dear,â sighed Lucy. âPoor Stella . . .â
âWhat? Sheâs developed lockjaw?â
âWorse. Sheâs gone totally potty on an Irish labourer.â
âYouâre joking!â
Apparently not. St Hughâs was in the process of putting up a new library, and the college had been crawling with brawny workmen for much of the year, one of whom had caught Stellaâs eye.
âNothingâs happened,â Lucy explained. âI mean, Iâm not sure he even knows she exists, but she spent most of last term moping around her rooms like a sick cat. Itâs all very Lady Chatterley and Mellors.â
âWhat would you know about Lady Chatterley and Mellors? Thatâs a banned book.â
âWhich is precisely the reason there are so many copies doing the rounds at university.â
âAs the man who took an oath before God to lead you towards a life of exemplary purpose, Iâm disappointed.â
âAs the man who had Henry Millerâs Tropic of Cancer lying around his house last summer, donât be.â
âAh, itâs not banned in France.â
âWell, it should be.â
âOh God, you didnât read it, did you?â
âOf course I did, the day you all went off to St Tropez.â
âAh yes . . .â said Tom, remembering now, âthe day you were struck down with a bad headache.â
âA little trick I learnt from Mother.â Lucy tapped the ash from her cigarette on to the cobbles at their feet. âHow is she, by the way?â
âEager to see you.â
âYou really must learn to lie more convincingly.â
âWell, I now know who to turn to for lessons, donât I?â
They had been sparring partners for as long as he could remember, ever since Lucy was a small child. With the passage of time, the tickling and romping and mock fights of those early years had been replaced by a battle of wits and a war of words. Tom had always encouraged the playful cut-and-thrust of their relationship, if only because there had never been much of that sort of thing at home for Lucy. Venetia, for all her âmodern waysâ, was a mother cast in a traditional mould, somewhat cold and remote. As for Leonard, when not submerged in his work at the Foreign Office he leaned far more naturally towards his two sons than to the dead manâs daughter whom Venetia had brought with her into the marriage.
Tom no longer feared for Lucyâs emotional well-being. She had blossomed into something quite extraordinary: a beautiful, intelligent and amusing young woman who seemed genuinely oblivious of her manifest charms. And if he still sought out her company whenever he could, it was as much for his own benefit as hers, for what she somehow managed to bring out in him. As the conversation continued to coil effortlessly around them over lunch, she was, it occurred to him, one of the few true friends he had in the world.
When the coffee arrived they carried their cups with them to a wooden bench just across the cobbles from their table. Here, in the drowsy shade of the plane trees, they sat and watched in reverential silence as four old men, tanned to the colour of teak, played boules.
âLetâs go for a wander,â suggested Tom, the moment the match was over.
He led her across the road to the port. On one side of the central quay were moored colourful wooden fishing yawls, one of which had landed their lunch much earlier that day, while the rest of the world was still sleeping. Being a fanatical sailor, Lucy was far more interested in the array of yachts and dinghies bobbing on the gentle swell across the way. They came in all shapes and sizes â there was even an ostentatious gentle-manâs cabin launch amongst them â but her eye was drawn to one sailboat in particular.
âOh my goodness, look at that!â
âWhat?â
âThat racing sloop.â
âYes, pleasing on the