‘Really? Only that’s not what Portia said to me.’

  ‘What do you mean exactly?’

  ‘She said Ned had told her he was going to follow his father into Parliament one day.’

  ‘Well, maybe he will,’ Ashley said casually, while something inside him snapped with a familiar fury. Did Ned seriously imagine political seats could be passed on from father to son, like writing-desks and shooting-sticks? Well, perhaps they could, he reflected bitterly; this is, after all, England. Meanwhile of course, Ned’s summer was too precious to him for it to be wasted on politics: too much fucking and cricket and fucking and sailing and fucking and fucking to be done, so why not let Ashley the Manchester carthorse do the secretarial work this year, eh, Pa old thing? Plenty of time for catching up after Oxford, don’t you think, Daddy darling? And one day, when I’m ‘ready to settle down’ I could send for good old Ashley and have him for a political assistant. Poor Ashley would be so grateful . . . in fact, why not get him in training for it now? Give him a bit of experience? Just the thing! We’ll invite him along for dinner and put it to him, he’ll be so grateful. It’ll get that nasty business of reading his embarrassing diary off my conscience, too. We’ll give him the old oil and have him typing letters and licking envelopes before you can say Arrogant Cunting Upper Fucking Class Arseholes . . .

  ‘You all right?’

  ‘Mm? Yes, fine, fine . . . miles away,’ Ashley smiled vaguely at Gordon as if emerging from a gently eccentric daydream. ‘So,’ he said brightly. ‘First time you’ve met the great Ned then?’

  Gordon nodded cautiously. ‘The Great Ned?’

  ‘Forgive the promptings of a sarcastic heart,’ said Ashley. ‘He’s very popular of course. Very talented, but . . . oh, you don’t want to listen to me. None of my business.’

  ‘Hey, if he’s dating my cousin, I want to know everything there is to know,’ said Gordon. ‘Portia thinks his shit don’t stink. But you’re in school with the guy. You’ve known him longer than she has.’

  ‘Well, let’s just say I wouldn’t like my cousin going out with him,’ said Ashley. ‘It’s hard to define. Most people think he’s charming and honest and everything that could ever be appealing in a man. Personally, I find him cold and arrogant and deceitful. Ah . . .’ Ashley looked up as Big Ben began to chime the half hour. ‘Twelve-thirty. If it’s all right with you, we might stop off at that pub round the corner. Said I would meet a friend there for lunch. If we feel like it we can go on to the House afterwards.’

  ‘Hey, look, if I’m in the way . . .’

  ‘Not at all. You’ll like Rufus. And he’ll like you. Well, he’ll like your ten pounds. You can buy a lot to drink with ten pounds.’

  ‘Oh well, if . . .’

  ‘I’m joking. He’s as rich as God. And I’m sure you’ll find that you have a great deal in common.’

  Ned lay in bed gazing up at the ceiling. With a fist clenched over her cheek, Portia slept tightly curled like a kitten beside him.

  He hadn’t yet told her about the nightmare of watching Paddy Leclare dying on board the Orphana. On the bus from Heathrow they had talked almost like strangers, Ned concerned not to make Gordon feel left out and Portia strangely shy in her cousin’s presence too. He wasn’t going to worry her, but the experience had shaken him. He had never confronted death, responsibility and fear before and to meet them all in one go was unsettling.

  Sailing back to Scotland with a dead man below had not been pleasant for him. Rufus Cade had behaved oddly too. It seemed natural that Ned should skipper the boat back to Oban and everyone but Cade agreed that it was right and sensible. Ned, without vanity he knew it to be true, was the best sailor amongst them, and surely Leclare’s last bestowal of trust in him proved his right to command? Not that he was able to repeat that secret to Cade or anyone else. For five hours, as dawn broke and they made their miserable way back to harbour, Cade had sullenly criticised all Ned’s decisions and gone out of his way to undermine his authority at every turn. This had never happened to Ned before and had left him feeling hurt and puzzled.

  It was only as they were making their way through Oban harbour towards the quayside and the flashing blue lights of the ambulance and police cars awaiting them that he had understood.

  Cade had approached him shyly. ‘Look, I’m sorry, Maddstone,’ he said, staring down at the decking. ‘I suppose I was a bit upset by it all. Didn’t mean to criticise you. It’s right for you to be in charge.’

