i
She knew what she would do now.
She would go away and never see Jerrold
again, never while their youth lasted, while they
could still feel. She would go out of England,
so far away that they couldn’t meet. She
would go to Canada and farm.
All night she lay awake with her mind
fixed on the one thought of going away. There
was nothing else to be done, no room for worry or
hesitation. They couldn’t hold out any longer,
she and Jerrold, strained to the breaking-point, tortured
with the sight of each other.
As she lay awake there came to her
the peace that comes with all immense and clear decisions.
Her mind would never be torn and divided any more.
And towards morning she fell asleep.
She woke dulled and bewildered.
Her mind struggled with a sense of appalling yet undefined
disaster. Something had happened overnight, she
couldn’t remember what. Something had happened.
No. Something was going to happen. She tried
to fall back into sleep, fighting against the return
of consciousness; it came on, wave after wave, beating
her down.
Now she remembered. She was going
away. She would never see Jerrold again.
She was going to Canada.
The sharp, clear name made the whole
thing real and irrevocable. It was something
that would actually happen soon. To her.
She was going. And when she had gone she would
not come back.
She got up and looked out of the window.
She saw the green field sloping down to the river
and the road, and beyond the road, to the right, the
rise of the Manor fields and the belt of firs.
And in her mind, more real than they, the Manor house,
the garden, and the many-coloured hills beyond, rolling,
curve after curve, to the straight, dark-blue horizon.
The scene that held her childhood, all her youth, all
her happiness; that had drawn her back, again and
again, in memory and in dreams, making her heart ache.
How could she leave it? How could she live with
that pain?
If she was going to be a coward, if
she was going to be afraid of pain How
was she to escape it, how was Jerrold to escape?
If she stayed on they would break down together and
give in; they would be lovers again, and again Maisie’s
sweet, wounding face would come between them; they
could never get away from it; and in the end their
remorse would be as unbearable as their separation.
She couldn’t drag Jerrold through that agony
again.
No. Life wasn’t worth living
if you were a coward and afraid. And under all
her misery Anne had still the sense that life was somehow
worth living even if it made you miserable. Life
was either your friend or your enemy. If it was
your friend you served it; if it was your enemy you
stood up to it and refused to let it beat you, and
your enemy became your servant. Whatever happened,
your work remained. Still there would be ploughing
and sowing, and reaping and ploughing again. Still
the earth waited. She thought of the unknown
Canadian earth that waited for her tilling.
Jerrold was not a coward. He
was not afraid well, only afraid of the
people he loved getting ill and dying; and she was
not going to get ill and die.
She would have to tell him. She
would go to him in the fields and tell him.
But before she did that she must make
the thing irrevocable. So Anne wrote to the steamship
company, booking her passage in two weeks’ time;
she wrote to Eliot, asking him to call at the company’s
office and see if he could get her a decent cabin.
She went to Wyck and posted her letters, and then
to the Far Acres field where Jerrold was watching the
ploughing.
They met at the “headland.”
They would be safe there on the ploughed land, in
the open air.
“What is it, Anne?” he said.
“Nothing. I want to talk to you.”
“All right.”
Her set face, her hard voice gave him a premonition
of disaster.
“It’s simply this,”
she said. “What happened yesterday mustn’t
happen again.”
“It shan’t. I swear it shan’t.
I was a beast. I lost my head.”
“Yes, but it may happen again.
We can’t go on like this, Jerry. The strain’s
too awful.”
“You mean you can’t trust me.”
“I can’t trust myself. And it isn’t
fair to you.”
“Oh, me. That doesn’t matter.”
“Well, then, say I matter.
It’s the same for me. I’m never going
to let that happen again. I’m going away.”
“Going away ”
“Yes. And I’m not coming back this
time.”
His voice struggled in his throat.
Something choked him. He couldn’t speak.
“I’m going to Canada in a fortnight.”
“Good God! You can’t go to Canada.”
“I can. I’ve booked my passage.”
His face was suddenly sallow white,
ghastly. His heart heaved and he felt sick.
“Nothing on earth will stop me.”
“Won’t Maisie stop you?
If you do this she’ll know. Can’t
you see how it gives us away?”
“No. It’ll only give
me away. If Maisie asks me why I’m
going I shall tell her I’m in love with you,
and that I can’t stand it; that I’m too
unhappy. I’d rather she thought I cared
for you than that she should think you cared for me.”
“She’ll think it all the same.”
“Then I shall have to lie.
