that had to be discussed at some point. Who was financially responsible for Charlie? He had not thought about this, in the drama of Isabelâs pregnancy, but a few days previously it had occurred to him that now there would be bills. He had seen an article in the paper about the cost of a child until it reached the age of independence, and the figure had been daunting. Tensâscoresâof thousands of pounds were needed to feed, clothe, and educate a child, and the age of independence itself seemed to be getting higher and higher. Twenty-five-year-olds still lived with, and on, their parents, and the paper cited one case of a daughter of thirty-two, still in full-time education, still being supported by her father. Was Charlie going to be that expensive? And if he was, would he be able to pay his share?
They were going for lunch in the restaurant at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, which was on Queen Street, a short walk from the auction house. Outside, in spite of the fact that it was June, the wind had a note of chill in it, a wind from the east, off the North Sea. Isabel looked up at the sky, which was clear but for a few scudding clouds, wispy, high-level streaks of white. âItâs so bright,â she said, shivering as a gust of wind swept up Broughton Street and penetrated the thin layer of her jersey. âLook at that sky. Look up there.â
Jamie stared up into the blue. He saw a vapour trail, higher than the clouds, on the very edge of space, it seemed, heading westwards towards America or Canada. He thought of the shiny thin tube suspended, against gravity, in that cold near-void; he thought of the people inside. âWhat do you think of when you see those jets?â he asked Isabel, pointing up at the tiny glint of metal with its white wisp of cotton wool trailing behind it.
Isabel glanced up. âTrust,â she said. âI think of trust.â
Jamie looked puzzled. âWhy would you think of that?â Then he started to smile; he knew the answer, and Isabel was right. âYes, I see.â
They turned the corner onto Queen Street. On the other side of the street, a block away, rose the red sandstone edifice of the Portrait Gallery, an ambitious neo-Gothic building which Isabel had always liked in spite of what she called its âCaledonian spikiness.â The gallery restaurant, tucked away and old-fashioned, was popular with people who wanted to sit, four to a table, in high-backed chairs reminiscent of suburban dining rooms. Isabel liked it because of its welcoming atmosphere and the overflow paintings from the main gallery hanging on its walls.
âI like coming here,â said Jamie, as they sat down at their table. âWhen I was a boy, I used to be brought here to see the pictures of the kings and queens of Scotland. I was interested in seeing Macbeth, but of course we havenât a clue what he looked like.â
âA much maligned king,â said Isabel as she loosened Charlieâs sling. âShakespeare cast him as a weak man, a murderer, but in fact he had quite a successful reign. Scotland prospered under Macbeth.â
â She was the problem,â said Jamie.
Isabel doubted this. It was only too easy to blame women, she thought, although she had to admit, if pressed, that there were some women who deserved any blame that came their way. Mrs. Ceausescu was such a case, as she pointed out.
âShe was shot, wasnât she?â said Jamie.
âIâm afraid so,â said Isabel. âAnd nobody deserves that. Not even the most appalling tyrant, or tyrantâs wife. She pleaded for her life, we are told, as did her husband, in his long winter coat, standing there in front of those young soldiers. He said that they should not shoot his wife, as she was a great scientist. At least he tried to do something gentlemanly at the very end.â
They were silent for a moment; Romania and firing squads seemed a world away from