“Well, it’s just that you keep repeating everything I say.”
“Everything you say? Do I?” said George, sitting back down on the radiator. “Then you’ll be hoping to see Ruth again, will you?” he ventured, at last getting in one of his questions.
“Well, that’s the funny thing,” said Andrew. “Just after dinner, the old man took me to one side and invited me to join the family in Venice over Easter.”
“And did you accept?” asked George, horrified by the very idea.
“Well, I’d like to, but there’s a slight complication.”
“A slight complication?”
“You’re at it again,” said Andrew.
“Sorry,” replied George. “What’s the complication?”
“I’ve already committed myself to a hockey tour of the West Country at Easter, and as I’m the only goalkeeper available, I don’t feel I can let the team down.”
“Certainly not,” said George, having to jump up again. “That would be damn bad form.”
“Quite,” said Andrew. “But I think I may have come up with a compromise.”
“A compromise?”
“Yes. If I were to miss the last match, I could take the boat train from Southampton on the Friday evening and be in Venice by Sunday morning, which would mean I could still spend a whole week with the Turners.”
“A whole week?” said George.
“I put the idea to the old man, and he seemed quite agreeable, so I’ll be joining them during the last week of March.”
That was all George needed to know. He jumped off the radiator, the seat of his trousers scorched.
“Are you sure you’re all right, Mallory? You seem quite distracted this morning.”
“Blame it on Wainwright,” said George, glad of the chance to change the subject.
“Wainwright?” said Andrew.
“I nearly lost my temper with him this morning when he suggested that it was the Earl of Essex who defeated the Spanish Armada, and Drake wasn’t even there.”
“Playing bowls on Plymouth Hoe, no doubt.”
“No, Wainwright has a theory that Drake was at Hampton Court at the time, having a protracted affair with Elizabeth, and that he’d sent Essex off to Devon to keep him out of the way.”
“I thought it was meant to be the other way round,” said Andrew.
“Let’s hope so,” said George.
CHAPTER TWENTY
TUESDAY, MARCH 24TH, 1914
THE FIRST COUPLE of days’ climbing had gone well, even if Finch seemed a little preoccupied and not his usual forthright self. It wasn’t until the third day, when they were both stuck on a ledge halfway up the Zmutt Ridge, that George found out why.
“Do you begin to understand women?” asked Finch, as if this was something they discussed every day.
“Can’t say I have a great deal of experience in that particular field,” admitted George, his thoughts turning to Ruth.
“Join the club,” responded Finch.