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Authors: Jill Tahourdin

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She expected Richard to look amused. Instead his face seemed to close up.

“So you’ve already met the local Midas?” was his dry comment.

Midas? A school-book memory flashed into her mind. Midas, the
king
whose touch turned everything into gold. She glanced up at Richard.

So he doesn’t like Eric Gore either, she thought. What’s more, he doesn’t even like my knowing him. She said lightly, “I took him for a foreigner, a German, perhaps. But my aunt said that was nonsense. She seemed to think he was pretty special.”

“H’m.”

She waited for Richard to comment further; but all he said, with rather cool abruptness, was, “Well, better run in and dry off, Alix. Mustn’t get chilled. I’ll be seeing you.”

Without waiting for her to reply he had left her, and was splashing through the shallows in the direction of his boat. He didn’t look back.

Alix called Nelson and ran with him back to the house.

Her cheeks were warm and she was aware of a curious elation, both pleasurable and vaguely alarming

as if at some challenge whose significance she didn’t quite grasp.

Quickly she slipped into her room. There she stripped off her wet swim-suit, towelled herself, and rinsed the salt from her hair.

At eight-thirty, composed and dressed in a bright shirt and linen slacks, she joined her aunt for breakfast.

Lady Merrick eyed her with frank pleasure.

“So nice to have you here, dear. Slept well?”

“Not very, Aunt Drusilla.”

“Oh? Why not? Bed not comfortable?”

“It was lovely. And so is my room. And Nelson and I had a heavenly swim this
morning,
early.”

“Then
what...?”

Alix came straight to the point.

“I’m afraid I was worrying. One of Bernard’s letters, the latest of the three, rather upset me. I’d like you to read it, if you will, and tell me what you think of it.” She took the air-letter from her bag and handed it over. Her aunt poured herself a second cup of coffee, donned formidable horarims,
and read it through twice, slowly.

“H’m,” she remarked at length. “This Barrett—who is he, exactly?”

Alix explained.

“Any family?”

“His wife. His mother too, I fancy. And a daughter.”

“Age?”

“Twenty-one or two.”

“Pretty?”

“Very, if the snapshot Bernard sent me is a good likeness. Do you think...?”

Lady Merrick removed her spectacles and shook her handsome grey head.

“You’re not going to like this,” she said kindly. “But for what my opinion is worth, I think
something
—perhaps this Sandra, perhaps not—has made Bernard feel he’s not quite so ... so sure
...”

“Yes,” Alix agreed in a small voice. “Yes. That’s rather what I thought too. I just wanted to know if it struck you the same way. Do you think he’d like to

to
jilt
me, Aunt Drusilla?”

“If he would, he hasn’t quite got the guts to say so,” was the dry response.

Alix was silent, thinking. She buttered a piece of toast, and absently spread it with marmalade, which she had always disliked.

“So what do I do now?” she asked at length.

Her aunt lit a cigarette and blew out a mouthful of smoke before replying. Then—

“You could let him go,” she suggested.

“But...”


Or you could put up a fight to keep him, couldn’t you?”

“Y—yes
.
..”

“It all depends,” Lady Merrick expounded briskly, “on how much he means to you, my dear. Tell me

how much
does
he mean?”

Alix hesitated.

“I’m not quite sure,” she said slowly. “I’ve been asking myself that question during the night, and honestly I don’t know the answer. You see, I haven’t seen
him
for two years.”

“Two years too long.”

“Perhaps. But you see, Aunt Drusilla—during those two years, everything I’ve thought done and—and
felt
has been based on the certainty that I was in love with Bernard, and he with me; and that I was going to marry him. If I’m not, I’ll feel that in a sense I’ve thrown away those two years—lost them out of my life.”

Her aunt blew a smoke ring. She said cheerfully, with a fond look at her niece’s downcast face, “They’re not lost, my dear, whatever comes of them. No experience of that kind—loving,
feeling
deeply, hoping—is a loss. But you’re both young. And you’ve got to face the fact that young people’s ideas—and tastes—can change a lot in two years.”

