“You always denigrate yourself, Robert. You are not a bit like most people.”
“Really, it was nothing, Lucinda. Quite easy. I was the lucky one…just because by chance I had this formula.”
“It was very clever of you to work it out.”
“I didn’t work it out. It just came. However, that was what I was doing when I was hit.”
“You might have been left out there.”
“Oh, it wasn’t all that bad. I was able to wait for the advance, and then I was taken back to base. After that…home. Your Uncle Gerald came to see me in the hospital. He said, ‘I don’t see why you shouldn’t go to Marchlands.’ I can tell you, Lucinda, it was like saying I was going to Heaven.”
“Oh…don’t say that.”
“Heaven on earth,” he corrected.
“Robert, how bad is your leg?”
“It’s getting better. I don’t suppose I shall ever walk as I did before, though.”
“Then…you couldn’t go back.”
“Not at the moment certainly.”
“Not ever, Robert,” I said. “I just could not bear it. You’ve told me so much about it. You’ve made me see it. I shall pray that your leg gets better…but slowly and that it is not really well until this wretched war is over.”
“Dear Lucinda,” he said. “What a nice thing to say.”
There was great excitement in the hospital when the news came. Robert had won the Military Cross. Nobody was more astonished than Robert himself. He showed the letter to my mother, who called me at once.
“Just listen to this,” she cried. “Robert is a hero. He’s got the Military Cross.”
“Really!”
“He was out in what they call no-man’s-land, and sending messages back as to the enemy’s whereabouts. He was wounded and for that reason could have returned to base, but he did not do so. He remained at his post and continued sending messages, which were so vital that the guns that otherwise would have been destroyed by the enemy were saved. That’s the gist of it. Robert is being decorated for his bravery.”
I embraced him, kissed him and wept over him.
“There wasn’t anything else I could have done,” said Robert. “I just went on…that was all.”
“Stop it, Robert,” I commanded. “You were wonderful. You’re a hero. You’ll go to Buckingham Palace and have a medal pinned on you by the King.”
There were celebrations throughout the hospital.
Robert was embarrassed. “Too much fuss,” he said. “It might be a mistake. Really, I was just sending back those messages….”
“And saving the guns!” I cried. “Shut up, Robert. You’re a hero and we are going to see that everyone knows it.”
I think he was more pleased about our delight than he was about his own success.
Aunt Belinda arrived at Marchlands with Annabelinda. They were both exuberant.
“Isn’t it wonderful? Fancy, Robert…” cried Annabelinda.
Aunt Belinda said, “We shall go to Buckingham Palace. Big Robert will come up for the occasion. We’re so proud of him.”
“I’m glad to hear it,” I said.
“You look better, Lucinda,” said Annabelinda.
“Thank you.”
“I’ve got lots to tell you.”
“What have you been doing?”
“We’re going to have a long talk…alone.”
Aunt Belinda was fussing around Robert. How was he, she wanted to know. She had been so pleased when she had heard he was going to Marchlands.
“I said to Robert, ‘Darling Lucie will look after him better than anyone. And Lucinda will be there. They were always such friends.’ It will be wonderful to go to the Palace.”
“Don’t think it is going to be too grand,” said Robert. “There’ll be plenty of others there.”
“It’s no use pretending it isn’t wonderful, Robbie darling. I’m so proud of you…my little Robbie…a hero!”
“Oh, Mother, please…”
“He’s just like his father,” said Aunt Belinda. “They don’t know how to get the best out of things. You’re a hero, darling. You saved those guns. Don’t forget that, and everyone is going to know it.”
Robert looked resigned and he and I exchanged smiles.
I should have liked to go to the Palace with him, but of course too many could not go, and Uncle Robert, Aunt Belinda and Annabelinda were his immediate family.
I did have my chat with Annabelinda on the first day of their arrival. It was evening. Annabelinda had always liked bedtime chats.
She came to my room and sat on my bed.
“I have such news,” she said. “It’s not out yet, but it will be next week. You shall be the first to know.”
“What is it?”
“I’m going to be married. I am engaged…not officially yet. There has to be a proper announcement. His family, you see.”
“Engaged?” I said.
She lowered her eyes, as though she feared to look at me.
“To Marcus,” she said.
“Oh…congratulations.”
“Thank you. It’s not supposed to be known yet, but I couldn’t keep it from you. Besides, I wanted to tell you myself. His people…you’ve no idea. Their house is like a castle. That’s the main house, where his parents live. When we’re married, our house will be on the estate. It’s quite grand…but you should see the ancestral home.”
“So you are very pleased.”
She grimaced. “The family is a bit overpowering. I went up there with my parents. They’ve inspected me. It’s like going back in time. All those old conventions. I can’t imagine how I shall live up to them.”
“No,” I said. “Nor can I.”
“Well, Marcus is marvelous. Right from the first, I knew.” She looked faintly defiant. “So did he. And we’ll have fun. I shall get him to buy a house in London. If he is going to stay at the War Office, he will have to. That wound makes him unfit for military service. It’s going to be wonderful. It’s only his old family that frightens me. Everything has to be just as it always has been…ceremonial. You’ve no idea. That’s why Marcus is so different. You’d never guess, talking to him, that there had been all that discipline in his life.”
“When are you going to be married?”
“Well, first we have to announce the engagement. I’ve only just passed the first test. There will be more vetting, I imagine. They wanted to know all about my family. Marcus said that I’d charm his father and he’ll know how to tackle his mother. I shall be all right. You know how respectable Daddy is. He’s passed muster—socially and financially.”
“And your mother?”
“You know how charming she can be.”
“And you?”
She looked smug, and I said, “Have you told Marcus?”
“Told him what?”
“About your past.”
“What do you mean?” she asked abruptly.
“Annabelinda, you know. I mean about Edward.”
She flushed scarlet. “How can you be so unkind when I’m so happy?” she demanded.
“You haven’t told him then?”
“How could I?”
“Don’t you think he ought to know?”
“It’s all over. It was just a slip.”
“There is Edward.”
“He’s just the little boy you brought from France. People do things like that in wartime. His parents were dead and you took him. Your people have adopted him because of your promise to his mother when she was dying. It’s all…settled.”
“I thought perhaps you would feel that you must tell your future husband.”
“How could I? Lucinda, don’t ever talk to me about it. It makes me so unhappy. You’re jealous, I believe.”
“I am not. I should not like to have a secret like that on my conscience, and I could not be jealous of someone who had. But it is not on your conscience, is it—for the simple reason that you haven’t one.”
I was talking wildly. I was not sure whether I was angry with her because she was going to marry Marcus or because she talked of Edward as though he were not important.
She got up and went to the door.
“I shan’t talk to you anymore. I thought you would like to know. I thought you would be pleased that I had told you first.” She turned and faced me and went on appealingly. “Lucinda, you wouldn’t say a word…?”
“Of course not. I haven’t ever, have I? And I have known for a long time.”