
“Hullo,” said Jonathan Royal. “That you, Caper?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Lighting-up time?”
“Five o’clock, sir. It’s a dark afternoon.”
“Ah,” said Jonathan suddenly rubbing his hands together, “that’s the stuff to give the troops.”
“I beg your pardon, sir?”
“That’s the stuff to give the troops, Caper. An expression borrowed from a former cataclysm. I did not intend you to take it literally. It’s the stuff to give my particular little troop. You may draw the curtains.”
Caper adjusted Jonathan’s patent black-out screens and drew the curtains. Jonathan stretched out a hand and switched on a table lamp at his elbow. Fire and lamplight were now reflected in the glass doors that protected his books, in the dark surfaces of his desk, in his leather saddle-back chairs, in his own spectacles, and in the dome of his bald pate.
With a quick movement he brought his hands together on his belly and began to revolve his thumbs one over the other, sleekly.
“Mr. Mandrake rang up, sir, from Winton St. Giles Rectory. He will be here at 5:30.”
“Good,” said Jonathan.
“Will you take tea now, sir, or wait for Mr. Mandrake?”
“Now. He’ll have had it. Has the mail come?”
“Yes, sir. I was just—”
