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#caligula #byron #bethfreed25 https://dailymotion.com/bethfreed25
As war rages, Fanny and the Radletts reunite to live at Alconleigh, while Linda desperately awaits word from Fabrice.
Transcript
01:00Linda darling it's Fanny. I'm in London to meet Alfred but not till luncheon.
01:13Fanny for God's sake I'm expecting an important call which may come at any
01:17moment. someone may be trying my number this very second. all right I'm on my way.
01:25hello darling. how do you imagine this got here? all the way from Paris in the
01:33middle of all this. the Southern Railway people just brought it and I signed for
01:37it as if things arrived from Paris every day.
01:39oh Fanny darling what an extraordinary war. what are you doing in London darling?
01:49I told you on the telephone I've come to meet Alfred. I don't remember. how is
01:59Alfred? oh he's rushing around buying lots of new equipment and seeing people.
02:03he thinks he'll be off abroad again almost immediately. what did he say about
02:08Dunkirk? he said it was like something out of the boy's own paper. he seems to
02:12have had a fascinating time. little Matt was here yesterday with Bob. oh isn't it
02:18wonderful to have them back again. if only one knew what had happened to one's
02:27French buddies. poor Linda. don't pity me. I've had several months of perfect and
02:36unalloyed happiness and very few people can say that even after long long lines.
02:43just off for now ma'am if that's all right. I'll be back this evening. thank
02:48you mrs. Hunt. I can see you're very cozy here but still wouldn't it be jollier
02:55and less lonely if you were to go down to Alkenley? you know I'm going there
03:00with the children as soon as Alfred's off again. I'd like to come for a visit
03:04sometime when I know a little more what is happening.
03:08oh wouldn't it be lovely to have ours and ours and ours in the Hans cupboard.
03:14it's such heaven to be here again. to be with you and uncle Matthew and Louisa.
03:20I've hardly seen her in years. you can take turn and turn about with the
03:24children. very handy for both of you. so nice for them all to be brought up
03:27together. just like old times. so sweet of you to have us all.
03:31oh the more the merrier. I shall like to fill the house. it's better for the
03:36Russians. with little Matt and Bob in the army. Jassie in America and Victor in
03:42the Wrens. Matthew and I'd be a very dreary old couple here all alone.
03:46I'm surprised they didn't try and stick some evacuees on you. no they did. then
03:51they decided the house was too cold for the lower classes. so they sent us some
03:56enormous crates from the Science Museum instead. Matthew thinks there may be some
04:01sort of secret weapon which they're hiding here. stands to reason. they're not
04:05gonna bother shifting a load of old rubbish down here to town like this.
04:07essential implements of war I'd say. sounds as if it were empty. don't you go
04:13tampering missy. it's our duty to guard them until they're wanted. just that.
04:17it's obvious why they sent them down here. they knew that this place is or soon will be the
04:22headquarters of the LDV. who's that spy? oh local defense volunteers. they're just
04:32forming down here your uncle's in command. he's as happy as a boy with his
04:36first full-size cricket bat. only Josh after all. he wanted to bring me the news.
04:44our uniforms have just arrived. soon this company will be equipped to guard this
04:49little lot down to the last man. then the last woman.
05:02I'm just at the right time. I need a subaltern to command the new platoon I'm
05:25forming for my home guard. I can't be a subaltern again. I mean I was a captain
05:30when I handed in my papers a million years ago. no vacancies for captains. I
05:34need an ensign. exercise will do you good. oh Matthew so relentless.
05:38all that can wait till later. time for lunch. oh god I'm starving. what is it? cottage pie?
05:43cottage pie? it's twice cooked meat. sheer poison. we'll have to make sacrifices in
05:49wartime. if I'm to be a platoon commander at my age I must have proper food. you'll
05:53have what you're given and like it. stiffer up you wreck. mr. Warbeck to the
05:59cookhouse.
06:19hello. yes yes. I have a call for you.
06:26Fabrice! Fabrice! I've been waiting for you for such a long time.
06:32can I come to your house straight away? wait yes you can come at once but don't go for a
06:37moment. go on talking. I want to hear the sound of your voice.
06:51so lucky it's Sunday and mrs. Hunt isn't here.
