i
But when to-morrow came he did not
kiss her. He was annoyed with Anne because she
insisted on taking a gloomy view of his father’s
illness.
The doctors couldn’t agree about
it. Dr. Ransome of Wyck said it was gastritis.
Dr. Harper of Cheltenham said it was colitis.
He had had that before and had got better. Now
he was getting worse, fast. For the last three
days he couldn’t keep down his chicken and fish.
Yesterday not even his milk. To-day, not even
his ice-water. Then they both said it was acute
gastritis.
“He’s never been like this before, Jerrold.”
“No. But that doesn’t
mean he isn’t going to get better. People
with acute gastritis do get better. It’s
enough to make him die, everybody insisting that he’s
going to. And it’s rot sending for Eliot.”
That was what Anne had done.
Eliot had written to her from London:
10 Welbeck St., Septh,
1910.
My dear Anne:
I wish you’d tell me how Father
really is. Nobody but you has any intelligence
that matters. Between Mother’s wails and
Jerrold’s optimism I don’t seem to
be getting the truth. If it’s serious
I’ll come down at once.
Always yours,
Eliot.
And Anne had answered:
My dear Eliot,
It is serious. Dr. Ransome
and Dr. Harper say so. They think now it’s
acute gastritis. I wish you’d come down.
Jerrold is heart-breaking. He won’t
see it; because he couldn’t bear it if he
did. I know Auntie wants you.
Always very affectionately
yours,
Anne.
She addressed the letter to Dr. Eliot
Fielding, for Eliot had taken his degree.
And on that to-morrow of Jerrold’s
Eliot had come. Jerrold told him he was a perfect
idiot, rushing down like that, as if Daddy hadn’t
an hour to live.
“You’ll simply terrify
him,” he said. “He hasn’t got
a chance with all you people grousing and croaking
round him.”
And he went off to play in the lawn
tennis tournament at Medlicote as a protest against
the general pessimism. His idea seemed to be that
if he, Jerrold, could play in a lawn tennis tournament,
his father couldn’t be seriously ill.
“It’s perfectly awful
of Jerrold,” his mother said. “I can’t
make him out. He adores his father, yet he behaves
as if he hadn’t any feeling.”
She and Anne were sitting in the lounge
after luncheon, waiting for Eliot to come from his
father’s room.
“Didn’t you tell him, Anne?”
“I did everything I know....
But darling, he isn’t unfeeling. He does
it because he can’t bear to think Uncle Robert
won’t get better. He’s trying to
make himself believe he will. I think he does
believe it. But if he stayed away from the tournament
that would mean he didn’t.”
“If only I could.
But I must. I must believe it if I’m
not to go mad. I don’t know what I shall
do if he doesn’t get better. I can’t
live without him. It’s been so perfect,
Anne. It can’t come to an end like this.
It can’t happen. It would be too cruel.”
“It would,” Anne said.
But she thought: “It just will happen.
It’s happening now.”
“Here’s Eliot,” she said.
Eliot came down the stairs. Adeline went to him.
“Oh Eliot, what do you think of him?”
Eliot put her off. “I can’t tell
you yet.”
“You think he’s very bad?”
“Very.”
“But you don’t think there isn’t
any hope?”
“I can’t tell yet.
There may be. He wants you to go to him.
Don’t talk much to him. Don’t let
him talk. And don’t, whatever you do, let
him move an inch.”
Adeline went upstairs. Anne and
Eliot were alone. “You can tell,”
she said. “You don’t think there’s
any hope.”
“I don’t. There’s
something quite horribly wrong. His temperature’s
a hundred and three.”
“Is that bad?”
“Very.”
“I do wish Jerry hadn’t gone.”
“So do I.”
“It’ll be worse for him, Eliot, than for
any of us when he knows.”
“I know. But he’s
always been like that, as long as I can remember.
He simply can’t stand trouble. It’s
the only thing he funks. And his funking it wouldn’t
matter if he’d stand and face it. But he
runs away. He’s running away now.
