re-lived in reverse his disastrous landing: here was the strip where the plane slid on its belly, and beyond that the marks where the wheel-struts collapsed and gouged out turf, and further back still the spot where the plane first fell to earth and the wheels dented the grass. Now that the machine was destroyed he felt curiously proud of his arrival. A good landing, so one of his instructors had told him, was a landing you could walk away from. He sat on his heels and fingered the wheel-marks. It hadnât been perfect but it was still a damn sight better than Wilkins had managed at Dover. Or Ross-Kennedy, doing cartwheels in a French field. Or Dexter, making a mess of that church. Damn fools. Nice chaps but rotten pilots. The hard-edged drone of an engine cut into his thoughts and he looked up. An FE2b sailed overhead, sinking softly, and touched down without a bounce. Paxton felt sick with envy. Two more planes landed during the next ten minutes. Each bounced a bit. The second bounced twice. Paxton felt better.
He went for a walk around the field, and then strolled into the mess to chat with the crews about their patrol; but the mess was empty.
âTheyâve all gone swimming, sir,â a servant said. âJust ate breakfast and went.â
âAh. Theyâll be back for lunch, though?â
âNo, sir. I think they go to an
estaminet
, sir.â
âYou mean Iâm the only officer on the camp?â
âWell, thereâs the adjutant, sir. But he doesnât usually take lunch.â
Paxton went to see the adjutant. Corporal Laceyâs gramophone was playing the César Franck symphonic variations, but Lacey stopped the record and received Paxton courteously. âIâm afraid Mr. Appleyard is resting in bed this morning,â he said. âA recurrence of an old Nigerian malady, I believe. The CO, of course, is at Brigade HQ all day.â
âAh,â Paxton said. âYes. Of course.â Nobody had told
him
the CO was at Brigade. Youâd think the Orderly Officer ought to be told.
In the next room, a couple of typewriters chattered, starting and stopping as unpredictably as birdsong.
âIf I may say so,â Lacey said,âit was uncommonly generous of you to take over Mr. Ogilvyâs duty as Orderly Officer.â
Paxton looked down. He found something of interest in an in-tray. It was a memo about disinfectant for the menâs latrines. âOh well,â he said. âI wasnât going anywhere.â
âNeither was Mr. Ogilvy. Now heâs splashing happily in the Somme.â
Rafters creaked as the heat baked the roof. Lacey sharpened a pencil, taking a long time to get it to a fine point. Paxton watched the tiny flakes fall and wished he knew how to drive. Then he could take an army car and whizz around the French countryside. There had been a chap at Sherborne whoâd had a car. Lucky blighter. Sherborne had been a jolly good school. You got beaten, of course. Everyone got beaten, by masters, by prefects. Eventually you became a prefect and then you beat others. Didnât do anyone any harm. On the contrary, it helped to develop the proper spirit. That was the great difference between us and the Boche. We had the proper spirit.
âSinfully languid,â Lacey said. He was standing by a window, balancing the pencil on a fingertip by its point.
âWhat?â
âDonât you find this weather almost sinfully languid?â The pencil wavered and he deftly caught it as it fell. âIdleness is a virtue on days like this. Unless one chooses to swim, and swimming is simply the most sensual of all indulgences. Donât you think?â He had the pencil balanced again.
âNo,â Paxton said firmly.
âOh, surely,â Lacey murmured. âWe all dream of toppling naked into a cool calm river and letting the running current do with us what it will.â
âI donât,â Paxton said. âI
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