06:54mrs. Hunt? my daily woman. whatever would she have thought? about the same as the
07:02night porter at the Hotel Montalembert.
07:10why did you come Fabrice? to join general de Gaulle? no I joined him long ago in
07:16Bordeaux. my work is in France but we have ways of communicating when we want.
07:23I must go and see him of course. he expects me at noon. but actually I came
07:34on a private mission.
07:42I came to tell you that I love you.
07:45you never said that to me in Paris. no. you always seem so practical. I had said it so
08:02often and often. I had been romantic with so many women but when I felt this to be
08:11different I couldn't bring out all those stale old phrases again. I couldn't utter them.
08:21I never said I loved you. I never called you to. indeed you often called me madame.
08:32all on purpose. because from the beginning I knew this was as real as the others
08:45were false. it was like recognizing somebody.
08:56oh dear. I can't explain. don't try. you needn't. I know. and then when you were gone I felt I
09:11had to tell you. it became an obsession with me to tell you. all these last
09:20dreadful weeks were made more dreadful because I was being prevented from
09:27telling you. however did you get here? on the circuit. I have to leave again tomorrow
09:39morning very early. I may not be back until the war is over.
09:51but you'll wait for me Linda. and nothing matters so much now that you know. I shall
10:05never again have to bear the horror of being away from you. and you're not
10:13knowing what a great great love I have for you. oh Fabrice. I feel. well I suppose
10:30religious people sometimes feel like this.
10:43I've been thinking. soon London may become a dangerous place. more I know this
10:57Sunday afternoon is peaceful but I do not think these people know what is
11:01coming. what is coming? soon there will be Thunderbolts out of this blue sky
11:09of yours. the worst kind of Thunderbolts always falls from a clear sky. remember.
11:27I think that you should go to mummy and find the country. oh no it's not as if
11:33I've got children with me like Fanny or Louisa. I shall stay here. suppose you
11:38come to London again suddenly. it is not likely. if I did I could find you in the
11:42country. well if it's like this visit there will be no time. I do not think I
11:49shall come again until the war is done.
11:58Fabrice. mm-hmm. do you think we shall ever live together again? of course we shall.
12:04for years and years and years until I'm 90. I have a very faithful nature. you
12:13weren't very faithful to Jacqueline. you know about Jacqueline you do. my poor. she
12:21was so kind. kind elegant and boring. oh how boring she was.
12:29I was immensely faithful to her and it lasted five years. it always does with me.
12:35either five days or five years. but as I love you ten times more as the others.
12:42that brings it to when I'm 90 and by then I shall have got into the habit. and
12:50how soon shall I see you again? on fera la navette as we say. that is I shall be
12:57hooking my turnips roundabout. and who knows it's possible just possible that
13:04the turnip trade will bring me again to London.
13:08tu fera la navette.
13:12I thought I heard a car.
13:16yes it's for me. I must go now.
13:22come on Linda.
13:27la navette. tu fera la navette.
13:57what's this stuff for? putting into the water to do the washing. what are you
14:13washing mummy? socks. trouble is Basil I can only use a very few flakes because I
14:18have to leave enough for auntie Louisa and this water is as hard as nails. what does hard as nails mean?
14:23you'll never guess who's turned up now. not in a thousand thousand years. Hitler.
14:29no your mother. auntie Boulter. she's just walked up the drive and walked in.
14:34alone? no with a man. let me see her current husband's a major something or
14:39the other. oh he doesn't look like a major. he's got a musical instrument with
14:42him and he's very dirty. come on Fanny leave those to soak. so there we were
14:46darlings. stuck on the Riviera with the Germans already in Bordeaux and nobody
14:52giving a hoot what happened to us. so then Mervin. that's the filthy beast I
14:58was married to. mother! Fanny! hello darling. this must be Basil I suppose.
15:05hello Basil darling. now let's have a look at you Fanny. ooh what a nasty spot
15:12you've got in your nose. make a seat with Emily. you brought her up. now where was
15:18I? on the Riviera with your filthy husband Mervin. that's it darling. thank
15:22you. so then the foul brute decided to stay behind and collaborate with the
15:26Huns. he always was a bit Hunnish you know. so I managed to make a break for it
15:32over the mountains to Spain. what the hell's going on Davy? you're supposed to
15:35be drilling your platoon. to Boulter Matthew. Matthew darling. Boulter!
