It was not long before Soames’s
determination to build went the round of the family,
and created the flutter that any decision connected
with property should make among Forsytes.
It was not his fault, for he had been
determined that no one should know. June, in
the fulness of her heart, had told Mrs. Small, giving
her leave only to tell Aunt Ann she thought
it would cheer her, the poor old sweet! for Aunt Ann
had kept her room now for many days.
Mrs. Small told Aunt Ann at once,
who, smiling as she lay back on her pillows, said
in her distinct, trembling old voice:
“It’s very nice for dear
June; but I hope they will be careful it’s
rather dangerous!”
When she was left alone again, a frown,
like a cloud presaging a rainy morrow, crossed her
face.
While she was lying there so many
days the process of recharging her will went on all
the time; it spread to her face, too, and tightening
movements were always in action at the corners of her
lips.
The maid Smither, who had been in
her service since girlhood, and was spoken of as “Smither a
good girl but so slow!” the
maid Smither performed every morning with extreme
punctiliousness the crowning ceremony of that ancient
toilet. Taking from the recesses of their pure
white band-box those flat, grey curls, the insignia
of personal dignity, she placed them securely in her
mistress’s hands, and turned her back.
And every day Aunts Juley and Hester
were required to come and report on Timothy; what
news there was of Nicholas; whether dear June had
succeeded in getting Jolyon to shorten the engagement,
now that Mr. Bosinney was building Soames a house;
whether young Roger’s wife was really expecting;
how the operation on Archie had succeeded; and what
Swithin had done about that empty house in Wigmore
Street, where the tenant had lost all his money and
treated him so badly; above all, about Soames; was
Irene still still asking for a separate
room? And every morning Smither was told:
“I shall be coming down this afternoon, Smither,
about two o’clock. I shall want your arm,
after all these days in bed!”
After telling Aunt Ann, Mrs. Small
had spoken of the house in the strictest confidence
to Mrs. Nicholas, who in her turn had asked Winifred
Dartie for confirmation, supposing, of course, that,
being Soames’s sister, she would know all about
it. Through her it had in due course come round
to the ears of James. He had been a good deal
agitated.
“Nobody,” he said, “told
him anything.” And, rather than go direct
to Soames himself, of whose taciturnity he was afraid,
he took his umbrella and went round to Timothy’s.
He found Mrs. Septimus and Hester
(who had been told she was so safe, she
found it tiring to talk) ready, and indeed eager, to
discuss the news. It was very good of dear Soames,
they thought, to employ Mr. Bosinney, but rather risky.
What had George named him? ‘The Buccaneer’
How droll! But George was always droll! However,
it would be all in the family they supposed they must
really look upon Mr. Bosinney as belonging to the
family, though it seemed strange.
James here broke in:
“Nobody knows anything about
him. I don’t see what Soames wants with
a young man like that. I shouldn’t be surprised
if Irene had put her oar in. I shall speak to....”
“Soames,” interposed Aunt
Juley, “told Mr. Bosinney that he didn’t
wish it mentioned. He wouldn’t like it
to be talked about, I’m sure, and if Timothy
knew he would be very vexed, I....”
James put his hand behind his ear:
“What?” he said.
“I’m getting very deaf. I suppose
I don’t hear people. Emily’s got
a bad toe. We shan’t be able to start for
Wales till the end of the month. There’s
always something!” And, having got what he wanted,
he took his hat and went away.
It was a fine afternoon, and he walked
across the Park towards Soames’s, where he intended
to dine, for Emily’s toe kept her in bed, and
Rachel and Cicely were on a visit to the country.
He took the slanting path from the Bayswater side
of the Row to the Knightsbridge Gate, across a pasture
of short, burnt grass, dotted with blackened sheep,
strewn with seated couples and strange waifs; lying
prone on their faces, like corpses on a field over
which the wave of battle has rolled.
He walked rapidly, his head bent,
looking neither to right nor, left. The appearance
of this park, the centre of his own battle-field, where
he had all his life been fighting, excited no thought
or speculation in his mind. These corpses flung
down, there, from out the press and turmoil of the
struggle, these pairs of lovers sitting cheek by jowl
for an hour of idle Elysium snatched from the monotony
of their treadmill, awakened no fancies in his mind;
he had outlived that kind of imagination; his nose,
like the nose of a sheep, was fastened to the pastures
on which he browsed.
