âTis a tidy walk from here.â He set down his bicycle and lamp and began unfastening buttons. âThatâs Medmenham Abbey behind me,â he said. âYouâll no doubt have heard of the Hell Fire Club of a hundred years ago. They were a prime set of rogues, they were. We remember âem in these partsâSir Francis Dashwood and that John Wilkes and Members of Parliament cominâ here regular from Westminster. There, put that round your shoulders, miss. Yes, when I saw you climbinâ up that bank, I donât mind admittinâ the thought crossed my mind that you were the tormented spirit of some poor village girl, taken advantage of by those wicked rascals. Would you permit me to accompany you, miss?â
It seemed a superfluous question when she was wearing his tunic, but he must have asked it out of courtesy. He was a singularly considerate constable, standing in the moonlight in his braces with his bullâs-eye pointing discreetly at the ground. And he looked not many years older than she.
âI shall feel the safer for your company, Officer.â
He left the bicycle on the grass, explaining that he would collect it later when he returned to his vigil. There had been reports that night fishing was going on and he was deputed to investigate.
âI did notice three men in a boat, but I donât believe I saw fishing rods,â said Harriet. She was feeling more comfortable in the tunic, which she wore like a cloak. It extended past the middle of her thighs.
âWhat sort of boat was it, miss?â
âOh, a rowing boat, a skiff, I believe. Two men were rowing and the third was seated facing them. They had a dog with them. They didnât look like poachers.â
âYou canât tell, miss. They might have been trailing nets.â
Even in her moment of greatest alarm this was not a thought which had occurred to Harriet. Imagine becoming tangled in their net! Things could certainly have turned out worse than they had. If the constableâs tunic had been only a foot or two longer, or, better still, if he had been wearing a greatcoat, the walk along the riverbank might have been quite agreeable. He was a tall young man and he moved with a confident air, one hand gripping his braces and the other pulling aside occasional branches that over-hung their route.
It occurred to Harriet that if night fishing was illegal, naked bathing was probably against the law as well. She wondered whether the constable proposed to make an arrest. It seemed to matter less than the reception awaiting her at College. Expulsion was inevitable, for what was âindecorous or unladylike conductâ if it was not coming back in the small hours dressed only in a policemanâs tunic? She would surely become a legend among the students, but she would never become a teacher.
She stole a glance at his face. He still had an accommodating look. Perhaps it was the way his moustache curled at the ends. No, she could see his eyes quite clearly in the moonlight and they twinkled with good humour, like her papaâs. They must be blue, she decided.
âI shall be in fearful trouble.â
âWhy is that, miss?â He was genuinely surprised.
âWe are not supposed to go out. It was a madcap adventure. I was dared to do it, you see. When Miss Plummer finds outââ
âMiss Plummer?â His accent made the name quite sweet to the ear.
âOur principal.â
âWhy should she find out, miss?â
âArenât you taking me back to the College?â
âYou ainât in custody, miss.â He smiled. âIf you got out without that lady knowinâ it, I dare say you can get in again. Iâll just walk along with you and make sure your clothes are still where you left them. When we get there, Iâll turn the other way and you can return my tunic and Iâll make my way back to Medmenham. Iâve no mind to disturb your