[No surviving envelope]
I am told by the Pan-American office that flight 100 is the regular daily flight from New York to London, and that the plane is due at Heath Row at 10.35 a.m. You were told 9.30, and I presume that the difference of one hour means that the time-table is given in Greenwich time, instead of daylight-saving. I propose to hire a car so as to be at the airport before the plane is due. In case you pass through the customs before you see me, you had better tell the porter that you think you are being met, and – just in case I am not there, I do not want you to miss the chance of going in the bus. But if all is well, you will find me there, and I propose to take you straight to the Basil Street Hotel, where you can have a bathroom and a bed to lie down on if you want to. Then I suggest that you should have a rest after an early lunch in the hotel with me, and take the 4.45 (if that is the train now) to Evesham. INason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine;c5 am writing to Meg to ask how you are to get from there to Broadway. I want to get this off to you, and I shall see you in ten days time.
The last two days have been very warm; hitherto the weather has been chilly and dull; and I expect you had better come prepared for the usual mixed British summer. It seems incredible that it should prove as fine and dry and sunny as last year.
1.MargaretNason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine (Meg) Geraldine Nason (1900–86), proprietor of the Bindery tea rooms, Broadway, Worcestershire, whom TSE and EH befriended on visits to Chipping Campden.