I must risk it.... Oh Jerry, don’t look
so awful! I’ve got to go. We’ve
settled it that we can’t go on deceiving her,
and we aren’t going to make her unhappy.
There’s nothing else to be done.”
“Except to bear it.”
“And how long do you suppose
that’ll last? We can’t bear
it. Look at it straight. It’s all
so horribly simple. If we were beasts and only
thought of ourselves and didn’t think of Maisie
it wouldn’t matter to us what we did. But
we can’t be beasts. We can’t lie to
Maisie, and we can’t tell her the truth.
We can’t go on seeing each other without wanting
each other unbearably and we
can’t go on wanting each other without some
day giving in. It comes back the first
minute we’re alone. And we don’t
mean to give in. So we mustn’t see each
other, that’s all. Can you tell me one
other thing I can do?”
“But why should it be you?
Why should you get the worst of it?”
“Because one of us has got to
clear out. It can’t be you, so it’s
got to be me. And going away isn’t the
worst of it. It’ll be worse for you sticking
on here where everything reminds you At
least I shall have new things to keep my mind off
it.”
“Nothing will keep your mind
off it. You’ll fret yourself to death.”
“No, I shan’t. I
shall have too much to do. You’re not
to be sorry for me, Jerrold.”
“But you’re giving up
everything. The Barrow Farm. The place you
wanted. You won’t have a thing.”
“I don’t want ‘things.’
It’s easier to chuck them than to hang on to
them when they’ll remind me.... Really,
if I could see any other way I’d take it.”
“But you can’t go. You’re not
fit to go. You’re ill.”
“I shall be all right when I get there.”
“But what do you think you’re
going to do in Canada? It’s not as
if you’d got anything to go for.”
“I shall find something.
I shall work on somebody’s ranch first and learn
Canadian farming. Then I shall look out for land
and buy it. I’ve got stacks of money.
All Grandpapa Everitt’s, and the money for the
farm. Stacks. I shall get on all right.”
“When did you think of all this?”
“Last night.”
“I see. I made you.”
“No. I made myself. After all, it’s
the easiest way.”
“For you, or me?”
“For both of us. Honestly,
it’s the only straight thing. I ought to
have done it long ago.”
“It means never seeing each other again.
You’ll never come back.”
“Never while we’re young.
When we’re both old, too old to feel any more,
then I’ll come back some day, and we’ll
be friends.”
And still his will beat against hers
in vain, till at last he stopped; sick and exhausted.
They went together down the ploughed
land into the pastures, and through the pastures to
the mill water. In the opposite field they could
see the brown roof and walls of the shelter.
“What are you going to plant in the Seven Acres
field?”
“Barley,” he said.
“You can’t. It was barley last year.”
“Was it?”
They were silent then. Jerrold
struggled with his feeling of deadly sickness.
Anne couldn’t trust herself to speak. At
the Barrow Farm gate they parted.
ii
Maisie’s eyes looked at him
across the table, wondering. Her little drooping
mouth was half open with anxiety, as if any minute
she was going to say something. The looking-glass
had shown him his haggard and discoloured face, a
face to frighten her. He tried to eat, but the
sight and smell of hot roast mutton sickened him.
“Oh, Jerrold, can’t you eat it?”
“No, I can’t. I’m sorry.”
“There’s some cold chicken. Will
you have that?”
“No, thanks.”
“Try and eat something.”
“I can’t. I feel sick.”
“Don’t sit up, then. Go and lie down.”
“I will if you don’t mind.”
He went to his room and was sick.
He lay down on his bed and tried to sleep. His
head ached violently and every movement made him heave;
he couldn’t sleep; he couldn’t lie still;
and presently he got up and went out again, up to
the Far Acres field to the ploughing. He couldn’t
overcome the physical sickness of his misery, but he
could force himself to move, to tramp up and down
the stiff furrows, watching the tractor; he kept himself
going by the sheer strength of his will. The rattle
and clank of the tractor ground into his head, making
it ache again. He was stunned with great blows
of noise and pain, so that he couldn’t think.
He didn’t want to think; he was glad of the abominable
sensations that stopped him. He went from field
to field, avoiding the boundaries of the Barrow Farm
lest he should see Anne.
When the sun set and the land darkened he went home.
At dinner he tried to eat, sickened
again, and leaned back in his chair; he forced himself
to sit through the meal, talking to Maisie. When
it was over he went to bed and lay awake till the
morning.
