She looked uncertainly at the professor, looming there in the middle of the room. âDonât let me keep you. Youâve been most kind and I am grateful.â
He stared back at her. âHas it struck you that the tone of our conversation has altered during the past few weeks? So polite, almost, if I might say so, friendly. We must do our best to correct that, mustnât we? Our years of cut and thrust have become a habit, havenât they?â
She kept her eyes on him. She didnât think that he was serious, but one could never tell. She said cautiously, âIf you say so, professor.â
She sidled to the door, ready to usher him out. âAh, speed the parting guest,â observed the professor in what she always thought of as his nasty voice.
She returned kindly, âOh, noâI was thinking of your date.â
He took the door handle from Julia, towering over her and leaving precious little room for the pair of them in the doorway. He said softly, âI hope that you dressed yourself to kill on my account, Julia,â and bent and kissed her. He was halfway down the first flight of stairs before she could get her breath, and then it was only a squeak.
Romance readers around the world were sad to note the passing of Betty Neels in June 2001. Her career spanned thirty years, and she continued to write into her ninetieth year. To her millions of fans, Betty epitomized the romance writer, and yet she began writing almost by accident. She had retired from nursing, but her inquiring mind still sought stimulation. Her new career was born when she heard a lady in her local library bemoaning the lack of good romance novels. Bettyâs first book, Sister Peters in Amsterdam, was published in 1969, and she eventually completed 134 books. Her novels offer a reassuring warmth that was very much a part of her own personality. She was a wonderful writer, and she will be greatly missed. Her spirit and genuine talent will live on in all her stories.
UNDER AN EARLY morning September sky London was coming awake; the sun shone impartially on stately Regency houses, high rise flats and any number of parks. It shone too on St Anneâs Hospital, a sprawling red brick edifice cramped by the mean streets around it, although not all were mean, in some of them the early Victorian houses, tall and narrow, each with its railed off area and attic windows, had made a brave effort to overcome shabbiness and were let out in flats or rooms. Even the attics had been converted into what were grandly called studio flats with tiny kitchens and showers squeezed into corners under the rafters.
The windows of one such flat, half way down a terrace in a side street lined with dusty plane trees, were open wide now, allowing the sun to shine in. It shone on the woman sitting in front of a rather battered dressing table, allowing her to take excellent stock of her reflection in its mirror. It was a charming one, although its owner didnât appear to like it overmuch. She had her hand up to her hair, tugging it this way and that, peering at it intently.
âThere are bound to be some,â the woman said loudly and with impatience, âI dare say the lightâs all wrong.â She abandoned her search and scrutinised her face, looking for wrinkles. But there werenât any of those either; her reflection frowned back at her, a lovely face with a creamy skin to go with her fiery hair and large green eyes. âWell, there ought to be,â said the woman, âthe first grey hairs and wrinkles show up at thirty,â she added gloomily, ânext year Iâll be thirty-oneâ¦â
She left the dressing table and crossed the room to drink the rest of a mug of tea on the table at the other side. She was a tall woman with generous curves, and despite her thirty years, looked a great deal younger. She finished the tea and began to dress and presently, in her dark blue sisterâs uniform, sat down in front of the mirror again and did her face and brushed her thick bright hair into a chignon. She had wasted time looking for the wrinkles; and there was only time for another pot of tea and some toast before she went on duty. She made the divan bed along one wall while the kettle boiled and then sat down at the table to drink the brew and munch her toast, wasting no time. Ten minutes later, the breakfast things stacked tidily in the sink in the tiny kitchen she let herself out of her room and locked the door, then with her cape slung over one shoulder ran down the three flights of stairs to the front door. No one else was about yet in the quiet street but once at its end she turned into a wider thoroughfare, bustling with morning traffic and early morning workers. It was a shabby street, with tatty shops and run down houses, and it led straight past the hospital gates, a mere five minutesâ walk. All the same the woman had cut it fine and hurried across the courtyard and in through the imposing entrance, pausing in the enormous, gloomy hall to peer into the head porterâs little office.