15:41oh who's this sewer with the violin? now if you brought that with you...
15:52Boulter's in the middle of telling us all her thrilling adventures. I'm sure she can explain everything.
15:55oh yes indeed. you see when I got to Spain they popped me in this ghastly prison
16:00camp and if it hadn't been for my heavenly Juan here. oh he doesn't speak a
16:08word of English by the way. well if it hadn't been for him Matthew I would
16:13still be sitting there now. but as it was he helped me to escape. we had to
16:20converse entirely in signs darlings and he indicated to me that I should entice
16:25one of the guards. it's really too shame making. flaunting around the sentry box
16:30and then my lovely brave Juan hit him on the head while he was being... well
16:36enticed. and then we managed to get away to Barcelona with me pretending to be a
16:42tart and Juan my pimp. oh and at last we got the British consul to help because
16:49guess what? he was a second cousin of my last husband but two. then we sailed home
16:57taking ten weeks in a tub like Noah's Ark and tossing down when it was our
17:02turn in the steerage lavatories. well Voltaire I'm delighted to see you and I
17:10hope you'll stay as long as you like but Voltaire but I am thinking we must let
17:20him stay. please Matthew darling just for one little week. oh all right then
17:28just for one little week. only for a few days and this is not definitely not the
17:36thin end of the wedge.
17:46as fine a seat as ever milady. oh Josh. oh you really mustn't call me milady. I
17:52haven't been for ages you know. yes milady. no Josh you really mustn't say that.
17:57Fanny. Fanny. help me to explain Fanny. the thing is Josh I have had four
18:03husbands since Lord Logan. miss Francis's father. I mean mrs. Winship's father.
18:09four husbands Josh. I said only three Fanny. you know I am never quite sure whether my marriage
18:17that disgusting major was valid. there was something awfully fishy about those
18:20papers. oh well in that case I'm still married to my lovely lovely Hank. the big
18:27game hunter. oh yes darling. but I can't still be married to him. I shot him in
18:33the head by accident. silly me. I'll be safari one day. I suppose I could still be his
18:40relic. now that would mean that I could call myself mrs. Rall rather than mrs.
18:45Plug which is what I call myself today. hmm which do you think sounds better
18:51Josh? mrs. Rall or mrs. Plug? really not my place to advise you milady. this little
18:57piggy went to market. this little piggy stayed at home. this little piggy had
19:02roast beef. this little piggy had none. and this little piggy was a bold little
19:09piggy. all the way home. and as for this little piggy...
19:30there's no doubt she's a great hand with the children. it's funny. she only ever had
19:35me of her own and I was looked after by a squadron of nannies. for the few months
19:39she actually stayed with me before the first bolt. well mine all adore her and I
19:44propose positively to exploit the fact. but of course we must be a little
19:48careful Fanny. Juan you know. he rushes into her room before tea and lives with
19:53her before tea. well it wouldn't do at all if any of the children caught them.
19:59David and Basil are safe in bed darling sleeping like seraphs. Juan gave them a
20:03little tune to send them off. ah I want a word with you about that. this um Juan.
20:09what's to be done about him? well Matthew darling. Juan did save my life time and
20:19time again you know. I can't very well tear him up now throw him away now can
20:23I my sweet? point taken but I can't keep a lot of daggers here you know. oh but do
20:28keep him just a little longer Matthew darling please. just for a few more days
20:32and then I swear I will find some place for him and tiny me to go. you can't
20:40think what a lousy time we had together. I must stick to him now. I simply must.
20:46well another week if you like and after that I'm afraid he must go.
20:55Sadie I'm going to do an unpardonable thing. it is for the general good and for
21:04your good too but it is unpardonable. David what can be coming? it's the food
21:10Sadie the food. I know how difficult it is for you in wartime but all of us in
21:15turns are being poisoned. I was sick for hours on end last night. the night before
21:20Emily had diarrhea. Fanny still has that enormous spot on her nose and the fact
21:25is dear that if mrs. Beecher were a bourgeois she couldn't be more
21:27successful. I know she's an awful cook. we're very lucky to have her but what
21:31can one do Davy? the meat ration only lasts two days. we have 14 meals a week.
