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Authors: Mary Stewart

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To my relief, after a moment's hesitation, he made no further protest. He took the hand quite simply, in a sort of courteous recognition of defeat.

"Good-bye, then, Mary Grey. I'm sorry. All the best."

As I left him I was very conscious of him standing there and staring after me.

CHAPTER II

Whisht! lads, haad your gobs An' Aa'll tell ye aal an aajul story.

C. F. LEUMANE : The Lambton Worm.

THE woman was there again.

For the last three days, punctually at the same time, she had pushed her way through the crowded aisles of the Kasbah Coffee House, and had found herself a seat in a corner. This last fact alone argued a good deal of stubborn determination, since at half past five in the afternoon the Kasbah was always crowded. But, either owing to her own fixity of purpose, or to the good manners of the students who, at that time of day, made up most of the Kasbah's. clientele, she got her corner seat every day, and there she sat, sipping her Espresso very slowly, and working her way through a Sausageburger Special, while the brightly-lit cafe-crowd swirled round her table, the deafening babel of young voices earnestly and dogmatically discussing love, death, and the afternoon's lectures against an emphatic background of Messrs. Presley, Inc., and what I had learned to recognise as the Kool Kats' Klub.

I myself had not noticed the woman until she was pointed out to me. I was on table-duty that week, and was too occupied in weaving my laden way through the crowds to clear the dirty cups away and wipe the scarlet plastic table-tops, to pay much attention to a dull-looking woman in country clothes, sitting alone in a corner. But Norma, from her position behind the Espresso machine, had observed her, and thought her 'queer'. It was Norma's most deadly adjective.

"She stares, I'm telling you. Not at the students, though take it from me what I see from up here's nobody's business sometimes; the things you see when you haven't got your gun. I mean, take a look at that one, that blonde in the tartan jeans, and when I say in she's only just to say in, isn't she? And I happen to know her da's a professor up at the University. Well, I don't know about a professor, exactly, but he works up in the Science Colleges and that shows you, doesn't it? I mean to say. Two coffees?

Biscuits? Well, we've got Popoffs and Yumyums and—oh yes, two Scrumpshies ... ta, honey. Pay at the cash desk. The things some people eat, and look at her figure, it stands to reason. Oh yes, the woman in the corner, she's off her rocker, if you ask me, fair gives you the creeps the way she stares. Don't say you hadn't noticed her, it's you she's watching, love, take it from me. All the time. Not so's you'd see it, but every time you're looking away there she is, staring. Nutty as a fruit cake, love, take it from me." "Stares at me, d'you mean?"

"That's what I'm telling you. Three coffees, one tea. Pay at the desk. Stares at you all the time. Can't seem to take her eyes off you. No, not that girl, she's with that black-haired chap in the Antarctic get-up who's over at the juke-box, would you credit it, he's got that tune again ... Yes, that woman over there under the contemp'ry Crusaders. The middle-aged one with the face like blotting-paper." I turned to look. It was true. As my eyes met hers, the woman looked quickly down at her cup. I lowered my tray of dirty crockery slowly till the edge rested against the bar-counter, and considered her for a moment.

She could have been anything between thirty-five and forty— "middle-aged", to Norma, meant anything over twenty-six—and the first adjective I myself would have applied to her would have been 'ordinary', or, at any rate, 'inconspicuous', rather than 'queer'. She wore goodish, but badly chosen country clothes, and a minimum of make-up—powder, I guessed, and a touch of lipstick which did little to liven the dull, rather heavy features. Her hair under the slightly out-of-date felt hat was dark, and worn plainly in a bun. Her eyebrows were thick and well-marked, but untidy-looking over badly-set eyes. The, outer corners of brows, eyes, and mouth were pulled down slightly, giving the face its heavy, almost discontented expression. The general effect of dullness was not helped by the browns and fawns of the colour-scheme she affected. I saw at once what Norma had meant by that last, graphic phrase. One got the curious impression that the woman only just missed being good-looking; that the features were somehow blurred and ill-defined, as if they had been drawn conventionally enough, and then the artist had smoothed a light, dry hand carelessly down over the drawing, dragging it just that fraction out of focus. She could have been a bad copy of a portrait I already knew; a print blotted off some dramatically sharp sketch that was vaguely familiar. But even as I tried to place the impression, it slid away from me. I had never, to my recollection, seen her before. If I had, I would scarcely have noticed her, I thought. She was the kind of woman whom, normally, one wouldn't have looked at twice, being at first sight devoid of any of the positive qualities that go to make up that curious thing called charm. Charm presupposes some sort of vivacity and spark, at least what one might call some gesture of advance towards life. This woman merely sat there, heavily, apparently content to wait while life went on around her.

