like a lamb.â
John nodded.
âI donât see him now, you know. Thatâs all finished. Thereâs nothing between us. Itâs just taking him time to get over it. Heâs living in the past. But he has no rights here. And he knows it.â
John nodded. Of course. Thatâs why he was taking up two-thirds of her bed.
âListen. I hope this hasnât put you off.â
John nodded and then changed to shaking his head. Not at all. Why should the possibility of being beaten to death every time you got into bed put you off?
âSally!â
She winked, kissed the tips of her fingers and touched them to his lips.
âItâs all right, Alec,â John heard her call as he came downstairs, letting the darkness take him into it. She rattled the milk bottles she had put out when the baby-sitter left. âIâm just locking up.â
John had brooded on the significance of that evening ever since. Sometimes, without warning, fragments of it would occur to him. He would hear âSally! Sally!â or see her face, distorted with panic, as she lay beneath him. Such moments came to him isolated and complete, inexplicable but stubbornly there, ciphers the pilgrim found along his way. But in what direction were they pointing him? Their repetitiousness suggested he hadnât resolved them. They were liable to turn up anywhere, in a pub, in the car, at a football match on a wet evening.
âTackle, Freddie, tackle!â Jodhpurs was calling.
Gary had the ball. As Freddie lunged towards him, Gary drew the ball back and then threaded it neatly throughFreddieâs legs and ran round him, leaving him stranded. âNutmegged him,â John muttered to himself. It was a way in which professional players hated to be beaten, perhaps because it made you look so silly â your legs, the very basis of your craft, being reduced to the role of a triumphal arch for the parade of your opponentâs skills. John was absurdly pleased. He glanced along at Jodhpurs as if he had taken revenge on her loud ignorance.
âSally! Sally!â
He had seen her since then in her office and once had a drink with her (not in âThe Barley Breeâ). She gave him occasional reports on the nocturnal activities of Alec Manson. His visits were apparently becoming less frequent. âHeâs coming to his senses,â Sally had said but John wasnât convinced that would ever be a permanent place of residence for Alec. Sally seemed still to expect that they would some time continue where they had left off, once Alecâs supposed refusal to forget the past had died of exhaustion. John wasnât so sure.
He had thought about it a lot and and he believed (how could he be sure?) that his uncertainties didnât come from fear of Alec. Now that he understood the risks, the location and habits of the dragon as it were, he felt he could work out ways to reach the maiden safely. But he suspected she was no longer the maiden he had thought she was. He still relished the memory of her body and would have liked to go back there but â such was the fervour of his dreams â he could only do it with his faith intact. Paradoxically, to accept her offer of herself would have been for him to diminish her unless he did it on terms of belief in her.
That belief had been undermined to some extent. âA fortnightâ had been carved on Johnâs mind. Alec had said it as if it meant a long time in his terms. Surely he wasnât always drunk and surely he didnât always go there just to sleep. John thought perhaps Sally had been lying to him. And, besides that central matter, his sense of Sally had beenirredeemably altered. âOh shite!â was something he would never have imagined her saying, a glimpse of another person, just as the nature of Alec had been. How had she become involved with a bouncer from âThe Barley Breeâ?â
One of the times John had been in that