“Mine haven’t changed,” Alix protested. “I’ve never even
thought
of changing.”

“No. But you’re the steadfast type my dear.” Seeing the real trouble and perplexity in her niece’s big brown eyes she added: “You know, don’t you, dear, that you are more than welcome to live with me here for just as long as you like?”

Alix smiled her gratitude.

“I know, darling,” she said in her warm voice. “And I
will
stay with you—I suppose I can find a
job—?—If ...
if things go wrong.
But...”

Lady Merrick, stubbing out her cigarette, waited with unaccustomed patience while her niece sought for words.

“But I can’t just take all this for granted. I can’t just leave things in the air. Either I’m engaged to Bernard and going to be married soon, or I’m not. The thing is, don’t you see?—I must
know”

“Of course.” Lady Merrick fitted another cigarette into her long amber holder and waited again. When at length Alix spoke, there was a flush of embarrassment on her face.

“I’m afraid you’re going to think me terribly ungrateful, after inviting me here and paying my fare and everything—but Aunt Drusilla, I think I must fly up to Salisbury right away, as soon as I can get a seat on a plane. I simply
can’t
stay on here, trying to enjoy this heavenly place, when all the time my future may be in ruins.”

Meeting her aunt’s eye at that point, she gave a shaky laugh.

“It sounds like something in a melodrama, put that way, doesn’t it? But—you do
see,
don’t you?”

“Of course I see,” Lady Merrick agreed warmly, hiding her own disappointment. “I have to go in to Edward this morning. We could go in to the travel bureau and see about your passage right away, if that’s what you’d like.”

Alix jumped up and kissed her aunt’s rather leathery cheek. Next to Bernard and Mummy and Daphne, she thought, she really
is
the nicest person in the world. “And you don’t think me a snake?”

“No, I don’t think you a snake. I think, if you want to know, that you’re being rather sensible and practical about the whole thing. You’re going to see Bernard, I take it, and give him a chance to
...”

“I shan’t say a thing,” Alix broke in. “I shan’t refer to the letter except to say how sorry I am about the farm. I shall just give him a chance to—to come clean, if he wants to. And then I shall fade away.”


If
he seems to want you to.”

“Yes, of course.”

“Did you answer the letter?”

“Not yet.”

“Then don’t,” Lady Merrick advised. “Send a cable, ARRIVING SUCH AND SUCH A DATE, PLEASE MEET. You can do it when you’ve booked your seat.
Much
the best way.”

Alix agreed. She had been
thinki
ng what a difficult letter it was going to be to write. A cable would be so much simpler; besides, it would leave Bernard with no alternative but to meet her plane.

“I’ll go and feed Nelson now. Then, when you’re ready, we can go to Edward.”

As her aunt was about to leave the room Alix had a guilty thought.

“Oh, that re
min
ds me. I’m afraid I saw Richard Herrold this morning.”

Lady Merrick bristled.

“Indeed? Where, may I ask?”

“On the lagoon. Nelson and I swam out—and there he was, in a boat, fishing. I’m afraid he means to fish there—just off your poi
nt—whenever the tide is right.”

“He sounds uncommonly like that father of his,” Lady Merrick commented with strong disapproval. “I hope you snubbed him as he deserved?”

“I did ask him if he couldn’t fish somewhere else. But he said this was his favourite place. So what could I do?”

“H’m. Nothing, I suppose. Can’t stop him. You’re rather taken with him, aren’t you?”

“Well, yes, I do like him. He was awfully nice to me on the way here. Though I’m afraid he’s completely on his father’s side about this Paradise scheme.”

“And there’s the rub. I do admit he appeared to have the same sort of superficial charm as his dreadful father. But I wouldn’t trust it a yard. Opportunists, I don’t doubt—both of ’em.”

