The Tall Girl from Somerset 4 Harvey November and an old mini.
HARVEY November and an old Mini.
Oxford 1964
Oxford 1964
Anne met, in her first
year at Oxford, in mid-November, when she had been there just over a month, when
the autumn was damp and the darkness fell at four o’clock, and the afternoon closed in early, and it was
cold, in his last year at university, a tall 22-year-old who was studying Spanish. Like her,
he was from Somerset. He came from Wilcombe, a village south-west of the
Mendips, on the road towards Exmoor and Devon, where the hills finish and
Somerset starts to level off and devote itself to draining its fields to leave
them dry enough for farming. It was
about six miles from Berringford and the old farmhouse, Erewhon, but of Erewhon there will be more later.
Harvey had ahead of him
just a few more months of university and then he was to enter the wide world. Anne had just left school, but women are older in their ways than men so this was a
good combination, and Anne and Harvey combined well. They met at a college play competition. She had gone because a friend from her college was
acting and needed moral support. He had
gone because, as a fourth–year student who had acted in previous university
productions, he was one of the judges.
The hall had been hired for the three nights of the competition, and it
was some way from the university, up in Headington. At the end of the evening Anne was waiting at
the bus stop just outside the hall when an old and rather scratched Mini braked
suddenly and stopped by her. Harvey leaned over and rolled the passenger window
down, and asked her if she wanted a lift back to her college. She said, “Thanks”.
"Thanks." It
was just one word and a short one at that, but its effect on him was out of all proportion. It was just a monosyllable, but he was at ease.
It wasn’t the word. It was the tone, the
pitch, the eyes and the smile. He relaxed and felt pleasantly warm and this was not because of
the car heater which was not working at all well. He really should get that fixed. On the way down the hill into Oxford he talked
to Anne without thinking what he had to say, without having to prepare the next
joke, without having to fit in anything special. He was himself. No
need to impress. He drove her back to her college gates, and the car engine
sounded better than before. Even the heater began show signs of life. He asked if they
could meet the next day, and the next day was Saturday, and Saturday is always
a day for optimism. She said yes, and it seemed a long
time to wait, for both of them.
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