or-less.
But after all these years it wasn't one of her problems. 'What about it, darling? The old Griffin place — ?'
'I was talking to a fellow — a Cambridge chap on the dig over the hill, where they're working on that Romano- British village . . . which they
'Yes, dear?' Rachel was just beginning to acclimatize to that harsh reality of her son's greater knowledge in certain areas
— like matters Romano-British and Anglo-Saxon, as well as sporting.
'He was very interesting — what he said was, I mean.'
She must be careful not to irritate him with her stupidity.
'About archaeology?' She had driven past the excavations only the day before, and had admired the chequer- board regularity of the work in progress.
'About dustmen, actually.'
'Dustmen?' Now she really had to be careful. So ... not another word.
dummy2
'Refuse collectors — garbage men.' Suddenly he was serious.
'You know,
Rachel felt assailed on two fronts. 'You'll have to ask him yourself. And it'll be your decision in the end. So long as you don't want to be a dustman . . .'
He looked at her seriously. 'Dustmen have got a lot to answer for.'
'You can say that again.' The weekly struggle to manhandle —
or, all too often, to womanhandle — the dustbins from the kitchen door to the roadside for collection was a sore trial to her. But at least he was changing the subject from a delicate area to a safe one. And, until she had had time to consult Larry — or at least to stop him putting his foot in it — the further away, the better. 'What's all this got to do with the old Griffin place, darling? You know more of it has fallen down since you went away for the summer term? It was in that dreadful storm we had in May — the one that brought down the old plum tree in the orchard.'
'Yes, I know. I had a look not long ago.' He brushed back his hair from his eyes, and looked the image of his father.
'Yesterday, in fact.'
'Yes, darling?' There had been a time when she would have worried about such an exploration, and when it would have been strictly Against the Rules in fact; although, in fact, that dummy2
had been one rule which the children had never broken. But now he was a big boy. But now, also, she was interested.
'Why did you do that?'
He stared at her for a moment. 'Dustmen, Mother — Rachel.
I told you — dustmen. That's the point.'
Rachel could hear her husband clumping finally from the bathroom to the bedroom upstairs. In a moment or two he would be on the back stair, coming down past the little arrow-slit window from which the surviving chimney of the old Griffin place was still just visible through the trees. 'Well, the point eludes me, darling. Because no dustman ever came within half a mile of old Mrs Griffin's dustbins, if she had such things — that's certain.'
'
Still unenlightened, Rachel took refuge in interested (if not intelligent) silence.
And her silence broke him finally. 'It's all still there. For the finding.'
That broke her. 'What is?'
'Everything. Or, anyway, everything she ever broke, or threw away. Or lost.' Suddenly his voice was eager. 'Remember that old pewter candle-stick I picked up there, years ago? That's still in my room?'
The light dawned, even blazed, suddenly illuminating all his designs. 'But . . . it's a horrible place, Christopher — a
place — '
'No, it isn't, Mother. It's the ruin of an old farm cottage. And there probably has been a farmhouse hereabouts since medieval times. And . . . maybe the site of the old Griffin place was the original farmhouse, because it has its own pond — the Cambridge chap said it might be. But, anyway, because there weren't any dustmen and garbage collectors in the old days, and it's way off the beaten track —
'What is all there?' Larry spoke from the open doorway of the back staircase, stooping automatically so as not to knock his head on the beam, years of practice having made him perfect.
'All the accumulated refuse of old Mrs Griffin, dear.' Rachel felt her lips compress. 'And your son wishes to dig it up.'
'Not 'dig it up', Mother.