One of his tenants had lately shown
a disposition to be behind-hand in his rent, and it
had become a grave question whether he had not better
turn him out at once, and so run the risk of not re-letting
before Christmas. Swithin had just been let in
very badly, but it had served him right he
had held on too long.
He pondered this as he walked steadily,
holding his umbrella carefully by the wood, just below
the crook of the handle, so as to keep the ferule
off the ground, and not fray the silk in the middle.
And, with his thin, high shoulders stooped, his long
legs moving with swift mechanical precision, this
passage through the Park, where the sun shone with
a clear flame on so much idleness on so
many human evidences of the remorseless battle of
Property, raging beyond its ring was like
the flight of some land bird across the sea.
He felt a touch on the
arm as he came out at Albert Gate.
It was Soames, who, crossing from
the shady side of Piccadilly, where he had been walking
home from the office, had suddenly appeared alongside.
“Your mother’s in bed,”
said James; “I was, just coming to you, but I
suppose I shall be in the way.”
The outward relations between James
and his son were marked by a lack of sentiment peculiarly
Forsytean, but for all that the two were by no means
unattached. Perhaps they regarded one another
as an investment; certainly they were solicitous of
each other’s welfare, glad of each other’s
company. They had never exchanged two words upon
the more intimate problems of life, or revealed in
each other’s presence the existence of any deep
feeling.
Something beyond the power of word-analysis
bound them together, something hidden deep in the
fibre of nations and families for blood,
they say, is thicker than water and neither
of them was a cold-blooded man. Indeed, in James
love of his children was now the prime motive of his
existence. To have creatures who were parts of
himself, to whom he might transmit the money he saved,
was at the root of his saving; and, at seventy-five,
what was left that could give him pleasure, but saving?
The kernel of life was in this saving for his children.
Than James Forsyte, notwithstanding
all his ‘Jonah-isms,’ there was no saner
man (if the leading symptom of sanity, as we are told,
is self-preservation, though without doubt Timothy
went too far) in all this London, of which he owned
so much, and loved with such a dumb love, as the centre
of his opportunities. He had the marvellous instinctive
sanity of the middle class. In him more
than in Jolyon, with his masterful will and his moments
of tenderness and philosophy more than
in Swithin, the martyr to crankiness Nicholas,
the sufferer from ability and Roger, the
victim of enterprise beat the true pulse
of compromise; of all the brothers he was least remarkable
in mind and person, and for that reason more likely
to live for ever.
To James, more than to any of the
others, was “the family” significant and
dear. There had always been something primitive
and cosy in his attitude towards life; he loved the
family hearth, he loved gossip, and he loved grumbling.
All his decisions were formed of a cream which he
skimmed off the family mind; and, through that family,
off the minds of thousands of other families of similar
fibre. Year after year, week after week, he went
to Timothy’s, and in his brother’s front
drawing-room his legs twisted, his long
white whiskers framing his clean-shaven mouth would
sit watching the family pot simmer, the cream rising
to the top; and he would go away sheltered, refreshed,
comforted, with an indefinable sense of comfort.
Beneath the adamant of his self-preserving
instinct there was much real softness in James; a
visit to Timothy’s was like an hour spent in
the lap of a mother; and the deep craving he himself
had for the protection of the family wing reacted
in turn on his feelings towards his own children;
it was a nightmare to him to think of them exposed
to the treatment of the world, in money, health, or
reputation. When his old friend John Street’s
son volunteered for special service, he shook his
head querulously, and wondered what John Street was
about to allow it; and when young Street was assagaied,
he took it so much to heart that he made a point of
calling everywhere with the special object of saying:
He knew how it would be he’d no patience
with them!
When his son-in-law Dartie had that
financial crisis, due to speculation in Oil Shares,
James made himself ill worrying over it; the knell
of all prosperity seemed to have sounded. It
took him three months and a visit to Baden-Baden to
get better; there was something terrible in the idea
that but for his, James’s, money, Dartie’s
name might have appeared in the Bankruptcy List.