The next day passed in the same way,
and the next night; and always he was aware of Maisie’s
sweet face watching him with frightened eyes and an
unuttered question. He was afraid to tell her
that Anne was going lest she should put down his illness
to its true cause.
And on the third day, when he heard
her say she was going to see Anne, he told her.
“Oh, Jerrold, she can’t really mean it.”
“She does mean it. I said
everything I could to stop her, but it wasn’t
any good. She’s taken her passage.”
“But why why should she want
to go?”
“I can’t tell you why. You’d
better ask her.”
“Has anything happened to upset her?”
“What on earth should happen?”
“Oh, I don’t know. When did she tell
you this?”
He hesitated. It was dangerous
to lie when Maisie might get the truth from Anne.
“The day before yesterday.”
Maisie’s eyes were fixed on
him, considering it. He knew she was saying to
herself, “That was the day you came home so sick
and queer.”
“Jerry did you say anything to upset
her?”
“No.”
“I can’t think how she could want to go.”
“Nor I. But she’s going.”
“I shall go down and see if I can’t make
her stay.”
“Do. But you won’t if I can’t,”
he said.
iii
Maisie went down early in the afternoon to see Anne.
She couldn’t think how Anne
could want to leave the Barrow Farm house when she
had just got into it, when they had all made it so
nice for her; she couldn’t think how she could
leave them when she cared for them, when she knew
how they cared for her.
“You do care for us, Anne?”
“Oh yes, I care.”
“And you wanted the farm.
I can’t understand your going just when you’ve
got it, when you’ve settled, in and when Jerrold
took all that trouble to make it nice for you.
It isn’t like you, Anne.”
“I know. It must seem awful
of me; but I can’t help it, Maisie darling.
I’ve got to go. You mustn’t
try and stop me. It only makes it harder.”
“Then it is hard? You don’t
really want to go?”
“Of course I don’t. But I must.”
Maisie meditated, trying to make it out.
“Is it is it because you’re
unhappy?”
Anne didn’t answer.
“You are unhappy.
You’ve been unhappy ever so long. Can’t
we do anything?”
“No. Nobody can do anything.”
“It isn’t,” said Maisie at last,
“anything to do with Jerrold?”
“You wouldn’t ask me that, Maisie, if
you didn’t know it was.”
“Perhaps I do know. Do you care for him
very much, Anne?”
“Yes, I care for him, very much. And I
can’t stand it.”
“It’s so bad that you’ve got to
go away?”
“It’s so bad that I’ve got to go
away.”
“That’s very brave of you.”
“Or very cowardly.”
“No. You couldn’t be a coward....
Oh, Anne darling, I’m so sorry.”
“Don’t be sorry.
It’s my own fault. I’d no business
to get into this state. Don’t let’s
talk about it, Maisie.”
“All right, I won’t.
But I’m sorry.... Only one thing. It it
hasn’t made you hate me, has it?”
“You know it hasn’t.”
“Oh, Anne, you are beautiful.”
“I’m anything but, if you only knew.”
She had got beyond the pain of Maisie’s
goodness, Maisie’s trust. No possible blow
from Maisie’s mind could hurt her now. Nothing
mattered. Maisie’s trust and goodness didn’t
matter, since she had done all she knew; since she
was going away; since she would never see Jerrold again,
never till their youth was gone and they had ceased
to feel.
iv
That afternoon Eliot arrived at Wyck Manor. His
coming was his answer to
Anne’s letter.
He went over to the Barrow Farm about
five o’clock when Anne’s work would be
done. Anne was still out, and he waited till she
should come back.
As he waited he looked round her room.
This, he thought, was the place that Anne had set
her heart on having for her own; it was the home they
had made for her. Something terrible must have
happened before she could bring herself to leave it.
She must have been driven to the breaking-point.
She was broken. Jerrold must have driven and broken
her.
He heard her feet on the flagged path,
on the threshold of the house; she stood in the doorway
of the room, looking at him, startled.
“Eliot, what are you doing there?”
“Waiting for you. You must have known I’d
come.”
“To say good-bye? That was nice of you.”
“No, not to say good-bye.
I should come to see you off if you were going.”
“But I am going. You’ve seen about
my berth, haven’t you?”
“No, I haven’t. We’ve got to
talk about it first.”
He looked dead tired. She remembered that she
was his hostess.
“Have you had tea?”
“No. You’re going to give me some.
Then we’ll talk about it.”
“Talking won’t be a bit of good.”
“I think it may be,” he said.
She rang the bell and they waited.