  Ned had laid a hand on Cade’s arm. ‘Bloody hell, Rufus, don’t give it another thought. Under the circumstances you’ve been amazing.’

  The rest of the day had passed in a confused dream of witness statements, telephone calls and interminable waiting before Ned had finally been allowed to lead the party off to Glasgow to catch the night train to Euston. Leadership was exhausting.

  Portia’s head stirred on his chest and he found himself looking into her eyes.

  ‘Hello,’ he said.

  ‘Hello.’

  And they laughed.

  Ashley watched as Gordon drained his second Guinness.

  ‘You seen her, Ashley,’ he said, belching as he wiped the froth from his mouth. ‘She’s beautiful. Wouldn’t you say she’s beautiful?’

  ‘Very beautiful indeed, Gordon,’ said Ashley who possessed several very old Greek textbooks that he considered infinitely more exciting.

  ‘Sides,’ Gordon continued. ‘Where I come from you don’t marry out. You just don’t do that. It’s wrong.’

  Rufus was glowering into a pint of Director’s that he had already chased with three triple whiskies. ‘Marry out? What’s that mean when it’s at home?’

  ‘Gordon and Portia are Jewish,’ Ashley explained. ‘It isn’t done to marry outside the faith.’

  ‘I’m a Catholic,’ said Rufus. ‘It’s the same with us.’

  ‘And she won’t look at me,’ said Gordon. ‘She won’t fucking look at me. You know what I’m saying?’

  ‘You’re saying she won’t look at you?’ said Rufus.

  ‘Right. You got it. Won’t look at me.’

  ‘I see. That must piss you right off.’

  ‘Piss me off is right.’

  ‘It would piss me off too, I can tell you.’

  Ashley was pleased to see Gordon and Rufus relaxed with each other, but he dreaded having to cope with two drunks. Although he was in the process of teaching himself everything there was to be known about wine, Ashley took little pleasure in alcohol, and none at all in drunkenness in himself or others. He knew enough not to show it, however and could nurse a drink through several rounds without looking like a prude.

  ‘So what exactly happened, Rufus? You say Leclare was dead when you returned?’

  ‘Jesus, Ash, I told you. He sent me off looking for a bottle of fucking Jameson’s that wasn’t there and by the time I got back, there was Saint Ned cradling him in his arms, cooing like a fucking pigeon. Next thing you know he’d helped himself to the command. Treated me like dirt too. Then had the fucking nerve to tell me that “under the circumstances” I’d been brilliant. Meaning of course, that under the circumstances he had been brilliant. Tosser. Still, he was the one who had to deal with the police and the ambulance and all the paperwork. Ha! Bet that hadn’t occurred to him.’ Rufus struggled to his feet. ‘Anyway. Fuck him. Who wants another drink?’

  ‘Why not?’ said Ashley. ‘Same again please. Gin and tonic, ice but no lemon.’

  ‘This stuff really gets to your gut,’ said Gordon handing his empty glass to Rufus. ‘Maybe just a half pint this time.’

  ‘A half of gin and a pint of Guinness and lemon. No ice, but tonic. I’ve got you.’ Rufus began weaving his way to the bar.

  ‘He’s not half as drunk as he appears,’ said Ashley. ‘His father’s an alcoholic and he’s trying it on for size.’

  Gordon watched Rufus’s retreating form and then turned to Ashley. ‘You like to see through people, don’t you?’

  ‘Well,’ said Ashley,
in some surprise. ‘Judging from that remark, so do you.’

  ‘Right. Touché. So tell me, who was this guy, anyway?’

  ‘The school used him as some sort of sailing instructor,’ Ashley said with a dismissive wave, as if describing the local cesspit operative. ‘Those who sailed were very fond of him in that insufferably matey way that the yachting fraternity adopts. He was endlessly organising trips in the holidays for boys who could afford it – or cared to busy themselves with an occupation so imponderably tedious,’ Ashley added quickly.

  ‘I heard of cases in the States where these guys are perverts,’ said Gordon. ‘You know, sailing round the Caribbean with schoolkids. Kind of weird thing to do.’

  ‘Yes, but I hardly think so in this case. Whatever you may have read about English public schools that kind of thing is pretty rare.’

