The small boy was trotting beside him. He looked up at disappointing Anthony.
âMummy likes the baddies on television best.'
âMummy sounds very promising.'
They sat down in the cane chairs in the speckled, drifting shade.
âLet me look at you,' Cecily said to Anthony.
âI shouldn't. Father didn't like what he saw.'
Juliet said, âYou have bags under your eyes.'
Anthony turned to his mother.
âIs she always like this?'
âI'm afraid so.'
âI feel I've stumbled into a dormitory partyâ'
âNot quite,' Juliet said. âIt's more like a coven. We're plotting.'
âWhat?'
âHow to get Alice back.'
Cecily said warningly, âJulietâ'
âOops. Did I say something I shouldn't have?'
âYou might be making too much of too little.'
Anthony scented intrigue.
âWhat's going on? What is Alice up to?'
âShe has thrown herself into village life,' Cecily said. âThat's all. So she hasn't much time for any of us, and we miss her.'
âShe used to ring
all
the time,' Juliet said. âShe was the one person I could have a really good complain about Henry to. Your mother's no good at all because she thinks Henry is a dear. I suppose he is really, in rather the same category as a dear old armchair. Or pair of bedsocks.' She began to squeal with laughter. âYou know what's
really
the matter. Allie thinks I'm so funny and I've got no audience just now. Cecily thinks I'm
quite
funny but not nearly as much as she ought to. Oh dear. I suppose I ought to be going.' She looked about her. âDo you think my luck has turned and I've actually lost two children out of three for good and all?'
Her son, who was clearly used to this kind of thing, said his brothers were in the stableyard.
âDo go and get them, there's a little treasure. Isn't it sad,' turning to Cecily, âhow exactly like his father he looks?'
âShe worships Henry,' Cecily said to Anthony.
âI want to know more about Alice.'
âWhy do you?'
âI used to fancy Aliceâ'
Cecily gave a little sigh.
âI know. I used to worry that you were going to make trouble. To spite Martin.'
âI did tryâ'
âWhat happened?'
âShe froze me out.'
âOh dear. How tiresome virtue is. There it stands, blocking every path to pleasure. Here come my beastly little children.' She stood up. âI shouldn't be cross about Allie. She looks as beautiful as the day, so clearly good works suit her.'
Cecily went out to the car and saw Juliet and her boys drive away. When she came back, Anthony was lying in the long cane chair where Alice had lain her first afternoon at Dummeridge, with his eyes shut. He didn't open them when he heard his mother return, he simply said, âWhat a rattle.'
âShe's sweet.'
âReally. Tell me more about Alice.'
âWhy are you so obsessive?'
âI'm not. I'm keenly interested in my brother's family in a most suitable way.'
âYou always have a
motive
.'
âNot this time.' He opened his eyes and turned his head towards his mother. âTell.'
âThere's nothing
to
tell,' Cecily said. âIt is exactly as I said to you just now. She had a bad post-natal breakdown after the last baby, and then a big house move, and now she has taken on a whole load of village responsibilities. She's extremely tired, so that she can't see reason and take a holiday.'
âAnd her new friend?'
âThe youngest daughter of the big house in their village.'
âIsn't that utterly suitable?'
Cecily said flatly, âUtterly.' She took a breath. âI want to know about you.'
Anthony shut his eyes again.
âUnemployed.'
âTemporarily?'
âOh yes. No problem. Quite rich.'
âAlso temporarily?'
âProbably. Is Martin rich?'
âNo.'
âComfortable?'
âYes,' Cecily said doubtfully.
âRich then. Isn't he too perfect.'
Cecily let a little silence fall, then she said, âI did rather hope you would bring a wife home with you.'
Anthony yawned.
âI was besieged. Literally. But I didn't seem able to fall in love back. I think I'm still carrying a torch for Alice.'
âYou haven't seen Alice for almost ten years. Very useful, supposing yourself to want someone you can't have, so that you need never commit yourself to anyone else.'