Composed of a physiological mixture
so sound that if he had an earache he thought he was
dying, he regarded the occasional ailments of his
wife and children as in the nature of personal grievances,
special interventions of Providence for the purpose
of destroying his peace of mind; but he did not believe
at all in the ailments of people outside his own immediate
family, affirming them in every case to be due to
neglected liver.
His universal comment was: “What
can they expect? I have it myself, if I’m
not careful!”
When he went to Soames’s that
evening he felt that life was hard on him: There
was Emily with a bad toe, and Rachel gadding about
in the country; he got no sympathy from anybody; and
Ann, she was ill he did not believe she
would last through the summer; he had called there
three times now without her being able to see him!
And this idea of Soames’s, building a house,
that would have to be looked into. As to the trouble
with Irene, he didn’t know what was to come of
that anything might come of it!
He entered 62, Montpellier Square
with the fullest intentions of being miserable.
It was already half-past seven, and Irene, dressed
for dinner, was seated in the drawing-room. She
was wearing her gold-coloured frock for,
having been displayed at a dinner-party, a soiree,
and a dance, it was now to be worn at home and
she had adorned the bosom with a cascade of lace,
on which James’s eyes riveted themselves at
once.
“Where do you get your things?”
he said in an aggravated voice. “I never
see Rachel and Cicely looking half so well. That
rose-point, now that’s not real!”
Irene came close, to prove to him that he was in error.
And, in spite of himself, James felt
the influence of her deference, of the faint seductive
perfume exhaling from her. No self-respecting
Forsyte surrendered at a blow; so he merely said:
He didn’t know he expected she was
spending a pretty penny on dress.
The gong sounded, and, putting her
white arm within his, Irene took him into the dining-room.
She seated him in Soames’s usual place, round
the corner on her left. The light fell softly
there, so that he would not be worried by the gradual
dying of the day; and she began to talk to him about
himself.
Presently, over James came a change,
like the mellowing that steals upon a fruit in the
sun; a sense of being caressed, and praised, and petted,
and all without the bestowal of a single caress or
word of praise. He felt that what he was eating
was agreeing with him; he could not get that feeling
at home; he did not know when he had enjoyed a glass
of champagne so much, and, on inquiring the brand
and price, was surprised to find that it was one of
which he had a large stock himself, but could never
drink; he instantly formed the resolution to let his
wine merchant know that he had been swindled.
Looking up from his food, he remarked:
“You’ve a lot of nice
things about the place. Now, what did you give
for that sugar-sifter? Shouldn’t wonder
if it was worth money!”
He was particularly pleased with the
appearance of a picture, on the wall opposite, which
he himself had given them:
“I’d no idea it was so good!” he
said.
They rose to go into the drawing-room, and James followed
Irene closely.
“That’s what I call a
capital little dinner,” he murmured, breathing
pleasantly down on her shoulder; “nothing heavy and
not too Frenchified. But I can’t get it
at home. I pay my cook sixty pounds a year, but
she can’t give me a dinner like that!”
He had as yet made no allusion to
the building of the house, nor did he when Soames,
pleading the excuse of business, betook himself to
the room at the top, where he kept his pictures.
James was left alone with his daughter-in-law.
The glow of the wine, and of an excellent liqueur,
was still within him. He felt quite warm towards
her. She was really a taking little thing; she
listened to you, and seemed to understand what you
were saying; and, while talking, he kept examining
her figure, from her bronze-coloured shoes to the waved
gold of her hair. She was leaning back in an Empire
chair, her shoulders poised against the top her
body, flexibly straight and unsupported from the hips,
swaying when she moved, as though giving to the arms
of a lover. Her lips were smiling, her eyes half-closed.
It may have been a recognition of
danger in the very charm of her attitude, or a twang
of digestion, that caused a sudden dumbness to fall
on James. He did not remember ever having been
quite alone with Irene before. And, as he looked
at her, an odd feeling crept over him, as though he
had come across something strange and foreign.
Now what was she thinking about sitting
back like that?
Thus when he spoke it was in a sharper
voice, as if he had been awakened from a pleasant
dream.
“What d’you do with yourself
all day?” he said. “You never come
round to Park Lane!”
