Authors: writing as Mary Westmacott Agatha Christie
âYes. Don't you?'
âOf course I don't,' said Henry indignantly.
âYou don't want to marry Susan?'
âI should hate to marry Susan.'
âShe wants to marry you.'
âYes, I'm afraid she does.' Henry looked despondent. âShe's always ringing me up and writing me letters. I don't know what to do about her.'
âDid you tell her you wanted to marry her?'
âOh, one says things,' said Henry vaguely. âOr rather they say things and one agrees ⦠One has to, more or less.' He gave her an uneasy smile. âYou wouldn't divorce me, would you, Shirley?'
âI might,' said Shirley.
âDarling â'
âI'm getting rather â tired, Henry.'
âI'm a brute. I've given you a rotten deal.' He knelt down beside her. The old alluring smile flashed out. âBut I do love you, Shirley. All this other silly nonsense doesn't count. It doesn't mean anything. I'd never want to be married to anyone but you. If you'll go on putting up with me?'
âWhat did you really feel about Susan?'
âCan't we forget about Susan? She's such a
bore
.'
âI'd just like to understand.'
âWell â' Henry considered. âFor about a fortnight I was mad about her. Couldn't sleep. After that, I still thought she was rather wonderful. After that I thought she was beginning, perhaps, to be just the least bit of a
bore
. And then she quite definitely
was
a bore. And just lately she's been an absolute
pest
.'
âPoor Susan.'
âDon't worry about Susan. She's got no morals and she's a perfect bitch.'
âSometimes, Henry, I think you're quite heartless.'
âI'm not heartless,' said Henry indignantly. âI just don't see why people have to cling so. Things are fun if you don't take them seriously.'
âSelfish devil!'
âAm I? I suppose I am. You don't really mind, do you, Shirley?'
âI shan't leave you. But I'm rather fed up, all the same. You're not to be trusted over money, and you'll probably go on having these silly affairs with women.'
âOh no, I won't. I swear I won't.'
âOh, Henry, be honest.'
âWell, I'll try not to, but do try and understand, Shirley, that none of these affairs mean anything. There's only you.'
âI've a good mind to have an affair myself!' said Shirley.
Henry said that he wouldn't be able to blame her if she did.
He then suggested that they should go out somewhere amusing, and have dinner together.
He was a delightful companion all the evening.
Mona Adams was giving a cocktail party. Mona Adams loved all cocktail parties, and particularly her own. Her voice was hoarse, since she had had to scream a good deal to be heard above her guests. It was being a very successful cocktail party.
She screamed now as she greeted a late-comer.
âRichard! How wonderful! Back from the Sahara â or is it the Gobi?'
âNeither. Actually it's the Fezzan.'
âNever heard of it. But how good to see you! What a lovely tan. Now who do you want to talk to? Pam, Pam, let me introduce Sir Richard Wilding. You know, the traveller â camels and big game and deserts â those thrilling books. He's just come back from somewhere in â in Tibet.'
She turned and screamed once more at another arrival.
âLydia! I'd no idea you were back from Paris.
How
wonderful!'
Richard Wilding was listening to Pam, who was saying feverishly:
âI saw you on television â only last night! How thrilling to meet you. Do tell me now â'
But Richard Wilding had no time to tell her anything.
Another acquaintance had borne down upon him.
He fetched up at last, with his fourth drink in his hand, on a sofa beside the loveliest girl he had ever seen.
Somebody had said:
âShirley, you must meet Richard Wilding.'
Richard had at once sat down beside her. He said:
âHow exhausting these affairs are! I'd forgotten. Won't you slip away with me, and have a quiet drink somewhere?'
âI'd love to,' said Shirley. âThis place gets more like a menagerie every minute.'
With a pleasing sense of escape, they came out into the cool evening air.
Wilding hailed a taxi.
âIt's a little late for a drink,' he said, glancing at his watch, âand we've had a good many drinks, anyway. I think dinner is indicated.'
He gave the address of a small, but expensive restaurant off Jermyn Street.
The meal ordered, he smiled across the table at his guest.
âThis is the nicest thing that's happened to me since I came back from the wilds. I'd forgotten how frightful London cocktail-parties were. Why do people go to them? Why did I? Why do you?'
âHerd instinct, I suppose,' said Shirley lightly.
She had a sense of adventure that made her eyes bright. She looked across the table at the bronzed attractive man opposite her.
She was faintly pleased with herself at having snatched away the lion of the party.
âI know all about you,' she said. â
And
I've read your books!'
âI don't know anything about you â except that your Christian name is Shirley. What's the rest of it?'
âGlyn-Edwards.'
âAnd you're married.' His eyes rested on her ringed finger.
âYes. And I live in London and work in a flower-shop.'
âDo you like living in London, and working in a flower-shop and going to cocktail parties?'
âNot very much.'
âWhat would you like to do â or be?'
âLet me see.' Shirley's eyes half closed. She spoke dreamily. âI'd like to live on an island â an island rather far away from anywhere. I'd like to live in a white house with green shutters and do absolutely nothing all day long. There would be fruit on the island and great curtains of flowers, all in a tangle ⦠colour and scent ⦠and moonlight every night ⦠and the sea would look dark purple in the evenings â¦'
She sighed and opened her eyes.
âWhy does one always choose islands? I don't suppose a real island would be nice at all.'
Richard Wilding said softly: âHow odd that you should say what you did.'
âWhy?'
âI could give you your island.'
âDo you mean you own an island?'
âA good part of one. And very much the kind of island you described. The sea is wine-dark there at night, and my villa is white with green shutters, and the flowers grow as you describe, in wild tangles of colour and scent, and nobody is ever in a hurry.'
âHow lovely. It sounds like a dream island.'
