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Chapter 14. Inscription

Chapter 14. Inscription

Chapter 13. Inscription

Aida was no fool - at first she blinked. "Is this what I think it is?"

Gideon had spent weeks thinking of what would be the best way

to tell her about the return of the ring.

She turned it over and looked closely at the inside of the band.

There were two barely legible initials: L and M.

Gideon felt suddenly ashamed that he'd worn the ring for nearly

two years and hadn't known they were there.

''Lillian Marchant." he said softly.

"Mother." Aida said ''How Gideon? How after all these years."

Before he had a chance to answer, Aida burst into tears

and hugged him.

*

Alone in the house Gideon sipped his tea and enjoyed the peace

and quiet. He knew it wouldn't last.

What he hadn't foreseen, was Aida with ring in hand, immediately

catching a train to Bath.

Home to their sprawling family estates and the house they grew

up in. With both their parents now passed, it would be home to

the arms of their gossip starved Aunts and Uncles and extended

family.

The ring and it's loss was part of family folklore.

*

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The visitors started to arrive soon after Aida returned to

London, but they were a different social set to what Gideon

had expected.

Aida told him that Bath had changed. It was now full of feminist

radicals she said, who were still passionate as ever about their

cause, but now frustrated that the War had put a stop to

their political campaigning.

Gideon was getting ready for his day at the enlistment board.

"Why don't they do something useful. Like join the land army

or work in a factory and support the War effort. That would

be something."

Aida ignored him and continued arranging the flowers on the

table she was setting. She went into the kitchen to get

more cutlery.

"The flowers look beautiful Aida." Gideon said as he walked

out the door.

"Don't forget we have guests tonight." Aida sang out.

*

Gideon arrived home late and found the house already full

of the happy chatter of guests. After changing and freshening

up, he found a seat at the table where a place name had

been set for him.

Looking around the room there appeared to be far more dinner

guests than seats, not that anyone seemed to care.

The guests were mostly young women and nearly all of them

had a drink in hand.

Next to him sat a woman closer in age to himself who had

fashionably short blonde hair.

"May I introduce myself." he said.

"I was rather hoping you would Gideon." the woman said.

"Have we met before?" he asked.

"We have not. My name is Edith, Aida has told me a great

deal about you."

Gideon contemplated the sherry in his glass.

"Let me apologise for my sister's shameless attempt at

match making."

Edith smiled. "Pre-dinner drinks started quite early this

afternoon and no one noticed when I switched name

cards to make sure that I sat next to you."

Ediths' eyes were clear and bright.

His face warmed as he blushed. "May I ask why?"

"I'll tell you that when we have lunch together. I'm in London

till the end of the week." Edith sipped the gin in her glass.

"As for tonight Gideon, let's get to know each other better,

and let the young ones have their fun."

*

Gideon left the enlistment offices at midday and walked

to the lake in Regents park where Edith's note said she would

be waiting. As he walked past the boarded up entrance to

the London zoo, it occurred to him that he knew next to

nothing about her. The dinner party had been a wonderful

night and he had enjoyed her company, but he couldn't

remember a single thing she'd said about herself.

Edith had asked him all sorts of questions about his life.

Surely at some point in the night he must have asked about hers.

There was a time he thought himself when he was far more

certain of the people around him.

The morning after the dinner party Aida was nursing a terrible

hangover. She handed him the note from Edith.

"Did someone make a friend last night." she said with a grin.

"You've been invited to a picnic."

*

Edith had laid out the picnic blanket on the sunny sloping bank of

the lake. They sat each side of a wicker basket from which

Edith took a small wheel of cheese and sliced it on a timber plate.

"Aida's visit to Bath and the return of her ring was the talk of the town

for weeks." she said.

''I'm sure it was." Gideon replied.

She dipped a flat knife into a jar of paste and passed a biscuit

to him. "But what I found most interesting of all, was when Aida

told me that you'd seen my nephew Finn at the enlistment board."

Gideon almost choked. ''Your nephew?"

''Miriam Page is my sister. The story of Aida's ring and your chance

meeting with Finn - it makes me think that perhaps we may have

a mutual friend."

Gideon watched two swans circling each other on the lake.

"Perhaps we do." he said.

*