EMBASSY
Enquiring for her at tea time Soames
learned that Fleur had been out in the car since two.
Three hours! Where had she gone? Up to London
without a word to him? He had never become quite
reconciled with cars. He had embraced them in
principle like the born empiricist, or
Forsyte, that he was adopting each symptom
of progress as it came along with: “Well,
we couldn’t do without them now.”
But in fact he found them tearing, great, smelly things.
Obliged by Annette to have one a Rollhard
with pearl-grey cushions, electric light, little mirrors,
trays for the ashes of cigarettes, flower vases all
smelling of petrol and stephanotis he regarded
it much as he used to regard his brother-in-law, Montague
Dartie. The thing typified all that was fast,
insecure, and subcutaneously oily in modern life.
As modern life became faster, looser, younger, Soames
was becoming older, slower, tighter, more and more
in thought and language like his father James before
him. He was almost aware of it himself.
Pace and progress pleased him less and less; there
was an ostentation, too, about a car which he considered
provocative in the prevailing mood of Labour.
On one occasion that fellow Sims had driven over the
only vested interest of a working man. Soames
had not forgotten the behaviour of its master, when
not many people would have stopped to put up with it.
He had been sorry for the dog, and quite prepared
to take its part against the car, if that ruffian
hadn’t been so outrageous. With four hours
fast becoming five, and still no Fleur, all the old
car-wise feelings he had experienced in person and
by proxy balled within him, and sinking sensations
troubled the pit of his stomach. At seven he telephoned
to Winifred by trunk call. No! Fleur had
not been to Green Street. Then where was she?
Visions of his beloved daughter rolled up in her pretty
frills, all blood-and-dust-stained, in some hideous
catastrophe, began to haunt him. He went to her
room and spied among her things. She had taken
nothing no dressing-case, no jewellery.
And this, a relief in one sense, increased his fears
of an accident. Terrible to be helpless when
his loved one was missing, especially when he couldn’t
bear fuss or publicity of any kind! What should
he do, if she were not back by nightfall?
At a quarter to eight he heard the
car. A great weight lifted from off his heart;
he hurried down. She was getting out pale
and tired-looking, but nothing wrong. He met
her in the hall.
“You’ve frightened me. Where have
you been?”
“To Robin Hill. I’m
sorry, dear. I had to go; I’ll tell you
afterwards.” And, with a flying kiss, she
ran up-stairs.
Soames waited in the drawing-room.
To Robin Hill! What did that portend?
It was not a subject they could discuss
at dinner consecrated to the susceptibilities
of the butler. The agony of nerves Soames had
been through, the relief he felt at her safety, softened
his power to condemn what she had done, or resist
what she was going to do; he waited in a relaxed stupor
for her revelation. Life was a queer business.
There he was at sixty-five and no more in command of
things than if he had not spent forty years in building
up security always something one couldn’t
get on terms with! In the pocket of his dinner-jacket
was a letter from Annette. She was coming back
in a fortnight. He knew nothing of what she had
been doing out there. And he was glad that he
did not. Her absence had been a relief. Out
of sight was out of mind! And now she was coming
back. Another worry! And the Bolderby Old
Crome was gone Dumetrius had got it all
because that anonymous letter had put it out of his
thoughts. He furtively remarked the strained
look on his daughter’s face, as if she too were
gazing at a picture that she couldn’t buy.
He almost wished the war back. Worries didn’t
seem, then, quite so worrying. From the caress
in her voice, the look on her face, he became certain
that she wanted something from him, uncertain whether
it would be wise of him to give it her. He pushed
his savoury away uneaten, and even joined her in a
cigarette.
After dinner she set the electric
piano-player going. And he augured the worst
when she sat down on a cushion footstool at his knee,
and put her hand on his.
“Darling, be nice to me.
I had to see Jon he wrote to me. He’s
going to try what he can do with his mother.
But I’ve been thinking. But it’s
really in your hands, Father. If you’d
persuade her that it doesn’t mean renewing the
past in any way! That I shall stay yours, and
Jon will stay hers; that you need never see him or
her, and she need never see you or me! Only you
could persuade her, dear, because only you could promise.
One can’t promise for other people. Surely
it wouldn’t be too awkward for you to see her
just this once now that Jon’s father
is dead?”
“Too awkward?” Soames
repeated. “The whole thing’s preposterous.”
“You know,” said Fleur,
without looking up, “you wouldn’t mind
seeing her, really.”
Soames was silent. Her words
had expressed a truth too deep for him to admit.
She slipped her fingers between his own hot,
slim, eager, they clung there. This child of
his would corkscrew her way into a brick wall!
“What am I to do, if you won’t,
Father?” she said very softly.
