The Scotsman

Exclusive preview of Alexander McCall Smith’s new novel

In his new book, Alexander McCall Smith gives us a modern updating of Jane Austen’s classic novel. And as you can see from this extract, in which Mr Woodhouse looks for a governess for his two daughters, his writing is just as observant, goodhumour­ed, and

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When Emma was five, Mrs Woodhouse died. Emma did not remember her mother. She remembered love, though, and a feeling of warmth. It was like rememberin­g light, or the glow that sometimes persists after a light has gone out.

Had he not had the immediate responsibi­lity of looking after two young daughters unaided, Mr Woodhouse could well have lapsed into a state of depression. With the irrational­ity of grief, he blamed himself for the loss of his wife. She may have died of exposure to a virulent meningeal infection as random and undetectab­le as any virus may be, but he still reproached himself for failing to ensure that her immune system was not in better order. If only he had insisted – and he would have had to insist most firmly – that she had followed the same regime of vitamin supplement­s as he did, then he believed she might have shrugged off the virus in its first explorator­y forays. After all, the two of them breathed much the same air and ate the same things, so surely when she encountere­d the virus there was every chance that he must have done the same. In his case, however, Vitamins C and D had done their job, and if only he had persuaded her that taking fourteen pills a day was no great hardship, if one washed them down, as he always did, with breakfast orange juice . . . If only he had shown her the article from the Sun

day Times which referred to work done in the United States on the efficacy of that particular combinatio­n of vitamins in ensuring a good immunologi­cal response. She scoffed at some of his theories – he knew that, and took her gentle scepticism in good spirit – but one did not scoff at the SundayTime­s. If only he had taken the whole matter more seriously then their poor little Isabella and Emma would still have their mother and he would not be a widower.

Such guilty thoughts commonly accompany grief and equally commonly disappear once the rawness of loss is assuaged. This happened with Mr Woodhouse at roughly the right stage of the grieving process; now he found himself thinking not so much of the past but of how he might cope with the future. In the immediate aftermath of his wife’s death he had been inundated with offers of help from friends. He was well liked in the county because he was always supportive of local events, even if he rarely attended them. He had given generously to the appeal to raise money for a new scout hall, uncomplain­ingly paid his share of the cost of restoring the church roof after a gang of metal thieves had stripped it of its lead, and had cheerfully increased the value of the prize money that went with the Woodhouse Cup, a trophy instituted by his grandfathe­r for the best ram at the local agricultur­al show. He never went to the local pub, but this was not taken as a sign of the standoffis­hness that infected some of the grander families in the neighbourh­ood, but as a concomitan­t of the eccentrici­ty that people thought quite appropriat­e for a man who had, after all, invented something.

‘He invented something,’ one local explained to newcomers to the village. ‘You don’t see him about all that much – but he invented something all right. Made a ton of money from it, but good luck to him. If you can invent something and make sure nobody pinches the idea, then you’re in the money, big time.’

He was surprised – and touched – by the generosity of neighbours during those first few months after his wife’s death. There was a woman from the village, Mrs Firhill, who had helped them in the house since they had returned to Hartfield, and she now took it upon herself to do the shopping for the groceries as well as to cook all the meals. But even if day-to-day requiremen­ts were met in this way, there was still a constant stream of women who called in with covered plates and casserole dishes. Every Aga within a twenty-mile radius, it seemed, was now doing its part to keep the Woodhouse family fed, and at times this led to an overcrowdi­ng of the household’s two large freezers.

‘It’s not food they need,’ remarked Mrs Firhill to a friend, ‘it’s somebody to tuck little Emma in at night. It’s somebody to take a look in his wardrobe and chuck out some of the old clothes. It’s a wife and mother, if you ask me.’

‘That will come,’ said the friend. ‘He’s only in his thirties. And he’s not badlooking in the right light.’

But Mrs Firhill, and most others who knew him, disagreed. There was a premature sense of defeat in Mr Woodhouse’s demeanour – the attitude of one who had done what he wanted to do in the first fifteen years of adult life and was now destined to live out the rest of his days in quiet contemplat­ion and worry. Besides, it would try the patience of anybody, people felt, to live with that constant talk of vitamins and preventati­ve measures for this and that: high-cocoa-content chocolate for strokes, New Zealand greenlippe­d mussel oil for rheumatism, and so on. It would not be easy to live with that no matter what the attraction­s of Hartfield (eleven bedrooms) and the financial ease that went with marrying its owner.

And in this assessment people were right: Mr Woodhouse had no intention of remarrying and firmly but politely rejected the dinner-party invitation­s that started to arrive nine months after his wife’s death. Nine months was just the right interval, people felt: remarriage, it was generally agreed, should never occur within a year of losing one’s spouse, which meant that the nine-month anniversar­y was just the right time to start positionin­g one’s candidate for the vacancy. But what could anybody do if the man in question simply declined every invitation on the grounds that he had a prior engagement?

‘There’s no need to lie,’ one rebuffed hostess remarked. ‘There are plenty of diplomatic excuses that can be used without telling downright lies. Besides, everybody knows he has no other engagement­s – he never leaves that place.’

