Eighteen running?â
Shirley glanced up at the board behind her.
âYes.â
âWe might have a bit on that, if the price is all right.â
âYou know a lot about horses, donât you, Henry? Were you â were you brought up with horses?â
âMy experience has mostly been with bookmakers.â
Shirley nerved herself to ask what she had been wanting to ask.
âItâs funny, isnât it, how little I really know about you? Have you got a father or mother, or are you an orphan, like me?â
âOh! My father and mother were killed in the blitz. They were in the Café de Paris.â
âOh! Henry â how awful!â
âYes, wasnât it?â agreed Henry, without, however, displaying undue emotion. He seemed to feel this himself, for he added: âOf course itâs over four years ago now. I was quite fond of them and all that, but one canât go on remembering things, can one?â
âI suppose not,â said Shirley doubtfully.
âWhy all this thirst for information?â asked Henry.
âWell â one likes to know about people,â Shirley spoke almost apologetically.
âDoes one?â Henry seemed genuinely surprised.
âAnyway,â he decided, âyouâd better come and meet my aunt. Put it all on a proper footing with Laura.â
âLaura?â
âWell, Lauraâs the conventional type, isnât she? Satisfy her that Iâm respectable and all that.â
And very shortly afterwards, a polite note arrived from Lady Muriel, inviting Shirley to lunch, and saying Henry would call for her in the car.
2
Henryâs aunt bore a strong resemblance to the White Queen. Her costume was a jumble of different and brightly-coloured wool garments, she knitted assiduously, and she had a bun of faded brown hair, streaked with grey, from which untidy wisps descended in all directions.
She managed to combine the qualities of briskness and vagueness.
âSo nice you could come, my dear,â she said warmly, shaking Shirley by the hand and dropping a ball of wool. âPick it up, Henry, thereâs a good boy. Now tell me, when were you born?â
Shirley said that she was born on 18th September, 1928.
âAh yes. Virgo â I thought so. And the time?â
âIâm afraid I donât know.â
âTck! How annoying! You must find out and let me know. Itâs most important. Where are my other needles â the number eights? Iâm knitting for the navy â a pullover with a high neck.â
She held out the garment.
âIt will have to be for a very large sailor,â said Henry.
âWell, I expect they have all sizes in the navy,â said Lady Muriel comfortably. âAnd in the army, too,â she added inconsequently. âI remember Major Tug Murray â sixteen stone â special polo ponies to be up to his weight â and when he rode anyone off there was nothing they could do about it. Broke his neck when he was out with the Pytchley,â she added cheerfully.
A very old and shaky butler opened the door and announced that luncheon was served.
They went into the dining-room. The meal was an indifferent one, and the table silver was tarnished.
âPoor old Melsham,â said Lady Muriel when the butler was out of the room. âHe really canât see at all . And he shakes so when he hands things, that Iâm never sure if heâll get round the table safely. Iâve told him again and again to put things on the sideboard, but he wonât. And he wonât let any of the silver be put away, though of course he canât see to clean it. And he quarrels with all the queer girls which are all one gets nowadays â not what heâs been accustomed to, he says. Well, I mean, what is? With the war and all.â
They returned to the drawing-room, and Lady Muriel conducted a brisk conversation on biblical prophecies, the measurements