FAT IN THE FIRE
On reaching home Fleur found an atmosphere
so peculiar that it penetrated even the perplexed
aura of her own private life. Her mother was
in blue stockingette and a brown study; her father
in a white felt hat and the vinery. Neither of
them had a word to throw to a dog. ’Is
it because of me?’ thought Fleur. ‘Or
because of Profond?’ To her mother she said:
“What’s the matter with Father?”
Her mother answered with a shrug of her shoulders.
To her father:
“What’s the matter with Mother?”
Her father answered:
“Matter? What should be the matter?”
and gave her a sharp look.
“By the way,” murmured
Fleur, “Monsieur Profond is going a ‘small’
voyage on his yacht, to the South Seas.”
Soames examined a branch on which no grapes were growing.
“This vine’s a failure,”
he said. “I’ve had young Mont here.
He asked me something about you.”
“Oh! How do you like him, Father?”
“He he’s a product like
all these young people.”
“What were you at his age, dear?”
Soames smiled grimly.
“We went to work, and didn’t
play about flying and motoring, and making
love.”
“Didn’t you ever make love?”
She avoided looking at him while she
said that, but she saw him well enough. His pale
face had reddened, his eyebrows, where darkness was
still mingled with the grey, had come close together.
“I had no time or inclination to philander.”
“Perhaps you had a grand passion.”
Soames looked at her intently.
“Yes if you want
to know and much good it did me.”
He moved away, along by the hot-water pipes.
Fleur tiptoed silently after him.
“Tell me about it, Father!”
Soames became very still.
“What should you want to know about such things,
at your age?”
“Is she alive?”
He nodded.
“And married?”
“Yes.”
“It’s Jon Forsyte’s mother, isn’t
it? And she was your wife first.”
It was said in a flash of intuition.
Surely his opposition came from his anxiety that she
should not know of that old wound to his pride.
But she was startled. To see some one so old and
calm wince as if struck, to hear so sharp a note of
pain in his voice!
“Who told you that? If your aunt!
I can’t bear the affair talked of.”
“But, darling,” said Fleur, softly, “it’s
so long ago.”
“Long ago or not, I
Fleur stood stroking his arm.
“I’ve tried to forget,”
he said suddenly; “I don’t wish to be
reminded.” And then, as if venting some
long and secret irritation, he added: “In
these days people don’t understand. Grand
passion, indeed! No one knows what it is.”
“I do,” said Fleur, almost in a whisper.
Soames, who had turned his back on her, spun round.
“What are you talking of a child
like you!”
“Perhaps I’ve inherited it, Father.”
“What?”
“For her son, you see.”
He was pale as a sheet, and she knew
that she was as bad. They stood staring at each
other in the steamy heat, redolent of the mushy scent
of earth, of potted geranium, and of vines coming along
fast.
“This is crazy,” said Soames at last,
between dry lips.
Scarcely moving her own, she murmured:
“Don’t be angry, Father. I can’t
help it.”
But she could see he wasn’t angry; only scared,
deeply scared.
“I thought that foolishness,” he stammered,
“was all forgotten.”
“Oh, no! It’s ten times what it was.”
Soames kicked at the hot-water pipe.
The hapless movement touched her, who had no fear
of her father none.
“Dearest!” she said: “What
must be, must, you know.”
“Must!” repeated Soames.
“You don’t know what you’re talking
of. Has that boy been told?”
The blood rushed into her cheeks.
“Not yet.”
He had turned from her again, and,
with one shoulder a little raised, stood staring fixedly
at a joint in the pipes.
“It’s most distasteful
to me,” he said suddenly; “nothing could
be more so. Son of that fellow It’s it’s perverse!”
She had noted, almost unconsciously,
that he did not say “son of that woman,”
and again her intuition began working.
Did the ghost of that grand passion
linger in some corner of his heart?
She slipped her hand under his arm.
“Jon’s father is quite ill and old; I
saw him.”
“You?”
“Yes, I went there with Jon; I saw them both.”
“Well, and what did they say to you?”
“Nothing. They were very polite.”
“They would be.”
He resumed his contemplation of the pipe-joint, and
then said suddenly: “I must think this over I’ll
speak to you again to-night.”
She knew this was final for the moment,
and stole away, leaving him still looking at the pipe-joint.
She wandered into the fruit-garden, among the raspberry
and currant bushes, without impetus to pick and eat.
Two months ago she was light-hearted!