Say what you like, it’s a sort of cowardice.”
“It’s his only fault.”
“I know it is. But it’s
a pretty serious one, Anne. And he’ll have
to pay for it. The world’s chock full of
suffering and all sorts of horrors, and you can’t
go turning your back to them as Jerrold does without
paying for it. Why, he won’t face anything
that’s even a little unpleasant. He won’t
listen if you try to tell him. He won’t
read a book that hasn’t a happy ending.
He won’t go to a play that isn’t a comedy...
It’s an attitude I can’t understand.
I don’t like horrors any more than he does;
but when I hear about them I want to go straight where
they are and do something to stop them. That’s
what I chose my profession for.”
“I know. Because you’re
so sorry. So sorry. But Jerry’s sorry
too. So sorry that he can’t bear it.”
“But he’s got to bear
it. There it is and he’s got to take it.
He’s only making things worse for himself by
holding out and refusing. Jerrold will never
be any good till he has taken it. Till
he’s suffered damnably.”
“I don’t want him to suffer.
I don’t want it. I can’t bear him
to bear it.”
“He must. He’s got to.”
“I’d do anything to save him. But
I can’t.”
“You can’t. And you
mustn’t try to. It would be the best thing
that could happen to him.”
“Oh no, not to Jerry.”
“Yes. To Jerry. If
he’s ever to be any good. You don’t
want him to be a moral invalid, do you?”
“No... Oh Eliot, that’s Uncle Robert’s
door.”
Upstairs the door opened and shut
and Adeline came to the head of the stairs.
“Oh Eliot, come quick ”
Eliot rushed upstairs. And Anne
heard Adeline sobbing hysterically and crying out
to him.
“I can’t I can’t.
I can not bear it!”
She saw her trail off along the gallery
to her room; she heard her lock herself in. She
had every appearance of running away from something.
From something she could not bear. Half an hour
passed before Eliot came back to Anne.
“What was it?” she said.
“What I thought. Gastric ulcer. He’s
had a haemorrhage.”
That was what Aunt Adeline had run away from.
“Look here, Anne, I’ve
got to send Scarrott in the car for Ransome. Then
he’ll have to go on to Cheltenham to fetch Colin.”
“Colin?” This was the end then.
“Yes. He’d better
come. And I want you to do something. I want
you to drive over to Medlicote and bring Jerrold back.
It’s beastly for you. But you’ll
do it, won’t you?”
“I’ll do anything.”
It was the beastliest thing she had ever had to do,
but she did it.
From where she drew up in the drive
at Medlicote she could see the tennis courts.
She could see Jerrold playing in the men’s singles.
He stood up to the net, smashing down the ball at
the volley; his back was turned to her as he stood.
She heard him shout. She heard
him laugh. She saw him turn to come up the court,
facing her.
And when he saw her, he knew.
ii
He had waited ten minutes in the gallery
outside his father’s room. Eliot had asked
Anne to go in and help him while Jerrold stood by the
door to keep his mother out. She was no good,
Eliot said. She lost her head just when he wanted
her to do things. You could have heard her all
over the house crying out that she couldn’t bear
it.
She opened her door and looked out.
When she saw Jerrold she came to him, slowly, supporting
herself by the gallery rail. Her eyes were sore
with crying and there was a flushed thickening about
the edges of her mouth.
“So you’ve come back,”
she said. “You might go in and tell me how
he is.”
“Haven’t you seen him?”
“Of course I’ve seen him.
But I’m afraid, Jerrold. It was awful, awful,
the haemorrhage. You can’t think how awful.
I daren’t go in and see it again. I shouldn’t
be a bit of good if I did. I should only faint,
or be ill or something. I simply can not bear
it.”
“You mustn’t go in,” he said.
“Who’s with him?”
“Eliot and Anne.”
“Anne?”
“Yes.”
“Jerrold, to think that Anne should be with
him and me not.”
“Well, she’ll be all right. She can
stand things.”
