I hadn't seen Worboys for years. I hadn't thought about him for longer than that; he'd been a year below me at school and then two years below me at Oxford, thanks to some illness I'd never cared enough to find out much about, though my friends knew him. He'd been a slight, black-haired chap then, hidden behind spectacles, always toting a book. But he'd been fast on his feet, one of those lunatics who ran miles overland for the fun of it. Not that he'd found it fun. I remembered him in college, limping down the stairs from this blister or that sprain, always grave-faced, softly-spoken. He had a fine pair of grey eyes, if you could make them out behind his spectacles, but I wasn't after him. In those days I reserved my energy for the great moon-arsed boys on the rugger and rowing squads, happy titled dimwits with futures in parliament and big cocks.
And so it took me a while to recognise Worboys when I saw him next, some seven years after I'd gone down. I was leaving my firm in the late afternoon of one of London's hot yellow afternoons, the sun still high and the whole stink of the city - petrol, cement, soot - in my nose as soon as the door swung shut behind me. Distracted, sun-blind after the cool office, I walked slap into a solid fellow, who dropped his case with a clatter.
"Watch where you're going, would you!" he snapped, stopping to retrieve it.
"I beg your pardon." He'd dropped a canvas holdall as well, which I bent to pick up. "I'm dreadfully -"
"Guest?" he said then. "Lawrence Guest, is that you?"
I looked him dead in the face and didn't know him. The way I go, this happens. It's not their faces I'm concerned with, after all, but this was going to be awkward if I'd met him through the firm or at a party. He was about my height, solid in the shoulders and chest even under his coat and waistcoat, narrow-hipped, upright. A row of tiny dark spots crested one cheekbone where he'd cut himself shaving.
"I beg your pardon," I said again, stupidly, still clutching the holdall. "I don't -"
"No, I suppose you wouldn't," he said, smiling, shaking his head. "Richard Worboys."
"Wor - oh! Yes. How are you, old boy?" I hadn't ever known his first name. Worboys Major at school had become just Worboys in college.
"Fitter than I've any right to be," he said. "And you're looking well, yourself."
"Yes, I -"
"I'd heard you got shot."
"Ah, well, a minor..." I was rapidly losing the thread. "Were you - in France -?"
"Briefly," he said, with a sort of grim smile. "I heard old Fitz, well, died."
"No, Fitz is alive and well," I said, surer of my ground now. "You're thinking of Oswald. But he fell down the stairs while he was on leave, broke his neck. Drunk," I added. I hadn't much liked Oswald.
"Litton?"
"Well, he, yes. His lieutenant was completely insane."
"Ah. Pity. Great pity. I always thought him to be rather delicious."
I stared at him. He gazed back, quite unperturbed.
"Worboys," I said eventually. "I had no idea."
"Really none?"
"None whatsoever. You always seem so -"