The car swerved again. Mrs. Alforde said, “I don’t follow. Why?”
“Because he could well be right.”
There was something about Julian Dawlish that made people want to trust him. If he had been a dog, he would have been a St. Bernard patrolling the Alpine passes with a keg of brandy attached to his collar and panting to offer a warming drink to any benighted traveler he might encounter. His face and perhaps his behavior seemed to promise an inner philanthropy. Even Mrs. Renton, not the most trusting of human beings, wasn’t proof against his peculiar form of charm. That was why she let him into the house and allowed him unescorted upstairs. That was why, when Rory opened his flat door, he found Dawlish standing outside with a smile on his face and Rory’s suitcase in his hand. And that was why Rory smiled back with a pleasure that was both unforced and unexpected.
“Hello, Wentwood. The lady who let me in said I could come up. Hope it’s not a bad time.”
“Of course not.” Rory opened the door more widely, aware that his unexpected visitor had a good view of the unmade bed through the open door of the bedroom; in the sitting room he would soon be passing within eighteen inches of the remains of Rory’s breakfast on the crumb-and ash-strewn table. “This is very kind of you.”
Dawlish put down the suitcase. “Phew.”
“Everything all right?” Rory said suddenly.
“Absolutely. If you mean at Cornwallis Grove, that is. Though in point of fact Fenella’s not there at present. She’s in Mecklenburgh Square.”
Rory swept a pile of papers from the seat of the one comfortable armchair. “Do sit down.”
“Thanks, but no. I’ve left Fenella measuring up for curtains. I was only in the way so I thought I’d run your things over. But I promised I wouldn’t be long.”
The two men went downstairs. Rory was relieved to get Dawlish out of the flat. He himself had grown accustomed to the place, after a fashion; but having Dawlish there made him see it abruptly and cruelly through Dawlish’s eyes. A squalid little place, he thought, dirty and utterly depressing. And it was costing him more than he could afford. Ahead of him his life stretched as a vista of ever more unpleasant homes.
“You and Fenella will almost be neighbors,” Dawlish said. “Which reminds me: would you like to pop over there for lunch today? Just a scratch meal, she said.”
Rory thought there was pity in Dawlish’s eyes. Damn the man. “Thank you,” he said. “But I’m not sure I can.”
“Shame. But if circumstances alter, do come along. It’s number fifty-three, the basement entrance. One o’clockish.”
They passed the first-floor landing. Rory half-hoped Lydia would be there. He wouldn’t have minded Dawlish meeting her-she came from the same social drawer as Dawlish, if not the one above. But she had gone out for the day, according to Mrs. Renton, with a lady who had called for her in a car. Judging by the snores, Captain Ingleby-Lewis was still asleep, which was just as well. Serridge was out. That left Mrs. Renton, who had returned to her sewing machine, and Malcolm Fimberry, who was unfortunately standing in the hall, pince-nez askew on his nose, his hair carefully arranged so that it looked like a heap of buttered curls, and his flies undone.
“Hello, Wentwood. I wonder if you could lend me a pinch of tea? I’ve run out and I don’t want to ask Mrs. Renton again.”
He peered at Julian Dawlish, so Rory had to introduce them. The three of them went outside. A large maroon Lagonda was standing outside the front door. Two small boys were examining it with careful nonchalance.
“That’s a fine car,” Fimberry said, bestowing a cautious pat on the nearside front mudguard.
“Not mine, actually,” Dawlish said, looking as close to embarrassed as Rory had seen him. “It’s my brother’s bus. Mine’s in for a service.” He glanced around him, clearly trying to distance himself from the magnificent vehicle. “Interesting place-I’ve never been here before. What’s that chapel over there?”
The question loosened Fimberry’s tongue in much the same way that brandy in its early stages loosened Ingleby-Lewis’s. Soon he was describing the vanished palace of the bishops.
Dawlish plunged into the flow. “That chapel, Mr. Fimberry-is that where they’re having the meeting on Saturday? I’ve seen a poster for it.”
“On my window, perhaps,” Fimberry said. “Yes-in the undercroft.”
“It’s a public meeting, is it?”
“As far as I know. They’re particularly interested in attracting the businessmen in the area. That’s why they’re having it at Saturday lunchtime. I’m sure you’d be most welcome if you wanted to come.” He gave a high, nervous laugh like a horse’s whinny. “The more the merrier, that’s what the organizer said to me.” He smiled and brought his face uncomfortably close to Dawlish’s. “He’s called Sir Rex Fisher. I don’t know if you know him?”
Dawlish shook his head. “We’ve never met. I know of him, though.” He turned to Rory. “I must push off. We’ll run into each other at Cornwallis Grove, I expect. But do come to lunch if you can manage it.”
“And of course if you come to the meeting,” Fimberry went on, “you’ll be able to see round the chapel. If you’re lucky you’ll see the Ossuary as well.”
“We brought nothing into this world,” said Mr. Gladwyn, “and it is certain we can carry nothing out. The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the Name of the Lord.”
It was cold in the dark little church, and Lydia’s hands burrowed deep in the pockets of her coat. She was beside Mrs. Alforde in one of the pews at the front. A sparrow had found its way into the church and every now and then it launched itself into flight, fluttering in vain around the pitch-pine beams, searching for the sky.
The plain coffin was resting on trestles in the chancel. There were no flowers. Someone was crying quietly.
“I held my tongue,” Mr. Gladwyn was saying, “and spake nothing: I kept silence, yea, even from good words; but it was pain and grief to me.”
In the other front pew was a tall woman in a long, dark, shabby coat, with her face hidden by a veil. There were two other women, both old, one on either side of her. The undertaker’s men and the sexton were behind them.
“Thou turnest man to destruction: again thou sayest, Come again, ye children of men.”
Mrs. Alforde stood, sat and knelt, and Lydia followed suit. There was no singing. The Vicar had pared the service down, and its brief, stark finality was terrible. When the time came, the little congregation trooped out after the coffin to the open grave at the bottom of the churchyard. They watched the undertaker’s men lowering the coffin into the raw earth. The sun came out from behind a cloud and suddenly the churchyard was bright and full of color, inappropriately festive.
“He cometh up, and is cut down, like a flower; he fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth in one stay.”
It was then that Lydia noticed the neighboring grave. Amy Narton’s. She glanced at the veiled woman on the other side of the coffin and wondered what on earth she must be feeling. Her husband and her daughter were lying side by side.
Earth pattered on the coffin. The undertaker’s men looked straight ahead, their faces full of sombre boredom. The last prayers were said, and then the collect, and then at last it was over. Lydia wished she had not come: idle curiosity had made her a tourist in someone else’s grief. There was no excuse for that.
Afterward, as the knot of people around the grave disintegrated, Mrs. Alforde went up to the woman with the veiled face. Lydia watched them talking. Then Mrs. Alforde said something to one of the elderly women beside her and rejoined Lydia, who had waited several yards away on the path.
“Poor woman,” Mrs. Alforde said. “I hope you don’t mind; I’ve promised to go and see her after lunch. It shouldn’t delay us too much.”