Miss Bannermanâor Celia, as she had tried to get used to calling herâhad become one of the most respected figures in nursing administration and was heavily involved in the management of the club. She had certainly come a long way since her earlier job as a warder at Holloway, but it was those years that interested Josephine now.
âI was just going to leave a message for you at reception,â Celia said, âbut youâve saved me the trouble. Your note said that youâve got something for me to read?â
âYes, the first draft of what we discussed the other day. I wondered if youâd have a look at it, just to make sure itâs reasonably accurateâand I have a few more questions, if youâve time.â
âYes, of course.â She looked at her watch. âIâm free now for a while, if that suits you? Shall we say in fifteen minutesâ time, just to give you a chance to catch your breath? Iâll see you in the drawing room.â
She walked back into the lounge without waiting for an answer, and Josephine recognised the same confidence in her own authority that had earned Miss Bannerman the respect of all her studentsârespect tinged with just the right amount of fear. She had seen that authority falter only once, and then just briefly and under exceptional circumstances, and it never failed to bring out the schoolgirl in her. She headed for the stairs again like a straggler late for lessons, but was stopped once more in her tracks, this time by Miss Timpson. âOh Miss Tey, I nearly forgotâdonât go upstairs without this,â she called, and at the higher volume her East End vowels were satisfyingly evident. âIt arrived for you earlier this afternoon.â She bent down to pick something up from the floor behind the desk and presented Josephine with an expensive-looking ornamental gardenia. Josephine held out her hand for the card.
âSorryâthatâs it. Thereâs no note.â
âAre you sure itâs for me?â
âOh yes. The boy from the shop was very particular. I had to sign for it.â
âBut no one knows Iâm here.â
âThen perhaps you have an admirer on the inside, darling.â There was no need to turn round to see where the suggestion came from: the voiceâwarm, attractive and full of innuendoâwas an established feature of the Cowdray Club, as familiar to its members as the decor and just as expensive. The Honourable Geraldine Ashby fell into an unusual category of membership: neither nurse nor professional, she was one of a handful of women who were elected to the club at the discretion of the council and whose purpose was purely social. Geraldineâs mother was more than happy to secure the position each yearwith a generous cheque to the College of Nursingâafter all, the association was the most respectable thing about her daughterâand Geraldine took her social responsibilities as seriously as the other members took their work. No one could deny that she livened things up considerably, and not just because she mixed the finest cocktails outside the Savoy: everything about her was daring, and that made a refreshing change from the cloud of earnestness that hung over so much of the club. It was impossible not to be drawn to her charm and good humour, and her beautyâa chic, adventurous beautyâsparkled as effortlessly in a tailored suit as it did in the latest Chanel. Forgetting for a moment the young girl on her armâa pretty if rather dull-looking blondeâGeraldine smiled wickedly at Josephine. âJust thinkâit could be any one of us. Who would you like it to be from?â
Experience had taught Josephine that a suitable responseâflirtatious, with just the right amount of disdainâwould only come to her later that evening, so she didnât bother to reply but picked up the flower with what she hoped was an enigmatic smile and