'I don't mind if I do,' he said.
After tea they looked at the specifications. The kite was huge, with gadgets he had never seen before, and it would cost a lot of money.
'You'll never be able to fly it by yourselves,' he said.
'We can try.' 'I suppose you wouldn't like me to help you just at first?' he asked uncertainly.
'Mightn't be a bad idea,' said Mrs Sunbury.
It was late when he got home, much later than he thought, and Betty was vexed.
'Wherever have you been, Herb? I thought you were dead. Supper's waiting and everything.'
'I met some fellows and got talking.'
She gave him a sharp look, but didn't answer. She sulked.
After supper he suggested they should go to a movie, but she refused.
'You go if you want to,' she said. 'I don't care to.'
On the following Saturday he went again to the common and again his mother let him fly the kite. They had ordered the new one and expected to get it in three weeks. Present his mother said to him:
'Elizabeth is here.'
'Betty?'
'Spying on you.'
It gave him a nasty turn, but he put on a bold front.
'Let her spy. I don't care.'
But he was nervous and wouldn't go back to tea with his parents. He went straight home. Betty was waiting for him.
'So that's the fellows you got talking to. I've been suspicious for some time, you going for a walk on Saturday afternoon, and all of a sudden I tumbled to it. Flying a kite, you, a grown man. Contemptible I call it.'
'I don't care what you call it. I like it, and if you don't like it you can lump it.'
'I won't have it and I tell you that straight. I'm not going to have you make a fool of yourself.'
'I've flown a kite every Saturday afternoon ever since I was a kid, and I'm going to fly a kite as long as ever I want to.'
'It's that old bitch, she's just trying to get you away from me. I know her. If you were a man you'd never speak to her again, not after the way she's treated me.'
'I won't have you call her that. She's my mother and I've got the right to see her as often as ever I want to.'
The quarrel went on hour after hour. Betty screamed at him and Herbert shouted at her. They had had trifling disagreements before, because they were both obstinate, but this was the first serious row they had had. They didn't speak to one another on the Sunday, and during the rest of the week, though outwardly there was peace between them, their ill-feeling rankled. It happened that the next two Saturdays it poured with rain. Betty smiled to herself when she saw the downpour, but if Herbert was disappointed he gave no sign of it. The recollection of their quarrel grew dim. Living in two rooms as they did, sleeping in the same bed, it was inevitable that they should agree to forget their differences. Betty went out of her way to be nice to her Herb, and she thought that now she had given him a taste of her tongue and he knew she wasn't going to be put upon by anyone, he'd be reasonable. He was a good husband in his way, generous with his money and steady. Give her time and she'd manage him all right.
But after a fortnight of bad weather it cleared.
'Looks as if we're going to have good flying weather tomorrow,' said Mr Sunbury as they met on the platform to await their morning train. 'The new kite's come.' 'It has?'
'Your mum says of course we'd like you to come and help us with it, but no one's got the right to come between a man and his wife, and if you're afraid of Betty, her kicking up a rumpus, I mean, you'd better not come. There's a young fellow we've got to know on the common who's just mad about it, and he says he'll get it to fly if anybody can.'
Herbert was seized with a pang of jealousy.
'Don't you let any strangers touch our kite. I'll be there all right.'
'Well, you think it over, Herbert, and if you don't come we shall quite understand.'
'I'll come,' said Herbert.
So next day when he got back from the City he changed from his business clothes into slacks and an old coat. Betty came into the bedroom.
'What are you doing?'
'Changing,' he answered gaily. He was so excited, he couldn't keep the secret to himself. 'Their new kite's come and I'm going to fly it.'
'Oh, no, you're not,' she said. 'I won't have it.'
'Don't be a fool, Betty. I'm going, I tell you, and if you don't like it you can do the other thing.'
'I'm not going to let you, so that's that.'
She shut the door and stood in front of it. Her eyes flashed and her jaw was set. She was a little thing and he was a tall strong man. He took hold of her two arms to push her out of the way, but she kicked him violently on the shin.
'D'you want me to give you a sock on the jaw?'
'If you go you don't come back,' she shouted.
He caught her up, though she struggled and kicked, threw her on to the bed and went out.
If the small box-kite had caused an excitement on the common it was nothing to what the new one caused. But it was was difficult to manage, and though they ran and panted and other enthusiastic flyers helped them Herbert couldn't get it up.
'Never mind,' he said, 'we'll get the knack of it presently. The wind's not right today, that's all.'
He went back to tea with his father and mother and they talked it over just as they had talked in the old days. He delayed going because he didn't fancy the scene Betty would make him, but when Mrs Sunbury went into the kitchen to get supper ready he had to go home. Betty was reading the paper. She looked up.
'Your bag's packed,' she said.
'My what?'
'You heard what I said. I said if you went you needn't come back. I forgot about your things. Everything's packed. It's in the bedroom.'
He looked at her for a moment with surprise. She pretended to be reading again. He would have liked to give her a good hiding.
'All right, have it your own way,' he said.
He went into the bedroom. His clothes were packed in a suitcase, and there was a brown-paper parcel in which Betty had put whatever was left over. He took the bag in one hand, the parcel in the other, walked through the sitting-room without a word and out of the house. He walked to his mother's and rang the bell. She opened the door.
'I've come home, Mum,' he said.
'Have you, Herbert? Your room's ready for you. Put your things down and come in. We were just sitting down to supper.' They went into the dining-room. 'Samuel, Herbert's come home. Run out and get a quart of beer.'
Over supper and during the rest of the evening he told them the trouble he had had with Betty.
'Well, you're well out of it, Herbert,' said Mrs Sunbury when he had finished. 'I told you she was no wife for you. Common she is, common as dirt, and you who's always been brought up so nice.'
He found it good to sleep in his own bed, the bed he'd been used to all his life, and to come down to breakfast on the Sunday morning, unshaved and unwashed, and read the News of the World.
'We won't go to chapel this morning,' said Mrs Sunbury. 'It's been an upset to you, Herbert; we'll all take it easy today.'
During the week they talked a lot about the kite, but they also talked a lot about Betty. They discussed what she would do next.
'She'll try and get you back,' said Mrs Sunbury.
'A fat chance she's got of doing that,' said Herbert.
'You'll have to provide for her,' said his father.
'Why should he do that?' cried Mrs Sunbury. 'She trapped him into marrying her and now she's turned him out of the home he made for her.'
'I'll give her what's right as long as she leaves me alone.'
He was feeling more comfortable every day, in fact he was beginning to feel as if he's never been away, he settled in like a dog in its own particular basket; it was nice having his mother to brush his clothes and mend his socks; she gave him the sort of things he'd always eaten and liked best; Betty was a scrappy sort of cook, it had been fun just at first, like picnicking, but it wasn't the sort of eating a man could get his teeth into, and he could never get over his mother's idea that fresh food was better than the stuff you bought in tins. He got sick of the sight of tinned salmon. Then it was nice to have space to move about in rather than be cooped up in two small rooms, one of which had to serve as a kitchen as well.