not yet buried and another man in the house? But it ain’t what it looks like, honest it’s not. Ain’t that right, Robert?”
Reid blushed comprehensively and his hands shook as he placed the supper tray on the table. Despite his guilty look, he faced Mary with a certain awkward sincerity. “Indeed it’s not, ma’am. I’m a mate of Wick’s – we’re both bricklayers by trade, and worked the same gang – and I just come round this evening to give Janey – I mean, Mrs Wick – a hand with the young ’uns. It’s a powerful hard time for her just now, burying her husband and looking after all them little ones.”
It took a moment for the facts to penetrate Mary’s frozen façade of calm. Fact: Reid’s given name was the same as the baby’s. Fact: he was on sufficiently intimate terms with Mrs Wick to be frying eggs, unsupervised, in her kitchen. Fact: he didn’t seem to recognize Mary. It was this last that refused to register for some time.
Something of the adults’ tension inhibited the children, too. They were a quiet brood by any standard but now their round, pale-blue eyes grew even wider, and the twins shoved their right thumbs into their mouths with sudden, simultaneous jerks. At last, Mary roused herself. Reid hadn’t recognized “Mark”. That was the main thing – the only thing – that mattered, just now. Everything else could wait.
“Your supper’s growing cold, children,” she said, relinquishing her chair, and was pleased at how natural she sounded. “You must be hungry.”
John, the boldest, nodded. He now made a dash for the table. “Fried eggs!” That lifted the strain and the rest of the children moved towards Reid, clearly ravenous.
Mrs Wick smiled nervously at Mary, as though checking to see whether she’d been forgiven. “They call him Uncle Rob, the children do. He’s a real blessing to our family.” Sudden tears glistened in her eyes. “I don’t know what I’d have done without him, this past week.”
Mary nodded, and suddenly it didn’t matter what the state of affairs was between Reid and Mrs Wick – not for the moment, at any rate. “It’s always a blessing when friends and neighbours come together in difficult times,” she said in affected, pompous tones. “And that is why I’ve come, too.” She drew Mrs Wick to a quiet corner of the room and unpacked the hamper: a little basket of eggs, a boiled ham, a seed cake; a slice of butter wrapped in paper, and an ounce of tea; and, right at the bottom, a length of black crape.
“Oh, Lord.” Mrs Wick’s eyes welled up and she began to cry in earnest now. “I never seen such a basket, Mrs Fordham, never in my life. It’s too good of you.” She wiped her eyes on a corner of her apron. “And the children—” She turned pleading eyes to Mary once more, seeming to look up at her although the two women were roughly the same height. “Of course, they don’t get such splendid teas, hardly at all; only it was Robert’s idea to give them a treat, and they been so grieved…”
Mary felt acutely uncomfortable. She was glad to give things to Mrs Wick, of course. The widow certainly seemed to need them. But such extravagant gratitude for what were, truly, only small things? Why shouldn’t the Wick children have fried eggs for supper every night of the week? It was wrong that they couldn’t afford it.
“Janey.” Reid’s quiet voice broke through Mrs Wick’s anxious flutterings and her head instantaneously swivelled towards him.
“Yes, Robert?”
“I’ll be going now. They’s two eggs keeping hot in the pan for you, and you’re to eat them both, hear? No giving them to Johnny or them greedy twins.”
She blushed faintly and glanced at Mary. “Two eggs? But I couldn’t…”
“You can, and you must.” He turned courteously to Mary. “Evening, ma’am.”
She nodded graciously and watched him take leave of the children, bidding them be good for their mother’s sake. It was impossible not to admire the compassion he showed them. As Reid let himself out of the door, he glanced once more towards the back of the room, his gaze swerving towards Janey Wick as though by compulsion. Guarded as his expression was, Mary couldn’t help but see the longing and tenderness in his eyes.
She was almost sorry to observe it. There was no way this man was a casual, drunken pub brawler. That, combined with his passion for Jane Wick and his