Alix was silent. She couldn’t agree with her aunt’s strictures on Richard, but didn’t want to make an issue of it.

“He wants to date you, I suppose?”

“Well—he wants me to go fishing again tomorrow. He—I helped him land a big fish this
morning

” Better say nothing about the invitation to dine. Write it off. Forget it.

“H’m,” said her aunt again. She stood with her hand on the knob of the door, appearing to cogitate. “As
you’re going off so soon, it can’t do much harm,” she said finally. “Of course I don’t want you to miss your morning swim. So nice for Nelson too. And I suppose it’s just possible you might learn something useful

about Herrold Senior’s further intentions, I mean.”

“I should think I easily might.”

Lady Merrick gave a resigned shrug.

“All right. But no dates on shore, please. Can’t have Herrold Senior think I’m weakening.”

“We’ll see how good a sleuth I am,” Alix said with her infectious laugh. And laughing, wondered at herself.

Though the shadow of Bernard’s letter, and this journey to find out the truth of it, hung over her, the odd sense of elation persisted. She felt at a loss to understand herself.

She wished Bernard were with her now. She was sure that if he were, and could take her in his arms and hug her in his affectionately bear-like way, and they could talk, everything would be as it always had between them. She wanted so much to keep things that way.

 

CHAPTER
FOUR

THE little town of Edward, where the residents of Paradise did their shopping, changed their library books, and fuelled their motor-cars, was sited well inland from the lagoon, which it viewed from a height, and off the national road, which by-passed it. It was backed by wooded foot-hills and the towering slopes of the Berg.

A gravel side-road lined with oaks, flowering gums, jacarandas and occasional small dwellings and shops, climbed gradually into its main street.

Along this side-road, this morning, wound donkey
-
carts carrying coloured families, a span of oxen in charge of a Khosa boy armed with a long whip, a horseman in khaki drill and a Boer War helmet, a large number of cyclists and pedestrians, and several lorries and motor-cars.

Among these Lady Merrick threaded her way in her ancient but stately Dodge with a nonchalance bo
rn
of familiarity, tooting her horn briskly and now and then uttering a mildly unladylike expletive.

“Always a bit congested on this stretch on Saturdays”, she remarked tolerantly. “Day off for the natives and coloureds.”

The main street was busy too, though with no more than a cosy small-town bustle of pedestrians
strollin
g,
stopping to chat, popping in and out of shops; and of traffic moving sedately or neatly parking itself.

Alix gazed about her with lively interest,
likin
g
it all. She was pleased by the brown faces she saw everywhere

ruddy-brown healthy tan of the “whites,” coffee
-
brown of the coloured, chocolate-brown of the purebred Africans. She liked the sparkling sunshine, the clean spring tang in the air, the white and pastel houses on the terraced slopes, the flowering trees, the distant
gli
mm
er
of the lagoon.

Big old oaks diversified the street and a few early jacarandas dropped their first azure blooms. A little old stone church stood back in a grassy tree-shaded churchyard, fitting in comfortably with old Dutch
-
gabled dwellings and more modem garages, offices and banks.

“The church was built by English settlers who came to this part of the Cape in 1820,” Lady Merrick explained as she manoeuvred to park the Dodge.

“I
was
just thinking how English the whole place looks,” Alix exclaimed. “In spite of the dark faces and exotic trees. It’s a dear little town, Aunt Drusilla.”

“They call places of this size dorps, here. Such an unattractive word, I always think. It’s very quiet usually, you know. It’s beginning to wake up now for the September holiday invasion. Tiresome—queues in the shops and at the Post Offic
e, nowhere to park, and the odder
-looking creatures, raw with sunburn and dressed in those queer American beach clothes, walking around. Bad enough now—but
think
what it’ll be like if Her
rold gets his way. Turmoil, my dear. Turmoil.”