21:36then what about game? there used to be such a lot here. the trouble is that Matthew
21:40thinks that all ammunition even cartridges must be kept for the Germans.
21:44so he refuses to waste even one ball of shot on hairs and partridges. but you're
21:50quite right Davy. the food is unwholesome. I'll try and do something about it.
21:56come on Davy. stop stuffing yourself like a capon. time for the night exercises and
22:01remember full fuel service marching order.
22:06Matthew! he's worse than all the torturers of the whole Spanish Inquisition.
22:37Davy what are all those bottles? Davy's vitamin pills. I have to take all of
22:45these Sadie because in spite of what I said the food is still so awful. unless I
22:50took these I might peter out altogether. and another thing Boater! you've been at
22:56my florist's essence of geranium again. a tiny droppy Davy. a tiny droppy
23:01doesn't stink out the whole bathroom. you've been pouring it into the bath
23:04with the stopper out. that's my quota for the whole of the month. it really is
23:07heinous of you Boater. I'll get you some more darling. I swear I'm going to London
23:12next week to have my wiggy wash and I'll bring you back a whole bottle. promise
23:16darling. and I very much hope you'll take Gawain with you and leave him there.
23:22while the Boater's in London now is your time to talk to him. why me? because you're
23:28so clever darling. look at him poor fellow. he hasn't even got the spirit to
23:33play his guitar anymore.
23:48now we obviously can't turn him out to starve. I mean one does have human
23:52feelings. not towards Dago's. but we can get him a job. but first we must find out
23:57what his profession was. now you're so good at languages Davy and you're so
24:04worldly and resourceful. I'm sure if you had a look at the Spanish dictionary in the
24:08library you could manage to ask him what he did before the war.
24:11don't try Davy. oh yes darling do. all right I'll try. but I can guess what the
24:19answer will be. G for gigolo. not M for matador or H for Hidalgo. even more
24:25useless. what then? then B for be off and the Boater will have to support him.
24:55in the library you say the Spanish dictionary? West wall fifth shelf down
25:13halfway along.
25:25my dears it's too fantastic. you'll never never guess. clever Davy to have found out
25:40what my precious Juan is good at. only one thing I thought silly me. a cardinal
25:47chef. mmm Spanish food. so delicious. so unconstipating. so digestible. mmm so full
25:59of glorious garlic. succulent birds, beasts, crustaceans at every meal.
26:05vegetables simply running with extravagant sauces. I only hope the food
26:10won't be too rich for you now Davy. oh I never mind the rich food. it's the poor
26:14food that does one such an infinity of harm. oh and then there's his talent for
26:17organizing. have you seen the storeroom that he's built up Matthew? I go and gaze
26:22at it in sheer wonderment for hours on end.
26:29pickles and preserves from morning till night.
26:34he shoots fowl with a catapult.
26:53makes the most inspired that is from what we leave over.
27:05these doughty hams.
27:11where does he get them from?
27:17heraldic shields of brawn.
27:21oh no more Juan.
27:26this place it's a veritable Aladdin's cave.
27:34if I were the Porter by God I'd marry the fella. and so everyone's happy and
27:41healthy again. my spot that I had on my nose has completely vanished and now
27:46even uncle Matthew's taken Juan to his heart. I'm afraid it happens all the time.
27:57she's that poorly. can't you take her back to the country with you? she simply
28:02wouldn't budge. she's as obstinate as a donkey madam. but it ain't hardly right.
28:07she should sleep here all alone with the bombs and everything. but she won't
28:12listen to saints. I'd better let you have my telephone number where I live in the
28:16country just in case. right you are madam. are you all right madam? yes I'm fine
28:25thank you. have you guessed? I'm in the family way. that's what it is. darling
28:36you're not supposed to have another. remember what the doctor said when Moira
28:40was born? doctors don't know anything. of course I can and I'm simply longing for
28:45it. this one won't be in the least like Moira you'll see. I'm going to have
28:51another one too. how lovely. when? around the beginning of May. me too. oh good. and
28:57Louisa's due at much the same time. haven't we been busy? I do call that nice.
29:02they can all be Hans together. why don't you come back with me to Alkenley?