“It’s all very well for Anne. He
isn’t her husband.”
“You’d better go away, Mother.”
“Not before you tell me how he is. Go in,
Jerrold.”
He knocked and went in.
His father was sitting up in his white,
slender bed, raised on Eliot’s arm. He
saw his face, strained and smoothed with exhaustion,
sallow white against the pillows, the back-drawn-mouth,
the sharp, peaked nose, the iron grey hair, pointed
with sweat, sticking to the forehead. A face
of piteous, tired patience, waiting. He saw Eliot’s
face, close, close beside it by the edge of the pillow,
grave and sombre and intent.
Anne was crossing the room from the
bed to the washstand. Her face was very white
but she had an air of great competence and composure.
She carried a white basin brimming with a reddish
froth. He saw little red specks splashed on the
sleeve of her white linen gown. He shuddered.
Eliot made a sign to him and he went
back to the door where his mother waited.
“Is he better?” she whispered. “Can
I come in?”
Jerrold shook his head. “Better not yet.”
“You’ll send for me if if ”
“Yes.”
He heard her trailing away along the
gallery. He went into the room. He stood
at the foot of the bed and stared, stared at his father
lying there in Eliot’s arms. He would have
liked to have been in Eliot’s place, close to
him, close, holding him. As it was he could do
nothing but stand and look at him with that helpless,
agonized stare. He had to look at him,
to look and look, punishing himself with sight for
not having seen.
His eyes felt hot and brittle; they
kept on filling with tears, burned themselves dry
and filled again. His hand clutched the edge of
the footrail as if only so he could keep his stand
there.
A stream of warm air came through
the open windows. Everything in the room stood
still in it, unnaturally still, waiting. He was
aware of the pattern of the window curtains.
Blue parrots perched on brown branches among red flowers
on a white ground; it all hung very straight and still,
waiting.
Anne looked at him and spoke.
She was standing beside the bed now, holding the clean
basin and a towel, ready.
“Jerrold, you might go and get
some more ice. It’s in the bucket in the
bath-room. Break it up into little pieces, like
that. You split it with a needle.”
He went to the bath-room, moving like
a sleepwalker, wrapped in his dream-like horror.
He found the ice, he broke it into little pieces,
like that. He was very careful and conscientious
about the size, and grateful to Anne for giving him
something to do. Then he went back again and
took up his station at the foot of the bed and waited.
His father still lay back on his pillow, propped by
Eliot’s arm. His hands were folded on his
chest above the bedclothes.
Anne still stood by the bed holding
her basin and her towel ready. From time to time
they gave him little pieces of ice to suck.
Once he opened his eyes, looked round
the room and spoke. “Is your mother there?”
“Do you want her?” Eliot said.
“No. It’ll only upset her. Don’t
let her come in.”
He closed his eyes and opened them again.
“Is that Anne?”
“Yes. Who did you think it was?”
“I don’t know...I’m sorry, Anne.”
“Darling ” the word broke from
a tender inarticulate sound she made.
Then: “Jerrold ,” he said.
Jerrold came closer. His father’s
right arm unfolded itself and stretched out towards
him along the bed.
Anne whispered, “Take his hand.”
Jerrold took it. He could feel it tremble as
he touched it.
“It’s all right, Jerry,”
he said. “It’s all right.”
He gave a little choking cough. His eyes darkened
with a sudden anxiety, a fear. His hand slackened.
His head sank forward. Anne came between them.
Jerrold felt the slight thrust of her body pushing
him aside. He saw her arms stretched out, and
the white gleam of the basin, then, the haemorrhage,
jet after jet. Then his father’s face tilted
up on Eliot’s arm, very white, and Anne stooping
over him tenderly, and her hand with the towel, wiping
the red foam from his lips.
Then eyes glazed between half-shut
lids, mouth open, and the noise of death.
Eliot’s arm laid down its burden.
