«Sorry to be so sort of-limp and wet-Thanks for listening I'll ring again-Bye-I forgot Rachel. I decided I would go out and buy Julian a present. I still felt ill and rather faint and given to fits of trembling. At the idea of buying the present a lot of trembling came on. Present-buying is a fairly universal symptom of love. It is certainly a sine qua non. (If you don't want to give her a present you don't love her.) It is I suppose a method of touching the beloved.

The telephone rang. I staggered to it and gasped into it.

«Oh Brad. It's Chris.»

«Oh-Chris-hello, dear.»

«I'm glad I'm still 'Chris' today.»

«Today-yes-«Have you thought over my proposition?»

«What proposition?»

«Gee, Brad, you are a tease. Look, can I come over and see you right now?»

«No.»

«Why not?»

«I've got a bridge party.»

«But you can't play bridge.»

«I learnt in the thirty or so years of your absence. I had to pass the time somehow.»

«Brad, when can I see you, it's kind of urgent?»

«I'll come round to see Priscilla-this evening-probably-«O. K., I'll wait. Mind you come.»

«And God bless you, Chris, God bless you, dear, God bless you.»

I sat in the hall beside the telephone and fingered Julian's scarf. Since I retained it with me, although it was hers, it was as if she had given me a present. I sat and looked through the open door of the sitting-room at Julian's things arranged upon the tables. I listened to the silence of the flat in the midst of the murmur of London. Time passed. I waited. Being your slave what should I do but tend upon the hours and times of your desire. I have no precious time at all to spend, nor services to do till you require.

It now seemed to me incredible that I could have had the nerve to leave the house that morning. Suppose she had telephoned, suppose she had come, when I was away? She could not spend the whole day digging a conversation pit, whatever that was. She would surely come round soon to get her Hamlet. How good it was that I had that hostage. After a while I moved back into the sitting-room and picked up the shabby little book and sat caressing it in Hart– bourne's armchair. My eyelids drooped and the material world grew dim and I waited.

The telephone rang and I ran to it, jolting the table and knocking the six volumes of Shakespeare off onto the floor.

«Bradley. Arnold here.»

«Oh God. It's you.»

«What's the matter?»

«Nothing.»

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