De Engelse schrijfster Esther Freud werd geboren in Londen op 2 mei 1963. Zie ook alle tags voor Esther Freud op dit blog.
Uit: Summer at Gaglow
“Of the three girls it was only Bina who was allowed to stay up for the night-time celebrations. Places had been laid for a hundred people at a long gallery of tables that spiralled round the dining room. Bina came up to the nursery where both Nanny and the governess, Fraulein Schulze, burst into praise over her dress and the way in which her hair had been arranged. Eva stared furiously into her green baize box and cursed that she was years too young. ‘It’s even worse luck for me,’ Martha said, and it cheered Eva up a little to see that she was right.
Their mother came up to wish them both goodnight. `You have been more than perfect today.’ She smiled, glittering in the doorway of their double room, while Martha and Eva sat at twin dressing tables and stared sulkily back at her through the glass. `Sleep well.’ She blew them each a kiss and left them to rejoin the party.
`Did you see the earrings she had on?’ Martha gasped, and Eva agreed that they were hideous. Great red rubies that dragged down the lobes of her ears. `And such skinny arms.’ She winced, continuing to give her hair the one hundred obligatory strokes insisted upon by Nanny.
`Well, at least we have Bina to report back.’ Eva brushed vigorously. `Not to mention,’ she lowered her voice, `our own dear Schu.’
`Now, now, children.’ It was Nanny standing behind them with their nightdresses, freshly pressed and aired. `I’m sure Fraulein Schulze will be too busy enjoying herself to have time for such nonsense.’
`Oh, Omi, Omi Lise,’ they both protested. They caught each other’s eye and grinned. This was exactly what their governess had time for and what, above anything, she enjoyed. It was her wicked bedtime stories that had won them over at the very start, and the way she poked fun at strangers, livening up the walks they took even on the most dreary days, and filling her charges, each one, with a small, warm well of spite.
Eva lay in bed, listening to the distant strains of the music and running over in her mind the various eligible girls invited by her mother. Who. would Emanuel be dancing with, she wondered, and she smiled at the off-hand way in which he had accepted their attentions.
`Martha?’ she whispered. `Martha, are you asleep?’
Esther Freud (Londen, 2 mei 1963)