  ‘Where’d they go?’

  ‘From the west of Scotland round to the Giant’s Causeway apparently and then back again. The year before that it was . . . where did you go last year, Rufus?’ Rufus had returned, and was setting drinks on the table, a bag of peanuts between his teeth.

  ‘Hng?’

  ‘Last year. Where did the Sailing Club go?’

  ‘Hooker Horror.’

  ‘Excuse me?’

  ‘The Hook of Holland,’ said Rufus, tearing open the packet with his teeth and pushing it towards Gordon. ‘From Southwold across the North Sea to Flushing. Then up the inland waterways to Amsterdam and all the way back.’

  ‘And I take it Leclare never molested you in any way? Never threatened the delicate flower of your virginity?’

  ‘Fuck off!’

  ‘Just a thought we had.’

  ‘As a matter of fact, I’ve been thinking of going back,’ said Rufus. ‘Amsterdam that is. They have naked girls in the windows and more dope than you’ve ever seen in your life.’

  ‘You smoke?’ Gordon asked Rufus.

  ‘Does the Pope shit in the woods?’ Ashley murmured, helping himself to a single peanut.

  Gordon lowered his voice excitedly. ‘You couldn’t put me on to someone, could you?’ he asked. ‘I haven’t had a smoke since I got here. I mentioned it to Portia one time and she looked at me like I was shit.’

  ‘Be a pleasure,’ said Rufus genially waving a hand. ‘You a grass man or a hash man?’

  ‘Grass,’ said Gordon.

  ‘No problem. As a matter of fact, I just happen to have on me the most seriously . . .’

  Ashley’s heart sank at the prospect of the conversation descending into drug talk. It was so much more amusing to hear Rufus and Gordon swapping complaints about Ned. Ned and drugs, unfortunately, did not mix in conversation. Mind you, of course . . .

  ‘Wouldn’t it be fun,’ said Ashley, sipping his gin and tonic primly, ‘to watch Maddstone being busted by the Drug Squad? Bit of a scandal, bit of a disgrace, bit of a come down for the holy one and his father, don’t you think? And just imagine how shocked dear Portia would be.’

  Rufus giggled and Gordon’s mouth fell open.

  ‘He’s going to be taking her to – what was it called? Something absurdly pretentious – the Knightsbridge College, that was it,’ Ashley continued dreamily. ‘Suppose the police were told that a wicked drug dealer had been seen hanging around outside the college most afternoons, distributing illegal substances to the students. Imagine witnessing the golden boy being led away in handcuffs.’

  ‘Yeah, but how . . .’

  ‘His jacket’s at the bottom of the stairs. All we have to do, surely, is use a little intelligence.’

  Ned stood naked at the window of his bedroom looking out over London. In an hour or so he might go down and scramble some eggs. Otherwise why would he ever want to leave this room for the rest of his life? They could stay here for ever. Only Portia had to be ready for her job interview. But they’d come back from that and run straight back up here again. Of course tomorrow morning his father was coming down from the country and they must be presentable then, but tomorrow was a world away. He couldn’t wait for Portia to meet his father, he felt they would become instant friends. A vista of their future years together appeared before him. Portia and Pa at Christmas, in the maternity ward, on holiday together. The smiling, the laughing, the affection, the love . . . he wanted to weep with ecstasy.

  A movement in the street below caught his eye. Ashley and Gordon were returning to the house, a third person between them. Ned smiled when he recognised the lumbering gait of Rufus Cade. How on earth had they bumped into him? Any other time it would be fun to welcome them in, but . . .

  Never usually unsociable or selfish, Ned crept to the door and gently turned the key in the lock. The very delicacy of the sound woke Portia.

  ‘Did you just lock the door?’

  ‘’Fraid so,’ whispered Ned. ‘The others are coming back. Thought we might pretend to have gone out.’

  Portia watched Ned crossing the room towards her and an intense happiness rushed through her like wind through grasses and she shivered and rippled with so much pleasure that she almost believed it was pain.

  ‘Don’t ever leave me.’

  ‘No fear,’ Ned whispered, climbing back into bed.

  They heard Ashley’s voice calling up the stairs.

  ‘We won’t disturb you both. Something I had to fetch. You young people enjoy yourselves!’

