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Grandmam said: "He came to Ty Gwyn as a valet to a guest. We never knew your mother was sweet on him till she went to London to marry him."

"Why didn't you go to the wedding?"

They were both silent. Then Granda said: "Tell him the truth, Cara. No good ever comes of lies."

"Your mother yielded to temptation," Grandmam said. "After the valet left Ty Gwyn, she found she was with child." Lloyd had suspected that, and thought it might account for her evasiveness. "Your Granda was very angry," Grandmam added.

"Too angry," Granda said. "I forgot that Jesus said: 'Judge not, that ye be not judged.' Her sin was lust, but mine was pride." Lloyd was astonished to see tears in his grandfather's pale blue eyes. "God forgave her, but I didn't, not for a long time. By then my son-in-law was dead, killed in France."

Lloyd was more bewildered than before. Here was another detailed story, somewhat different from what he had been told by his mother and completely different from Daisy's theory. Was Granda weeping for a son-in-law who had never existed?

He persisted. "And the family of Teddy Williams? Mam said he came from Swansea. He probably had parents, brothers and sisters . . ."

Grandmam said: "Your mother never talked about his family. I think she was ashamed. Whatever the reason, she didn't want to know them. And it wasn't our place to go against her in that."

"But I might have two more grandparents in Swansea. And uncles and aunts and cousins I've never met."

"Aye," said Granda. "But we don't know."

"My mother knows, though."

"I suppose she does."

"I'll ask her, then," said Lloyd.

iv

Daisy was in love.

She knew, now, that she had never loved anyone before Lloyd. She had never truly loved Boy, though she had been excited by him. As for poor Charlie Farquharson, she had been at most fond of him. She had believed that love was something she could bestow upon whomever she liked, and that her main responsibility was to choose cleverly. Now she knew that was all wrong. Cleverness had nothing to do with it, and she had no choice. Love was an earthquake.

Life was empty but for the two hours she spent with Lloyd each evening. The rest of the day was anticipation; the night was recollection.

Lloyd was the pillow she put her cheek on. He was the towel with which she patted her breasts when she got out of the bathtub. He was the knuckle she put into her mouth and sucked thoughtfully.

How could she have ignored him for four years? The love of her life had appeared before her at the Trinity Ball, and she had noticed only that he appeared to be wearing someone else's dress clothes! Why had she not taken him in her arms and kissed him and insisted they get married immediately?

He had known all along, she surmised. He must have fallen in love with her from the start. He had begged her to throw Boy over. "Give him up," he had said the night they went to the Gaiety Theatre. "Be my girlfriend instead." And she had laughed at him. But he had seen the truth to which she had been blind.

However, some intuition deep within her had told her to kiss him, there on the Mayfair pavement in the darkness between two streetlights. At the time she had regarded it as a self-indulgent whim, but in fact it was the smartest thing she had ever done, for it had probably sealed his devotion.

Now, at Ty Gwyn, she refused to think about what would happen next. She was living from day to day, walking on air, smiling at nothing. She got an anxious letter from her mother in Buffalo, worrying about her health and her state of mind after the miscarriage, and she sent back a reassuring reply. Olga included tidbits of news: Dave Rouzrokh had died in Palm Beach; Muffie Dixon had married Philip Renshaw; Senator Dewar's wife, Rosa, had written a bestseller called Behind the Scenes at the White House, with photographs by Woody. A month ago this would have made her homesick; now she was just mildly interested.

She felt sad only when she thought of the baby she had lost. The pain had gone immediately, and the bleeding had stopped after a week, but the loss grieved her. She no longer cried about it, but occasionally she found herself staring into empty space, thinking about whether it would have been a girl or a boy, and what it would have looked like--and then realized with a shock that she had not moved for an hour.

Spring had come, and she walked on the windy mountainside, in waterproof boots and a raincoat. Sometimes, when she was sure there was no one to hear but the sheep, she shouted at the top of her voice: "I love him!"

She worried about his reaction to her questions about his parentage. Perhaps she had done wrong to raise the issue: it had only made him unhappy. Yet her excuse had been valid: sooner or later the truth would probably come out, and it was better to hear such things from someone who loves you. His pained bafflement touched her heart, and made her love him even more.

Then he told her he had arranged leave. He was going to a south-coast resort called Bournemouth for the Labour Party's annual conference on the second weekend in May, which was a British holiday called Whitsun.

His mother would also be at Bournemouth, he said, so he would have a chance to question her about his parentage; and Daisy thought he looked eager and afraid at the same time.

Lowther would certainly have refused to let him go, but Lloyd had spoken to Colonel Ellis-Jones back in March, when he had been assigned to this course, and the colonel either liked Lloyd or sympathized with the party, or both, and gave him permission that Lowther could not countermand. Of course, if the Germans invaded France then nobody would be able to take leave.

Daisy was strangely frightened by the prospect of Lloyd's leaving Aberowen without knowing that she loved him. She was not sure why, but she had to tell him before he went.

Lloyd was to leave on Wednesday and return six days later. By coincidence, Boy had announced he would come to visit, arriving on Wednesday evening. Daisy was glad, for reasons she could not quite figure out, that the two men would not be there at the same time.

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