Alix looked curiously at her aunt. She could remember the days when she would have enjoyed the rip
-
roaring noise and confusion of holiday crowds. Had Uncle Edgar—whom Alix had never met—changed her outlook so completely?

Lady Merrick gave her sudden jolly neigh of a laugh.

“Think I’ve grown into an old fuddy-duddy, don’t you?” she demanded. “Well, if I have, blame it on Herrold, who wants to divert the main holiday stream into Uncle Edgar’s beloved Paradise. Drat him,” she finished explosively as she stepped on to the pavement next to which she had at last succeeded in edging the Dodge. “Why, hullo, James. Nearly knocked you down. Didn’t see you,” she exclaimed a second later, smiling at a tall, lean-bodied man with thick white hair, a pleasant leather-face and what used to be called a “gallant” manner.

“Alix, come and meet my old friend James Gurney. My niece Alix Rayne, James, here on a flying visit.”

“Welcome to Paradise, Miss Alix,” Gurney said with old-fashioned courtesy. “How d’you like it?”

“I love it, Mr. Gurney.”

“Good. Bring her to see my garden, Drusilla. And meantime, how about coffee at the Espresso in an hour or so?”

“Thank you, James. Love to.”

Mr. Gurney lifted his ancient panama hat and left them, very upright and only leaning slightly on his stick.

“He’s nearly eighty and still plays golf and bowls and walks miles. He’s been widowed twice—and now he plans to take a third wife.
Me,”
whispered Lady Merrick with what, in anyone less deeply contralto, would have been a giggle. “He had a very bad war, prisoner of the Japs in Shanghai for four years, lost nearly everything, just has enough to live quietly in Paradise. A dear old boy.”

Again Alix gave her aunt a curious look. She hadn’t somehow thought of her as still marriageable. Yet she was still a handsome woman—of fifty-odd?—sixty-odd?

Alix had never given the matter a thought before.
Mummy was forty-seven and Aunt Drusilla was her eldest sister. She looked no older now than she had four years ago, when she had flown over to visit the
f
amily
after Uncle Edgar’s death.

With a little gurgle of laughter Alix said, “He’s nice, but too old for you, darling. You must find yourself a younger beau.”

“Perhaps I will,” Lady Merrick surprisingly agreed. “It’s no fife for a woman, living alone without a man about the place.”

They had reached the travel bureau now, and the conversation died a natural death.

Lady Merrick said, “I’ll go and change the books while you fix up about your air passage. You’ve got all your documents, of course? Very well, dear, I’ll come back for you.”

Alix went inside the travel bureau and was received by a slim, smiling girl, grey-eyed and dark-haired, about whom there was something strangely familiar.

Of course. Richard had a sister. This girl was strikingly like
him
in looks and manner. Alix would have liked to ask her name, but the girl was already busy
t
akin
g
down her particulars. When she had finished, however, she looked up with a twinkle in her eyes.

“I think I’ve heard about you,” she said friendlily. “Didn’t my brother Richard drive you over from P.E.?”

“Yes, he did.
I
was just
thinki
ng
how like him you are.”

The two girls smiled at each other, and at once there was a warmth between them. Alix thought regretfully that if she hadn’t been going away, and if there hadn’t been this business about Paradise between them, they might easily have become friends. And Valerie thought she could understand her brother’s enthusiasm about this new girl, and that she herself would have loved to know her better.

“I thought you were meaning to stay here for a while,” she said aloud, and then wished she had kept quiet, seeing the shade of embarrassment on Alix’s candid face.

“Yes, I was. I’ve—had to change my plans.” Tactfully Valerie went on with the business in hand, and asked no more personal questions.

But when, later in the morning, Richard called in with a message from their father, she told
him
that his friend Alix Rayne had been in, and had booked to fly from Port Elizabeth to Salisbury on next Wednesday afternoon’s plane. She saw that the news had come as a shock to him. Since she had always been his confidante she didn’t hesitate to ask.

