Graham had a standing invitation to visit Lord Arlott, but hadn't taken advantage of it partly because he was too busy at the annex, and partly because of a vague desire to keep his prewar life disconnected from his new one. At seventy, Valentine Arlott continued to conduct his newspaper with undiminished energy and interference. He was a small, lively man in rimless glasses, the fiery red hair which Graham well remembered long ago turned grey, but his Australian accent was as fierce as ever, to be dimmed or intensified according to how it suited to illuminate a particular argument. The
'Zip-fasteners?' Val exclaimed, Graham coming to the point of his visit at once. His thick grey eyebrows shot up. 'What the hell would you want those for?'
Graham explained.
'Sounds like a good cause,' said Val. 'Fix it up, Geoff, will you?'
'Certainly, Val.'
There was a third person in the basement room, who from the humility with which he conducted himself Graham passed off as some sort of secretary. He was startled to discover a little later that the man was the paper's editor.
'Well, Graham-how are you going along?' Val Arlott leaned back in his swivel-chair, smiling but eyeing Graham with a shrewdness he turned impartially on prime ministers and messenger boys. 'By God, you're looking fit. And ten years younger.'
Graham laughed. 'It's the simple country life. Think what a fortune it would have cost to enjoy before the war.'
'Don't you get bored?'
'Not much. I just work and sleep.'
'You must notice the change-patching up our national heroes instead of our national beauties.'
'I do. It's much more gratifying.'
'I suppose it should be gratifying to me, too. I'm the one who gave you your start, aren't I?'
'Of course-no Val Arlott, no Graham Trevose.'
In the nineteen-twenties Val had run a crusade in the
'Making much money?' asked Val.
'No, but there's nothing to spend it on.'
'That's true. Not these days.'
'You must have had a pretty bad time of it up here in London,' observed Graham.
'It certainly hasn't been a picnic. Any bombing down your way?'
'Our only casualty has been a cow. I think they mistook us for Biggin Hill.'
'Now the bastards are turning their attention to the provinces. Swansea had a nasty time of it last night.'
'Is the damage serious?' It warmed Graham to talk again to someone important, a man who not only knew the inside story of the war but who, from the look of the room at least, might even affect the turn of the plot. 'I mean, taking the country as a whole.'
'It could be worse. They get the railways running again pretty smartly, and production all round has been hit much less than we feared. The U-boats are a stickier problem, between you and me. But civilian morale has stood up to it. It might have gone the other way, you know. Could have been panic, demands for peace. He confided in me he's genuinely relieved about that'
"Who is?' asked Graham.
Val Arlott seemed surprised at the question. 'Churchill.' His look turned to annoyance as Graham gave a laugh. 'What's funny?'
'Nothing, Val, nothing.' The Captain Piles and Mrs Sedgewick-Smiths of Graham's new world shrank into their true inconsequence. 'I don't move in such circles, I'm afraid.'
'Geoff, fix up some drinks, will you?' ordered Val Arlott.
'Certainly, Val.'
When they were alone, Val asked Graham, 'How's your wife taking the war?'
'Maria wouldn't begin to understand. The clock of her mind stopped somewhere in the thirties.'
'I ran into her brother the other day.'
'The second Lord Cazalay?'
'Yes, God help us. There was some unpleasantness between the pair of you, I gather?'
'Yes. Cazalay and that fellow Haileybury were in it together, trying to get me struck off.'
'You mean about the actress? What's her name-Stella Garrod?'