“I’ll do anything for
your happiness,” said Soames; “but this
isn’t for your happiness.”
“Oh! it is; it is!”
“It’ll only stir things up,” he
said grimly.
“But they are stirred up.
The thing is to quiet them. To make her feel
that this is just our lives, and has nothing to
do with yours or hers. You can do it, Father,
I know you can.”
“You know a great deal, then,” was Soames’
glum answer.
“If you will, Jon and I will wait a year two
years if you like.”
“It seems to me,” murmured
Soames, “that you care nothing about what I
feel.”
Fleur pressed his hand against her cheek.
“I do, darling. But you
wouldn’t like me to be awfully miserable.”
How she wheedled to get her ends! And trying
with all his might to think she really cared for him he
was not sure not sure. All she cared
for was this boy! Why should he help her to get
this boy, who was killing her affection for himself?
Why should he? By the laws of the Forsytes it
was foolish! There was nothing to be had out of
it nothing! To give her to that boy!
To pass her into the enemy’s camp, under the
influence of the woman who had injured him so deeply!
Slowly inevitably he would lose
this flower of his life! And suddenly he was conscious
that his hand was wet. His heart gave a little
painful jump. He couldn’t bear her to cry.
He put his other hand quickly over hers, and a tear
dropped on that, too. He couldn’t go on
like this! “Well, well,” he said,
“I’ll think it over, and do what I can.
Come, come!” If she must have it for her happiness she
must; he couldn’t refuse to help her. And
lest she should begin to thank him he got out of his
chair and went up to the piano-player making
that noise! It ran down, as he reached it, with
a faint buzz. That musical box of his nursery
days: “The Harmonious Blacksmith,”
“Glorious Port” the thing had
always made him miserable when his mother set it going
on Sunday afternoons. Here it was again the
same thing, only larger, more expensive, and now it
played: “The Wild Wild Women” and
“The Policeman’s Holiday,” and he
was no longer in black velvet with a sky-blue collar.
‘Profond’s right,’ he thought, ‘there’s
nothing in it! We’re all progressing to
the grave!’ And with that surprising mental
comment he walked out.
He did not see Fleur again that night.
But, at breakfast, her eyes followed him about with
an appeal he could not escape not that he
intended to try. No! He had made up his mind
to the nerve-racking business. He would go to
Robin Hill to that house of memories.
A pleasant memory the last! Of going
down to keep that boy’s father and Irene apart
by threatening divorce. He had often thought,
since, that it had clenched their union. And,
now, he was going to clench the union of that boy
with his girl. ‘I don’t know what
I’ve done,’ he thought, ‘to have
such things thrust on me!’ He went up by train
and down by train, and from the station walked by
the long rising lane, still very much as he remembered
it over thirty years ago. Funny so
near London! Some one evidently was holding on
to the land there. This speculation soothed him,
moving between the high hedges slowly, so as not to
get overheated, though the day was chill enough.
After all was said and done there was something real
about land, it didn’t shift. Land, and
good pictures! The values might fluctuate a bit,
but on the whole they were always going up worth
holding on to, in a world where there was such a lot
of unreality, cheap building, changing fashions, such
a “Here to-day and gone to-morrow” spirit.
The French were right, perhaps, with their peasant
proprietorship, though he had no opinion of the French.
One’s bit of land! Something solid in it!
He had heard peasant-proprietors described as a pig-headed
lot; had heard young Mont call his father a pig-headed
Morning Poster disrespectful young devil.
Well, there were worse things than being pig-headed
or reading The Morning Post. There was Profond
and his tribe, and all these Labour chaps, and loud-mouthed
politicians, and “wild, wild women”!
A lot of worse things! And, suddenly, Soames
became conscious of feeling weak, and hot, and shaky.
Sheer nerves at the meeting before him! As Aunt
Juley might have said quoting “Superior
Dosset” his nerves were “in
a proper fantigue.” He could see the house
now among its trees, the house he had watched being
built, intending it for himself and this woman, who,
by such strange fate, had lived in it with another
after all! He began to think of Dumetrius, Local
Loans, and other forms of investment. He could
not afford to meet her with his nerves all shaking;
he who represented the Day of Judgment for her on earth
as it was in heaven; he, legal ownership, personified,
meeting lawless beauty, incarnate. His dignity
demanded impassivity during this embassy designed
to link their offspring, who, if she had behaved herself,
would have been brother and sister. That wretched
tune: “The Wild Wild Women” kept
running in his head, perversely, for tunes did not
run there as a rule. Passing the poplars in front
of the house, he thought: ‘How they’ve
grown; I had them planted!’
A maid answered his ring.
“Will you say Mr. Forsyte, on a very
special matter.”