29:07there's no sense in stopping here in all this. it can't be good for you or the
29:11baby. I like it. it's my home and I like to be in it. besides someone might turn
29:18up just for a few hours you see and he knows where to find me here. you'll be
29:21killed and then he won't know where to find you. oh darling Fanny don't be so
29:25silly. nobody gets killed in air raids. there's a great deal of noise and mess
29:29but people don't really get killed much. darling please don't touch wood.
29:48music
30:19music
30:31Fanny! there's a Mrs. Hunt on the telephone from London. Linda's house has been hit.
30:38is Linda? they don't know. they're still digging.
30:49music
31:05thank God for uncle Matthew's home guard petrol.
31:18music
31:48music
32:04Fanny! Louisa! Fanny!
32:11come on
32:16you see? what did I tell you Fanny about air raids not killing people? my bed
32:24simply went straight through two floors into the basement rather like a lift.
32:28nothing wrong. mild shock. she'll be all right Najif. then you can take her off
32:34in your car. you do realize she was pregnant? yes she still is. no damage
32:43though. pity. the child could kill her even though the Germans haven't. well at
32:50least there can't be any more of this nonsense about staying in London. so now
32:54you know it all down to the teeniest little thing. you see I wanted him to
32:59find me there in the house that was given to me for love. well no one will
33:03find you there anymore. he'll come on here when he comes. he knows all about
33:07Alkinley and all of you. I've told him the histoire. that's what he calls it all.
33:12histoire. I've told him oh so many times. meanwhile how are you going to explain
33:18the baby? I don't have to. or not yet. mummy and Farah have assumed without being
33:24lied to just assumed that it's Christian's. they think we've more or less
33:27been together all this time you see or at any rate whenever Christian could get
33:31in leave. there's no end of Christian now he's an officer. and in his old regiment
33:37at that. the whirligig of time.
33:41it does seem rather unfair. Linda goes off and has this glorious time in Paris
34:01and comes back covered in rich birds. and what do we get for sticking all our
34:06lives to the same dreary old husbands. three-quarter length Sean Lamb. Alfred
34:13isn't a dreary old husband. nor is John. but you know what I mean. yes I know what
34:19you mean. is that one of the ones you got in Paris you know when you were doing
34:31your war work? oh it's wonderful what one can get there with no money if you're
34:35clever. yes wonderful isn't it Linda darling? just been doing the pillboxes. I
34:43reckon we should be able to stop them for two hours possibly three before we're
34:48all killed. not bad for such a little place. cheer up missy. you won't know
34:56you're dead and better dead than being raped by the hung. could be two points of
35:01view about that. mother you must stop all this with Linda. what darling? you know
35:06all this giggling and whimsiness. let's face it we're just two fallen women
35:11approach. she simply can't bear it. but darling she really is nothing but a
35:15high-class taft in that flat in Paris. all those clothes. it was Softer wasn't it?
35:21how did you know? everybody knew in the Riviera. one always knew about Softer
35:25somehow. oh and a jolly good cop for Linda too darling. you mustn't think I
35:30grudge. but mother you must understand that she regards it all with the most
35:34intense feelings of romance. all those months she spent with Fabrice. he was he
35:40is the great love of her life. I still don't see why she has to be so high-hat
35:45about it. Sadie and that don't know I realize that. wild horses wouldn't make
35:49me tell them I'm not that kind of a girl. I know. but I still think that when we're
35:53all together Linda might be a teensy bit more jolly and less high-hat. so I'm
35:58afraid darling the Bolters feelings have been rather coarsened by time. no
36:02good expecting sensitivity in that quarter. oh well I'll just have to steer
36:06clear of her I suppose. the reason I can't bear her way of carrying on is just
36:10because I might have been her. just like her I mean. a Bolter myself. I almost
36:16thought I was until Fabrice. well at least she does realize that Fabrice has
36:20got to be kept from uncle Matthew and aunt Sadie. she won't let you down there.
36:23I sometimes think I should let myself down. it's such a strain making up things
36:28I'm supposed to have heard from Christian. you know how he hates his CEO or
36:32adores Cairo. and of course I never hear anything from him at all. but don't they
36:36notice that you never get any letters? no I do this act of always being the first
36:40down to grab mine off the mat. you know so eager for news I can hardly wait.
