"But how long did you have to wait for a bus?" Virginia asked him.
"Only a little bit. I knew there was one coming."
"How did you know?"
"I had a bus timetable." He looked at Edie. "1 took it out of your bag one day. I kept it."
"I wondered what had happened to my wee timetable."
"1 took it. I looked up the bus to Relkirk, and I knew it would come. And it did."
"But didn't anybody ask you what you were doing all on your own?"
"No. I had on my Balaclava helmet and it was my disguise and only my eyes showed. I didn't look like a schoolboy because I didn't wear my school cap."
"How did you pay the fare?" Edmund asked.
"Vi had given me two pounds when she said goodbye to me. I didn't hand it in. I kept it in the inside pocket of my overcoat. I put the timetable there too, so that nobody would find it."
"And then you got to Relkirk?"
"Yes. I got to the bus station. And it was getting dark, and I had to find the other bus, the one that goes past Caple Bridge. There was a Strathcroy bus too, but I didn't want to catch that one in case somebody saw me, somebody who knew me. And it was quite difficult to find that bus because there were lots of buses and I had to read the names on all the fronts of them. But 1 did find it, but we had to wait for quite a long time before it started."
"Where did you get off that bus?"
"I told you. Caple Bridge. And then I walked."
"You walked from Caple Bridge?" Virginia looked at her small son in wonder. "But, Henry, that's five miles…"
"I didn't walk the whole of the way," he admitted. "I know I'm not allowed to get lifts, but I did get one at the very end from a very nice man in a sheep-float. And he took me to Strathcroy. And then…" His voice, which had sounded so clear and confident, began to shake again. "And then…" His eyes turned to Edie.
Edie took over. "Don't cry, pet. We won't talk about it if you don't want to…"
"I want you to tell them."
So Edie did, in her most practical and down-to-earth fashion, but even this did not assuage the horror of Henry's terrible experience. At mention of Lottie, the colour seeped from Virginia's cheeks, and she drew Henry close and pressed her face to the top of his head and laid her hands across his eyes, as though she could shut out for ever the sight of Lottie Carstairs coming across Edie's bedroom floor to find out who stood beyond the window.
"Oh, Henry." She rocked him like a baby. "I can't bear it… What a thing to happen. What a thing to happen to you."
Edmund, equally shaken, kept his voice calm.
"So what did you do, Henry?"
His father's level tones restored, a little, Henry's courage. He emerged, ruffled, from Virginia's embrace. He said, "I went to Mrs. Ishak. Her shop was still open and she was sweeping the floor. And she was very kind. And Mrs. Ishak telephoned the police, and they came with the sirens going and a blue light flashing. We saw it from the shop. And then, when it had gone again, back to Relkirk, Mrs. Ishak put on her coat, and she and me walked here. And she rang the bell because the door was locked, and then the dogs barked, and Edie came." He reached for his cocoa and drained the mug, and then set the empty mug down on the table. He said, "I thought she was murdered! Lottie had put on her lilac cardigan and her mouth was all red, and I thought that she had killed Edie…"
His face crumpled. It was all too much for him. He wept again, and they let him cry, and Edmund did not tell him to be a man but simply sat there, regarding his small and sobbing son with a growing admiration and pride. For Henry, at eight years old, had not only run away from school, but accomplished his flight in certain style. He'd planned the whole operation with undreamt-of courage, good sense, and forethought. He appeared to have been prepared for any contingency, and it was only the disastrous and unfortuitous reappearance of the wretched Lottie Carstairs that had finally defeated him.
Eventually, the tears ceased. Henry had cried himself dry. Edmund gave him his clean linen handkerchief, and Henry sat up and blew his nose. He said, "I think I should like to go to bed now."
"Of course." Virginia smiled down at him. "Do you want a bath first? You must be feeling very cold and dirty."
"Yes, all right."
He got off her knee. He blew his nose again, went to his father to return the handkerchief. Edmund took it, and drew Henry close, and bent to kiss the top of his head.
He said, "There's just one thing you haven't told us." Henry looked up. "Why did you run away?"
Henry thought. And then he said, "I didn't like it. It felt all wrong. Like being ill. Headachy."
"Yes," said Edmund after a bit. "Yes, I see." He hesitated, and then went on. "Look, old boy, why don't you go up with Edie and get into that bath. Mummy and I have got to go to this party, but I'll ring Vi first and tell her you're in great shape, and we'll come up and say good night before you go to sleep."
"All right." Henry put his hand into Edie's and they made for the door. But he turned back. "You will come, won't you?"
"Promise."
The door closed behind him. Edmund and Virginia were left alone.
With Henry gone, she sat slumped in the hard kitchen chair. There was no longer need to conceal the trauma of shock and strain, and beneath her make-up he saw her face pale and drawn, and her eyes shadowed, no longer bright with the evening's laughter.
She looked drained. He stood up and took her hand and pulled her to her feet. "Come," he said, and he led her out of the kitchen and along the passage to the empty library. The fire that he had rekindled still blazed, and the big, shadowy room was warm. She was grateful for the warmth. She went towards it, sank down on the fireside stool, and spread her hands to the flames. Her long, many-layered skirts flowed about her, and the collar of her fur coat supported her head, her clear-cut profile.
"You look like a particularly well-heeled Cinderella." She glanced up and sent him the ghost of a smile. "Would you like a drink?"
She shook her head. "No. I'm all right."
He went to his desk, switched on the lamp, and dialled the number for Croy. It was Archie who answered his call.
"Archie. Edmund here."
"Is Henry all right?"
"Yes, he's fine. Had a bit of an experience, but don't say anything to Vi. Just tell her that Edie's with him, and he's on his way to bed."
"Are you coming back here?"
Edmund watched his wife, sitting with her back to him, silhouetted against the firelight. He said, "No, I think not. We'll go straight to Corriehill and meet you all there."
"Right. I'll tell everyone. See you later, Edmund."
"Goodbye."
He put down the phone, went back to the fire, and stood, with one foot on the fender and a hand on the mantelpiece, gazing, as his wife gazed, at the flames. But the silence that lay between them was no longer one of enmity, but the peaceful communion of two people who, having together survived a crisis, felt no need for words.
It was Virginia who broke that silence. She said, "I'm sorry."
"What are you sorry about?"
"I'm sorry I said that. In the car. Telling you not to be angry. It was stupid. I should have known that you would never be angry with Henry."
"On the contrary, I feel proud of him. He did very well."
"He must have been so miserable."
"I think he just felt lost. I was wrong. You were right. Colin Henderson said as much. He's not ready, yet, for boarding-school."
"You mustn't blame yourself."
"That's a generous thing to say."
"No, it's not generous. I'm grateful. Because now we can stop arguing and quarrelling and destroying each other. And you had only the best intentions in mind. You thought it would be best for Henry. Everybody makes mistakes, sooner or later. A man who never made a mistake never made anything. It's over now. Let's leave it behind. Just be thankful that nothing dreadful happened to Henry, and that he's safe."