Even two days ago light-hearted, before
Prosper Profond told her. Now she felt tangled
in a web of passions, vested rights, oppressions
and revolts, the ties of love and hate. At this
dark moment of discouragement there seemed, even to
her hold-fast nature, no way out. How deal with
it how sway and bend things to her will,
and get her heart’s desire? And, suddenly,
round the corner of the high box hedge, she came plump
on her mother, walking swiftly, with an open letter
in her hand. Her bosom was heaving, her eyes
dilated, her cheeks flushed. Instantly Fleur thought:
“The yacht! Poor Mother!”
Annette gave her a wide startled look, and said:
“J’ai la migraine.”
“I’m awfully sorry, Mother.”
“Oh; yes! you and your father sorry!”
“But, Mother I am. I know what
it feels like.”
Annette’s startled eyes grew
wide, till the whites showed above them. “You
innocent!” she said.
Her mother so self-possessed,
and commonsensical to look and speak like
this! It was all frightening! Her father,
her mother, herself! And only two months back
they had seemed to have everything they wanted in
this world.
Annette crumpled the letter in her
hand. Fleur knew that she must ignore the sight.
“Can’t I do anything for your head, Mother?”
Annette shook that head and walked on, swaying her
hips.
‘It’s cruel,’ thought
Fleur, ’and I was glad! That man! What
do men come prowling for, disturbing everything!
I suppose he’s tired of her. What business
has he to be tired of my mother? What business!’
And at that thought, so natural and so peculiar, she
uttered a little choked laugh.
She ought, of course, to be delighted,
but what was there to be delighted at? Her father
didn’t really care! Her mother did, perhaps?
She entered the orchard, and sat down under a cherry-tree.
A breeze sighed in the higher boughs; the sky seen
through their green was very blue and very white in
cloud those heavy white clouds almost always
present in river landscape. Bees, sheltering out
of the wind, hummed softly, and over the lush grass
fell the thick shade from those fruit-trees planted
by her father five-and-twenty years ago. Birds
were almost silent, the cuckoos had ceased to sing,
but wood-pigeons were cooing. The breath and
drone and cooing of high summer were not for long
a sedative to her excited nerves. Crouched over
her knees she began to scheme. Her father must
be made to back her up. Why should he mind so
long as she was happy? She had not lived for nearly
nineteen years without knowing that her future was
all he really cared about. She had, then, only
to convince him that her future could not be happy
without Jon. He thought it a mad fancy. How
foolish the old were, thinking they could tell what
the young felt! Had not he confessed that he when
young had loved with a grand passion!
He ought to understand. ‘He piles up his
money for me,’ she thought; ’but what’s
the use, if I’m not going to be happy?’
Money, and all it bought, did not bring happiness.
Love only brought that. The ox-eyed daisies in
this orchard, which gave it such a moony look sometimes,
grew wild and happy, and had their hour. ‘They
oughtn’t to have called me Fleur,’ she
mused, ’if they didn’t mean me to have
my hour, and be happy while it lasts.’
Nothing real stood in the way, like poverty, or disease sentiment
only, a ghost from the unhappy past! Jon was right.
They wouldn’t let you live, these old people!
They made mistakes, committed crimes, and wanted their
children to go on paying! The breeze died away;
midges began to bite. She got up, plucked a piece
of honeysuckle, and went in.
It was hot that night. Both she
and her mother had put on thin, pale low frocks.
The dinner flowers were pale. Fleur was struck
with the pale look of everything: her father’s
face, her mother’s shoulders; the pale panelled
walls, the pale-grey velvety carpet, the lamp-shade,
even the soup was pale. There was not one spot
of colour in the room, not even wine in the pale glasses,
for no one drank it. What was not pale was black her
father’s clothes, the butler’s clothes,
her retriever stretched out exhausted in the window,
the curtains black with a cream pattern. A moth
came in, and that was pale. And silent was that
half-mourning dinner in the heat.
Her father called her back as she
was following her mother out.
She sat down beside him at the table,
and, unpinning the pale honeysuckle, put it to her
nose.
“I’ve been thinking,” he said.
“Yes, dear?”
“It’s extremely painful
for me to talk, but there’s no help for it.
I don’t know if you understand how much you
are to me I’ve never spoken of it,
I didn’t think it necessary; but but
you’re everything. Your mother ”
he paused, staring at his finger-bowl of Venetian glass.
“Yes?”
“I’ve only you to look
to. I’ve never had never wanted
anything else, since you were born.”
“I know,” Fleur murmured.
Soames moistened his lips.
“You may think this a matter
I can smooth over and arrange for you. You’re
mistaken. I I’m helpless.”
Fleur did not speak.
“Quite apart from my own feelings,”
went on Soames with more resolution, “those
two are not amenable to anything I can say. They they
hate me, as people always hate those whom they have
injured.”
“But he Jon
“He’s their flesh and
blood, her only child. Probably he means to her
what you mean to me. It’s a deadlock.”