âIt's quite real.'
âHow can you ever bear to come away?'
âI'm restless. Some day I shall go back there and settle down and never leave it again.'
âI think you'd be quite right.'
The waiter came with the first course and broke the spell. They began talking lightly of everyday things.
Afterwards Wilding drove Shirley home. She did not ask him to come in. He said: âI hope â we'll soon meet again?'
He held her hand a fraction longer than was necessary, and she flushed as she drew it away.
That night she dreamed of an island.
âShirley?'
âYes?'
âYou know, don't you, that I'm in love with you?'
Slowly she nodded.
She would have found it hard to describe the last three weeks. They had had a queer, unreal quality about them. She had walked through them in a kind of permanent abstraction.
She knew that she had been very tired â and that she was still tired, but that out of her tiredness had come a delicious hazy feeling of not being really anywhere in particular.
And in that state of haziness, her values had shifted and changed.
It was as though Henry and everything that pertained to Henry had become dim and rather far away. Whereas Richard Wilding stood boldly in the foreground â a romantic figure rather larger than life.
She looked at him now with grave considering eyes.
He said:
âDo you care for me at all?'
âI don't know.'
What
did
she feel? She knew that every day this man came to occupy more and more of her thoughts. She knew that his proximity excited her. She recognized that what she was doing was dangerous, that she might be swept away on a sudden tide of passion. And she knew that, definitely, she didn't want to give up seeing him â¦
Richard said:
âYou're very loyal, Shirley. You've never said anything to me about your husband.'
âWhy should I?'
âBut I've heard a good deal.'
Shirley said:
âPeople will say anything.'
âHe's unfaithful to you and not, I think, very kind.'
âNo, Henry's not a kind man.'
âHe doesn't give you what you ought to have â love, care, tenderness.'
âHenry loves me â in his fashion.'
âPerhaps. But you want something more than that.'
âI used not to.'
âBut you do now. You want â your island, Shirley.'
âOh! the island. That was just a day-dream.'
âIt's a dream that could come true.'
âPerhaps. I don't think so.'
âIt
could
come true.'
A small chilly breeze came across the river to the terrace on which they were sitting.
Shirley got up, pulling her coat tightly around her.
âWe mustn't talk like this any more,' she said. âWhat we're doing is foolish, Richard, foolish and dangerous.'
âPerhaps. But you don't care for your husband, Shirley, you care for me.'
âI'm Henry's wife.'
âYou care for
me
.'
She said again:
âI'm Henry's wife.'
She repeated it like an article of faith.
When she got home, Henry was lying stretched out on the sofa. He was wearing white flannels.
âI think I've strained a muscle.' He made a faint grimace of pain.
âWhat have you been doing?'
âPlaying tennis at Roehampton.'
âYou and Stephen? I thought you were going to play golf.'
âWe changed our minds. Stephen brought Mary along, and Jessica Sandys made a fourth.'
âJessica? Is that the dark girl we met at the Archers' the other night?'
âEr â yes â she is.'
âIs she your latest?'
âShirley! I told you, I promised you â¦'
âI know, Henry, but what are promises? She is your latest â I can see it in your eye.'
Henry said sulkily:
âOf course, if you're going to imagine things â¦'
âIf I'm going to imagine things,' Shirley murmured, âI'd rather imagine an island.'
âWhy an island?'
Henry sat up on the sofa and said: âI really
do
feel stiff.'
âYou'd better have a rest tomorrow. A quiet Sunday for a change.'
âYes, that might be nice.'
But the following morning Henry declared that the stiffness was passing off.
âAs a matter of fact,' he said, âwe agreed to have a return.'
âYou and Stephen and Mary â and Jessica?'
âYes.'
âOr just you and Jessica?'
âOh, all of us,' he said easily.
âWhat a liar you are, Henry.'
But she did not say it angrily. There was even a slight smile in her eyes. She was remembering the young man she had met at the tennis-party four years ago, and how what had attracted her to him had been his detachment. He was still just as detached.
The shy embarrassed young man who had come to call the following day, and who had sat doggedly talking to Laura until she herself returned, was the same young man who was now determinedly in pursuit of Jessica.
âHenry,' she thought, âhas really not changed at all.'
âHe doesn't want to hurt me,' she thought, âbut he's just like that. He always has to do just what he wants to do.'
She noticed that Henry was limping a little, and she said impulsively:
âI really don't think you ought to go and play tennis â you must have strained yourself yesterday. Can't you leave it until next week-end?'
But Henry wanted to go, and went.
He came back about six o'clock and dropped down on his bed looking so ill that Shirley was alarmed. Notwithstanding Henry's protests, she went and rang up the doctor.
As Laura rose from lunch the following afternoon the telephone rang.
âLaura? It's me, Shirley.'
âShirley? What's the matter? Your voice sounds queer.'
âIt's Henry, Laura. He's in hospital. He's got polio.'
âLike Charles,' thought Laura, her mind rushing back over the years. âLike Charles â¦'
The tragedy that she herself had been too young to understand acquired suddenly a new meaning.
The anguish in Shirley's voice was the same anguish that her own mother had felt.
Charles had died. Would Henry die?
She wondered. Would Henry die?
âInfantile paralysis is the same as polio, isn't it?' she asked Mr Baldock doubtfully.
âNewer name for it, that's all â why?'
âHenry has gone down with it.'
âPoor chap. And you're wondering if he's going to get over it?'
âWell â yes.'
âAnd hoping he won't?'
âReally, really. You make me out a monster.'
âCome now, young Laura â the thought was in your mind.'
âHorrible thoughts do pass through one's mind,' said Laura. âBut I wouldn't wish anyone dead â really I wouldn't.'