In Johannesburg, they were a trifle inclined to frighten the horses.
There was, indeed, a remarkable amount of high-pressure drinking and casual fornication in this city. It was not as intense, of course, as what went on in Kenya, where the upper crust of ‘white settlers’ really behaved very badly indeed, when judged by anything except farmyard standards. Someone should one day write a little piece called A Day in the Life of a Kenya Nobleman; the quota of drinks downed, maidens overthrown, husbands duped, lovers maimed, and bullets hitting the pillow would overload the most elaborate Bureau of Statistics.
But Johannesburg really did very well, in its own quiet way. There was little or no prostitution – the essential yardstick of a moral community; pleasure was public, violence was funny, and love, above all, was amateur.
All of which made it very easy to write a gossip column – especially with the beady blue eyes of Bruno van Thaal to help me.
Those beady blue eyes were now surveying me, with an appraisal all the more intuitive and feminine for being utterly neuter; I knew that Bruno was taking in every last detail, from gabardine suit (slightly crushed from the flight) to maquillage (repaired as good as new). Finally he said: ‘Kate, you look wonderful!’
‘A man tried to pick me up for three whole hours!’ I said, kissing him.
‘My dear, you must have fainted dead away!’
Eumor swept off his Panama hat, and declared, in his unusual Balkanised English: ‘I kill him to the death! Where is he? How tall?’
‘Nine feet.’
‘I surrender.’
Joel Sachs said: ‘Hallo, Kate! Nice to see you again.’
‘How’s our business?’<
br />
‘Booming.’
‘Darling,’ said Bruno van Thaal, ‘yesterday’s column was really rather naughty, wasn’t it?’
‘I tried to temper justice with malice.’ Out of sight of the others, I winked at him. It had been mostly his own material.
We moved inside the airport building, where it was cooler, and the noise of planes was deadened. A few people greeted me; one of the Customs men whom I knew smiled as he touched the peak of his cap; a mining man, a friend of my father, raised his hat with the courtesy of a much earlier age. Then the good-looking young steward who had elected to carry my stole and my cosmetic-case off the plane, and to collect the other luggage said: ‘All ready, Miss Marais.’
‘You should come up more often,’ said Bruno, as we moved through the dry sunshine towards the car park. ‘Johannesburg is really very ordinary without you.’
‘Four times a year is all that the traffic will bear … How about the party tonight?’
‘All laid on, darling.’
‘I bring a young girl, no?’ asked Eumor.
‘No.’
‘The daughter of my innkeeper?’
‘No … How are the horses, Eumor?’
‘Not so nice as the daughter of my innkeeper.’
‘There’ll be lots of girls there, Eumor,’ Joel Sachs reassured him. ‘You’ll do all right.’
‘But this one is different.’
‘Two heads?’ I asked.
‘With but a single thought,’ said Bruno.
A couple of minutes later we were in Eumor’s fancy-looking Cadillac, driving towards the mine-dumps and the gleaming white towers of Johannesburg.