“You’ve fallen for her, haven’t you, Dick?”

“Hook, line and sinker, Val.”

Valerie’s eyes widened.

“As bad as that?”

“As bad as that.”

“Poor Dicky. But didn’t I see a ring on her engagement finger?”

Richard said wryly, “You did. She’s come out to marry a would-be tobacco farmer fellow somewhere near Salisbury.”

“Would-be?”

“Still learning his job. And looking for a farm.”

“Oh. So it’s not imminent?”

“It wasn’t. But it looks as if something’s moved faster than expected. Or
else...”

“Or else what?”

Richard’s jaw suddenly looked very resolute as he replied, “I don’t know. But I’ve got a hunch about this engagement of hers. And I’m going to play it for all it’s worth.”

“Golly!”

“Golly nothing. Look, Val, do me a favour, will you?”

“Of course. Anything, Dick.”

“Well, then...”

With their dark heads together they planned for a minute or two. Then Valerie grinned.

“There you are. Best of luck, Dick.” And Richard grinned, too, and said, “Thanks, pal,” and
left
her.

She shook her head ruefully. She admired her brother tremendously, and felt a twinge of natural jealousy over Alix, while admitting to herself that she was just the sort of girl she would like best for a sister-in-law, if sister
-
in-law there must be.

But she did wish that Richard—with his looks and good humour, his force of character and sense of fun

hadn’t gone and lost his heart to a girl who wasn’t free to marry him. Like most attractive young men he had weathered a number of more or less mild affairs; but this, she was shrewd enough to see, was the real thing.

She hoped with all her loving heart that he wasn’t riding for a fall.

Later on, Alix went with Lady Merrick to the Espresso bar, to find it crowded and buzzing with talk, the air thick with tobacco smoke and a rich smell of coffee and cakes.

“Good lord, half Paradise seems to be here,” boomed Lady Merrick as they plunged into the fug.

In the next few minutes Alix was introduced to a bewildering number of her aunt’s friends. There were Colonel Braines and his mousy wife whom Lady Merrick greeted with marked reserve. The Maxwells who had farmed in Kenya till the Mau drove them out. The Pooles who had been rubber planters in Malaya. The Leighs and Greens and Holts from the Rhodesias. The Waynes from Burma. The Hunts from Singapore.

Expatriates, it seemed, one and all. Idly Alix wondered how they had all happened to converge on this one little spot on the globe.

They all welcomed her warmly. They assured her it was
such
a pleasure to have a new, pretty young face among them. They said, “We must arrange some parties for you, my dear.”

And Alix thanked them prettily and said how sorry she was to be leaving on Wednesday’s plane.

Whereupon their interest in her died a little. Because what they all really wanted to talk about, now that dear Drusilla had arrived, was
what
was going to happen to Paradise?

Soon they were all arguing heatedly. On both sides of the question. The Fors and th
e Againsts, as Richard had said
...

As if the thought of
him
had conjured up his bodily presence, she saw him w
alkin
g past the wide windows of the Espresso. He had seen her—she was near the door, stirring her
cappuccino
. His face lit up. He stopped in his stride—he was coming in. She shook her head at him severely. That would never do. She saw his eyebrow go up. He shot an ironic look at her aunt, shrugged, and went on.

There was nothing in the little interchange to excite her, Alix told herself. Or to bring back—as it undoubtedly had—that odd sense of elation, of meeting some challenge.

She looked round anxiously to see if her aunt had noticed. But Lady Merrick was treating Colonel Braines to some decided views and had her back to the door.

She doubted whether anyone but herself, and two giggling bobbysoxers spooning up ice-cream at a comer table and now obviously discussing her had registered the tiny incident.

She threw the bobbysoxers a cold look and turned her back on them. They were still giggling. Silly little creatures.

Tomorrow morning, she would have to tell Richard she was leaving almost at once for Salisbury
...

