But the strain told on them when they
were back in the dining-room. They sat down,
very shaky, and looked at each other.
“I don’t feel I can settle
to anything,” said Josephine, “until I’ve
had something. Do you think we could ask Kate
for two cups of hot water?”
“I really don’t see why
we shouldn’t,” said Constantia carefully.
She was quite normal again. “I won’t
ring. I’ll go to the kitchen door and ask
her.”
“Yes, do,” said Josephine,
sinking down into a chair. “Tell her, just
two cups, Con, nothing else—on a tray.”
“She needn’t even put
the jug on, need she?” said Constantia, as though
Kate might very well complain if the jug had been there.
“Oh no, certainly not!
The jug’s not at all necessary. She can
pour it direct out of the kettle,” cried Josephine,
feeling that would be a labour-saving indeed.
Their cold lips quivered at the greenish
brims. Josephine curved her small red hands
round the cup; Constantia sat up and blew on the wavy
steam, making it flutter from one side to the other.
“Speaking of Benny,” said Josephine.
And though Benny hadn’t been
mentioned Constantia immediately looked as though
he had.
“He’ll expect us to send
him something of father’s, of course. But
it’s so difficult to know what to send to Ceylon.”
“You mean things get unstuck
so on the voyage,” murmured Constantia.
“No, lost,” said Josephine
sharply. “You know there’s no post.
Only runners.”
Both paused to watch a black man in
white linen drawers running through the pale fields
for dear life, with a large brown-paper parcel in his
hands. Josephine’s black man was tiny;
he scurried along glistening like an ant. But
there was something blind and tireless about Constantia’s
tall, thin fellow, which made him, she decided, a
very unpleasant person indeed…On the veranda, dressed
all in white and wearing a cork helmet, stood Benny.
His right hand shook up and down, as father’s
did when he was impatient. And behind him, not
in the least interested, sat Hilda, the unknown sister-in-law.
She swung in a cane rocker and flicked over the leaves
of the “Tatler.”
“I think his watch would be
the most suitable present,” said Josephine.
Constantia looked up; she seemed surprised.
“Oh, would you trust a gold watch to a native?”
“But of course, I’d disguise
it,” said Josephine. “No one would
know it was a watch.” She liked the idea
of having to make a parcel such a curious shape that
no one could possibly guess what it was. She
even thought for a moment of hiding the watch in a
narrow cardboard corset-box that she’d kept
by her for a long time, waiting for it to come in for
something. It was such beautiful, firm cardboard.
But, no, it wouldn’t be appropriate for this
occasion. It had lettering on it: “Medium
Women’s 28. Extra Firm Busks.”
It would be almost too much of a surprise for Benny
to open that and find father’s watch inside.
“And of course it isn’t
as though it would be going—ticking, I mean,”
said Constantia, who was still thinking of the native
love of jewellery. “At least,” she
added, “it would be very strange if after all
that time it was.”