i
The Barrow Farm house, long, low and
grey, stood back behind the tall elms and turned its
blank north gable end to the road and the Manor Farm.
Its nine mullioned windows looked down the field to
the river. And the great barns were piled behind
it, long roof-trees, steep, mouse-coloured slopes
and peaks above grey walls.
Anne didn’t move into the Barrow
Farm house all at once. She had to wait while
Jerrold had the place made beautiful for her.
This was the only thing that roused
him to any interest. Through all his misery he
could still find pleasure in the work of throwing small
rooms into one to make more space for Anne, and putting
windows into the south gable to give her the sun.
Anne’s garden absorbed him more
than his own seven hundred acres. Maisie and
he planned it together, walking round the rank flower-beds,
and bald wastes scratched up by the hens.
There was to be a flagged court on
one side and a grass plot on the other, with a flower
garden between. Here, Maisie said, there should
be great clumps of larkspurs and there a lavender
hedge. They said how nice it would be for Anne
to watch the garden grow.
“He’s going to make it
so beautiful that you’ll want to stay in it
forever,” she said.
And Anne went with them and listened
to them, and told them they were angels, and pretended
to be excited about her house and garden, while all
the time her heart ached and she was too tired to care.
The house was finished by the end
of November and Jerrold and Maisie helped her to furnish
it. Maisie sent to London for patterns and brought
them to Anne to choose. Maisie thought perhaps
the chintz with the cream and pink roses, or the one
with the green leaves and red tulips and blue and
purple clematis was the prettiest. Anne tried
to behave as if all her happiness depended on a pattern,
and ended by choosing the one that Maisie liked best.
And the furniture went where Maisie thought it should
go, because Anne was too tired to care. Besides,
she was busy on her farm. Old Sutton in his decadence
had let most of his arable land run to waste, and
Anne’s job was to make good soil again out of
bad.
Maisie was pleased like a child and
excited with her planning. Her idea was that
Anne should come in from her work on the land and find
the house all ready for her, everything in its place,
chairs and sofas dressed in their gay suits of chintz,
the books on their shelves, the blue-and-white china
in rows on the oak dresser.
Tea was set out on the gate-legged
table before the wide hearth-place. The lamps
were lit. A big fire burned. Colin and Jerrold
and Maisie were there waiting for her. And Anne
came in out of the fields, tired and white and thin,
her black hair drooping. Her rough land dress
hung slack on her slender body.
Jerrold looked at her. Anne’s
tired face, trying to smile, wrung his heart.
So did the happiness in Maisie’s eyes. And
Anne’s voice trying to sound as if she were
happy.
“You darlings! How nice you’ve made
it.”
“Do you like it?”
Maisie was breathless with joy.
“I love it. I adore it!
But aren’t there lots of things that
weren’t here before? Where did that table
come from?”
“From the Manor Farm. Don’t you remember
it? That’s Eliot.”
“And the bureau, and the dresser, and those
heavenly rugs?”
“That’s Jerrold.”
And the china was Colin, and the chintz
was Maisie. The long couch for Anne to lie down
on was Maisie. Everything that was not Anne’s
they had given her.
“You shouldn’t have done it,” she
said.
“We did it for ourselves. To keep you with
us,” said Maisie.
“Did you think it would take all that?”
She wondered whether they saw how
hard she was trying to look happy, not to be too tired
to care.
Then Maisie took her upstairs to show
her her bedroom and the white bathroom. Colin
carried the lamp. He left them together in Anne’s
room. Maisie turned to her there.
“Darling, how tired you look. Are you too
tired to be happy?”
“I’d be a brute if I weren’t happy,”
Anne said.
But she wasn’t happy. The
minute they were gone her sadness came upon her, crushing
her down. She could hear Colin and Maisie, the
two innocent ones, laughing out into the darkness.
She saw again Jerrold’s hard, unhappy face trying
to smile; his mouth jerking in the tight, difficult
smile that was like an agony. And it used to be
Jerrold who was always happy, who went laughing.
She turned up and down the beautiful
lighted room; she looked again and again at the things
they had given her, Colin and Jerrold and Maisie.
Maisie. She would have to live
with the cruelty of Maisie’s gifts, with Maisie’s
wounding kindness and her innocence. Maisie’s
curtains, Maisie’s couch, covered with flowers
that smiled at her, gay on the white ground.