Driving back later to Paradise, they found the side
-
road leading from Edward more crowded than ever.
A
swarm of passengers milled round the bus waiting to t
a
ke them out to the location three miles away.

Ahead of the Dodge, a cyclist wobbled on the very crown of the road.

“Drunk, I suppose,” muttered Lady Merrick, tooting vigorously.

The cyclist turned to grin over his shoulder, wobbled insanely, and fell off almost under their bonnet. Lady Merrick had to swerve smartly to avoid him, and in doing so struck her front tyre against the sharp edge of one of the upright stones that marked, at measured intervals, the verge.

There was a loud crack. The car bumped and swerved. Tight-lipped, Lady Merrick switched off.

“A burst. Today of all days, when the garages close early. Bother and blow!”

She got out to inspect the damage. The cyclist had picked himself up and mounted. With one scared look at her over his shoulder he pedalled off down the road as if the fiends were after him. His friends giggled nervously. A crowd gathered round the car, goggling.

Alix had just got out to join her aunt when a big black sedan, with a uniformed native driver, pulled in behind them. Its owner jumped out.

One look at him told her who he was. These Herrolds certainly did go in for strong family resemblances. The same grey eyes (though these were set about with many wrinkles); the same humorous lift of one eyebrow; the same forceful nose and chin. This must be Tornado Herrold in person—come to their rescue. Laughter bubbled up inside Alix. How
would
her aunt take this?

“In trouble, I see, Lady Merrick,” the newcomer remarked genially. “These damn cyclists, heh? Ought to be a law against ’em. Tut-tut-tut. You’ll never use that tyre again, I’m afraid. Now let’s see, what can I do for you?”

“Thank you, Mr.—er—Herrold. I am quite capable of changing a wheel, if I am not interrupted,” Lady Merrick told him coldly—and not, Alix suspected, quite truthfully.

Andrew Herrold’s reply was kindly but brusque.

“Nonsense, madam. Can’t have a lady changing a wheel in the road in the middle of this mob. Kindly allow me to handle this. Here, Joseph”—to his driver—“you change it. And meantime I’ll drive the pair of you back to ‘Laguna.’ ”

He looked hard at Alix and added: “I take it this is your niece, the one my son drove here. How d’you do, Miss Rayne? Welcome to Paradise—heh? Now just get in here
...
and you beside me in front, Lady Merrick
...
have you home in a jiffy.”

“I haven’t the slightest intention ”

“Joseph will drive your car out when it’s ready. Mind your skirt, now.”

The door slammed. Lady Merrick’s indignation had got her nowhere. With a deftness and decision Alix couldn’t but admire, Andrew Herrold had them both in his car and travelling along the rough causeway to Paradise. His face wore a bland smile. In his eyes, she wouldn’t have minded betting, was an amused t
winkle exactly like Richard’s.

Lady Merrick thanked him, as she descended at her own front door, with icy politeness. She didn’t invite him to come in, nor did she offer her hand.

Andrew Herrold remained unperturbed.

“Delighted to have been of use,” he said, genial as ever. With a grin he added, “I shall look forward to meeting you again—on Tuesday.”

“Tuesday?”

“At Northolme.”

Lady Merrick bristled.

“You mean you intend to gate-crash our meeting?” The grin deepened.

“Gate-crash? Nothing of the sort, my lady. Didn’t you know I’ve bought out your neighbours on both sides? which makes me a Paradise property owner like yourself. So I qualify, heh?”

Speechless, unable to bear more, Lady Merrick turned on her heel and retired with awful dignity indoors.

Before Alix could follow, Andrew Merrick addressed her. IDs eyes held a familiar hint of laughing wickedness.

“And what do
you
think of Paradise, Miss Rayne?”

“I
think
it’s perfectly lovely.” Bravely she added, “Just as it is.”

“Believe me, you’d be bored to tears within three months if you had to live here. Nothing to
do.
Can’t live on a view, y’know.”

