at her twiceâbut uniforms did something for some girls. He felt the familiar mild glow of interestâsomething like an intelligent electric heater might feel when itâs first turned on, heâd often thought.
As he crossed with his empty tray to the counter, he made a deliberate effort to decide whether there was any of that in what he felt about Pinkie. More and more, since Mr. Stottâs warning, he had come to realise what most people would think and say if a sixteen-year-old boy ran off with a ten-year-old girlâkidnapped her, it was going to look like. So it seemed to him important to be sure in his mind that there was no truth in it. He tried to think about Pinkie and compare his reaction with his thoughts (if you could call them thoughts) about Karen. Yes, there was warmth there, and actual physical sensation, slight but real, across his shoulder blades and the back of his neck; with it went a movement in his mind, but again feeling like something physical, something beginning to open ⦠Inside himself he knew it was quite different, nothing to do with sex at all. But yes, thereâd be problems persuading anyone. Old Stott had been right about that. He felt depressed as he made his way back to the entrance hail.
âThatâs for you,â said Sergeant Coyne, tapping a white envelope on the counter. It was, tooââB. Evansâ in large floppy writing. The card inside said, âWill you please come to tea in the nursery wing today, 4:00 P.M.? Louise Butterfield.â
âWhoâs Louise Butterfield?â he asked.
âMrs. Butterfield to you, my lad. Sheâs a Sphere Three. Lady plays the harp at the sessions.â
âOh. Iâve got to go have tea with her in the nursery wing. Whereâs that?â
Sergeant Coyne couldnât alter the tone of his voice, but his eyes widened.
âUp the stairs back end of kitchen passage,â he said, âTop floor, turn right. Youâll see a notice says âNo Unauthorized persons,â but if youâve been asked, you donât have to mind that.â
âThanks.â
âThatâs where Miss Pinkie lives, see? Mrs. Butterfield watches after her.â
It was a private apartment. There was a door with a lock to it, a bell push, a peephole. From beyond the door the plinkety sounds of harp scales came faintly, but they stopped at the ring of the bell.
Mrs. Butterfield opened the door. Barry didnât recognize her for a moment because she was standing, though with the help of a stick. Heâd seen her that morning being wheeled into the Harmony Session and hadnât realised she could walk. She gave Barry a lovely smile, a typical Foundation smile, full of peace and happiness.
âYou must be Barry,â she said.
âThatâs right.â
âIâm Louise Butterfield. Pinkieâs told me a lot about youâ¦â
(False note? A lotâPinkie?)
âItâll be great to see her again.â
âSheâs just getting up from her rest. She seems extra tired today. It was a difficult session.â
âSo I heard. Must be a strain any time.â
âSheâs wonderful how she stands it.â
âRight.â
Mrs. Butterfield, still smiling, nodded as though they had agreed on something really important, then turned and hobbled down the passage. Barry followed her into a large room brimming with light. The bright-coloured furniture looked used and comfortable. There was a harp by the fireplace and an enormous dollâs house between the windows. Over in the far corner was a desk with schoolbooks on it, a blackboard, a globe of the world.
âI used to be a teacher,â said Mrs. Butterfield. âItâs worked out very luckilyâthatâs the Harmony, of course. We do our lessons here andââ
She was interrupted by the crash of the door being flung open. As Barry turned, Pinkie charged headlong into him, the way she
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