She thought of the other house, of the curtains that
had shut out the light from her and Jerrold, of the
couch where she had lain in his arms. Each object
had a dumb but poignant life that reminded and reproached
her.
This was the scene where her life
was to be cast. Henceforth these things would
know her in her desolation. Jerrold would never
come to her here as he had come to the Manor Farm
house; they would never sit together talking by this
fireside; those curtains would never be drawn on their
passion; he would never go up to that lamp and put
it out; she would never lie here waiting, thrilling,
as he came to her through the darkness.
She had wanted the Barrow Farm and
she had got what she had wanted, and she had got it
too late. She loved it. Yet how was it possible
to love the place that she was to be so unhappy in?
She ought to hate it with its enclosing walls, its
bright-eyed, watching furniture, its air of quiet
complicity in her pain.
She drew back the curtains. The
lamp and its yellow flame hung out there on the darkness
of the fields. The fields dropped away through
the darkness to the river, and there were the black
masses of the trees.
There the earth waited for her.
Out there was the only life left for her to live.
The life of struggling with the earth, forcing the
earth to yield to her more than it had yielded to
the men who had tilled it before her, making the bad
land good. Ploughing time would come and seed
time, and hay harvest and corn harvest. Feeding
time and milking time would come. She would go
on seeing the same things done at the same hour, at
the same season, day after day and year after year.
There would have been joy in that if it had been Jerrold’s
land, if she could have gone on working for Jerrold
and with Jerrold. And if she had not been so
tired.
She was only twenty-nine and Jerrold
was only thirty-two. She wondered how many more
ploughing times they would have to go through, how
many seed times and harvests. And how would they
go through them? Would they go on getting more
and more tired, or would something happen?
No. Nothing would happen.
Nothing that they could bear to think of. They
would just go on.
In the stillness of the house she
could feel her heart beating, measuring out time,
measuring out her pain.
ii
That winter Adeline and John Severn came down to Wyck
Manor for
Christmas and the New Year.
Adeline was sitting in the drawing-room
with Maisie in the heavy hour before tea time.
All afternoon she had been trying to talk to Maisie,
and she was now bored. Jerrold’s wife had
always bored her. She couldn’t imagine
why Jerrold had married her when it was so clear that
he was not in love with her.
“It’s funny,” she
said at last, “staying in your own house when
it isn’t your own any more.”
Maisie hoped that Adeline would treat
the house as if it were her own.
“I probably shall. Don’t
be surprised if you hear me giving orders to the servants.
I really cannot consider that Wilkins belongs to anybody
but me.”
Maisie hoped that Adeline wouldn’t
consider that he didn’t.
And there was a pause. Adeline
looked at the clock and saw that there was still another
half-hour till tea time. How could they possibly
fill it in? Then, suddenly, from a thought of
Jerrold so incredibly married to Maisie, Adeline’s
mind wandered to Anne.
“Is Anne dining here tonight?” she said.
And Maisie said yes, she thought Adeline
and Mr. Severn would like to see as much as possible
of Anne. And Adeline said that was very kind of
Maisie, and was bored again.
She saw nothing before her but more
and more boredom; and the subject of Anne alone held
out the prospect of relief. She flew to it as
she would have fled from any danger.
“By the way, Maisie, if I were
you I wouldn’t let Anne see too much of Jerrold.”
“Why not?”
“Because, my dear, it isn’t good for her.”
“I should have thought,”
Maisie said, “it was very good for both of them,
as they like each other. I should never dream
of interfering with their friendship. That’s
the way people get themselves thoroughly disliked.
I don’t want Jerry to dislike me, or Anne, either.
I like them to feel that if he is married they
can go on being friends just the same.”
“Oh, of course, if you like it ”
“I do like it,” said Maisie, firmly.
Firm opposition was a thing that Adeline’s
wilfulness could never stand. It always made
her either change the subject or revert to her original
statement. This time she reverted.
“My point was that it isn’t fair to Anne.”
“Why isn’t it?”
“Because she’s in love with him.”
“That,” said Maisie, with
increasing decision, “I do not believe.
I’ve never seen any signs of it.”
“You’re the only person
who hasn’t then. It sticks out of her.
If it was a secret I shouldn’t have told you.”
“It is a secret to me,”
said Maisie, “so I think you might let it alone.”