He got up and put his hand on Jerrold’s shoulder
and led him out of the room. “Go out into
the air,” he said. “I’ll tell
Mother.”
Jerrold staggered downstairs, and
through the hall and out into the blinding sunshine.
Far down the avenue he could hear
the whirring of the car coming back from Cheltenham;
the lines of the beech trees opened fan-wise to let
it through. He saw Colin sitting up beside Scarrott.
Above his head a lattice ground and
clattered. Somebody was going through the front
rooms, shutting the windows and pulling down the blinds.
Jerrold turned back into the house to meet Colin there.
Upstairs his father’s door opened
and shut softly and Anne came out. She moved
along the gallery to her room. Between the dark
rails he could see her white skirt, and her arm, hanging,
and the little specks of red splashed on the white
sleeve.
iii
Jerrold was afraid of Anne, and he
saw no end to his fear. He had been dashed against
the suffering he was trying to put away from him and
the shock of it had killed in one hour his young adolescent
passion. She would be for ever associated with
that suffering. He would never see Anne without
thinking of his father’s death. He would
never think of his father’s death without seeing
Anne. He would see her for ever through an atmosphere
of pain and horror, moving as she had moved in his
father’s room. He couldn’t see her
any other way. This intolerable memory of her
effaced all other memories, memories of the child Anne
with the rabbit, of the young, happy Anne who walked
and rode and played with him, of the strange, mysterious
Anne he had found yesterday in her room at dawn.
That Anne belonged to a time he had done with.
There was nothing left for him but the Anne who had
come to tell him his father was dying, who had brought
him to his father’s death-bed, who had bound
herself up inseparably with his death, who only moved
from the scene of it to appear dressed in black and
carrying the flowers for his funeral.
She was wrapped round and round with
death and death, nothing but death, and with Jerrold’s
suffering. When he saw her he suffered again.
And as his way had always been to avoid suffering,
he avoided Anne. His eyes turned from her if
he saw her coming. He spoke to her without looking
at her. He tried not to think of her. When
he had gone he would try not to remember.
His one idea was to go, to get away
from the place his father had died in and from the
people who had seen him die. He wanted new unknown
faces, new unknown voices that would not remind him------
Ten days after his father’s
death the letter came from John Severn. He wrote:
“... I’m delighted
about Sir Charles Durham. You are a lucky devil.
Any chap Sir Charles takes a fancy to is bound to
get on. He can’t help himself. You’re
not afraid of hard work, and I can tell you we give
our Assistant Commissioners all they want and a lot
more.
“It’ll be nice if you
bring Anne out with you. If you’re stationed
anywhere near us we ought to give her the jolliest
time in her life between us.”
“But Jerrold,” said Adeline
when she had read this letter. “You’re
not going out now. You must wire and tell
him so.”
“Why not now?”
“Because, my dear boy, you’ve
got the estate and you must stay and look after it.”
“Barker’ll look after it. That’s
what he’s there for.”
“Nonsense, Jerrold. There’s no need
for you to go out to India.”
“There is need. I’ve got to
go.”
“You haven’t. There’s
every need for you to stop where you are. Eliot
will be going abroad if Sir Martin Crozier takes him
on. And if Colin goes into the diplomatic service
Goodness knows where he’ll be sent to.”
“Colin won’t be sent anywhere for another
four years.”
“No. But he’ll be
at Cheltenham or Cambridge half the time. I must
have one son at home.”
“Sorry, Mother. But I can’t
stand it here. I’ve got to go, and I’m
going.”
To all her arguments and entreaties
he had one answer: He had got to go and he was
going.
Adeline left him and went to look
for Eliot whom she found in his room packing to go
back to London. She came sobbing to Eliot.
“It’s too dreadfully hard.
As if it weren’t bad enough to lose my darling
husband I must lose all my sons. Not one of you
will stay with me. And there’s Anne going
off with Jerrold. She may have him with her
and I mayn’t. She’s taken everything
from me. You’d have said if a wife’s
place was anywhere it was with her dying husband.