“You can swim, and fish, and sail, and
...”

“In summer. When it’s fine. But what about when it isn’t? What about the winter season, when it’s a bit chilly for that sort of caper?”

“There’s entertaining, and Bridge, and


Herrold chuckled.

“You speak without conviction, m’dear. You know perfectly well it’s a case of a lot of selfish elderly folk, here on retirement, wanting to keep the place to themselves till they die off, one by one. This is a place that ought to be opened up for youth to enjoy, as well as the oldsters. Just you wait till I’ve finished with it. I’ll make it one of the finest, liveliest resorts in all Africa. It’s got the climate, the setting. All it lacks is some civilised amenities. Proper facilities for campers and caravanners. A country club. Organised water sports. Later on, a
hotel...

“And a floating restaurant for the gourmets and connoisseurs,” Alix broke in, not without a little touch of malice.

He drew his barley eyebrows together in a frown. “And what’s wrong with that, young lady? Just wait a few months. You’ll see what I mean.”

“I’m afraid I shan’t, Mr. Herrold,” Alix told him coolly. “I shan’t be here.”

“Oh? Why not? Thought you’d come to stay for a bit?”

“I’ve changed my plans. I leave for Rhodesia on Wednesday.”

Andrew Herrold studied her thoughtfully.

“Ah, well. Things sometimes turn out differently from what we intend,” he observed. “Now, if by any chance you decide to come back here, I shall have something to offer you. My son, tells me you’re a qualified garden planner, horticulturist and what not.
W
ell?”

“Yes, I am. But I really
...”

“Now don’t be hoity-toity. It’s just an idea I have, that you might turn up here again. If you do, you’ll be the very person I’m looking for to lay out a really first
-
class garden area for my caravan park and club. Interesting job. And the hotel grounds later, of course. And then I’d need you to stay on to supervise maintenance. Fine prospects—if you measured up.”

Alix had listened with rising indignation. She was normally even-tempered, but she felt anger beginning to sizzle inside her as her eyes met Herrold’s speculative scrutiny. Really, this was too much.

Her chin lifted. She said clearly, “Please understand, Mr. Herrold, that I’m leaving for Rhodesia on Wednesday
to be married.
So I’m afraid I shan’t be in a position to consider your kind offer. Please excuse me now—I see my aunts wants me.”

He looked down at her, from under the barley eyebrows with a kind of irascible benevolence.

“Off you go then, m’dear. You’ve got spirit, I’m glad to see. I like a girl to have spirit. But remember—if you
do
change your mind and come back, be sure to contact me, and see if the job’s still open.”


Oh
!
” exclaimed Alix explosively. Without waiting
for more she turned and ran indoors.

It was just as if he knew all about her. Or at any rate, as if he guessed she was simply putting a brave face on things. As if he knew how very uncertain the future was for her. Yet how
could
he know? Of course he couldn’t. And why on earth had she lost her head and lied to him about getting married?

He’s impossible, she told herself angrily. No wonder Aunt Drusilla detests him ...

Up in her own room, she caught sight of her reflection in the mirror. Flushed cheeks, eyes over-bright as if with unshed tears ...

“Those
Herrolds
,”
she muttered.

At that moment her resentment included both of them. Father and
son...

Effelina had laid out lunch on a table on the veranda. Dressed crab, caught by Francis in the lagoon. Cold guinea fowl, shot no doubt by Eric Gore, and a salad. Fresh fruit and cheese. Delicious—all of it. Yet neither Alix nor her aunt ate with any appetite. Alix could see that Lady Merrick was still very much put out by the encounter with Herrold. She pulled herself together and tried to divert her.

“How did they all
come
to Paradise, Aunt Drusilla?” she demanded vivaciously. The people she had met that morning, she went on to explain. From the ends of the earth—or at any rate, from what Daddy used to call the Outposts of Empire.

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