WE ROLLED DOWN THE LONG DRIVE, past Grannyโs white stag ponies through the golf course, past the green where the Queen Mother once scored a hole in one, past the policeman in his little hut (crisp salute) and over a couple of speed bumps, then over a small stone bridge and onto a quiet country lane.
Pa, driving, squinted through the windscreen.ย Splendid evening, isnโt it?
Balmoral. Summer. 2001.
We went up a steep hill, past the whisky distillery, along a blowy lane and down between sheep fields, which were overrun by rabbits. That is, those lucky enough to escape us. Weโd shot a bunch earlier that day. After a few minutes we turned onto a dusty track, drove four hundred meters to a deer fence. I hopped out, opened the padlocked gate. Now, at last, because we were on remote private roads, I was allowed to drive. I jumped behind the wheel, hit the accelerator, put into practice all those driving lessons from Pa through the years, often seated on his lap. I steered us through the purple heather into the deepest folds of that immense Scottish moorland. Ahead, like an old friend, stood Lochnagar, splotchy with snow.
We came to the last wooden bridge, the tires making that soothing lullaby I always associated with Scotland.ย Da dong, da dongโฆda dong, da dong.ย Just below us, a burn seethed after recent heavy rain up top. The air was thick with midges. Through the trees, in the last moments of daylight, we could faintly make out huge stags peering at us. Now we arrived in a great clearing, an old stone hunting lodge to the right, the cold stream running down to the river through the wood on our left, and there she was. Inchnabobart!
We ran inside the lodge. The warm kitchen! The old fireplace! I fell onto the fender, with its worn red cushion, and inhaled the smell of that huge pyramid of silver birch firewood stacked beside it. If thereโs a smell more intoxicating or inviting than silver birch, I donโt know what it could be. Grandpa, whoโd set off half an hour before us, was already tending his grill at the back of the lodge. He stood amid a thick cloud of smoke, tears streaming from his eyes. He wore a flat cap, which he took off now and then to mop his brow or smack a fly. As the fillets of venison sizzled he turned them with a huge pair of tongs, then put on a loop of Cumberland sausages. Normally Iโd beg him to make a pot of his specialty, spaghetti Bolognese. This night, for some reason, I didnโt.
Grannyโs specialty was the salad dressing. Sheโd whisked a large batch. Then she lit the candles down the long table and we all sat on wooden chairs with creaky straw seats. Often we had a guest for these dinners, some famous or eminent
personage. Many times Iโd discussed the temperature of the meat or the coolness of the evening with a prime minister or bishop. But tonight it was just family.
My great-grandmother arrived. I jumped up, offered her my hand. I always offered her my handโPa had drummed it into meโbut that night I could see Gan-Gan really needed the extra help. Sheโd just celebrated her 101st birthday and was looking frail.
Still natty, however. She wore blue, I recall, all blue. Blue cardigan, blue tartan skirt, blue hat. Blue was her favorite color.
She asked for a martini. Moments later, someone handed her an ice-cold tumbler filled with gin. I watched her take a sip, expertly avoiding the lemon floating along the top, and on an impulse I decided to join her. Iโd never had a cocktail in front of my family, so this would be an event. A bit of rebellion.
Empty rebellion, it turned out. No one cared. No one noticed. Except Gan-Gan. She perked up for a moment at the sight of me playing grown-up, gin and tonic in hand.
I sat beside her. Our conversation started out as lively banter, then evolved, gradually settling into something deeper. A connection. Gan-Gan was really speaking to me that night, really listening. I couldnโt quite believe it. I wondered why. Was it the gin? Was it the four inches Iโd grown since last summer? At six foot I was now one of the tallest members of the family. Combined with Gan-Ganโs shrinkage, I towered over her.
I wish I could recall specifically what we talked about. I wish Iโd asked more questions, and jotted down her answers. Sheโd been the War Queen. Sheโd lived at Buckingham Palace while Hitlerโs bombs rained from the skies. (Nine direct hits on the Palace.) Sheโd dined with Churchill, wartime Churchill. Sheโd once possessed a Churchillian eloquence of her own. She was famous for saying that, no matter how bad things got, sheโd never, ever leave England, and people loved her for it. I loved her for it. I loved my country, and the idea of declaring youโd never leave struck me as wonderful.
She was, of course,ย infamousย for saying other things. She came from a different era, enjoyed being Queen in a way that looked unseemly to some. I saw none of that. She was my Gan-Gan. She was born three years before the aeroplane was invented yet still played the bongo drums on her hundredth birthday. Now she took my hand as if I were a knight home from the wars, and spoke to me with love and humor and, that night, that magic night, respect.
I wish Iโd asked about her husband, King George VI, who died young. Or her brother-in-law, King Edward VIII, whom sheโd apparently loathed. He gave up his crown for love. Gan-Gan believed in love, but nothing transcended the Crown. She also reportedly despised the woman heโd chosen.
I wish Iโd asked about her distant ancestors in Glamis, home to Macbeth.
Sheโd seen so much, knew so much, there was so much to be learned from her, but I just wasnโt mature enough, despite the growth spurt, or brave enough, despite the gin.
I did, however, make her laugh. Normally that was Paโs job; he had a knack for finding Gan-Ganโs funny bone. He loved her as much as he loved anybody in the world, perhaps more. I recall him glancing over several times and looking pleased that I was getting such good giggles out of his favorite person.
At one point I told Gan-Gan about Ali G, the character played by Sacha Baron Cohen. I taught her to sayย Booyakasha, showing her how to flick her fingers the way Sacha did. She couldnโt grasp it, she had no idea what I was talking about, but she had such fun trying to flick and say the word. With every repetition of that word,ย Booyakasha, sheโd shriek, which would make everyone else smile. It tickled me, thrilled me. It made me feelโฆa part of things.
This was my family, in which I, for one night at least, had a distinctive role. And that role, for once, wasnโt the Naughty One.