the passenger seat. We get back to find Annie is completely recovered and pottering in the kitchen with Jane. Jonathan, who is in his awful school uniform, is railing against the new English master who has put him down for detention, he says, for being cheeky.
âYou
are
cheeky, Jont,â Jane says without concern. âI consider it part of your charm, but you cannot expect others to do so.â
âThe bloody fool asks me to paraphrase âheavenâs cherubin, horsed upon the sightless couriers of the airâ,â he says, thumping about. âWhatâs the fucking good of paraphrasing it? It sounds better the way it is.â
âWhat did you say to him, Jont?â Jane says.
âBut donât you agree, Jane, it makes nonsense of it to paraphrase it?â Jonathan says.
âWhat did you say to him, Jont?â Jane says insistently.
âI said if he didnât understand it he shouldnât be doing it with us.â
âAnd?â she says archly.
âHe said if I was so clever would I like to take the class. So I took the class. A bloody sight better at it I was, too, but he made me stop after about ten minutes because it showed him up. Heâd better not try and be funny with me again,â Jonathan says. This is bigger and better trouble-making than I ever dreamed of. Silently, resentfully, I hand him the crown.
âYou watch it, Jonathan, thatâs all,â Jane says. âNeither Jake nor I will be on our knees before the Head, pleading on your behalf when he decides to throw you out.â She turns to Roger. âThe young ladies âphoned for you, Roger. The ones with the tennis court. They want you to play tennis with them tomorrow.â Roger shrugs.
âThey play tennis in white togs,â he says nastily, âlike walk-ons for
Cinderella on Ice.â
I quail before this snobbish indictment and thank God that I always hid in the library during games. If I hadplayed tennis I would almost certainly have done so in white togs.
âGo on, Rogsie,â Jonathan says, as Jane makes us tea. âIâd go for the one with the legs.â Roger says nothing. He goes out to fetch his violin. âI have to go now,â he says to John, who gives him the car keys.
Twelve
That evening, in the garden, Jane forgives me for picking a half-grown cucumber which I mistake for a courgette. Potatoes come out of the ground white, I discover. The brown skin forms afterwards. Jacob joins us on his return, in the company of Annie and Sam whom he has met at the gate. He has the
Listener
in his hand and a parcel of cheese wrapped in vine leaves for his wife.
âFor you, my love,â he says. âNot for anybody to share with you.â
âNot even you?â she says. She is touched. âOh, Jake.â
Wrapped in the
Listener
he has a Dillonâs bag which he hands to me. In it is a copy of
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists.
âTake a holiday from The Great Tradition,â he says. I thank him, profusely, being honoured by the gift.
âA Young Personâs Guide to the New Jerusalem, eh, Jake?â Jane says. âIâm rather glad I got the cheese. Iâm too old to be converted.â
âIâm coming out simultaneously in paperback,â he says to her. She rejoices and kisses him.
âOh, wow,â she says. âOh, Jake, wow.â
âCome out with me tonight,â he says. âLeave the children, leave the guests and come out with me. Hold hands with me at the pictures.â
âI have to tell you, Jake, that Iâve been having fairly regular labour contractions this afternoon,â she says.
âChrist,â he says. âThatâs it then for the next six months. Or can one hire a wet nurse? Who needs an au pair? Why is the world full of au pairs? A wet nurse is what we need.â
âIâm sorry, Jake,â she says, âIâd better not go anywhere
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