couldnât come,â said Joyce.
He promptly pulled out the chair beside me and sat down.
âYouâre making bread,â he said.
âYes, but I only just started. It still has to rise. Did people like your loaf?â He nodded. Joyce turned towards me. âEveryone in Ravenâs class had to make something and explain how it worked. Raven chose bread. He drew pictures of all the stages and took the loaf heâd made to school.â As she spoke, Joyce was opening and closing the refrigerator, slipping bread into the toaster, slicing some cheese. âTomato or cucumber?â she asked.
âTomato, please. Do you know how yeast works?â
I shook my head, and Raven launched into an explanation. Yeast, it turned out, was a fungus. Joyce set a cheese sandwich in front of him, but he refrained from eating until he was sure that I understood the whole process; then he turned to his sandwich with equal seriousness. As soon as he had finished, Joyce asked him to carry a thermos of coffee out to Edward and Stephen. He thanked her for the sandwich and went to do her bidding.
After the door had closed behind him, Joyce smiled at me. âSo now you know everything about yeast.â
âYes. What a nice boy.â I carried my coffee cup over to the sink. Something about Ravenâs initial hesitation had made me think that he was relieved rather than otherwise to find Jenny absent. âDo he and Jenny get on well?â I asked.
Joyce looked up from wiping the counter. âI think they do. Sometimes when he comes to the house Jenny is a bit standoffish. I suspect she doesnât like the fact that Raven gets to see more of us than she does; she can be quite territorial, as maybe youâve noticed. Now,â she said briskly, âwhat are we going to have for lunch?â
CHAPTER 7
When we left, late on Sunday afternoon, Joyce and Edward walked out to the car with us. âCome again soon,â Joyce said. âWeâre always here.â She put her arms around me, and briefly I was enveloped in the sweet odour of baking. She released me, and Edward stepped forward to shake my hand; he too urged me to return.
Stephen hugged both his parents. âThank you for everything. Weâll be in touch soon.â He climbed into the car beside me and started the engine. We turned onto the main road. âYou see,â he said, âthey like you. Youâll have to tell Suzie that it is possible.â
I smiled. As we drove through the village, I looked at the houses on either side of the road, each in the middle of its tidy garden. The approval of Stephenâs parents, like the keystone of an arch, I thought, completed our union. I placed my hand lightly on his leg. âJoyce really misses Jenny,â I said.
âI know. When do you think would be a good weekend to take her for a visit?â
âMaybe in a fortnight?â We had passed beyond the village, and as Edward had told me, the road was bordered by muddy fields; in some, flocks of sheep were grazing among the turnips.
âA fortnight is Valentineâs Day, and I want to be romantic with you, not go home to my parents.â
I leaned my head on his shoulder. âBut then it will be three weeks before we can go again, unless we go next Friday.â
âThatâs too soon. Joyce would start to get on my nerves if I saw her two weekends in a row.â
âWhy donât we invite her to come to Edinburgh for the day?â
âNow thereâs a good idea. We could go on some sort of outing together, and no one would have time to be badly behaved. Good.â He squeezed my hand.
I was still sitting with my head on his shoulder, gazing out of the window, when suddenly I saw an arrow of geese flying purposefully across the grey sky. âLook,â I said. Stephen stopped the car and we got out. The lonely cries of the geese filled the air, and as they flew low over the road, we could
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