disappointment.â
They both laughed at the memory of the disastrous dinner last summer. Two cocktails on the terrace at Les Roches had revealed Francesco to be a pompous and pugnacious bigot, and even before their entrées had arrived heâd been making eyes at one of the waiters.
In the ordinary course of events Tom would have driven directly from the station to the old port, where a stroll along the bustling waterfront would have been followed by lunch at the Brasserie Cronstadt. That was his customary routine when guests arrived on the late-morning sleeper from Paris. But he had others plans for Lucy, and they involved driving straight to Le Lavandou, skirting the hilltop town of Hyères before dropping down through the pine forests towards the coast.
They chatted lightly about the string of parties which had kept Lucy back in London, sparing her the long drive south through France with Leonard and her mother.
âI canât say I missed it. All those detours to cathedrals that Leonard insists on making, the lectures on the transition from Romanesque to Gothic architecture . . .â
âIs that the real reason George and Harry canât make it this year?â
âNo, Grandfather really is taking them to Portsmouth for Navy Week.â
âAnd you werenât tempted?â
âIâd rather gnaw through my arm.â
Tom laughed. âWell, Iâm sorry they wonât be here.â
âIâm not. Theyâve become insufferable lately.â
âYou mean big sister canât boss them around any more?â
âExactly! The wilful little brutes.â
Le Lavandou, with its palm-fringed promenade and its port backed by a huddle of old buildings, still felt like a frontier town to Tom. Although he visited it often, it lay at the western limits of his ordinary beat and he rarely ventured beyond it. Whenever he did so, returning there was like returning home, even if home still lay a good few miles to the east along the twisting shoreline of the Côte des Maures.
The table was waiting for them under the awning at the Café du Centre, and Pascal appeared within moments of their arrival bearing a bottle of white Burgundy on ice. Nothing had been left to chance. The table, the wine, even the fish they would eat, all had been chosen in advance by Tom when heâd passed through earlier that morning. He wanted the build-up to the big surprise to be perfect.
Pascal was one of the few people in on the secret and he was obviously determined to play his part to perfection. Like a child sworn to silence, though, the burden proved almost too much to bear.
As soon as he had disappeared back inside, Lucy lit a cigarette and enquired, âWhatâs wrong with Pascal? He keeps looking at you in a funny way.â
âReally?â
âAll weird and wide-eyed.â
âMaybe itâs lack of sleep. Their new babyâs only a few weeks old.â
This seemed to satisfy her; besides, they had better things to discuss. It was almost six months since theyâd last seen each other â during one of Tomâs rare visits to England â and on that occasion thereâd been little opportunity to talk openly. In fact, thereâd been little opportunity to talk at all, because Lucyâs great friend, Stella, had muscled in on their lunch at the Randolph Hotel. Like Lucy, Stella was a second-year Modern History undergraduate at St Hughâs College. Unlike Lucy, she seemed to think this entitled her to hold forth at length on any subject that happened to pop into her head. And there was certainly no shortage of those: everything from the worrying rise of Fascism to the latest fashions in womenâs shoes. In her defence, Stella was well informed and extremely amusing with it, but Tom could still recall the delightful silence of the long drive back to London from Oxford.
âHowâs the irrepressible Stella bearing up?â
âOh,