
“Relaxes a little, that’s all. Drinks a bit, reads, listens to his records.”
“Can’t nobody spend every day in a shed for three years without being up to some devilment,” she said.
“It’s not a shed,” said Sydney. “It’s a greenhouse I keep telling you.”
“Whatever you call it.”
“He grows hydrangeas in there. And dahlias.”
“If he wants hydrangeas he should go back home. He hauls everybody down to the equator to grow Northern flowers?”
“It’s not just that. Remember how he liked his study back at the house? Well, it’s like that, except it’s a greenhouse kind of a study.”
“Anybody build a greenhouse on the equator ought to be shame.”
“This is not the equator.”
“Could of fooled me.”
“Nowhere near it.”
“You mean there’s some place on this planet hotter than this?”
“I thought you liked it here.”
“Love it.”
“Then stop complaining.”
“It’s because I do love it that I’m complaining. I’d like to know if it’s permanent. Living like this you can’t figure nothing. He might pack up any minute and trot off someplace else.”