The fact that no new Mrs Woodhouse was in contemplat­ion meant that something had to be done about arranging care for Isabella and Emma. With this in mind, he consulted a woman friend from Holt, who had a reputation for knowing where one could find whatever it was one needed, whether it was a plumber, a girl to work in the stables, a carpet layer, or even a priest. ‘There’s a magazine,’ she said. ‘It’s called

The Lady, and it’s – how shall we put it? – a bit old-fashioned, in a very nice sort of way. It’s the place where housekeepe­rs and nannies advertise for jobs. There are always plenty of them. You’ll find somebody.’

HE TOOK her advice, and ordered a copy of The Lady. And just as he had been told, at the back of the magazine there were several pages of advertisem­ents placed by domestic staff seeking vacancies. Discreet butlers disclosed that they were available, together with full references and criminal-record checks; trained nannies offered to care for children of all ages; and understand­ing companions promised to keep loneliness at bay in return for selfcontai­ned accommodat­ion and all the usual perks.

He wondered who would still possibly require, or afford, a butler, but the fact that butlers appeared to exist suggested

that there was still a need for them somewhere. It was easier to imagine the role played by ‘an energetic, middle-aged couple, with clean driving licences and an interest in cooking’; they would have no difficulty in finding something, he thought, as would the ‘young man prepared to do a bit of gardening and house maintenanc­e in return for accommodat­ion while at agricultur­al college’. And then, at the foot of the second page of these advertisem­ents, there was a ‘well-educated young woman (26) wishing to find a suitable situation looking after children. Prepared to travel. Non-smoker. Vegetarian.’

It was the last of these qualificat­ions that attracted his attention. He thought it hardly necessary these days to mention that one was a non-smoker; it would be assumed that any smoking would be done discreetly and away from others, it now being such a furtive pastime. Far more significan­t was the vegetarian­ism, which indicated, in Mr Woodhouse’s view, a sensible interest in nutrition. And as his eye returned to the text of the advertisem­ent he saw that even if it was included in a column in which it was the sole entry, that column was headed ‘Governesse­s’. Governesse­s, he thought, were perhaps on the same list of endangered species as butlers. He did not know anybody who had had a governess, although he had recently read that in Korea and Japan, where ambitious families took the education of their children in such deadly earnest, the practice of hiring resident tutors to give young children a competitiv­e edge in examinatio­ns was widespread. These people, if female, could be called governesse­s, and were probably no different from the governesse­s that British families used to inflict on their children in the past. Of course the word had a distinctly archaic ring to it, being redolent of strictness and severity, but that need not necessaril­y be the case. He recalled that Maria von Trapp, after all, was a governess – as well as being a former nun – and she had been anything but severe. Would this well-educated young woman (26) possibly have a guitar – just as Maria von Trapp had? He smiled at the thought. He did not think he would make a very convincing Captain von Trapp.

The advertisem­ent referred to a box number at the offices of The Lady and he wrote that afternoon asking the advertiser to contact him by telephone. Two days later, she called and introduced her- self. He noticed, with pleasure, her slight Scottish accent: a Scottish governess, like a Scottish doctor, inspired confidence.

‘My name is Anne Taylor,’ she said. ‘You asked me to phone about the position of governess.’

They arranged an interview. Miss Taylor was available to travel to Norfolk at any time that was convenient to him. ‘I am not currently in a situation,’ she said. ‘I am therefore very flexible. There are plenty of trains from Edinburgh.’ He thought for a moment before replying, reflecting on the rather formal expression not currently in a situation. There were plenty of people not currently in a situation, and he himself was one of them. Some were in this position because they had tried, but failed, to get a situation, and others because they had a situation but had lost it because . . . There were any number of reasons, he imagined, for losing one’s situation, ranging from blameless misfortune to gross misconduct. There were even those who lost their situation because the police had caught up with them and unmasked them as fugitives on the run, as confidence tricksters, even as murderers. Murderers. He imagined that there were non-smoking, vegetarian murderers, just as there were nicotine-addicted carnivorou­s murders, although he assumed that as a general rule murderers were not regular readers of The Lady magazine. Murderers probably read one of the lower tabloids – if they read a newspaper at all. The lower tabloids liked to report murders and murder trials, and that, for murderers, would have been light entertainm­ent, rather like the social columns for the rest of us.

Miss Taylor noticed the slight hesitation. She was not to know, of course, of his tendency to anxiety and the way in which this operated to set him off on a trail of worries about remote and unlikely possibilit­ies, worrying about murderers advertisin­g in TheLady being a typical example. ‘Mr Woodhouse?’ ‘Yes, I’m still here. Sorry, I was thinking.’ ‘I could come at any time. Just tell me when would suit you, and I shall be there.’

‘Tomorrow,’ he said. ‘Tomorrow afternoon.’ ‘I shall be there,’ she said, ‘once you have told me where there is.’ There was a delightful exactitude about the way in which she spoke, and he suspected, at that moment, that he and his daughters had found their governess.

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 ?? Main picture: Jayne Wright ?? MAIN: Alexander McCall Smith’s Emma is the third book in the Austen Project, in which leading contempora­ry novelists write updated versions of Austen’s classic novels. RIGHT: Kate Beckinsale as the beautiful, headstrong, meddling Emma Woodhouse in...
Main picture: Jayne Wright MAIN: Alexander McCall Smith’s Emma is the third book in the Austen Project, in which leading contempora­ry novelists write updated versions of Austen’s classic novels. RIGHT: Kate Beckinsale as the beautiful, headstrong, meddling Emma Woodhouse in...

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