please.â He followed her into the kitchen and sat down at the table and thought how restful she was; she had seemed glad to see him, but she had probably learned to give a welcoming smile to anyone who knocked on the door. Certainly she had displayed no fuss at seeing him.
He said on an impulse, âWill you have lunch with me? Thereâs a pubâthe Old Boot in Underthornâfifteen minutesâ drive from here. I donât suppose you get any callers before the middle of the afternoon?â
She poured the coffee and fetched a tin of biscuits.
âBut youâre on your way to Glastonburyâ¦â
âYes, but not expected until teatime. And itâs such a splendid day.â When she hesitated he said, âWe could take Cyril with us.â
She said then, âThank you; I should like that. But I must be back soon after two oâclock; itâs Saturdayâ¦â
They went back to the orchard presently, and sat on the bench while Amabel finished shelling the peas. Oscar had got onto the doctorâs knee and Cyril had sprawled under his feet. They talked idly about nothing much and Amabel, quite at her ease, now answered his carefully put questions without realising just how much she was telling him until she stopped in mid-sentence, aware that her tongue wasrunning away with her. He saw that at once and began to talk about something else.
They drove to the Old Boot Inn just before noon and found a table on the rough grass at its back. There was a small river, overshadowed by trees, and since it was early there was no one else there. They ate home-made pork pies with salad, and drank iced lemonade which the landlordâs wife made herself. Cyril sat at their feet with a bowl of water and a biscuit.
The landlord, looking at them from the bar window, observed to his wife, âLook happy, donât they?â
And they were, all three of them, although the doctor hadnât identified his feeling as happiness, merely pleasant content at the glorious morning and the undemanding company.
He drove Amabel back presently and, rather to her surprise, parked the car in the yard behind the house, got out, took the door key from her and unlocked the back door.
Oscar came to meet them and he stooped to stroke him. âMay I sit in the orchard for a little while?â he asked. âI seldom get the chance to sit quietly in such peaceful surroundings.â
Amabel stopped herself just in time from saying, âYou poor man,â and said instead, âOf course you may, for as long as you like. Would you like a cup of tea, or an apple?â
So he sat on the bench chewing an apple, with Oscar on his knee, aware that his reason for sitting there was to cast an eye over any likely guests in the hope that before he went a respectable middle-aged pair would have decided to stay.
He was to have his wish. Before very long a middleaged pair did turn up, with mother-in-law, wishing to stay for two nights. It was absurd, he told himself, that he should feel concern. Amabel was a perfectly capable young woman, and able to look after herself; besides, she had a telephone.
He went to the open kitchen door and found her there, getting tea.
âI must be off,â he told her. âDonât stop what youâre doing. I enjoyed my morning.â
She was cutting a large cake into neat slices. âSo did I. Thank you for my lunch.â She smiled at him. âGo carefully, Dr Fforde.â
She carried the tea tray into the drawing room and went back to the kitchen. They were three nice peopleâpolite, and anxious not to be too much trouble. âAn evening meal?â they had asked diffidently, and had accepted her offer of jacket potatoes and salad, fruit tart and coffee with pleased smiles. They would go for a short walk presently, the man told her, and when would she like to serve their supper?
When they had gone she made the tart, put the potatoes in the oven and