PART Ⅳ-6
you?’ she said.
It seemed pretty obvious t I anso kiss me.
‘t on promptly. t’s o say sometant you set foot inside t expecting you. You’ll just o I don’t t any cheese.’
I folloos into tting-room. I s tc. I meant to get my say in first, and I kne ter if I took a strong line from tart.
‘No trick on me?’
S laid op of t she looked genuinely surprised.
‘ trick? do you mean?’
‘Sending out t S.O.S.!’
‘ S.O.S.? are you tALKING about, George?’
‘Are you trying to tell me you didn’t get to send out an S.O.S. saying you were seriously ill?’
‘Of course I didn’t! ill. for?’
I began to explain, but almost before I began I saake. I’d only fe ory. It just upid mistake t’s altle bit of imagination I’d credited erest in tes or so er all. But t c trouble of some kind coming. And tioning me in quiet and kind of chful.
‘So you el at Birmingham?’
‘Yes. Last nigional Broadcast.’
‘hen?’
‘t t in case to lie my of it. Left at ten, lunc Coventry, tea at Bedford—I’d got it all mapped out.)
‘So you t last nig even leave till this morning?’
‘But I tell you I didn’t t I explained? I t it anotricks. It sounded a damn sight more likely.’
‘t at all!’ s I kne s on more quietly: ‘So you left this morning, did you?’
‘Yes. I left about ten. I Coventry—’
‘t for t out at me, and in tant sook out a piece of paper, and out as if it hing.
I felt as if someone m