Going Home
'Mulligatawny soup,' Carruthers said in the dining-car. 'Roast beef,
roast potatoes, Yorkshire pudding, mixed vegetables.'
'And madam?' murmured the waiter.
Miss Fanshawe said she'd have the same. The waiter thanked
her. Carruthers said:
'Miss Fanshawe'll take a medium dry sherry. Pale ale for me,
please.'
The waiter paused. He glanced at Miss Fanshawe, shaping his
lips.
'I'm sixteen and a half,' Carruthers said. 'Oh, and a bottle of
Beaune. 1962..'
It was the highlight of every term and every holiday for Carruth-
ers, coming like a no-man's-land between the two: the journey with
Miss Fanshawe to their different homes. Not once had she officially
complained, either to his mother or to the school. She wouldn't do
that; it wasn't in Miss Fanshawe to complain officially. And as for
him, he couldn't help himself.
'Always Beaune on a train,' he said now, 'because of all the bur-
gundies it travels happiest.'
'Thank you, sir,' the waiter said.
'Thank
you,
old chap.'
The waiter went, moving swiftly in the empty dining-car. The
train slowed and then gathered speed again. The fields it passed
through were bright with sunshine; the water of a stream glittered
in the distance.
'You shouldn't lie about your age,' Miss Fanshawe reproved,
smiling to show she hadn't been upset by the lie. But lies like that,
she explained, could get a waiter into trouble.
Carruthers, a sharp-faced boy of thirteen, laughed a familiar
harsh laugh. He said he didn't like the waiter, a remark that Miss
Fanshawe ignored.
'What weather!' she remarked instead. 'Just look at those weep-
Going Home
521
ing willows!' She hadn't ever noticed them before, she added, but
Carruthers contradicted that, reminding her that she had often be-
fore remarked on those weeping willows. She smiled, with false
vagueness in her face, slightly shaking her head. 'Perhaps it's just
that everything looks so different this lovely summer. What will
you do, Carruthers? Your mother took you to Greece last year,
didn't she? It's almost a shame to leave England, I always think,
when the weather's like this. So green in the long warm days —'
'Miss Fanshawe, why are you pretending nothing has hap-
pened?'
'Happened? My dear, what has happened?'
Carruthers laughed again, and looked through the window at
cows resting in the shade of an oak tree. He said, still watching the
cows, craning his neck to keep them in view:
'Your mind is thinking about what has happened and all the time
you're attempting to make ridiculous conversation about the long
warm days. Your heart is beating fast, Miss Fanshawe; your hands
are trembling. There are two little dabs of red high up on your
cheeks, just beneath your spectacles. There's a pink flush all over
your neck. If you were alone, Miss Fanshawe, you'd be crying your
heart out.'
Miss Fanshawe, who was thirty-eight, fair-haired and untouched
by beauty, said that she hadn't the foggiest idea what Carruthers
was talking about. He shook his head, implying that she lied. He
said:
'Why are we being served by a man whom neither of us likes
when we should be served by someone else? Just look at those
weeping willows, you say.'
'Don't be silly, Carruthers.'
'What has become, Miss Fanshawe, of the other waiter?'
'Now please don't start any nonsense. I'm tired and —'
it was he who gave me a taste for pale ale, d'you remember
that? In your company, Miss Fanshawe, on this train. It was he
who told us that Beaune travels best. Have a cig, Miss Fanshawe?'
'No, and I wish you wouldn't either.'
'Actually Mrs Carruthers allows me the odd smoke these days.
Ever since my thirteenth birthday, May the twenty-sixth. How can
she stop me, she says, when day and night she's at it like a factory
chimney herself?'
'Your birthday's May the twenty-sixth? I never knew. Mine's two
522.
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