CHAPTER
THREE
Donald Prescott was by
nature an eccentric. He was also a
wealthy bachelor who spent a great deal of time photographing models for both
native and foreign magazines. One of the
models he photographed most often, whether dressed or undressed, was Harding's
current girlfriend, Carol Jackson, whose slim though shapely figure he
particularly admired. She was also
popular with the editors of a variety of successful men's magazines, and this
fact had led to the formation of a sort of Carol Jackson industry for which,
apparently, there was never any shortage of custom. Whatever the presentation, she could be
depended upon to excite curiosity. And
Donald Prescott, her favourite photographer, knew how to make the most of
her. He was a dab hand at exploiting women!
At forty-five he was securely established in his chosen
profession, able to pick and choose as he thought fit, and no less able to
indulge those favourite eccentricities of his which had earned him almost as
great a reputation as his camera. Among
their number was the establishment of the 'Rejection Club' for young or
aspiring authors who had garnered more than fifty rejection slips from
publishers, which met twice a month in the drawing room of his South Hampstead
residence, and whose members spent the greater part of the meeting discussing
literature and philosophy, their own and everyone else's. At present, the club membership numbered
about forty, a majority of whom had around 50-100 rejection slips to their
name, though a few had as many as 200 or more.
What, besides eccentricity, had prompted Prescott to start the club was
a desire to find out more about the difficulties aspiring authors were
confronted with, and to ascertain whether rejections followed as a consequence
of a given writer's work being bad or good, insufficiently commercial or
insufficiently accomplished, too truthful or too illusory, and so on. Having received approximately fifty
rejections from a variety of publishers during the three years he had spent,
before turning to photography, as an aspiring author, he wanted to discover
whether there were others who'd had as little luck as himself and, if so, for
what reasons? Thus he placed a number of
advertisements in local newspapers and magazines to the effect that he intended
to start a club for people with fifty or more rejection slips to their name, in
order that they could get together on a fortnightly basis to discuss their
problems, find out where, if anywhere, they were going wrong, and, if they
couldn't rectify anything, at least obtain some mutual consolation and
encouragement from one another.
All this had occurred some ten years ago and duly resulted in a
steady flow of people in-and-out of the club, most of whom only stayed a few
weeks but some of whom, warming to the hospitality and sympathy they received
there, were of the opinion that it was in their interests to stay much
longer. The condition of entry did,
however, necessitate that one should produce evidence, in the form of rejection
slips, to prove one's work had in fact been rejected at least fifty times, in
order to preclude the possibility of anyone's bluffing their way into it. But once this fact had been demonstrated, one
was free to come and go at one's leisure.
Contrary to Prescott's initial suspicions, a majority of the
struggling authors who frequented his house on this basis weren't imbeciles or
amateurish duffers who couldn't write to save their skins but, on the contrary,
highly-gifted and serious-minded people whose work tended to be either insufficiently
commercial to pander to popular taste or, in some cases, detrimental to
bourgeois interests and the class system which favoured the rich and
high-profiled, including those with a public school and university background,
at the expense of the poor and downtrodden, who, excluded from the more
glamorous or influential forms of employment, could never or rarely get
sufficient media or other publicity to make them a desirable prospect from a
publisher's point of view. Indeed, it
had completely taken him by surprise to discover that so many intelligent
writers regularly had work rejected because it was either too scholarly, too
philosophical, too ideologically radical, too complex, too outspoken, too
satirical, too ethnic, or even too revolutionary in its treatment of plot,
characterization, style, grammar, etc., for general dissemination within the
commercial framework of the free market.
Indeed, as the club developed and its members became more
intimate, a kind of anti-popular campaign was launched in which they vowed to
write contemptuously of established authors who specialized in and profited
from crime, thriller, war, horror, spy, and occult stories, kow-towing to
popular predilections with an opportunistic blatancy totally unworthy of a
cultured and discriminating turn-of-mind!
Such authors, particularly the most commercially successful of them,
were unanimously regarded as the literary scum-of-the-earth, and poster-size
reproductions of their fame-wallowing faces were duly tacked to the walls and
exposed to graphic disfigurement and verbal abuse as a reminder of just how
contemptible they were. And, by way of
reminding themselves of their common cause against commercial trash, the
'Rejection Club' sported, in large letters on a wooden plaque which hung over
the drawing-room's mantelpiece, a reassuring quotation from The Soul of Man Under
Socialism by Oscar Wilde, which read: 'No country produces such badly
written fiction, such tedious common work in the novel form, such silly, vulgar
plays as England. It must necessarily be
so. The popular standard is of such a
character that no artist can get to it.