“You ought to know it if nobody
else does. We’ve all of us known about
Anne for ages. She was always quite mad about
Jerrold. It was funny when she was a little thing;
but it’s rather more serious now she’s
thirty.”
“She isn’t thirty,” said Maisie,
contradictiously.
“Almost thirty. It’s
a dangerous age, Maisie. And Anne’s a dangerous
person. She’s absolutely reckless.
She always was.”
“I thought you thought she was in love with
Colin.”
“I never thought it.”
Maisie hated people who lied to her.
“Why did you tell Jerrold they were lovers,
then?” she said.
“Did I tell Jerrold they were lovers?”
“He thinks you did.”
“He must have misunderstood
what I said. Colin gave me his word of honour
that there was nothing between them.”
But Maisie had no mercy.
“Why should he do that if you
didn’t think there was? If you were mistaken
then you may be mistaken now.”
“I’m not mistaken now. Ask Colin,
ask Eliot, ask Anne’s father.”
“I shouldn’t dream of
asking them. You forget, if Jerrold’s my
husband, Anne’s my friend.”
“Then for goodness sake keep
her out of mischief. Keep her out of Jerrold’s
way. Anne’s a darling and I’m devoted
to her, but she always did love playing with fire.
If she’s bent on burning her pretty wings it
isn’t kind to bring her where the lamp is.”
“I’d trust Anne’s wings to keep
her out of danger.”
“How about Jerrold’s danger? You
might think of him.”
“I do think of him. And I trust him.
Absolutely.”
“I don’t. I don’t trust anybody
absolutely.”
“One thing’s clear,” said Maisie,
“that it’s time we had tea.”
She got up, with an annihilating dignity,
and rang the bell. Adeline’s smile intimated
that she was unbeaten and unconvinced.
That evening John Severn came into
his wife’s room as she was dressing for dinner.
“I wish to goodness Anne hadn’t
this craze for farming,” he said. “She’s
simply working herself to death. I never saw her
look so seedy. I’m sorry Jerrold let her
have that farm.”
“So am I,” said Adeline.
“I never saw Jerry look so seedy, either.
Maisie’s been behaving like a perfect idiot.
If she wanted them to go off together she couldn’t
have done better.”
“You don’t imagine,”
John said, “that’s what they’re after?”
“How do I know what they’re
after? You never can tell with people like Jerrold
and Anne. They’re both utterly reckless.
They don’t care who suffers so long as they
get what they want. If Anne had the morals of
a of a mouse, she’d clear out.”
“I think,” John said,
“you’re mistaken. Anne isn’t
like that.... I hope you haven’t said anything
to Maisie?”
Adeline made a face at him, as much
as to say, “What do you take me for?”
She lifted up her charming, wilful face and powdered
it carefully.
iii
The earth smelt of the coming rain.
All night the trees had whispered of rain coming to-morrow.
Now they waited.
At noon the wind dropped. Thick
clouds, the colour of dirty sheep’s wool, packed
tight by their own movement, roofed the sky and walled
it round, hanging close to the horizon. A slight
heaving and swelling in the grey mass packed it tighter.
It was pregnant with rain. Here and there a steaming
vapour broke from it as if puffed out by some immense
interior commotion. Thin tissues detached themselves
and hung like a frayed hem, lengthening, streaming
to the hilltops in the west.
Anne was going up the fields towards
the Manor and Jerrold was coming down towards the
Manor Farm. They met at the plantation as the
first big drops fell.
He called out to her, “I say,
you oughtn’t to be out a day like this.”
Anne had been ill all January with
a slight touch of pleurisy after a cold that she had
taken no care of.
“I’m going to see Maisie.”
“You’re not,” he said.
“It’s going to rain like fury.”
“Maisie knows I don’t mind rain,”
Anne said, and laughed.
“Maisie’d have a fit if
she knew you were out in it. Look, how it’s
coming down over there.”
Westwards and northwards the round
roof and walls of cloud were shaken and the black
rain hung sheeted between sky and earth. Overhead
the dark tissues thinned out and lengthened.
The fir trees quivered; they gave out slight creaking,
crackling noises as the rain came down. It poured
off each of the sloping fir branches like a jet from
a tap.
“We must make a dash for it,”
Jerrold said. And they ran together, laughing,
down the field to Anne’s shelter at the bottom.
He pushed back the sliding door.
