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Now she made herself say, the effort putting severity into her voice, 'Joyce, I'm just leaving. I'm off for the weekend. I'll take you home and put you to bed there.'

'But I've lost the door key,' said Joyce, her eyes filling with tears.

Sarah knew the key had not been lost, but to prove that meant she would have to search Joyce's pathetic grubby bag, which once had been a brightly striped Mexican affair.

She told herself that on this ground she would have to fight, though it was poor ground. If she did not… She telephoned the hospital where her brother was a consultant, was told it was his afternoon in Harley Street, rang Harley Street, was told he was with a patient. Sarah said to the receptionist that this was Dr Millgreen's sister, and the call concerned his daughter, who was ill. She would hold on. She held on for a good ten minutes, while Joyce cried quietly in her chair.

At one point she said in a little voice, 'But I want to stay here with you, Auntie.'

'You can't stay here with me now. You're ill, you need treatment.'

'But he'll make me go to hospital. I don't want to.'

'No, but he'd make you stay in bed, and so would I.'

'Why are you all so horrible to me? I want to live with you always.'

'Joyce, none of us has heard one word from you — good God, it must be five months. I was running all over London looking for you.'

At this point the receptionist said Dr Millgreen could not come to the telephone, Mrs Durham must manage. 'Tell my brother that his daughter is in my flat. She is ill. I shall be away until Monday.'

She was angry. That she was full of guilt goes without saying. It was no use telling herself she had 110 reason to feel guilt.

She said to Joyce, 'I suppose someone will come and fetch you. If not, I should simply get into a taxi and go home.' Here she put some money into the Mexican bag.

Joyce whimpered, 'Oh Auntie, I don't understand.'

Because this was a child talking, not even Joyce the unpredictable adolescent, who did manage to cope with life on some sort of level, Sarah did not reply to her. Instead she said to an adult, reminding herself that Joyce was twenty, 'Look, Joyce, you understand perfectly well. Something or other has happened out there, but of course you'll never tell us what… '

Joyce interrupted angrily, 'If I did tell you, you'd take advantage of me and punish me.'

Sarah said, 'I don't remember my punishing you for anything, ever.'

'But my father does. He's always horrible.'

'He is your father. And you have a mother; she stands up for you.' Joyce turned away her face. She was trembling, in spasms. 'You are a grown-up woman, Joyce. You're not a little girl.'

At this a little girl looked vaguely in her aunt's direction with enormous drowned eyes. A small pink mouth stood pathetically half open.

'I'm not going to spend my life looking after you. I don't mind if you come and stay here when I'm here. But I'm not going to wait on you. If you like I'll take you for a holiday somewhere. You certainly look as if you could do with one. Well, we'll talk about it, but not now. I've got a train to catch. I'll ring up from Oxfordshire and find out if you've gone home.'

Joyce would not go home. Late that night Hal might mention to his wife, if he remembered, that the girl was ill and alone in Sarah's flat. Rather, 'Joyce has turned up at Sarah's, and Sarah seems to think she's not well.' Anne, exhausted and irritable, would instruct the two girls, Briony and Nell, to go over to Sarah's. They would be angry with Joyce for disappearing for so long. They would be angry with Sarah for not coping. Everyone would be angry with Sarah. As usual. It crossed Sarah's mind now to think that was indeed a bit odd.

When Sarah got off the train, it was Elizabeth who came to introduce herself. The two women frankly inspected each other, Elizabeth in a way that made Sarah wonder exactly what Stephen had said about her, for Elizabeth had the look of someone checking to make sure information had been correct: apparently, yes, it had. Elizabeth was a smallish woman, with shiny yellow hair held by a black velvet ribbon, and this made her look both efficient and spirited. Her face was round and healthy and her cheeks were country pink. She had unequivocal bright blue eyes. Her body was firm and rounded: if one touched it, one's finger would bounce off, thought Sarah. Everything about this woman told the world, but in a take-it-or-leave it voice, You can rely on me for anything reasonable. She seemed pleased with Sarah and was certainly thinking, Good, I don't have to bother with her, she can look after herself. For Elizabeth — like Sarah — was one of the people who wake every morning with a mind's eye list of items to be dealt with. Sarah had already been crossed off the list.

Now Elizabeth strode off to a station wagon, but slowed so as to adjust to Sarah's pace. The back of the car seemed crammed with large healthy dogs. Elizabeth drove fast and well — what else? She commanded the car with every muscle of her body, as if it were a horse she could not trust not to get out of hand. Meanwhile she gave Sarah information about what they saw as they drove through the jolly countryside. At the top of a rise she stopped the car and said, 'There it is, there's Queen's Gift.' Although she had lived in the house all her life and could hardly be unused to this view, she sounded like a child trying not to be too pleased with itself, and Sarah liked her from that moment.

The house stood four-square on its slight rise, dignified but sprightly, as if a country dance had been magicked into brick, but not without suggestions (the eight barred windows at the top?) that in its long centuries there must have been plenty of drama. It was a hot still afternoon in that summer of 1989, when one perfect day followed another. The house seemed determined to soak in sunlight and store it against the English weather that was bound to set in again soon. There it sat glowing redly amid its English lawns and shrubs and judiciously disposed trees, take me or leave me, not a house one could live in without submitting to it, and, clearly, Elizabeth felt that in presenting the house she was defining herself. Now she told Sarah she had been born there. Her father had been born there. Queen's Gift had been in her family one way or another since it had been built.

They drove slowly through appropriately impressive gates, the dogs barking and whining at being home, then through a wood of beeches and oaks, and turned a corner abruptly to approach a side view of the house, where, on a tall board that pointed the way to a beech walk, was Julie's face — an impetuous smiling girl — styled in black and white on a poster. At once Sarah was returned to her own world, or rather the two worlds slid together. There are times when everything seems like a film set or a stage set, and the old house had become a background for Julie Vairon, incongruous though that certainly was.

Stephen emerged from tall doors at the top of a flight of stone steps that were an invitation (only conditional, for above them was a notice that said, discreetly, Cloakrooms) to the public to ascend them. Stephen seemed worried. He descended the steps, smiling at her, but on the last one he stopped, and his large hand was curving around a gently eroded stone ball that crowned a pillar, as if, because of the habits necessary to a busy man, he was assessing the condition of this sphere since it might be time for him to do something about it.

He took her suitcase, set it on the bottom step, and said he would show her around. At this Elizabeth laughed and said, 'But poor Sarah, can't she have a cup of tea first?' as she relinquished their guest, her own duty done, to her husband. Sarah waited for a signal or glance that recognizes a situation, and it came: Elizabeth shone that smile on them both that says — in this case with good-humoured irony — 'I know what is going on and I don't mind,' before going off on her own affairs. In fact she had so little interest in this obligatory little act that the smile had faded before she turned away. There are not many spouses, or partners, strong-minded enough to forgo that look, that smile, or laugh, for it makes a claim, and an even stronger one than jealousy or anger. Stephen glanced at Sarah to see if she had noticed, and then a small grimace signalled, A pity, and he said aloud, 'Don't mind. She's got it wrong. If she had ever asked, I would have.