  The smothered laughter of Gordon and Rufus delighted them. How wonderful it was to be giggled about.

  Ned sighed with the completest fulfilment and joy. Where in all the universe was anyone so unfathomably lucky? He was young, healthy and happy and without a care or an enemy in the world.

  2

  Ned shivered and pulled the blanket closer around his shoulders.

  ‘Excuse me,’ he said. ‘Do you think it would be possible for someone to bring me my clothes?’

  The policeman at the door shifted his eyes from the ceiling to Ned.

  ‘Not cold is it?’

  ‘No, but you see I’m only wearing . . .’

  ‘Middle of summer, isn’t it?’

  ‘Yes, yes it is, but . . .’

  ‘Well then.’

  Ned stared at the foil ashtray in front of him on the table and tried to force his mind to concentrate on what had happened.

  At four o’clock he had seen Portia into the College, which is to say they had rung the bell for the fifth floor of a disappointingly ordinary doorway in a narrow street behind the Scotch House.

  ‘I’ll be outside,’ he promised, kissing her goodbye as if for the longest parting. ‘And when you come out we’ll go into Harrods for an ice-cream soda to celebrate.’

  He had been waiting there on the pavement for nearly half an hour, trying to work out, in a cheerful sort of way, whether or not Portia taking such a time up there was a good sign. Being an optimist, he had naturally decided that it was.

  A group of young Spaniards or Italians (he couldn’t really tell which) had come up to the door. They had been in the act of producing a key when Ned had decided, on an impulse, to be let in with them. The sight of a respectably dressed boyfriend might just tip the balance in Portia’s favour.

  ‘Excuse me,’ he had said. ‘Would it be all right if I came in with you?’

  They had looked at him in bewilderment. If this was the average standard of English here, then Portia was going to have a lot to do.

  ‘I . . . JUST . . . WONDER . . . IF . . . YOU . . .’ he had started to say, but before the words were out of his mouth it had all happened. Appearing it seemed from nowhere, two men had each seized an arm and bundled Ned towards a car. Too surprised to speak, the last thing he heard before a hand pushed him down into the back seat was the raucous laughter of a small group of people standing in the dimly lit doorway of the nearby pub.

  ‘W-what’s going on?’ he had asked. ‘What are you doing?’

  ‘You’d better ask yourself what you’ve been doing,’ one of the men had said drawing a foil package from Ned’s jacket pocket
, as the car accelerated away with a squeal of tyres.

  At the police station he had been more thoroughly searched. They had taken away for examination everything but his underpants and he had been sitting in this room now for over half an hour, wondering what could possibly be going on. The next time the door opened and someone came in, he decided, he would insist on being allowed to telephone his father. The police had no idea they were dealing with a cabinet minister’s son. Sir Charles was a gentle and scrupulously polite man, but he had commanded a brigade in the war and run a small pocket of Empire for six years. In the Sudan he had pronounced sentences of death and seen them carried out. As Secretary of State for Northern Ireland he had extended the limits of internment without trial and authorised all kinds of extreme measures – ‘strong medicine for a strong infection’ he had said to Ned once, without revealing details. This was not a man to be messed with. Ned almost felt sorry for the police. He would assure his father that he had been kindly treated and that he held no grudge.

  At last, the door to the interview room opened.

  ‘Right then, son.’

  ‘Hello, sir.’

  ‘My name is Detective Sergeant Floyd.’

  ‘If it’s all right, I’d like to ring . . .’

  ‘Cigarette?’

  Floyd dropped a packet of Benson and Hedges and a lighter onto the table as he drew up a chair opposite Ned and sat down.

  ‘No thanks. I don’t smoke.’

  ‘You don’t smoke?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Half an ounce of hash and you don’t smoke?’

  ‘I’m sorry?’

  ‘Bit late for “sorry” isn’t it? One thing to have it for your own use. But selling to foreign students. Magistrates don’t like that.’

  ‘I don’t understand.’

  ‘Of course you don’t. How old are you?’

  ‘Seventeen and a half.’

  ‘Seventeen and a half? And a half!’

  The policeman at the door joined in the laughter.

  ‘Well, I am,’ said Ned, tears beginning to form in his eyes. What was wrong with saying that, when it was true?