If she realised who he was, quite
probably she would not see him. ’By George!’
he thought, hardening as the tug came: ’It’s
a topsyturvy affair!’
The maid came back. Would the gentleman state
his business, please?
“Say it concerns Mr. Jon,” said Soames.
And once more he was alone in that
hall with the pool of grey-white marble designed by
her first lover. Ah! she had been a bad lot had
loved two men, and not himself! He must remember
that when he came face to face with her once more.
And suddenly he saw her in the opening chink between
the long heavy purple curtains, swaying, as if in
hesitation; the old perfect poise and line, the old
startled dark-eyed gravity; the old calm defensive
voice: “Will you come in, please?”
He passed through that opening.
As in the picture-gallery and the confectioner’s
shop, she seemed to him still beautiful. And this
was the first time the very first since
he married her five and thirty years ago, that he
was speaking to her without the legal right to call
her his. She was not wearing black one
of that fellow’s radical notions, he supposed.
“I apologise for coming,”
he said glumly; “but this business must be settled
one way or the other.”
“Won’t you sit down?”
“No, thank you.”
Anger at his false position, impatience
of ceremony between them, mastered him, and words
came tumbling out:
“It’s an infernal mischance;
I’ve done my best to discourage it. I consider
my daughter crazy, but I’ve got into the habit
of indulging her; that’s why I’m here.
I suppose you’re fond of your son.”
“Devotedly.”
“Well?”
“It rests with him.”
He had a sense of being met and baffled.
Always always she had baffled him, even
in those old first married days.
“It’s a mad notion,” he said.
“It is.”
“If you had only!
Well they might have been ”
he did not finish that sentence “brother and
sister and all this saved,” but he saw her shudder
as if he had, and stung by the sight, he crossed over
to the window. Out there the trees had not
grown they couldn’t, they were old!
“So far as I’m concerned,”
he said, “you may make your mind easy. I
desire to see neither you nor your son if this marriage
comes about. Young people in these days are are
unaccountable. But I can’t bear to see
my daughter unhappy. What am I to say to her when
I go back?”
“Please say to her, as I said
to you, that it rests with Jon.”
“You don’t oppose it?”
“With all my heart; not with my lips.”
Soames stood, biting his finger.
“I remember an evening ”
he said suddenly; and was silent. What was there what
was there in this woman that would not fit into the
four comers of his hate or condemnation? “Where
is he your son?”
“Up in his father’s studio, I think.”
“Perhaps you’d have him down.”
He watched her ring the bell, he watched the maid
come in.
“Please tell Mr. Jon that I want him.”
“If it rests with him,”
said Soames hurriedly, when the maid was gone, “I
suppose I may take it for granted that this unnatural
marriage will take place: in that case there’ll
be formalities. Whom do I deal with Herring’s?”
Irene nodded.
“You don’t propose to live with them?”
Irene shook her head.
“What happens to this house?”
“It will be as Jon wishes.”
“This house,” said Soames suddenly:
“I had hopes when I began it. If
they live in it their children!
They say there’s such a thing as
Nemesis. Do you believe in it?”
“Yes.”
“Oh! You do!” He
had come back from the window, and was standing close
to her, who, in the curve of her grand piano, was,
as it were, embayed.
“I’m not likely to see
you again,” he said slowly: “Will
you shake hands,” his lip quivered, the words
came out jerkily, “and let the past die?”
He held out his hand. Her pale face grew paler,
her eyes so dark, rested immovably on his, but her
hands remained clasped in front of her. He heard
a sound and turned. That boy was standing in the
opening of the curtains. Very queer he looked,
hardly recognisable as the young fellow he had seen
in the Gallery off Cork Street very queer;
much older, no youth in the face at all haggard,
rigid, his hair ruffled, his eyes deep in his head.
Soames made an effort, and said with a lift of his
lip, not quite a smile nor quite a sneer:
“Well, young man! I’m
here for my daughter; it rests with you, it seems this
matter. Your mother leaves it in your hands.”
The boy continued staring at his mother’s face,
and made no answer.
“For my daughter’s sake
I’ve brought myself to come,” said Soames.
“What am I to say to her when I go back?”
Still looking at his mother, the boy said, quietly:
“Tell Fleur that it’s
no good, please; I must do as my father wished before
he died.”
“Jon!”
“It’s all right, Mother.”
In a kind of stupefaction Soames looked
from one to the other; then, taking up hat and umbrella,
which he had put down on a chair, he walked towards
the curtains. The boy stood aside for him to go
by. He passed through and heard the grate of
the rings as the curtains were drawn behind him.
The sound liberated something in his chest.
‘So that’s that!’ he thought, and
passed out of the front door.