It is at once too easy and too difficult to be a popular novelist. It is too easy, because the requirements of
the public as far as plot, style, psychology, treatment of life, and treatment
of literature are concerned are within the reach of the very meanest capacity
and the most uncultivated mind. It is
too difficult, because to meet such requirements the artist would have to do
violence to his temperament, would have to write not for the artistic joy of
writing, but for the amusement of half-educated people, and so would have to suppress
his individualism, forget his culture, annihilate his style, and surrender
everything that is valuable in him.'
Thus read the very pertinent and admirably anti-commercial quotation
with which the club members sought, under Prescott's moral guidance, to boost
their morale and strengthen their resolve never to capitulate to the
pseudo-cultural enemy, whatever his
class, but to carry-on fighting against him in the name of art, truth, spirit,
intelligence, honesty, courage, idealism, etc., to the bitter end or,
preferably, until such time as an ultimate victory had been won and everything
low and mean was systematically consigned to the rubbish bin of commercial
history. That Oscar Wilde had fought
against this enemy to the bitter end, they fully realized. But so, too, had other such 'saints' of their
'church' as Baudelaire, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Huysmans, James Joyce, Aldous
Huxley, Hermann Hesse, Henry Miller, Lawrence Durrell, and Thomas Mann, so that
it was with such courageous names as these in mind that they continued to write
and dispatch typescripts not guaranteed to solicit popular endorsement.
Yet there was also another side to the club's attitude towards
commercial literature which, initiated by Prescott himself, took the form of an
imaginative sympathy for those exceptional publishers who, less overly
exploitative than the majority of their competitors, would much rather have
published only works of cultural and literary value but were obliged, through
force of economic necessity, to kow-tow to commercial criteria and only publish
such books as could be expected to appeal to a wide public. Here it was not so much the author whose
work, though intrinsically valuable in itself, had been regularly rejected whom
one was expected to sympathize with, as the publisher who suffered nightmares
of depression and humiliation at having to publish so much rubbish, novelistic
or otherwise, simply to make ends meet, and who, deep down, would rather have
published only what he knew to be artistically and/or culturally
meritorious. Instead of which, the
cut-throat circumstances of life in a capitalist economy obliged him to earn
the privilege of bringing out a few genuinely valuable books by publishing a
host of trashy ones - much to his personal dissatisfaction!
Yes, in order not to become too prejudiced against publishers,
and thereby run the risk of losing all track of economic reality, Donald
Prescott reminded his fellow-rejects, from time to time, of the difficulties
they faced, and of the noble intentions which the most reputable firms always
harboured. The literary saint who
suffered all manner of tortuous misgivings and reserves in the face of
commercial pressures had to be juxtaposed with the well-intentioned publisher
who, no less frequently, suffered all manner of tortuous misgivings and
reserves in the face of economic pressures, before one could hope to get the
two in perspective and arrive at anything like a reasonable viewpoint. Otherwise one would be deceiving oneself and
doing a grave injustice to both author and publisher alike! Yet this didn't mean to say that, as a
writer, one should therefore 'sell out', by sacrificing one's creative
principles, and automatically commit literary suicide. If one had any creative principles at all, it
was one's duty as an artist to stick by them in order not to allow commercial
pressures and temptations to get the better of one. For if one didn't, there could be no question
of work of intrinsic literary value ever being produced by one again! One would simply be reduced to the
contemptible status of the literary riffraff - a victim of the democratic mob
and an enemy of the spirit! There could
be no question of any member of the 'Rejection Club' becoming that!
Such, at any rate, was how
Concerning Donald Prescott's other main eccentricities,
however, it is perhaps wiser not to speak at all. Although it might prove of passing interest
to the odd person, here and there, to learn that he was possessed of a marked
predilection for women's underclothes, particularly panties, which he collected
with a zeal and pride not far removed from what a collector of books or records
might experience with each new addition to his collection of cultural
artefacts. Not that he went into ladies'
underwear shops and actually bought them over the counter or anything like
that. Oh no! They came to him via the models, including
Carol Jackson, whom he had at one time or another succeeded in seducing (and he
had succeeded in seducing the great majority of them). One pair of panties from each model was his
requirement which, once acquired and pegged to a clothesline in one of his
spare upstairs rooms, became for him the equivalent of what a scalp must have
been to a Red Indian in the bad old days of intertribal or colonial warfare -
namely an object of conquest.
