'We've pinched their taxi, that's one of the things that's going on. It's parked just round this corner.'
As if answering its name, the taxi, tired of waiting, emerged from the side-street and turned up towards the main road. He ran furiously off in pursuit, calling loudly: 'Taxi. Taxi.'
It drew to a stop and he went up to the driver's window. After a brief conversation, the taxi moved off again and disappeared into the main road. Dixon ran back to Christine, whom the Barclays had now rejoined. 'Sorry I couldn't get him for you,' he said to them. 'He'd got someone to pick up at the station in five minutes. What a nuisance.'
'Well, thank you very much, Dixon, for trying,' Barclay said.
'Yes, thank you all the same,' his wife said.
He took Christine's arm and walked her round into the side-street, calling good-night. They started to cross over.
'Does that mean we've lost the taxi? It was ours, was it?'
'Ours after it was theirs. No, I told the driver to drive round the corner and wait for us a hundred yards along the road. We can cut up through this alley, be there in a couple of minutes.'
'What would you have done if he hadn't driven out just then? We couldn't have driven off under the noses of those people.'
'I'd already worked out we'd have to do something like that. We'd got to establish that we and the taxi were leaving separately. That's why I was quick off the mark.'
'You were, very.'
With no more said they reached the taxi, parked outside the lighted windows of a dress-shop. Dixon opened a rear door for Christine, then said to the driver: 'Our friend isn't coming. We'll make a start, if you're ready.'
'Right, sir. Just by the Corn Exchange, isn't it?'
'No, it's further than the Corn Exchange.' He named the small town where the Welches lived.
'Oh, can't make it there, I'm sorry, sir.'
'It's all right, I know the way.'
' So do I, but they told me at the garage the Corn Exchange.'
'Did they really? Well, they told you wrong, then. We're not going to the Corn Exchange.'
'Not enough petrol.'
'Bateson's at the foot of College Road doesn't shut till twelve.' He peered at the dashboard. 'Ten to. We'll do it on our heads.'
'Not allowed to draw petrol except at our own garage.'
'We are tonight. I'll write to the company explaining. It's their fault for telling you you were only going to the Com Exchange. Now let's go, or you'll find yourself eight miles out without any petrol to get you back.'
He got in beside Christine and the car started.
XIV
'THAT was all very efficient,' Christine said. 'You're getting good at this sort of thing, aren't you? First the table, then the
'I didn't use to be. By the way, I hope you don't object too much to the way I got hold of this taxi.'
'I've got into it, haven't I?'
'Yes, I know, but I should have thought the method would strike you as unethical.'
'It does, at least it would in the ordinary way, but it was more important for us to get a taxi than for them, wasn't it?'
'I'm glad you look at it like that.' He brooded on her use of the word 'important' for a moment, then realized that he didn't much care for her easy acquiescence in his piratical treatment of the Barclays' taxi. Even he now felt it had been a bit thick, and she presumably hadn't his excuse for wanting a taxi very badly. Like both the pretty women he'd known, and many that he'd only read about, she thought it was no more than fair that one man should cheat and another be cheated to serve her convenience. She ought to have objected, refused to go with him, insisted on returning and handing the taxi over to the Barclays, walked back, revolted by his unscrupulousness, into the dance. Yes, he'd have liked that, wouldn't he? Ay, proper champion that would have been, lad. His hand flew to his mouth in the darkness to stifle his laughter; to sidetrack it, he began distilling alarm from the thought that he'd have to find something to talk to this girl about all the way back to the Welches'. The only thing he felt at all clear about was the fact that this abduction of her was a blow struck against Bertrand, but it seemed less than prudent to begin there. Why had she consented to ditch her boy-friend in this emphatic way? There were several possible answers. Perhaps he could start with that. 'Did you manage to get away all right?' he asked.
'Oh yes; nobody seemed to object very much.'
'What did you say to them?'
'I just explained things to Uncle Julius - he never minds what I do - and then I just told Bertrand I was going.'
'How did he react to that?'
'He said, 'Oh, don't do that, I'll be with you in a minute.' Then he went on talking to Mrs Goldsmith and Uncle. So I came away then.'
'I see. It all sounds very easy and quick.'
'Oh, it was.'
'Well, I'm very glad you decided to come with me after all.'
'Good. I couldn't help feeling guilty rather, at first, about walking out on them all, but that's worn off now.'
'Good. What finally made you make up your mind?'
After a silence, she said: 'I wasn't enjoying it much in there, as you know, and I started feeling awfully tired, and it didn't look as if Bertrand could leave for some time, so I thought I'd come along with you.'
She said this in her best schoolmistressy way, elocution-mistressy in fact, so Dixon repeated as stiffly: 'I see.' In the light of a street-lamp he could see her sitting, as he'd expected, on the very edge of the seat. That was that, then.
She suddenly broke in again in her other manner, the one he associated with their phone conversation: 'No, I'm not going to try and get away with that. That's only a part of it. I don't see why I shouldn't tell you a bit more. I left because I was feeling absolutely fed-up with everything.'
'That's a bit sweeping. What had fed you up in particular?'
'Everything. I was absolutely fed-up. I don't see why I shouldn't tell you this. I've been feeling very depressed recently, and it all seemed to get too much for me tonight.'
'A girl like you's got no call to be depressed about anything, Christine,' Dixon said warmly, then at once fell against the window and banged his elbow smartly on the door as the taxi lurched aside in front of a row of petrol pumps. Behind these was an unlit building with a painted sign, faintly visible, reading