i
He went through the wide empty house,
looking through all the rooms, trying to find some
memory of the happiness he had had there long ago.
The house was full of Anne. Anne’s figure
crossed the floors before him, her head turned over
her shoulder to see if he were coming; her voice called
to him from the doorways, her running feet sounded
on the stairs. That was her place at the table;
that was the armchair she used to curl up in; just
there, on the landing, he had kissed her when he went
to school.
They had given his mother’s
room to Maisie, and they had put his things into the
room beyond, his father’s room. Everything
was in its place as it had been in his father’s
time, the great wardrobe, the white marble-topped
washstand, the bed he had died on. He saw him
lying there and Anne going to and fro between the
washstand and the bed. The parrot curtains hung
from the windows, straight and still.
Jerrold shuddered as he looked at these things.
They had thought that he would want
to sleep in that room because he was married, because
Maisie would have the room it led out of.
But he couldn’t sleep in it.
He couldn’t stay in it a minute; he would never
pass its door without that sickening pang of memory.
He moved his things across the gallery into Anne’s
room.
He would sleep there; he would sleep
in the white bed that Anne had slept in.
He told himself that he had to be
near Colin; there was only the passage between and
their doors could stand open; that was why he wanted
to sleep there. But he knew that was not why.
He wanted to sleep there because there was no other
room where he could feel Anne so near him, where he
could see her so clearly. When the dawn came she
would be with him, sitting in her chair by the window.
The window looked to the west, to Upper Speed and
the Manor Farm house. The house was down there
behind the trees, and somewhere there, jutting out
above the porch, was the window of Anne’s room.
He looked at his watch. One o’clock.
At two he would go and see Anne.
ii
When Jerrold called at the Manor Farm
house Anne was out. Old Ballinger came slouching
up from the farmyard to tell him that Miss Anne had
gone up to the Far Acres field to try the new tractor.
The Far Acres field lay at the western
end of the estate. Jerrold followed her there.
Five furrows, five bright brown bands on the sallow
stubble, marked out the Far Acres into five plots.
In the turning space at the top corner he saw Anne
on her black horse and Colin standing beside her.
With a great clanking and clanging
the new American, tractor struggled towards them up
the hill, dragging its plough. It stopped and
turned at the “headland” as Jerrold came
up.
A clear, light wind blew over the
hill and he felt a sudden happiness and excitement.
He was beginning to take an interest in his land.
He shouted:
“I say, Anne, you look like
Napoleon at the battle of Waterloo.”
“Oh, not Waterloo, I hope. I’m going
to win my battle.”
“Well, Marengo Austerlitz whatever
battles he did win. Does Curtis understand that
infernal thing?”
Young Curtis, sulky and stolid on
his driver’s seat, stared at his new master.
“Yes. He’s been taught
motor mechanics. He’s quite good at it ...
If only he’d do what you tell him. Curtis,
I said you were not to use those disc coulters for
this field. I’ve had three smashed in two
weeks. They’re no earthly good for stony
soil.”
“Tis n’ so bad ’ere as it is at
the east end, miss.”
“Well, we’ll see. You can let her
go now.”
With a fearful grinding and clanking
the tractor started. The revolving disc coulter
cut the earth; the three great shares gripped it and
turned it on one side. But the earth, instead
of slanting off clear from the furrows, fell back
again. Anne dismounted and ran after the tractor
and stopped it.
“He hasn’t got his plough set right,”
she said. “It’s too deep in.”
She stooped, and did something mysterious
and efficient with a lever; the wheels dipped, raising
the shares to their right level, and the tractor set
off again. This time the earth parted clean from
the furrows with the noise of surge, and three slanting,
glistening waves ran the length of the field in the
wake of the triple plough.
“Oh, Jerrold, look at those
three lovely furrows. Look at the pace it goes.
This field will be ploughed up in a day or two.
Colin, aren’t you pleased?”
The tractor was coming towards them,
making a most horrible noise.
“No,” he said, “I
don’t like the row it makes. Can’t
I go, now I’ve seen what the beastly thing can
do?”
“Yes. You’d better go if you can’t
stand it.”
Colin went with quick, desperate strides
down the field away from the terrifying sound of the
tractor.
They looked after him sorrowfully.
“He’s not right yet. I don’t
think he’ll ever be able to stand noises.”
“You must give him time, Anne.”