36:45but of course it isn't an act. it's quite true. I am eager. I'm consumed to hear
36:51from Fabrice. if only there could be just one line.
37:00do you ever think about your husband's?
37:06well funnily enough I do quite often think about Tony. and I see that the
37:11thing going wrong was hardly his fault. I don't think would have gone right with
37:14anyone unless I'd happened to meet Fabrice then. because in those days I was
37:20so extremely nasty. and Christian? oh he was just an interlude. he hardly counts
37:27in my life at all. because our marriage only lasted such a very short time and
37:31was quite overshadowed by what came after. and what do you think is to come?
37:40one day the telephone will ring as it did once before. he'll be there.
37:47oh Lord we give the hearty thanks that one has catapulted yet another pheasant
37:52and that the storeroom continues to be crammed with abundance. yes that's just
37:59the thing. oh yes what's the thing? the storeroom. Aladdin's cave as you call it.
38:03when the invasion comes there's a very important job to be done. and I'm making
38:07you officer responsible Davey. responsible for what? blowing up Aladdin's
38:11cave. but why Matthew? why? when the Germans come and we're all dead that
38:18cupboard could keep them going for weeks. all wrong. make them come up their lines
38:22of communication by having to bring up their own food. Matthew telling some of
38:27us may still be alive. then you'll deserve to starve or live off the scraps
38:32the Huns give you. I would have let old Juan blow it up. it's his storeroom after all.
38:37the fact is although I rather like old Juan these days I don't altogether
38:41trust the fella. once a foreigner always a foreigner in my opinion. so Davey I'll
38:47show you how to do it after luncheon.
38:50senor.
38:52ah
39:06do you mind? I thought I'd pop in to work up a little circulation. really it's too
39:19bad of Matthew to insist on blowing up Aladdin when the Germans come. invasion
39:24or no invasion I shall not be able to find it in my soul to blow up Aladdin.
39:27and Emily entirely agrees with me. I think Farr's right. it's all very well
39:32for you Linda. you'll get fed somehow. pregnant women always are. but nobody
39:37will bother about me. I shall never be able to make the Germans understand
39:41about my delicate stomach. Davey if you won't go and blow up Aladdin I shall go
39:45to Farr for lessons how to do it tomorrow. I shall just have to resign
39:49myself to a lingering death. not a very pleasant prospect I must say.
39:55Farr's plan is simply ridiculous.
39:57and it's typical of Linda's sheer fecklessness to support it.
40:01she takes no thought for the future for any aspect of it. I've tried to jolt her but she simply
40:07says one day the telephone will ring as if she were saying one day my prince
40:10will come. whatever will a baby wear poor thing. if ever a baby came naked
40:15into this world it'll certainly be this one. what on earth's Christian to say when he hears about it?
40:19they asked you're married. you'll have to bring a suit to illegitimize it and then the
40:23scandal will be quite infinite. I quite think Farr will turn her out into the
40:27snow. much as he loves her. he's simply Victorian about all this kind of thing.
40:33she ought to be beside herself with worry. instead of which she's behaving like the
40:38wife of a millionaire in Monte Carlo. nevertheless as her time is very near I
40:43shall positively go to Oxford and buy her a layette myself. it's rather sad to
40:49belong to a lost generation as we do. I'm sure history will squeeze the two
40:54wars together and they'll count as one. people will forget we ever existed.
41:01we might just as well have never lived at all.
41:06it is unfair.
41:13this is for you. oh Louisa Fanny. thank you. how sweet of you. it's all Louisa's doing.
41:21I've no energy for Oxford or shopping now. I'm due the same time as you
41:25remember. so's Louisa. thank you Louisa. you're you're a real hon. well it wasn't
41:33all that much bother. after all I've had more practice at this kind of thing than
41:37you two. but times are hard and I'd like to be paid. when you can of course.
41:45Tony's engagement ring. you ought to get a bid for it. done? done. Fanny! Fanny are you all right?
41:54Fanny darling. Fanny.
41:57now here's a telegram from Alfred in Alexandria and Marnix sends his love.
42:03his best love he said and a million congratulations. oh and you'll be
42:07delighted to hear that Louisa has had a boy. Angus they're going to call him.
