"You haven't done all this yourself, have you? You should have said, I would have helped. I did some cooking when I was at Cambridge. I got quite good at it."

"It's all right, Mrs Mayberry prepared most of it after lunch. You didn't think she'd trust us with it, did you? I'm just finishing off. Do you think this'll be enough?" She wagged the knife at the plate of meat she had cut.

"Yes, fine. If they want any more, Cecil can cut it."

"Hmm, that'll be the day."

"Is there anything I can do?"

"Take the trays through, would you."

"Right." He grabbed the one nearest to him, piled high with plates and dishes.

"Not that one!"

Nicholas put it down with a guilty lurch. The plates threatened to keel over. Isabel put her hand out hurriedly to stop them.

"Those are the plates from lunch, Nick," she said with a tinge of reproach.

"Sorry." How stupid, he raged silently. He knew the heat he could feel on his face was a crimson blush.

"Try this one," she said in a gentler voice.

He picked up the one she indicated, and turned for the door, feeling totally worthless.

"Nick. Thank you for offering to help. None of the others did."

She was giving him a soft smile, and there was something in her expression which said she understood.

"That's OK, any time."

Nicholas and Uri were setting the places when Edward Kitchener and Rosette Harding-Clarke came in at twenty-nine minutes past seven. He saw the old boy was in his usual clothes, baggy white trousers, white cotton shirt, cream-yellow jacket with a blue silk handkerchief tucked into his breast pocket, and a tiny red bow tie, which always made Nicholas think a butterfly had landed on his collar. There was still an air of the tiger left in Kitchener, age was not a gift he accepted gracefully. He was reasonably slim, carrying himself with undiminished vigour; his face was a long one, with skin stretched thinly around his jaw, scratchy with stubble; a crew-cut of silver hair looked almost like a cap.



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