The rain drummed on the roof and went
hissing along the soaked ground; it sprayed out as
the grass bent and parted under it; every hollow tuft
was a water spout. The fields were dim behind
the shining, glassy bead curtain of the rain.
The wind rose again and shook the
rain curtain and blew it into the shelter. Rain
scudded across the floor, wetting them where they stood.
Jerrold slid the door to. They were safe now from
the downpour.
Anne’s bed stood in the corner
tucked up in its grey blankets. They sat down
on it side by side.
For a moment they were silent, held
by their memory. They were shut in there with
their past. It came up to them, close and living,
out of the bright, alien mystery of the rain.
He put his hand on the shoulder of
Anne’s coat to feel if it was wet. At his
touch she trembled.
“It hasn’t gone through, has it?”
“No,” she said and coughed again.
“Anne, I hate that cough of yours. You
never had a cough before.”
“I’ve never had pleurisy before.”
“You wouldn’t have had it if you hadn’t
been frightfully run down.”
“It’s all over now,” she said.
“It isn’t. You may
get it again. I don’t feel as if you were
safe for one minute. Are you warm?”
“Quite.”
“Are your feet wet?”
“No. No. No. Don’t worry,
Jerry dear; I’m all right.”
“I wouldn’t worry if I
was with you all the time. It’s not seeing
you. Not knowing.”
“Don’t,” she said. “I
can’t bear it.”
And they were silent again.
Their silence was more real to them
than the sounding storm. There was danger in
it. It drew them back and back. It was poignant
and reminiscent. It came to them like the long
stillness before their passion. They had waited
here before, like this, through moments tense and
increasing, for the supreme, toppling instant of their
joy.
Their minds went round and round,
looking for words to break the silence and finding
none. They were held there by their danger.
At last Anne spoke.
“Do you think it’s over?”
“No. It’s only just begun.”
The rain hurled itself against the
window, as if it would pluck them out into the storm.
It brimmed over from the roof like water poured out
from a bucket.
“We’ll have to sit tight till it stops,”
he said.
Silence again, long, inveterate, dangerous.
Every now and then Anne coughed, the short, hard cough
that hurt and frightened him. He knew he ought
to leave her; every minute increased their danger.
But he couldn’t go. He felt that, after
all they might have done and hadn’t done, heaven
had some scheme of compensation in which it owed them
this moment.
She turned from him coughing, and
that sign of her weakness, the sight of her thin shoulders
shaking filled him with pity that was passion itself.
He thought of the injustice life had heaped on Anne’s
innocence; of the cruelty that had tracked her and
hunted her down; of his own complicity with her suffering.
He thought of his pity for Maisie as treachery to
Anne, of his honour as cowardice. Instead of piling
up wall after wall, he ought never to have let anything
come between him and Anne. Not even Maisie.
Not even his honour. His honour belonged to Anne
far more than to Maisie. The rest had been his
own blundering folly, and he had no right to let Anne
be punished for it.
An hour ago the walls had stood solid
between them. Now a furious impulse seized him
to tear them down and get through to her. This
time he would hold her and never let her go.
His thoughts went the way his passion
went. Then suddenly she turned and they looked
at each other and he thought no more. All his
thoughts went down in the hot rushing darkness of
his blood.
“Anne,” he said, “Anne” His
voice sounded like a cry.
They stood up suddenly and were swept
together; he held her tight, shut in his arms, his
body straining to her. They clung to each other
as if only by clinging they could stand against the
hot darkness that drowned them; and the more they
clung the more it came over them, wave after wave.
Then in the darkness he heard her
crying to him to let her go.
“Don’t make me, Jerrold, don’t make
me.”
“Yes. Yes.”
“No. Oh, why did we ever come here?”
He pressed her closer and she tried
to push him off with weak hands that had once been
strong. He felt her breakable in his arms, and
utterly defenceless.
“I can’t,” she cried.
“I should feel as if Maisie were there and looking
at us.... Don’t make me.”
Suddenly he let her go.
He was beaten by the sheer weakness
of her struggle. He couldn’t fight for
his flesh, like a brute, against that helplessness.
“If I go, you’ll stay here till the rain
stops?”
“Yes. I’m sorry, Jerry. You’ll
get so wet.”
That made him laugh. And, laughing,
he left her. Then tears came, cutting through
his eyelids like blood from a dry wound. They
mixed with the rain and blinded him.
And Anne sat on the little grey bed
in her shelter and stared out at the rain and cried.