She seemed to be making very lame
excuses, and James did not look at her. He did
not want to believe that she was really avoiding them it
would mean too much.
“I expect the fact is, you haven’t
time,” he said; “You’re always about
with June. I expect you’re useful to her
with her young man, chaperoning, and one thing and
another. They tell me she’s never at home
now; your Uncle Jolyon he doesn’t like it, I
fancy, being left so much alone as he is. They
tell me she’s always hanging about for this young
Bosinney; I suppose he comes here every day. Now,
what do you think of him? D’you think he
knows his own mind? He seems to me a poor thing.
I should say the grey mare was the better horse!”
The colour deepened in Irene’s
face; and James watched her suspiciously.
“Perhaps you don’t quite
understand Mr. Bosinney,” she said.
“Don’t understand him!”
James hummed out: “Why not? you
can see he’s one of these artistic chaps.
They say he’s clever they all think
they’re clever. You know more about him
than I do,” he added; and again his suspicious
glance rested on her.
“He is designing a house for
Soames,” she said softly, evidently trying to
smooth things over.
“That brings me to what I was
going to say,” continued James; “I don’t
know what Soames wants with a young man like that;
why doesn’t he go to a first-rate man?”
“Perhaps Mr. Bosinney is first-rate!”
James rose, and took a turn with bent head.
“That’s it’,”
he said, “you young people, you all stick together;
you all think you know best!”
Halting his tall, lank figure before
her, he raised a finger, and levelled it at her bosom,
as though bringing an indictment against her beauty:
“All I can say is, these artistic
people, or whatever they call themselves, they’re
as unreliable as they can be; and my advice to you
is, don’t you have too much to do with him!”
Irene smiled; and in the curve of
her lips was a strange provocation. She seemed
to have lost her deference. Her breast rose and
fell as though with secret anger; she drew her hands
inwards from their rest on the arms of her chair until
the tips of her fingers met, and her dark eyes looked
unfathomably at James.
The latter gloomily scrutinized the floor.
“I tell you my opinion,”
he said, “it’s a pity you haven’t
got a child to think about, and occupy you!”
A brooding look came instantly on
Irene’s face, and even James became conscious
of the rigidity that took possession of her whole figure
beneath the softness of its silk and lace clothing.
He was frightened by the effect he
had produced, and like most men with but little courage,
he sought at once to justify himself by bullying.
“You don’t seem to care
about going about. Why don’t you drive down
to Hurlingham with us? And go to the theatre
now and then. At your time of life you ought
to take an interest in things. You’re a
young woman!”
The brooding look darkened on her face; he grew nervous.
“Well, I know nothing about
it,” he said; “nobody tells me anything.
Soames ought to be able to take care of himself.
If he can’t take care of himself he mustn’t
look to me that’s all.”
Biting the corner of his forefinger
he stole a cold, sharp look at his daughter-in-law.
He encountered her eyes fixed on his
own, so dark and deep, that he stopped, and broke
into a gentle perspiration.
“Well, I must be going,”
he said after a short pause, and a minute later rose,
with a slight appearance of surprise, as though he
had expected to be asked to stop. Giving his
hand to Irene, he allowed himself to be conducted
to the door, and let out into the street. He would
not have a cab, he would walk, Irene was to say good-night
to Soames for him, and if she wanted a little gaiety,
well, he would drive her down to Richmond any day.
He walked home, and going upstairs,
woke Emily out of the first sleep she had had for
four and twenty hours, to tell her that it was his
impression things were in a bad way at Soames’s;
on this theme he descanted for half an hour, until
at last, saying that he would not sleep a wink, he
turned on his side and instantly began to snore.
In Montpellier Square Soames, who
had come from the picture room, stood invisible at
the top of the stairs, watching Irene sort the letters
brought by the last post. She turned back into
the drawing-room; but in a minute came out, and stood
as if listening. Then she came stealing up the
stairs, with a kitten in her arms. He could see
her face bent over the little beast, which was purring
against her neck. Why couldn’t she look
at him like that?
Suddenly she saw him, and her face changed.
“Any letters for me?” he said.
“Three.”
He stood aside, and without another word she passed
on into the bedroom.