“No,” cried Fleur, “no, Father!”
Soames leaned back, the image of pale
patience, as if resolved on the betrayal of no emotion.
“Listen!” he said.
“You’re putting the feelings of two months two
months against the feelings of thirty-five
years! What chance do you think you have?
Two months your very first love-affair,
a matter of half a dozen meetings, a few walks and
talks, a few kisses against, against what
you can’t imagine, what no one could who hasn’t
been through it. Come, be reasonable, Fleur!
It’s midsummer madness!”
Fleur tore the honeysuckle into little,
slow bits. “The madness is in letting the
past spoil it all. What do we care about the past?
It’s our lives, not yours.”
Soames raised his hand to his forehead,
where suddenly she saw moisture shining.
“Whose child are you?”
he said. “Whose child is he? The present
is linked with the past, the future with both.
There’s no getting away from that.”
She had never heard philosophy pass
those lips before. Impressed even in her agitation,
she leaned her elbows on the table, her chin on her
hands.
“But, Father, consider it practically.
We want each other. There’s ever so much
money, and nothing whatever in the way but sentiment.
Let’s bury the past, Father.”
Soames shook his head. “Impossible!”
“Besides,” said Fleur gently, “you
can’t prevent us.”
“I don’t suppose,”
said Soames, “that if left to myself I should
try to prevent you; I must put up with things, I know,
to keep your affection. But it’s not I
who control this matter. That’s what I want
you to realise before it’s too late. If
you go on thinking you can get your way, and encourage
this feeling, the blow will be much heavier when you
find you can’t.”
“Oh!” cried Fleur, “help me, Father;
you can help me, you know.”
Soames made a startled movement of negation.
“I?” he said bitterly.
“Help? I am the impediment the
just cause and impediment isn’t that
the jargon? You have my blood in your veins.”
He rose.
“Well, the fat’s in the
fire. If you persist in your wilfulness you’ll
have yourself to blame. Come! Don’t
be foolish, my child my only child!”
Fleur laid her forehead against his shoulder.
All was in such turmoil within her.
But no good to show it! No good at all!
She broke away from him, and went out into the twilight,
distraught, but unconvinced. All was indeterminate
and vague within her, like the shapes and shadows
in the garden, except her will to have.
A poplar pierced up into the dark-blue sky and touched
a white star there. The dew wetted her shoes,
and chilled her bare shoulders. She went down
to the river bank, and stood gazing at a moonstreak
on the darkening water. Suddenly she smelled
tobacco smoke, and a white figure emerged as if created
by the moon. It was young Mont in flannels, standing
in his boat. She heard the tiny hiss of his cigarette
extinguished in the water.
“Fleur,” came his voice,
“don’t be hard on a poor devil! I’ve
been waiting hours.”
“For what?”
“Come in my boat!”
“Not I.”
“Why not?”
“I’m not a water-nymph.”
“Haven’t you any romance in you?
Don’t be modern, Fleur!”
He appeared on the path within a yard of her.
“Go away!”
“Fleur, I love you. Fleur!”
Fleur uttered a short laugh.
“Come again,” she said, “when I
haven’t got my wish.”
“What is your wish?”
“Ask another.”
“Fleur,” said Mont, and
his voice sounded strange, “don’t mock
me! Even vivisected dogs are worth decent treatment
before they’re cut up for good.”
Fleur shook her head; but her lips were trembling.
“Well, you shouldn’t make me jump.
Give me a cigarette.”
Mont gave her one, lighted it, and another for himself.
“I don’t want to talk
rot,” he said, “but please imagine all
the rot that all the lovers that ever were have talked,
and all my special rot thrown in.”
“Thank you, I have imagined it. Good-night!”
They stood for a moment facing each
other in the shadow of an acacia-tree with very moonlit
blossoms, and the smoke from their cigarettes mingled
in the air between them.
“Also ran: ’Michael
Mont’?” he said. Fleur turned abruptly
towards the house. On the lawn she stopped to
look back. Michael Mont was whirling his arms
above him; she could see them dashing at his head,
then waving at the moonlit blossoms of the acacia.
His voice just reached her. “Jolly jolly!”
Fleur shook herself. She couldn’t help him,
she had too much trouble of her own! On the verandah
she stopped very suddenly again. Her mother was
sitting in the drawing-room at her writing bureau,
quite alone. There was nothing remarkable in the
expression of her face except its utter immobility.
But she looked desolate! Fleur went up-stairs.
At the door of her room she paused. She could
hear her father walking up and down, up and down the
picture-gallery.
‘Yes,’ she thought, jolly! Oh, Jon!’