“Time? He’s had three
years. It’s heart-breaking. I must
just keep him out of the way of the tractors, that’s
all.”
She mounted her horse and went riding
up and down the field, abreast of the plough.
Jerrold waited for her at the gate of the field.
iii
It was Sunday evening between five and six.
Anne was in the house, in the great
Jacobean room on the first floor. Barker had
judged it too large and too dilapidated to live in,
and it had been left empty in his time. Eliot
had had it restored and Jerrold had furnished it.
Black oak bookcases from the Manor stretched along
the walls, for Jerrold had given Eliot half of their
father’s books. This room would be too
dilapidated to live in, and it had been left empty
in his time. Eliot had had it restored and Jerrold
had furnished it. Black oak bookcases from the
Manor stretched along the walls, for Jerrold had given
Eliot half of their father’s books. This
room would be Eliot’s library when he came down.
It was now Anne’s sitting-room.
The leaded windows were thrown open
to the grey evening and a drizzling rain; but a fire
blazed on the great hearth under the arch of the carved
stone chimney-piece. Anne’s couch was drawn
up before it. She lay stretched out on it, tired
with her week’s work.
She was all alone in the house.
The gardener and his wife went out together every
Sunday to spend the evening with their families at
Medlicote or Wyck. She was not sorry when they
were gone; the stillness of the house rested her.
But she missed Colin. Last Sunday he had been
there, sitting beside her in his chair by the hearth,
reading. Today he was with Jerrold at the Manor.
The soft drizzle turned to a quick patter of rain;
a curtain of rain fell, covering the grey fields between
the farm and the Manor, cutting her off.
She was listening to the rain when
she heard the click of the gate and feet on the garden
path. They stopped on the flagstones under her
window. Jerrold’s voice called up to her.
“Anne Anne, are you there? Can
I come up?”
“Rather.”
He came rushing up the stairs. He was in the
room now.
“How nice of you to come on this beastly evening.”
“That’s why I came.
I thought it would be so rotten for you all alone
down here.”
“What have you done with Colin?”
“Left him up there. He was making no end
of a row on the piano.”
“Oh Jerrold, if he’s playing again he’ll
be all right.”
“He didn’t sound as if there was much
the matter with him.”
“You never can tell. He can’t stand
those tractors.”
“We must keep him away from
the beastly things. I suppose we’ve got
to have ’em?”
“I’m afraid so. They
save no end of labour, and labour’s short and
dear.”
“Is that why you’ve been working yourself
to death?”
“I haven’t. Why, do I look dead?”
“No. Eliot told me. He saw you at
it.”
“I only take a hand at hay time
and harvest. All the rest of the year it’s
just riding about and seeing that other people work.
And Colin does half of that now.”
“All the same, I think it’s about time
you stopped.”
“But if I stop the whole thing’ll
stop. The men must have somebody over them.”
“There’s me.”
“You don’t know anything
about farming, Jerry dear. You don’t know
a teg from a wether.”
“I suppose I can learn if Colin’s learnt.
Or I can get another Barker.”
“Not so easy. Don’t
you like my looking after your land, then? Aren’t
you pleased with me? I haven’t done so badly,
you know. Seven hundred acres.”
“You’ve been simply splendid.
I shall never forget what you’ve done. And
I shall never forgive myself for letting you do it.
I’d no idea what it meant.”
“It’s only meant that
Colin’s better and I’ve been happier than
I ever thought I could have been.”
“Happier? Weren’t you happy then?”
She didn’t answer. They
were on dangerous ground. If they began talking
about happiness
“If I gave it up to-morrow,”
she said, “I should only go and work on another
farm.”
“Would you?”
“Jerrold do you want me to go?”
“Want you?”
“Yes. You did once. At least, you
wanted to get away from me.”
“I didn’t know what I
was doing. If I had known I shouldn’t have
done it. I can’t talk about that, Anne.
It doesn’t bear thinking about.”
“No. But, Jerrold tell
me the truth. Do you want me to go because of
Colin?”
“Colin?”
“Yes. Because of what your mother told
you?”
“How do you know what she told me?”
“She told Eliot.”
“And he told you? Good God! what
was he thinking of?”
“He thought it better for me to know it.
It was better.”
“How could it be?”
“I can’t tell you...Jerrold, it isn’t
true.”
“I know it isn’t.”
“But you thought it was.”
“When did I think?”
“Then; when you came to see me.”
“Did I?”
“Yes. And you’re not going to lie
about it now.”