She gave him his tea, and while they ate and drank
he talked to her about the weather and the land, and
about his work and the book he had just finished on
Amoebic Dysentery, and about Colin and how well he
was now. Neither of them spoke of Jerrold or
of Maisie.
When the tea things were cleared away
he leaned back and looked at her with his kind, deep-set,
attentive eyes. She loved Eliot’s eyes,
and his queer, clever face that was so like and so
unlike his father’s, so utterly unlike Jerrold’s.
“You needn’t tell me why
you’re going,” he said at last. “I’ve
seen Jerrold.”
“Did he tell you?”
“No. You’ve only got to look at him
to see.”
“Do you think Maisie sees?”
“I can’t tell you.
She isn’t stupid. She must wonder why you’re
going like this.”
“I told her. I told her I was in love with
Jerrold.”
“What did she say?”
“Nothing. Only that she
was sorry. I told her so that she mightn’t
think he cared for me. She needn’t know
that.”
“She isn’t stupid,” he said again.
“No. But she’s good.
She trusts him so. She trusted me.... Eliot,
that was the worst of it, the way she trusted us.
That broke us down.”
“Of course she trusted you.”
“Did you?”
“You know I did.”
“And yet,” she said, “I believe
you knew. You knew all the time.”
“If I didn’t, I know now.”
“Everything?”
“Everything.”
“How? Because of my going away? Is
that it?”
“Not altogether. I’ve
seen you happy and I’ve seen you unhappy.
I’ve seen you with Jerrold. I’ve
seen you with Maisie. Nobody else would have
seen it, but I did, because I knew you so well.
And because I was afraid of it. Besides, you
almost told me.”
“Yes, and you said it wouldn’t make any
difference. Does it?”
“No. None. I know,
whatever you did, you wouldn’t do it only for
yourself. You did this for Jerrold. And you
were unhappy because of it.”
“No. No. I was happy.
We were only unhappy afterwards because of Maisie.
It was so awful going on deceiving her, hiding it and
lying. I feel as if everything I said and did
then was a lie. That was how I was punished.
Not being able to tell the truth. And I could
have borne even that if it wasn’t for Jerrold.
But he hated it, too. It made him wretched.”
“I know it did. If you
hadn’t been so fine it wouldn’t have punished
you.”
“The horrible thing was
knowing what I’d done to Jerrold, making him
hide and lie.”
“Oh, what you’ve done
to Jerrold You’ve done him nothing
but good. You’ve made him finer than he
could possibly have been without you.”
“I’ve made him frightfully unhappy.”
“Not unhappier than he’s
made you. And it’s what he had to be.
I told you long ago Jerrold wouldn’t be any
good till he’d suffered damnably. Well he
has suffered damnably. And he’s got a soul
because of it. He hadn’t much of one before
he loved you.”
“How do you mean?”
“I mean he used to think of
nothing but his own happiness. Now he’s
thinking of nothing but Maisie’s and yours.
He loves you better than himself. He even loves
Maisie better I mean he thinks more of her than
he did before he loved you. There are two people
that he cares for more than himself. He cares
more for his own honour than he did. And for
yours. And that’s your doing. Just
think how you’d have wrecked him if you’d
been a different sort of woman.”
“No. Because then he wouldn’t have
cared for me.”
“No, I believe he wouldn’t. He chose
well.”
“You were always much too good to me.”
“No, Anne. I want you to
see this thing straight, and to see yourself as you
really are. Not to go back on yourself.”
“I don’t go back on myself.
That would be going back on Jerrold. I’m
sorry because of Maisie, that’s all. If
I’d had an ounce of sense I’d never have
known her. I’d have gone off to some place
not too far away where Jerrold could have come to
me and where I should never have seen Maisie.
That’s what I should have done. We should
both have been happy then.”
“Yes, Jerrold would have been
happy. And he wouldn’t have saved his soul.
And he’d have been deceiving Maisie all the time.
You don’t really wish you’d done that,
Anne.”
“No. Not now. And
I’m not unhappy about Maisie now. I’m
going away. I’m giving Jerrold up.
I can’t do more than that.”
“You wouldn’t have to
go away, Anne, if you’d do what I want and marry
me. You said perhaps you might if you had to save
Jerrold.”
“Did I? I don’t think I did.”
“You’ve forgotten and
I haven’t. You don’t know what an
appalling thing you’re doing. You’re
leaving everything and everybody you ever cared for.
You’ll die of sheer unhappiness.”
“Nonsense, Eliot. You know
perfectly well that people don’t die of unhappiness.
