lived there.’
Perhaps he was the old white-haired man that Andrew vaguely remembered from his visit to Taha as a small boy. He had little wish to go looking up people from the Guthries’ past or to stay longer in the frontier town than he needed. Taha had bad associations for his mother.
But to keep his father happy, he said, ‘If I get the chance I will.’
His father looked anxiously over at him. ‘You won’t do anything foolhardy, will you? I know what it’s like to be a young subaltern and wanting to prove oneself to fellow officers.’
‘Dad, I’m a professional soldier,’ Andrew said. ‘I’m not here to play games.’
‘Sorry,’ Tom said quickly. ‘I just worry . . .’
‘You don’t have to.’
His father gripped the steering wheel. ‘I’ve never asked you about your time in France – what it was like and how you got away—’
‘You were in the Great War,’ Andrew said gently, ‘and know more than most what fighting is like. I don’t need to tell you.’
‘But we’ve had so little time together and I’ve wasted it.’
‘We needn’t have argued,’ Andrew admitted. ‘But I shouldn’t have flown off the handle with you either.’
Soon they were at the railway station and Andrew jumped out. He busied himself supervising Manek, glad of the bustle around them which prevented further heart-searching by his father.
‘You don’t have to wait around,’ Andrew said to him. ‘Best to say goodbye here.’
Tears welled in his father’s eyes. ‘Please believe me when I say that Esmie longs to see you too. You’re dearer to her than anyone.’
‘She has a daughter now,’ Andrew pointed out. Swiftly, he put out his hand and said, ‘Send her my regards and congratulations about the baby. Thanks for the lift, Dad.’
Tom took his hand and held onto it; he was struggling to speak. Clearing his throat, he said, ‘Promise me you’ll come and visit us in Gulmarg when you get leave?’
Andrew nodded. ‘I’d like that.’
He thought his father was going to burst into tears, so hurriedly withdrew his hand. Abruptly, his father grabbed his shoulders and with surprising force, pulled him into a hug.
‘Look after yourself,’ he said croakily. ‘God go with you, my dearest boy.’
Andrew suddenly felt deeply overwhelmed with sadness and regret for his father. He nodded and stepped back. Unable to express how he felt, he turned away, leaving his father standing on the dusty pavement.
Even after he’d boarded the train and it was pulling out of Rawalpindi, Andrew felt downcast. He shouldn’t have let old resentments get in the way. He had squandered the opportunity to allow him and his father to make amends and find true reconciliation. It might be months – even years – before he had another such chance.
Sitting watching Rawalpindi being swallowed up by the dun-coloured landscape, Andrew felt leaden at the thought. His father was no longer a robust man – not the giant presence of his childhood – but someone bedevilled by mental breakdown and too much drink. His overriding emotion was one of pity. Yet he had broken away and left his father standing alone and miserable, perhaps thinking that he was no longer loved by his son.
Then Andrew reminded himself that he was more alone in this country than his father was. Tom would soon be returning to Gulmarg – to Esmie and Belle – his new family. And to Stella. If she had been around in Pindi, he would probably never have argued with his dad. She would have smoothed the way with her intelligence, warmth and humour.
But as he had realised in the night, for his own sanity he must rid his mind of her, once and for all. She belonged to a time and place that no longer existed – his Indian boyhood.
Chapter 43
The Raj-in-the-Hills, April 1942
The evening Tom returned, Stella was settling Belle in her cradle after a long feed. She heard Esmie’s cry of delight and voices on the veranda. They were all still living in the annex but the hotel would be reopening in May and staff hired for the summer season would soon be arriving. She knew that she would only have another week or so of feeding the baby before she would have to hand over nursing duties.
Stella stroked Belle’s pink cheek and soft brown hair and wondered how she was going to be able to leave her. Belle watched her with drowsy eyes as Stella set the cradle rocking. She remembered Esmie soothing Andrew in this very same crib. She longed