“Well, if I did I’ve paid for it.”
(What did he mean? Paid for it? It was she
who had paid.)
“When did you know it wasn’t true?”
she said.
“Three months after, when Eliot
wrote and told me. It was too late then....
If only you’d told me at the time. Why didn’t
you?”
“But I didn’t know you thought it.
How could I know?”
“No. How could you?
Who would have believed that things could have happened
so damnably as that?”
“But it’s all right now. Why did
you say it was too late?”
“Because it was too late. I was
married.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that I lied when I told
you it made no difference. It made that difference.
If I hadn’t thought that you and Colin were...if
I hadn’t thought that, I wouldn’t have
married Maisie. I’d have married you.”
“Don’t say that, Jerrold.”
“Well you asked for the truth, and
there it is.”
She got up and walked away from him
to the window. He followed her there. She
spread out her hands to the cold rain.
“It’s raining still,” she said.
He caught back her hands.
“Would you have married me?”
“Don’t, Jerrold, don’t. It’s
cruel of you.”
He was holding her by her hands.
“Would you? Tell me. Tell me.”
“Let go my hands, then.”
He let them go. They turned back
to the fireplace. Anne shivered. She held
herself to the warmth.
“You haven’t told me,” he said.
“No, I haven’t told you,” she repeated,
stupidly.
“That’s because you would.
That’s because you love me. You do love
me.”
“I’ve always loved you.”
She spoke as if from some far-off
place; as if the eternity of her love removed her
from him, put her beyond his reach.
“But what’s the good of talking
about it?” she said.
“All the good in the world.
We owed each other the truth. We know it now;
we know where we are. We needn’t humbug
ourselves and each other any more. You see what
comes of keeping back the truth. Look how we’ve
had to pay for it. You and me. Would you
rather go on thinking I didn’t care for you?”
“No, Jerrold, no. I’m only wondering
what we’re to do next.”
“Next?”
“Yes. That’s why you want me to
go away.”
“It isn’t. It’s
why I want you to stay. I want you to leave off
working and do all the jolly things we used to do.”
“You mustn’t make me leave off working.
It’s my only chance.”
They turned restlessly from the fireplace
to the couch. They sat one at each end of it,
still for a long time, without speaking. The fire
died down. The evening darkened in the rain.
The twilight came between them, poignant and disquieting,
dimming their faces, making them strange and wonderful
to each other. Their bodies loomed up through
it, wonderful and strange. The high white stone
chimney-piece glimmered like an arch into some inner
place.
Outside, from the church below the
farm house, the bell tinkled for service.
It ceased.
Suddenly they rose and he came towards
her to take her in his arms. She beat down his
hands and hung on them, keeping him off.
“Don’t, Jerry, please, please don’t
hold me.”
“Oh Anne, let me. You let me once.
Don’t you remember?”
“We can’t now. We mustn’t.”
And yet she knew that it would happen
in some time, in some way. But not now.
Not like this.
“We mustn’t.”
“Don’t you want me to take you in my arms?”
“No. Not that.”
“What, then?” He pressed tighter.
“I want you not to hurt Maisie.”
“It’s too late to think of Maisie now.”
“I’m not thinking of her.
I’m thinking of you. You’ll hurt yourself
frightfully if you hurt her.” She wrenched
his hands apart and went from him to the door.
“What are you going to do?” he said.
“I’m going to fetch the lamp.”
She left him standing there.
A few minutes later she came back
carrying the lighted lamp. He took it from her
and set it on the table.
“And now?”
“Now you’re going back
to Colin. And we’re both going to be good...You
do want to be good don’t you?”
“Yes. But I don’t see how we’re
going to manage it.”
“We could manage it if we didn’t see each
other. If I went away.”
“Anne, you wouldn’t.
You can’t mean that. I couldn’t stand
not seeing you. You couldn’t stand it,
either.”
“I have stood it. I can stand it again.”
“You can’t. Not now.
It’s all different. I swear I’ll be
decent. I won’t say another word if only
you won’t go.”
“I don’t see how I can
very well. There’s the land... No.
Colin must look after that. I’ll go when
the ploughing’s done. And some day you’ll
be glad I went.”
“Go. Go. You’ll find out then.”
Their tenderness was over. Something
hard and defiant had come in to them with the light.
He was at the door now.
“And you’ll come back,”
he said. “You’ll see you’ll
come back.”