Altogether, since he first began collecting them, just over six
years ago, he now had some 330 pairs of assorted panties dangling in parallel
rows of different height across the large room in which he chose to keep them -
panties of every shape, size, and colour, with a number of G-strings thrown-in
for good measure. And to each item
exhibited in this provocative fashion was appended a small cotton tag bearing,
in neatly printed block capitals, the forename of its original owner, together
with the date of surrender. Thus one
might have encountered, in this extraordinary museum of women's briefs, upwards
of twenty exhibits bearing the name Susan, sixteen the name Christine, twelve
the name Margaret, ten the name Carol, and so on, right the way down to those
specimens which were as yet unduplicated, but bore such interesting and exotic
names as Norma, Jayshree, Yogini, Shobhana, Shahla, Alia, Isik, and
Anne-Marie. To be sure, the genuine
connoisseur of panties could hardly have failed to be impressed by this
collection, were he granted the good fortune to be escorted around the 'Panties
Museum' - as Prescott liked to call it - by the curator-in-residence himself
and invited to scrutinize the exhibits to his heart's content, listening all
the while to the running commentary provided by his host as a means to
enlightening him as to the character and quality of their original owners, not
to mention the dubious means by which they had been acquired! Such an unprecedented spectacle could hardly
have failed to elicit at least some enthusiasm from the guest whose privilege
it was to witness what Prescott proudly referred to as 'The finest private
collection of assorted female briefs in Western Europe', even if the
accompanying invitation to take a sniff at as many of them as he pleased in
order to verify, where possible, the authenticity of their current owner's
claims, wasn't guaranteed to meet with his wholehearted approval! For it had occurred to a few sceptics, when
confronted by these exhibits for the first time, to doubt the genuineness of
Prescott's claims and to question whether he hadn't simply bought them all in
various shops, at one time or another, appended name tags to them, and then
cold-bloodedly invented some cock-and-bull story about his conquests, together
with equally spurious information regarding the characters and physical
qualities of the young women concerned, the better to impress his
visitors. But the doubts of the sceptics
- for the most part elderly males unwilling to believe their host could
possibly have had it off with so many women during the course of his
photographic career - were invariably silenced when each of them was personally
invited to sniff certain of the exhibits, and accordingly verify the fact that
they had indeed been worn and still bore faint traces of their original owners'
person. To be sure, the smell of the
museum was not, in view of Prescott's disinclination to let-in too much fresh
air at the risk of undermining the credibility of his claims, particularly fragrant. But such was his determination to prevent
anyone from accusing him of fraud ... that he was more than prepared to put-up
with any nasal or psychological inconvenience this caused him, as well as go to
the trouble of pointing out such small stains of one sort or another as could
still be found on various of the exhibits, as further proof that these items
were not new but decidedly second-hand.
However, the vast majority of
But one of the people who never declined the photographer's
invitations to visit him was Carol Jackson, who was now posing for his latest
camera in quite the most slender brassiere it had ever been her privilege to
wear, her head thrown back in a posture of sensual abandon, her hands crossed
behind it. How many more snaps of this
nature
"So how's your artist friend been keeping lately?"
Prescott asked, as the time approached for them to take a break from their
morning's labour.
"As well as can be expected," Carol replied, before
settling herself down in the nearest armchair and lighting a mild cigarette
with the aid of a plastic lighter.
"And still painting hard?" Prescott rejoined.
"As far as I know," Carol admitted. "Portraits at the moment."
"Portraits?"
Prescott raised his brows in a show of acute surprise. "Are they any good?"
"Not bad; though I'm not properly qualified to judge, am
I?" said Carol rhetorically.
"However, he must have some talent for portraiture if Henry Grace
is sufficiently interested to have commissioned his portrait. You've doubtless heard of him before."
The photographer smiled faintly and then gently nodded.
"I've actually talked to him," he confessed. "Quite a few times, in fact."
"Really?"
Carol hadn't even vaguely considered the possibility, and was somewhat
surprised in consequence.
"He used to be among my most regular visitors at one
time," Prescott declared, with a little chuckle. For a moment he stared unseeingly at Carol,
as though absorbed in some arduous recollection, before asking: "And what,
pray, does friend Robert think of him?"
"Professionally or personally?" Carol wanted to know.
"Either."
The model reflected awhile, inhaling and exhaling some smoke
from her cigarette. "Well,
professionally he thinks very highly of Mr Grace," she revealed. "But personally ... I'm not so
sure. They appear to get on quite well
together - at least to the extent that circumstances currently permit
them. But I haven't yet succeeded in
finding out all that much, partly because Robert systematically refuses to
discuss the subject with me. He
absolutely forbids me to be present in the garden or, for that matter, the
studio while Mr Grace is there. And Mr
Grace has bloody-well been there from three to four hours a day all the past week!"
"Presumably that's the time it takes Robert to complete a
portrait?" Prescott conjectured.
"I imagine so," Carol confirmed, frowning.
The photographer poured out a couple of glasses of sweet white
wine and then handed one to Carol, asking: "What about Mr Grace's wife -
is she there, too?"
"Yeah, Patricia accompanies him to
Prescott had to laugh at that!
It was just like Henry Grace, he reflected, to drag his wife along with
him.