Except for the tireless stare of those toffee-brown eyes. As I let my own gaze slide past her in apparent indifference, I saw her eyes lift once more to my face.

Norma said, in my ear: "D'you know her?"

"Never seen her before in my life. Yes, I know who you mean, the woman in the brown hat; I just didn't want her to see me staring, that's all. Are you sure, Norma? She's not just sitting there kibitzing in general?"

" 'Course I'm sure. What else have I got to do—" here she laid hold of the Espresso handle with one hand, reached for a couple of cups with the other, filled them, slapped them on to their saucers and the saucers on to a tray, supplied the tray with sugar and teaspoons, and pushed the lot across to Mavis, the waitress on duty in the inner room—"What else have I got to do, but watch what's going on?" Mavis, I noticed, had passed quite close to the corner table, bound for the inner room with the coffee-cups. The woman didn't glance at her.

"Still watching you . . ." murmured Norma. "You see?"

"You must be mistaken. It's a nervous mannerism, or she thinks I'm someone she knows, or—" I broke off short,

"Or what?"

"Nothing. It doesn't matter anyway. Let her stare if it gives her pleasure."

"Sure. I should worry. Poor old thing's going round the bend, I shouldn't wonder," said Norma kindly. "All the same, you watch it, Mary. I mean to say, kind of uncomfortable, isn't it? Someone staring at you all the time, stands to reason." She brightened. "Unless she's a talent scout for films, or the T.V. Now, there's a thing! D'you think it might be that?"

I laughed. "I do not."

"Why not? You're still pretty," she said generously, "and you must have been lovely when you were young. Honest. Lovely."

"That's very sweet of you. But anyway, talent scouts hang round the infant-school gates these days, don't they? I mean, you're practically crumbling to pieces at anything over nineteen."

"You've said it. On the shelf with your knitting at twenty-one," said Norma, who was eighteen and a half.

"Well, all the same, you watch it. Maybe she's one of those, you know, slip a syringe into your arm and away with you to worse than death before you know where you are."

I began to laugh. "Who's out of date now? I believe you have to queue for a place these days. No, I hardly see her putting that one across, Norma!"

"Well, I do," said Norma stubbornly. "And you may well laugh, not but what it makes you wonder who said it was worse than death. A man, likely. Well, there's no accounting for tastes, is there, not but what I wouldn't just as soon have a good square meal, myself. Three coffees? Here you are. Sorry, I'll give you a clean saucer. Ta. Pay at the desk. For crying out loud, he's got that tune again." Compelling, piercing, and very skilful indeed, the saxes and (surely) the kornets of the Kool Kats bullied their way up triumphantly through the noises of the cafe and street outside. I said hurriedly: "I'll have to take these through to the kitchen. See you later. Keep your eye on the White Slaver."

"Sure. All the same, it's all very well to laugh, but she's got that kind of face. Stodgy, but clever, and more to her than meets the eye. Must be something, anyway, stands to reason. I mean, I'm telling you, the way she stares. Oh well, maybe you are just like someone she knows, ©r something."

"Maybe I am," I said.

I picked up the tray and, without another glance at the corner under the contemporary Crusaders, I pushed my way through the swing door into the steamy cubby-hole that the Kasbah called its kitchen.

•••

Next day she was there again. And the next. And Norma was right. Now that I knew, I could feel it, the steady gaze that followed me about the place, pulling my own eyes so strongly that I had to will myself not to keep glancing back at her, to see if she was still watching me.

Once or twice I forgot, and my look did cross hers, to see her eyes drop just as they had before, and the heavy face, expressionless, stare down at the slow swirl of brown in her coffee-cup as she stirred it. Another time when I caught the edge of her steady, obstinate stare, I stopped, cloth in hand—I was wiping a table-top—and let myself look surprised, and a little embarrassed. She held my gaze for a moment, then she looked away.

It was on the third afternoon that I decided that there must be more in it than a chance interest. My recent encounter on the Roman Wall was still very much in the front of my mind, and I felt strongly that that afternoon's mistakes would hardly bear repeating.