42:12Sadie sends love. she says you to take it very easily after the beastly time
42:16you've had and not to dream of coming back until you're quite well. but who
42:19will manage the boys? the Bolter and Emily are doing a spectacular job between them.
42:23the Bolters turned up absolutely trumps. her turn to come and see you tomorrow.
42:27and Aunt Sadie. I do long to see her. Sadie can't come just now darling. she
42:33has to stay at Alkenley. I suppose she's busy looking after Linda. I know Louisa
42:38and I were pretty early but Linda must be due at absolutely any moment. Linda is
42:44dead Fanny. she had a fine son but she is dead. the doctors were right.
42:58it's funny how few things she had. these lovely dresses she bought in Paris when
43:14she was on a war work and that sable coat and then nothing. most of her stuff
43:21was destroyed when Cheney Rock was bombed. there must have been letters and
43:25things. what happened to all those letters and Christians she was always telling us about?
43:29dispatch rider? I shouldn't wonder if the balloon hasn't gone up at last.
43:38darling Matthew must be the last man in England who still believes there may be
43:47an invasion. hmm well don't disillusion him darling. he needs something enjoyable to
43:54think about just now. a frog of all things from the girls HQ in London with a
44:00message for... for Linda. the devil can always be found. I think you'd better let
44:14Aunt Sadie open it.
44:24chÚre madame je suis chargé... in English perhaps. I'm instructed to inform you with the deepest
44:34regret that major-general... major-general the Duke of Sauveterre... Duke of Sauveterre?
44:43who's he? has been killed while on active service. why this to Linda?
44:55listen to me darlings. I hope to God I can make you understand.
45:03yes well then but...
45:13oh no no children! sandwiches first!
45:22oh it's a lovely christening. two little boys.
45:26thank you
45:32if only Linda's was Christian as it should have been. you must forgive her that.
45:44oh I do. one always forgave her anything in the end but I could just wish. wish
45:50what? the Sauveterre fellow may have been a frog but he was a soldier. a gentleman.
45:55from all I've heard he died like one too. proper father for any woman's child. so
46:00there's an end to that. I heard all about it through free French liaison.
46:07Sauveterre was running the resistance over a large area beneath the Pyrenees. he was
46:12betrayed to the Gestapo. captured and shot. who betrayed him? I can make a
46:18goodish guess. a successful leader with the name Duke de Sauveterre will be gall
46:24and wormwood to at least one political faction in the resistance. well whoever
46:30betrayed Fabrice Sauveterre may have made a hero of him. so they weren't quite as
46:34clever as they thought. Sauveterre's class will need a few heroes when this war is
46:40done. I have decided if Juan will come and cook for me at Merlinford Bolta I
46:45will even put up with you in the house. this war has finally destroyed whatever
46:50conscience I had left. treble the money. did you understand that one darling? his
46:57English has got much better you know. yes I have understood him. my lord if Juan
47:01serves whom it pleased him to serve and it pleased him very much to serve the
47:07Lady of Alkeny who took him in when things were very low.
47:18pity yours couldn't be christened with the other two. we must wait until his
47:22father can get leave. where exactly is John now? I don't know I'm sure or madly
47:27secret. like Linda's Duke. not nearly as dangerous thank God. I once met Linda's
47:35Duke a long time ago. he was a favorite of mummies and she asked him to Hampton.
47:39Fanny was there too I remember and simply adored him. I think he was the
47:45most attractive man I ever met. not beautiful not even handsome but somehow
47:53magical. come and look at the table.
48:00since both Linda and Fabrice are dead I have adopted the little Fabrice with the
48:17consent of Christian the legal father. he has blue eyes the same shape as Linda's
48:22brown ones and is a most beautiful and enchanting child. I love him quite as
48:28much as and perhaps more than I do my own. penny for them Fanny darling. I was
48:35thinking about Linda. ah yes Linda. poor Linda. poor little girl. do you know Fanny
48:43perhaps it's for the best after all. I mean the lives of women like Linda and
48:48me are not quite so much fun as one begins to get older. I think she would
48:51have been happy with Fabrice. he was the great love of her life you know.
48:57one always thinks that. every every time.
50:57you

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