"What's so funny?" Carol wanted to know, becoming
puzzled and slightly offended by the photographer's attitude.
"Oh, nothing really," Prescott assured her. "Just a little private joke, that's
all."
"Anyway, Robert is doing his utmost to get into his latest
sitter's good books," Carol declared, changing the subject slightly. "He's of the opinion that his career
will thereby be considerably enhanced."
Having got over his little joke, Prescott merely smiled and
wandered over to his camera, which he proceeded to gently stroke with the hand
not holding a glass of wine. "Your
lover must have a much higher opinion of Henry Grace and his professional
influence than I do," he at length said.
Carol was somewhat flummoxed by this remark. "What makes you say that?" she
asked.
"Simply what you told me," the photographer
replied. "I very much doubt whether
an old rogue like Mr Grace would put himself out on Robert's behalf, no matter
how hard the latter tries to impress him.
He's just not that kind of man."
Deep down Carol was almost amused or, at any rate, secretly
gratified by the possibility that her boyfriend was making a damn fool of
himself when he thought he was being most wise.
"Are you sure?" she queried.
"Absolutely sure," Prescott affirmed in a tone which
left no room for uncertainty.
"Besides, even if Mr Grace were to do the improbable, I doubt
whether his professional influence would appreciably improve Robert's prospects
of advancement to greater fame. After
all, a single art critic, even when well-known, doesn't have all that much
clout. Doubtfully as much as your
admirer may, for reasons best known to himself, like to imagine anyway."
"But Henry Grace is internationally famous!" Carol
protested, feigning concern on her boyfriend's behalf. "Surely that fact must be taken into
account when assessing either his potential or actual influence?"
"But how d'you know all this?" Carol queried, still
unwilling to take
"Through what I've recently read by him, read about him,
heard from various artists and critics about him, thought about him, remembered
about him ... oh, through so many channels," the photographer at length
asserted, expressing, via a broad sweep of an arm, the general breadth of his
information. "He writes well and is
respected in many countries by a great many people - don't get me wrong
there! Yet his influence isn't so great
that he could be expected to win-over the hearts and minds of the more youthful
or progressive art-lovers. On the
contrary, his influence on the younger generation would be very slight, believe
me! And it's above all to the younger
generation that your admirer would have to appeal, if he hoped to increase his
fame - not to those outmoded people whom Grace could still be depended upon to
influence in some way."
"But maybe that's precisely what Robert wants,"
suggested Carol, recalling to mind the conventional nature of his most recent
work. "Simply to be appreciated by
art enthusiasts of a more traditional stamp, and thus become renowned as a
champion and defender of conventional aesthetic values."
Prescott gave vent to a short, sharp burst of sardonic
laughter, such as he usually only succumbed to when confronted by suggestions
or comments which ran contrary to his own better knowledge. "That may be," he conceded, for
Carol's sake, "but I would hardly describe the thought as one guaranteed
to appeal to the ambitions of any self-respecting, progressive artist! If it's that kind of fame he's after, he
might as well take his canvases to an antique dealer as to a modern gallery. Indeed, he might as well give-up painting
original works altogether and concentrate on copying old masters instead. He'll be appreciated alright, but only by
those philistines who know next-to-nothing about modern art and can only relate
to what preceded it. In other words,
people who require of art that it conforms to something intelligible to them, something pleasantly
picturesque. But if he thinks he'll
secure universal acclaim through reverting to such muck, and if he thinks Henry
Grace will help him acquire it, then he's sadly mistaken! Just as he's sadly mistaken if he thinks
that, by returning to a more traditional framework, he'll be saving art from
the ogres of modernity and thereby restoring it to a healthier condition. Nothing could be further from the truth! All he'll end-up bloody-well doing is to
acquire, with his rather limited fame, the contempt of all truly contemporary
artists and connoisseurs of modern art for being both a fool and a reactionary
down-dragging influence on the age. But
don't tell him I told you that. Let him
discover it for himself, if he's really determined to pursue this futile course
of his."
"I wouldn't dare tell him," Carol responded. "He wouldn't listen to me anyway, having
dismissed so many of his previous girlfriends for being critical of his
work. He'd probably send me packing
there and then."
Prescott glanced at his watch and commented how it was time
they got down to some more work before lunch, since he had another model - a
new one - to see during the afternoon and didn't want to fall behind with his schedule. What kind of panties she would turn-up in, he
didn't of course know. But he was fairly
confident that, before she left his studio an hour or two later, she would have
surrendered them to his private museum and thus enabled him to expand his collection
to 331. Without a doubt, he was
distinctly looking forward to conquering her!
For the time being, however, there was Carol Jackson to photograph
again, and this time minus her bra. She
had already been conquered, and on more than one previous occasion, to boot!