But no. She was allowed to be with him and
I was turned out of his room.”
“My dear Mother, you know you weren’t.”
“I was. You turned me out yourself,
Eliot, and had Anne in.”
“Only because you couldn’t stand it and
she could.”
“I daresay. She hadn’t the same feelings.”
“She had her own feelings, anyhow,
only she controlled them. She stood it because
she never thought of her feelings. She only thought
of what she could do to help. She was magnificent.”
“Of course you think so, because
you’re in love with her. She must take
you, too. As if Jerrold wasn’t enough.”
“She hasn’t taken me.
She probably won’t if I ask her. You shouldn’t
say those things, Mother. You don’t know
what you’re talking about.”
“I know I’m the most unhappy
woman in the world. How am I going to live?
I can’t stand it if Jerry goes.”
“He’s got to go, Mother.”
“He hasn’t. Jerrold’s
place is here. He’s got a duty and a responsibility.
Your dear father didn’t leave him the estate
for him to let it go to wrack and ruin. It’s
most cruel and wrong of him.”
“He can’t do anything
else. Don’t you see why he wants to go?
He can’t stand the place without Father.”
“I’ve got to stand it. So he may.”
“Well, he won’t, that’s all.
He simply funks it.”
“He always was an arrant coward
where trouble was concerned. He doesn’t
think of other people and how bad it is for them.
He leaves me when I want him most.”
“It’s hard on you, Mother;
but you can’t stop him. And I don’t
think you ought to try.”
“Oh, everybody tells me what
I ought to do. My children can do as they
like. So can Anne. She and Jerrold can go
off to India and amuse themselves as if nothing had
happened and it’s all right.”
But Anne didn’t go off to India.
When she spoke to Jerrold about going
with him his hard, unhappy face showed her that he
didn’t want her.
“You’d rather I didn’t go,”
she said gently.
“It isn’t that, Anne.
It isn’t that I don’t want you. It’s it’s
simply that I want to get away from here, to get away
from everything that reminds me I shall
go off my head if I’ve got to remember every
minute, every time I see somebody who I
want to make a clean break and grow a new memory.”
“I understand. You needn’t tell me.”
“Mother doesn’t. I wish you’d
make her see it.”
“I’ll try. But it’s all right,
Jerrold. I won’t go.”
“Of course you’ll go.
Only you won’t think me a brute if I don’t
take you out with me?”
“I’m not going out with
you. In fact, I don’t think I’m going
at all. I only wanted to because of going out
together and because of the chance of seeing you when
you got leave. I only thought of the heavenly
times we might have had.”
“Don’t don’t, Anne.”
“No, I won’t. After
all, I shouldn’t care a rap about Ambala if you
weren’t there. And you may be stationed
miles away. I’d rather go back to Ilford
and do farming. Ever so much rather. India
would really have wasted a lot of time.”
“Oh, Anne, I’ve spoilt all your pleasure.”
“No, you haven’t. There isn’t
any pleasure to spoil now.”
“What a brute what a cad you must
think me.”
“I don’t, Jerry.
It’s not your fault. Things have just happened.
And you see, I understand. I felt the same about
Auntie Adeline after Mother died. I didn’t
want to see her because she reminded me and
yet, really, I loved her all the time.”
“You won’t go back on me for it?”
“I wouldn’t go back on
you whatever you did. And you mustn’t keep
on thinking I want to go to India. I don’t
care a rap about India itself. I hate Anglo-Indians
and I simply loathe hot places. And Daddy doesn’t
want me out there, really. I shall be much happier
on my farm. And it’ll save a lot of expense,
too. Just think what my outfit and passage would
have cost.”
“You wouldn’t have cared what it cost
if ”
“There isn’t any if.
I’m not lying, really.” Not lying.
Not lying. She would have given up more than
India to save Jerrold that pang of memory. Only,
when it was all over and he had sailed without her,
she realized in one wounding flash that what she had
given up was Jerrold himself.