not toânot to shut herself away too much from people.â
Nadine Boynton looked thoughtfully at Sarah.
She said: âI see. Youâre a doctor. That makes a difference.â
âYou see what I mean?â Sarah urged.
Nadine bent her head. She was still thoughtful.
âYou are quite right, of course,â she said after a minute or two. âBut there are difficulties. My mother-in-law is in bad health and she has what I can only describe as a morbid dislike of any outsiders penetrating into her family circle.â
Sarah said mutinously: âBut Carol is a grown-up woman.â
Nadine Boynton shook her head.
âOh, no,â she said. âIn body, but not in mind. If you talked to her you must have noticed that. In an emergency she would always behave like a frightened child.â
âDo you think thatâs what happened? Do you think she becameâafraid?â
âI should imagine, Miss King, that my mother-in-law insisted on Carol having nothing more to do with you.â
âAnd Carol gave in?â
Nadine Boynton said quietly: âCan you really imagine her doing anything else?â
The eyes of the two women met. Sarah felt that behind the mask of conventional words they understood each other. Nadine, she felt, understood the position. But she was clearly not prepared to discuss it in any way.
Sarah felt discouraged. The other evening it had seemed to her as though half the battle were won. By means of secret meetings she would imbue Carol with the spirit of revoltâyes, and Raymond, too. (Be honest now, wasnât it Raymond really she had had in mind all along?) And now, in the very first round of the battle she had been ignominiously defeated by that hulk of shapeless flesh with her evil, gloating eyes. Carol had capitulated without a struggle.
âItâs all wrong !â cried Sarah.
Nadine did not answer. Something in her silence went home to Sarah like a cold hand laid on her heart. She thought: âThis woman knows the hopelessness of it much better than I do. Sheâs lived with it!â
The lift gates opened. The older Mrs Boynton emerged. She leaned on a stick and Raymond supported her on the other side.
Sarah gave a slight start. She saw the old womanâs eyes sweep from her to Nadine and back again. She had been prepared for dislike in those eyesâfor hatred even. She was not prepared for what she sawâa triumphant and malicious enjoyment. Sarah turnedaway. Nadine went forward and joined the other two.
âSo there you are, Nadine,â said Mrs Boynton. âIâll sit down and rest a little before I go out.â
They settled her in a high-backed chair. Nadine sat down beside her.
âWho were you talking to, Nadine?â
âA Miss King.â
âOh, yes. The girl who spoke to Raymond the other night. Well, Ray, why donât you go and speak to her now? Sheâs over there at the writing-table.â
The old womanâs mouth widened into a malicious smile as she looked at Raymond. His face flushed. He turned his head away and muttered something.
âWhatâs that you say, son?â
âI donât want to speak to her.â
âNo, I thought not. You wonât speak to her. You couldnât however much you wanted to!â
She coughed suddenlyâa wheezing cough.
âIâm enjoying this trip, Nadine,â she said. âI wouldnât have missed it for anything.â
âNo?â
Nadineâs voice was expressionless.
âRay.â
âYes, Mother?â
âGet me a piece of notepaperâfrom the table over there in the corner.â
Raymond went off obediently. Nadine raised herhead. She watched, not the boy, but the old woman. Mrs Boynton was leaning forward, her nostrils dilated as though with pleasure. Ray passed close by Sarah. She looked up, a sudden hope showing in her face. It died down as he brushed past her, took some notepaper from