They die of accidents and diseases and old age.
I shall die of old age. And I’ll be back
in twenty years’ time if I’ve seen it
through.”
“Twenty years. The best
years of your life. You’ll be desperately
lonely. You don’t know what it’ll
be like.”
“Oh yes, I do. I’ve
been lonely before now. And I’ve saved myself
by working.”
“Yes, in England, where you
could see some of us sometimes. But out there,
with people you never saw before people
who may be brutes ”
“They needn’t be.”
He went on relentlessly. “People
you don’t care for and never will care for.
You’ve never really cared for anybody but us.”
“I haven’t. I’m
going because I care. I can’t let Jerry
go on like that. I’ve got to end it.”
“You’re going simply to
save Jerrold. So that you can never go back to
him. Don’t you see that if you married me
you’d both be safe? You couldn’t
go back. If you were married to me Jerrold wouldn’t
take you from me. If you were married to me you
wouldn’t break faith with me. If you had
children you wouldn’t break faith with them.
Nothing could keep you safer.”
“I can’t, Eliot.
Nothing’s changed. I belong to Jerrold.
I always have belonged to him. It isn’t
anything physical. Even if I’m separated
from him, thousands of miles, I shall belong to him
still. My mind, or soul, or whatever the thing
is, can’t get away from him.... You say
if I belonged to you I couldn’t give myself
to Jerrold. If I belong to Jerrold, how can I
give myself to you?”
“I see. It’s like that, is it?”
“It’s like that.”
Eliot said no more. He knew when he was beaten.
v
Maisie sat alone in her own room,
thinking it over. She didn’t know yet that
Eliot had come. He had arrived while she was with
Anne and she had missed him on the way to Barrow Farm,
driving up by the hill road while he walked down through
the fields.
She didn’t think of Jerrold
all at once. Her mind was taken up with Anne
and Anne’s unhappiness. She could see nothing
else. She remembered how Adeline had told her
that Anne was in love with Jerrold. She had said,
“It was funny when she was a little thing.”
Anne had loved him all her life, then. All her
life she had had to do without him.
Maisie thought: Perhaps he would
have loved her and married her if it hadn’t
been for me. And yet Anne had loved her.
That was Anne’s beauty.
She wondered next: If Anne had
been in love with Jerrold all that time, and if they
had all seen it, all the Fieldings and John Severn,
how was it that she had never seen it? She had
seen nothing but a perfect friendship, and she had
tried to keep it for them in all its perfection, so
that neither of them should miss anything because Jerrold
had married her. She remembered how happy Anne
had been when she first knew her, and she thought:
If she was happy then, why is she unhappy now?
If she loved Jerrold all her life, if she had done
without him all her life, why go away now?
Unless something had happened.
It was then that Maisie thought of
Jerrold, and his sad, drawn face and his sudden sickness
the other day. That was the day he had been with
Anne, when she had told him that she was going away.
He had never been the same since. He had neither
slept nor eaten.
Maisie had all the pieces of the puzzle
loose before her, and at first sight not one of them
looked as if it would fit. But this piece under
her hand fitted. Jerrold’s illness joined
on to Anne’s going. With a terrible dread
in her heart Maisie put the two things together and
saw the third thing. Jerrold was ill because
Anne was going away. He wouldn’t be ill
unless he cared for her. And another thing.
Anne was going away, not because she cared, but because
Jerrold cared. Therefore she knew that he cared
for her. Therefore he had told her. That
was what had happened.
When she had put all the pieces into
their places she would have the whole story.
But Maisie didn’t want to know
any more. She had enough to make her heart break.
She still clung to her belief in their goodness.
They were unhappy because they had given each other
up. And under all her thinking, like a quick-running
pain, there went her premonition of its end.
She remembered that they had been happy once when she
first knew them. If they were unhappy now because
they had given each other up, had they been happy
then because they hadn’t? For a moment she
asked herself, “Were they ?” and
was afraid to finish and answer her own question.
It was enough that they were all unhappy now and that
none of them would ever be happy again. Not Anne.
Not Jerrold. Their unhappiness didn’t
bear thinking of, and in thinking of it Maisie forgot
her own.
Her heart shook her breast with its
beating, and for a moment she wondered whether her
pain were beginning again. Then the thought of
Anne and Jerrold and herself and of their threefold
undivided misery came upon her, annihilating every
other thought. As if all that was physical in
Maisie were subdued by the intensity of her suffering,
with the coming of the supreme emotion her body had
no pain.