Dawlish pulled out a chair. “Oh-by the way-Fenella had to go.”
“I thought I heard the door,” Rory said carefully.
“She was in a bit of a hurry. No time to say goodbye.”
“It must be a busy time for her.”
Dawlish stared vaguely at him. “I wouldn’t be surprised if she’s been overdoing it a bit lately.”
Rory agreed. Dawlish picked up the typed sheets. Rory waited, forcing himself to stay still. Dawlish skimmed through the entire article and then turned back and read it again, this time more slowly. At last he looked up.
“This is good,” he said. “Just what the doctor ordered.”
“Do you think the editor will agree?”
“I’m quite sure he will.” He swallowed and then went on in a rush, “I say, old man, would you mind if I asked you something?”
“Fire away.”
Dawlish hesitated. “Do you think that…” He lost his nerve and broke off, running his fingers through his hair. He swiftly recovered. “What I mean to say is, I ought to show you over the rest of the house soon-especially the attic. See how you feel about living there for a bit. Do you think you’ll be able to manage the stairs later today?”
“I hope so. I can certainly try.”
“Good,” said Dawlish absently. He stared at the kitchen sink, and Rory knew he was really looking at the emptiness of a world without Fenella. “Absolutely splendid.”
Lydia Langstone had never traveled in a third-class railway compartment before. She discovered that, like crowded buses or bone-shaking trams, they were where you met British humanity in all its smelly, noisy variety. On that Sunday it was a slow journey punctuated with changes and delays and populated with tiresome fellow passengers. She had plenty of time to regret her decision.
Eventually and reluctantly, she reached Mavering. As she walked along the rainswept platform, she was tempted to wait for the next train that might take her in warm, safe discomfort back to London.
A porter approached her, scenting a tip. “Taxi, miss?”
Lydia shook her head and asked where the footpath to Rawling was. He looked surprised but gave her meticulous directions. She rewarded him with a sixpence and set out.
She had dressed for the weather in a waterproof coat and hat so the rain did not worry her. It was cold, however, and she forced herself to walk as quickly as possible. When the path forked, she took the left-hand turn, the one that would take her along the bottom of the meadow behind Morthams Farm. Twenty minutes later she came out on to the lane to Rawling.
The stumpy tower of Mr. Gladwyn’s church was about half a mile away. No one was in sight. Less than a hundred yards from where she stood, the chimneys of a small cottage poked into a muddy gray sky. She hurried down the lane and stopped outside.
The garden gate had fallen backward from its hinges. The disintegrating corpse of a blackbird lay on the path up to the front door, and the weeds were waist high on what had once been a lawn. A wisp of smoke rose from one of the chimneys. Ignoring the front door, Lydia followed the cinder path round the side of the house. As she passed one of the windows, she glimpsed movement inside.
She tapped on the back door and waited. No one came. She was about to knock again when the door opened suddenly. A tall woman with ragged gray hair stared at Lydia. She wore a rusty black dress draped over a stick-like body. Her skin had a gray pallor, and her eyes were large, a faded blue in color. The hand gripping the side of the door had long and graceful fingers that ended with nails bitten to the quick. Lydia thought the woman had once been beautiful. She had seen her before, of course, at the graveside, but then the widow had been masked by her veil and in any case her individuality had been swamped by the occasion.
“Good afternoon,” Lydia said uncertainly. “I’m Mrs. Langstone. We haven’t met, Mrs. Narton, but-”
“I know who you are.” The voice was low and harsh. “What do you want?”
“First I wanted to say how sorry I was about your husband.”
“Why? You didn’t know him.”
Lydia rushed on: “I was here with Mrs. Alforde-”
“You came to the funeral,” Mrs. Narton said. “I don’t know why, I’m sure.”
There was a long silence, during which Lydia wished more than ever that she had not come. Mrs. Narton’s face remained impassive. Finally, she let go of the door and in doing so pushed it wide, revealing a low-ceilinged kitchen. She turned away and sat down at the table. She rested her hands on the table, palms down, on either side of an open Bible.
It was, Lydia decided, a sort of invitation. She went inside, closing the door behind her. She drew out a chair and sat down opposite Mrs. Narton. She waited.
When the tapping on the window started, Rory was sitting as close as he could get to the electric fire with a blanket draped like a cape over his shoulders. He was whiling away the long evening with a plump and undemanding novel by J. B. Priestley that he had found in the kitchen. At first he thought he was imagining it because the tapping was both faint and sporadic, almost as though it wasn’t sure it wanted to be heard.
He put down the book, hobbled to the window and pulled aside the curtain. Lydia’s face, distorted by the rain on the window, swam on the other side of the glass. He dropped the blanket on the carpet, stumbled into the hall and opened the door.
The first thing he realized was how wet she was. Her coat was streaked with mud. She didn’t speak. She stood there on the doorstep and stared blankly at him until he drew her over the threshold. He helped her out of her coat and draped it with her hat on one of the pegs in the hall.
“Come and sit by the fire,” he ordered.
He followed her into the sitting room. She stood in the middle of the threadbare carpet, looking around her as though wondering what she was doing here. Her skirt and stockings were filthy.
Rory touched her shoulder. “Sit down.”
She sank obediently into the chair in front of the fire. He picked up the blanket and wrapped it around her shoulders. She seemed not to notice. Her teeth were chattering.
“What the hell have you been doing with yourself?”
“I-I walked from the station.”
“Which station?”
“Liverpool Street.”
“But that’s miles away.” He glanced at the mud on her shoes and stockings. “And you fell over too, by the look of it.”
“That was on the footpath from Rawling.”
She pulled the blanket more tightly around her. Rory limped into the kitchen and returned with Dawlish’s whisky bottle and a clean wineglass. He filled the glass half full and held it out to her. She took it obediently and sipped, making a face at the taste.
“Have some more,” Rory said.
“I don’t like it.”
“Have another sip. It’s good for you.”
She obeyed, wrinkling her nose like a petulant child.
“Why did you go to Rawling?”
She didn’t reply. She took another mouthful of whisky. In her bedraggled state she looked much younger than she usually did.
“All right,” he went on when she showed no sign of replying. “You can’t sit there in your wet things. I’m going to fetch some more blankets. Then you can take your things off and hang them to dry.”
He brought two more blankets from the room where he had slept. As an afterthought he added his pajamas, which Dawlish had brought back from Bleeding Heart Square the previous evening. He went back to Lydia, who was sitting where he had left her.
“You’ll need to take off your shoes, your stockings and your skirt,” he said firmly, as though she were one of his sisters. He laid the blankets and pajamas on the floor beside her. “The pajamas are clean. You’re welcome to borrow them. I’ll leave you alone for five minutes.”
She looked up at him. “Thank you.”
In the kitchen he put the kettle on and smoked a cigarette. When he returned to the sitting room ten minutes later, the wet clothes were drying on the chair. Lydia had changed into the pajamas and was curled up in a nest of blankets by the fire. The whisky glass at her elbow was empty. There was more color in her cheeks.