âI
did
want her.'
âOnly in the same way that you wanted Martin's Meccano and Martin's friend Guy and Martin's diligence over examinations.'
âThat's not very flattering to Alice.'
âIt's meant,' Cecily said, âto be not very flattering to you.'
âOh, me. I've a hide like a rhino.'
âI know.'
âFirst Father's unpleasant to me and now you are. I shall go to Pitcombe.'
âNo,' Cecily said suddenly.
Anthony sat up slowly and put his feet on the grass.
âWhy not?'
âBecause you are a troublemaker.'
âI don't want to make trouble. I just want someone to be nice to me. Alice will be nice.'
âAlice,' Cecily said, âhas enough to cope with, without you,' and then she gave the game away completely by beginning, with great dignity, to weep.
Anthony could not remember seeing his mother cry before. Indeed, her self-possession had been one of the chief things that had enraged him, as a teenager â nothing, it seemed, that you could do or say shook her composure. But she was shaken now. He knew she adored Alice. The main reasons for his own desire for Alice long ago were that his mother adored her, his father liked her a great deal and Martin wanted her. And then of course there were the additional, tantalizing reasons of Alice's personality and her fascinating dislike of him. Perhaps Cecily and Alice had quarrelled. Perhaps Cecily was an interfering grandmother. Perhaps Alice's youthful infatuation with Cecily had died and there had grown up instead, as there so often did in such cases, a robust dislike of the former idol. Anthony, turning these interesting speculations over in his mind, was rather inclined to the last view. He thought he would spend a few more days at Dummeridge, or as long as it took for the festal return of the Prodigal Son atmosphere to wear off, and he would make a few calls to contacts in the City â he left a Morgan Grenfell telephone number lying about prominently â and then he would invite himself to Pitcombe. So he made himself very charming to Dorothy, and to the two young men in the garden whom his mother was training, and at meals he tried to elicit more information from Cecily about Pitcombe, information which, he was interested to notice, she seemed peculiarly reluctant to give.
âAnthony!' Alice said into the telephone. She was leaning against the kitchen wall, with Charlie, eating a biscuit, on her hip.
âI want you to ask me to stay.'
âOf
course
. Where are you?'
âDummeridge.'
âOhâ'
âExactly. What have you done to my mother?'
âAbsolutely nothing.'
âSure?'
Alice smiled at Clodagh across the kitchen.
âJust a
teeny
bit of independenceâ'
Anthony laughed.
âI see. Look. When can I come? Nobody is being very kind to me, which is tough when I'm so vastly improved.'
Alice said dreamily, her eyes on Clodagh, âI'll be kind. I'm kind to everyone just now.'
âWhy?'
âBecause I'm happy.'
âWhat, doing the church flowers?'
âYes.'
âExtraordinary. You do, however, sound happy.'
Clodagh bent over James, who was painting a tiny, neurotic picture of a very neat house in one corner of a large piece of paper. He leaned against her and Alice heard him say, âYou do it.' âNo, Jamie, you.' âClo-clo do it,' he said in a loving baby voice, gazing at her.
âAre you listening?' Anthony demanded down the telephone.
âSort of.'
âIf I come on Friday pour le weekend, how would that be? If you're very kind to me, I might have to stay.'
âDo,' Alice said, rubbing her cheek on Charlie's head, âwhatever you like.'
âIs your house lovely?'
âOh yes,' Alice said. âIt's perfect here. It really is. You'll see.'
She put the telephone down.
âMartin's brother.'
Natasha, who was importantly doing her homework â this term's novelty â looked up from an extremely neat English exercise book to say kindly to her brother, âUncle Anthony. Who you have never seen.'
âNor have you!'
âI
nearly
did. I was more nearly born in time. More nearly than you.'
âWas she?' James whispered up into Clodagh's hair.
â'Fraid soâ'
âWon't I
ever
be the bigger?'
