“Well...not exactly, but...”
She stood back, to get a view of the line.
“May I choose from these?”
He shrugged, a prophet without honour.
Miss Teatime scrutinized the row of bonnets in a single, slow-ranging inspection, then stepped forward and placed a gloved finger on the bronze paintwork of a car near the end.
“I shall have this one, if you please.”
The manager gazed dubiously at the low, clean-lined Renault, crouched in the row like some cat-napping athlete.
“I’m not sure you’d find that very suitable. It’s not English, you know.”
“I am prepared to forego the luxury of patriotism in the interests of comfort and dependability on this one occasion, Mr Hall.”
He made a last effort to redeem his own judgment.
“It’s awfully fast,” he said, in the tone wherewith a child is warned to throw away a sweet picked up in the street.
“Good,” said Miss Teatime. “I should hate to think that all those modifications to the cylinder head and manifold and valve springs and suspension had been wasted.”
The managed closed his eyes and offered a little prayer to the god of garages: O, please let her hit a lamp-post! Please let these old eyes see her being towed in!
Even after Miss Teatime had driven off—with depressing obvious proficiency—the man was still so upset that he filed away her agreement form and cheque without noticing that to the latter she had quite forgotten to add a signature.
From St Ann’s Place, Miss Teatime drove directly to the station. She parked the Renault neatly in the forecourt and went into the booking hall.
On the wall was a table of departures. Miss Teatime donned her spectacles and took out a pencil and her little memorandum book.
It was the four minutes past eight train, she recalled, on which Commander Trelawney had always left for home. She moved her pencil point down the time-table. Here it was. All stations to Chalmsbury, then Horley Bank, Stang and Brocklestone-on-Sea.
She made a list of all the stops on the route, closed the notebook and put it away.
It was nearly half-past ten.
Buying a platform ticket, she passed through the barrier and glanced up at the signals beside the footbridge. She was just in time to see one of the arms lurch to the “clear” position. A train from Brocklestone—Trelawney’s usual train, she supposed—was due.
Miss Teatime hurried to the bookstall counter.
“I should like a map of this area, if you happen to have one. From Flaxborough to the coast is what I want, actually.”
An ordnance survey section? Oh, yes, that would do admirably. There was no need to wrap it.
The rumble of the approaching train stirred a nearby knot of people into movement.
Miss Teatime took the map, told an astounded assistant to keep the change from a pound note, and hurried from the platform just as the train’s leading coach went by. Choosing a route unlikely to be taken by the commander on the way to his bank, she was out of sight of the station entrance before the first passenger off the Brocklestone train emerged.
Today’s meeting was to be half an hour later than the usual eleven o’clock. Miss Teatime debated whether she should risk taking a quick whisky or two first...(I felt so foolish, Jack, having to sit down on the stairs while this man brought me a glass of something to pull me round—I do believe it was spirits’)...No, better not, perhaps.
When she reached the Garden of Remembrance, she walked past the gate and turned instead up the path flanked with yew and cypresses that led to the porch of St Laurence’s. She entered the church and sat down near the back. In the cool, grey solitude, she unfolded the map and supported it on the back of the chair in front of her.
She studied it for nearly half an hour.
Chapter Fifteen
The clock in the tower of St Laurence’s Church struck falteringly. It was half past eleven. Miss Teatime looked away from the drinking fountain, at which she had been watching a little girl methodically scrub out her doll’s clothes, and gazed towards the garden entrance. There was no sign of Trelawney.
She felt a twinge of anxiety. Up to now, he had shown himself an almost aggressively punctual person. Behaviour out of character was one of the very few things that made Miss Teatime nervous. It tended to upset calculations, and earning a living was difficult enough these days without one’s having to re-cast the horoscope, as it were.
However, two minutes later she saw the commander’s fair hair bobbing along beyond the hedge. He pushed open the gate and strode towards her. Even while he was still twenty yards away, she could see from the set of his head and the briskness of his step that he was in a good humour.
“A thousand apologies, dear lady. I was prepared to find you flown.”
“Nonsense, I have only just arrived myself.”
“Excellent!” He patted her thigh, as he might a gun dog. “In any case, I’ve a perfectly good excuse in my locker—or rather in ours, as it’s a joint account. The money’s paid in—five hundred nice shiny Jimmy O’Goblins!”
(Dear God! Where had she last come across that one? Sapper? Henty?) She widened her eyes commendingly. “My word! You are not one for wasting time, Mr Trelawney.”
“Hello-o-o...” Mock despair was on his face. “Who’s this talking to Mister Trelawney?”
“Commander,” she corrected mischievously.
“What! Pulling rank now, eh?”
Her glance fell. “Jack...”
“I should jolly well think so!” Again he patted her thigh, but this time his hand remained. He gazed closely into her face while his fingers contracted. She was about to draw sharply away when she saw in his eyes genuine interest and surprise.
“I say...” He withdrew his hand and stared at where it had been. “You’ve got some muscle, haven’t you?”
Miss Teatime straightened her skirt. “I do try and keep in trim, as a matter of fact. Just a few toning up exercises.”
His air of bright purpose returned. “Did you write that letter?”
Opening her bag and holding it so that the map she had bought that morning stayed out of sight, she took out an envelope and handed it to him.
“The cheque is there as well,” she said. “I have made it out to the daughter just in case there is some difficulty in Mr Cambridge’s dealing with it in hospital.”
He nodded. “Very sensible.”
The envelope was unsealed. He drew out the letter and began to read.
Dear Evelyn [Miss Teatime had written],
This is to introduce my good friend, Commander John Trelawney, who has kindly agreed to act on my behalf in the matter of the boat. He will hand you my cheque, which, as you will see, is for five hundred pounds (I wish you would let me make it a sum nearer the true value of the Lucy, or even half of it, but it seems that you and your father have made up your minds). Please give Commander Trelawney the receipt, and also the boat’s manual and the other documents—of which you will know more than I—and take him to the mooring. He is going to sail the Lucy here himself (a task for which I could scarcely have chosen anyone better qualified than a one-time Naval officer!) and he will wish, of course, to satisfy himself that she is in good condition for the voyage. I think there is nothing much to add, except perhaps the telephone number of my hotel (Flaxborough 2130), in case you wish to ring me about any details I have forgotten to mention. I do hope and pray that the money, ridiculously inadequate as of course it is, will be of some immediate use in easing your troubles.