Norie (speaking rather louder as Vivie is now busy in the adjoining roomlet, boiling the kettle on the gas stove and preparing the tea): “Yes. And I’ve got lots to talk over with you. All sorts of plans have come into my head. I don’t know whether I have been eating anything more than usually brain stimulating—everything has a physical basis—but I have come back from this scattered holiday full of new ideas.”
Presently they are seated on camp-stools sipping tea, eating strawberries and cakes, under the striped sun-blind.
Norie continues: “Do you remember Beryl Clarges at Newnham?”
Vivie: “Yes—the pretty girl—short, curly hair, brown eyes, rather full lips, good at mathematics—hockey ... purposely shocked you by her outspokenness—well?”
Norie: “Well, she’s had a baby ... a month ago ... awful rumpus with her people ... Father’s Dean Clarges ... Norwich or Ely, I forget which ... They’ve put her in a Nursing Home in Seymour Street. Mother wears a lace mantilla and cries softly. Beryl went wrong, as they call it, with an architect.”
Vivie: “Pass your cup ... Don’t take all the strawberries (Norie: “Sorry! Absence of mind—I’ve left you three fat ones”) Architect? Strange! I always thought all architects were like Praddy—had no passions except for bricks and mortar and chiselled stone and twirligig iron grilles ... perhaps just a thrill over a nude statue. Why, till you told me this I’d as soon have trusted my daughter—if I had one—with an architect as with a Colonel of Engineers—You know! The kind that believes in the identity of the Ten Lost Tribes with the British and is a True Protestant! Poor Beryl! But how? what? when? why?”