Clodagh kissed him.
âIn size, you will be.'
Alice came to the table and sat down with Charlie. She wanted to tell Clodagh about Anthony but Natasha's beady presence made that impossible just now. So she smiled at Clodagh, and Clodagh came round the table and kissed her, and then Charlie, and then Natasha said, âWhat about a kiss for good little me doing my homework?'
Clodagh picked her off her chair.
âYou're a little Tashie madam, you areâ'
Natasha put her arms round her neck.
âI'm going to be like you when I grow up.'
âNo. You're going to be like your lovely mother.'
âCan I too?' James said.
Clodagh put Natasha back on her chair.
âLook at you,' she said to Alice.
âWhy, whatâ'
âThe cat that got the creamâ'
âOh but I am, I
am
â'
âYou are so bloody
beautiful
.'
âDear me,' Natasha said, âin front of James.'
âBloody,' James said softly to his picture, âbloody, bloody, bloody beautiful.'
Clodagh leaned towards Alice.
âBeautiful.'
âYou too.'
âNo. I'm a ratface.' She put a finger on Charlie's cheek. âAnd Charlie's a moonface.'
âAnd James,' Natasha said with deadly quietness, âis a fishface.'
James gave a yelp. Then a car came swooping past the house and there was a chorus of âDaddy! Daddy!' and Charlie, who had been dozing against Alice like a human teddy bear, became galvanized by the desire to join in.
It was exactly the homecoming Martin wanted. It was the best day he had had at work since the day he had been made a junior partner. He had been summoned in by Nigel Gathorne, the senior partner, to be congratulated, personally, on securing the Unwins as clients for the firm, and to be told, quite plainly, that this, particularly if he made a success of it, would contribute materially to Martin's upward rise. He then gave Martin a glass of fino sherry, a mark of approval all the junior partners recognized as being equivalent to a CBE. He was so genuinely pleased that Martin even managed to put aside all the complications and tribulations that seemed to have dogged his path since his lunch with Henry Dunne at the White Hart. If Nigel Gathorne could offer such warm and
professional
congratulations, then Martin's achievement must be real indeed. Coming out of Nigel's office, he felt he almost owed Clodagh an apology for his petulance over her part in it. Even thinking of her now was possible without an involuntary blush, but of course she had made that easy by being so ordinarily friendly to him and such a help with the children and such a good friend to Alice. He had, in his glow of gratitude and achievement, actually had a preliminary look at the Unwin trust papers at once, and really, it wasn't, at first glance, going to be too difficult to unscramble. He visualized a business conversation with Clodagh. It was a happy little fantasy in which he retrieved the self-esteem he had lost in that undignified little scene in the kitchen when Alice was away. At twenty past five, Martin left his office and went back to his car past the Victoria Wine Company so that he could buy a bottle of champagne, which luckily they had on a very reasonable offer indeed.
âYou'll be able to handle Georgina,' Clodagh said, admiring the light through her champagne glass. âEasy peasy.'
They were sitting in the drawing room, to celebrate.
âIs she like you?'
Clodagh avoided looking at Alice.
âGeorgina is absolutely straight in every way. She'll be just like Ma, in the end, only quieter. She buys day clothes from Laura Ashley and evening ones from Caroline Charles and shoes from Bally and knickers from M & S. She's a dear.'
Alice said, head back against a chair cushion, eyes half-closed, âWhy don't you go and see her more?'
âBecause, for some reason, I really like being at home just now.'
âNever,' Alice said, on the edge of laughter. She turned her head towards Martin. âAnthony's coming. On Friday.'
Martin pulled a slight face.
âOh well. It had to happen. How long for?'
âDon't you like him?' Clodagh said, interested. âWhy don't you?'
Alice began. âHe'sâ' and Martin, fearing family criticism, said quickly, âWe fought a bit when we were growing up, that's all. He's been in Japan and Hong Kong for almost ten years. He's probably changed a lot.'