When the bar-counter was quiet, I paused by it, .and said to Norma: "She's still at it, your White Slaver in the corner. And I'm tired of it. I'm going over to speak to her and ask her if she thinks she's ever met me."

"Well, you needn't bother," said Norma. "I been trying to get a minute to tell you ever since a quarter to six. She's bin asking about you. Asked Mavis who you were."

"Did she?"

"Uh-huh. Right out. Got hold of Mavis while you were in the kitchen. What's up?"

"Nothing. No, really. What did Mavis tell her?"

"Well, she didn't see nothing wrong in it, the old girl said she thought she knew you anyway, and asked if you came from these parts and if you were living in Newcastle. So Mavis said who you were and that you'd come from Canada and had a fancy to stay up north for a bit, seeing as your family'd come from round here hundreds of years ago, and that you were just working here temp'ry like, till you get yourself sorted out and found a proper job. Mavis didn't see anything wrong in telling her, a woman like that, sort of respectable. It's not as if it was a man, after all, is it?"

Another time I would have appreciated the way Norma said the word, as if describing a dangerous and fascinating kind of wild beast; but just now I had room only for one thing. "No," I said, "it's all right. But—well, it's odd, Norma, the whole thing, and I don't like mysteries. Did Mavis find out anything about her} Who she is, where she comes from?"

"No."

I looked unseeingly down at the tray of crockery in my hand. Fleetingly, I was there again: the Roman Wall in the sunshine, the bubble of the curlews, the smell of thyme, the swans preening and dipping in the lough below, and, facing me, that hard blue stare, as genuinely dangerous, I felt sure, as anything that Norma could have dreamed up ...

I said abruptly: "I want to know who she is. But I don't want to speak to her. Look, Norma, she's got a dress-box or something with her, and it's labelled. I'm going into the kitchen again, now, because I don't want to look as if I've any interest in it. Will you ask Mavis to go over, say something—any excuse will do—and get a look at that label?"

"Sure. You leave it to me. Anything for a spot of excitement. Oh, and tell them to get a move on in there: I'll be out of cups in a minute."

When I got back from the kitchen with the cups, the corner table was empty. Mavis was at the counter with Norma. I said, a little anxiously : "Did she see you looking?"

"Not her," said Mavis. "Funny sort of woman, eh? Norma says you don't know her."

"No." I set the tray down on the counter. "The box was labelled, then? What was the name?"

"Dermott. A Miss Dermott."

I turned slowly to look at her. "Dermott."

"Docs it mean anything?" asked Norma.

Mavis said: "Dermott? That's an Irish name, isn't it?"

"What's the matter?" said Norma quickly. "Mary, do you know her?" I said sharply: "Did you see the address? Was there one? Did you sec where she was from?" Mavis was looking at mc curiously. "Yes, I did. Some address near Bellingham, a farm. White-something Farm, it was. Mary,

what—?" "Whitescar?"

"Yes, that was it. Then you do know her?"

"No. I've never seen her in my life. Honestly. But—" I took in my breath—"she must know someone I know, that's all. I— I've met someone from Whitescar . . . she must have heard I worked here, and came to see. But what an odd way of doing it, not to speak, I mean . . . Oh, well," I managed a smile, speaking lightly. "That's that little mystery solved, and nothing to it after all. Thanks a lot, Mavis."

"Think nothing of it." And Mavis, dismissing the incident, hurried away. But Norma, lifting the piles of clean cups and saucers from the tray I had brought, and stacking them slowly in place, eyed me thoughtfully.

"Nothing to it, eh?"

"Nothing at all. If she's here tomorrow I'll speak to her

myself."

"I would," said Norma. "I would, too. Find out what she's playing at. . . Friend of a friend of yours, eh?"

"Something like that."

Something life that. I could see the likeness now: the poorish copy of that dramatically handsome face, the sepia print of Connor Winslow's Glorious Technicolor. "My half-sister keeps house at Whitescar . . ." She would be some half-dozen years older than he, with the different colouring she had probably got from her Dermott father, and none of the good looks that his Winslow blood had given Connor. But the likeness, ill-defined, shadowy, a characterless travesty of his vivid charm, was there, to be glimpsed now and then, fleetingly, by anyone who knew. I thought, suddenly: I wonder if she minds.

BOOK: Ivy Tree
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