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Title: Whiteoaks
Alternative title (U.S.): Whiteoaks of Jalna
Author: de la Roche, Mazo (1879-1961)
Date of first publication: 1929
Edition used as base for this ebook:
   London: Macmillan, 1929
Date first posted: 30 November 2013
Date last updated: 30 November 2013
Project Gutenberg Canada ebook #1134

This ebook was produced by: Paul Ereaut
& the Online Distributed Proofreading Canada Team
at http://www.pgdpcanada.net






    WHITEOAKS



    MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED

    LONDON  BOMBAY  CALCUTTA  MADRAS

    MELBOURNE

    THE MACMILLAN COMPANY

    NEW YORK  BOSTON  CHICAGO

    DALLAS  SAN FRANCISCO

    THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
    OF CANADA, LIMITED

    TORONTO



    WHITEOAKS

    BY

    MAZO DE LA ROCHE

    MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED

    ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON

    1929



    COPYRIGHT

    PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN



    FOR

    HUGH EAYRS





                      CONTENTS


     CHAPTER                            PAGE

         I. FINCH                         1

        II. THE FAMILY                   18

       III. THE HOUSE AT NIGHT           38

        IV. FINCH--THE ACTOR             57

         V. LEIGH'S INFLUENCE            69

        VI. CLOUTIE JOHN                 87

       VII. THE ORCHESTRA                96

      VIII. THE FOUR BROTHERS           118

        IX. ALAYNE                      126

         X. ERNEST'S ADVENTURE          138

        XI. ERNEST'S TACT               146

       XII. EDEN DISCOVERED             157

      XIII. THE CIRCLE                  163

       XIV. THE ARM OF JALNA            176

        XV. VAUGHANLANDS                190

       XVI. WOODLAND MEETINGS           201

      XVII. NIGHT MEETINGS              225

     XVIII. DEATH OF A CENTENARIAN      241

       XIX. JALNA IN MOURNING           255

        XX. THE YOUNG PRETENDER         268

       XXI. BEQUEST                     280

      XXII. SUNRISE                     303

     XXIII. RENNY AND ALAYNE            316

      XXIV. WEAVING                     325

       XXV. A LOAN                      339

      XXVI. LIES AND LYRICS             349

     XXVII. THE FLITTING                363

    XXVIII. WILD DUCKS                  381






WHITEOAKS




I

FINCH


From the turnstile where the tickets were taken, a passage covered
by striped red and white awning led to the hall of the Coliseum. The
cement floor of this passage was wet from many muddy footprints, and
an icy draught raced through it with a speed greater than that of the
swift horses within.

There were but a few stragglers entering now, and among these was
eighteen-year-old Finch Whiteoak. His raincoat and soft felt hat were
dripping; even the smooth skin on his thin cheeks was shining with
moisture.

He carried a strap holding a couple of textbooks and a dilapidated
notebook. He was unpleasantly conscious of these as the mark of a
student, and wished he had not brought them along. He tried to conceal
them under his raincoat, but they made such a repulsive-looking lump on
his person that he sheepishly brought them forth and carried them in
full view again.

Inside the hall he found himself in a hubbub of voices and sounding
footfalls, and in the midst of a large display of flowers. Monstrous
chrysanthemums, strange colours flaming behind their curled petals,
perfect pink roses that seemed to be musing delicately on their own
perfection, indolent crimson roses, weighed down by their rich colour
and perfume, crowded on every side.

With the sheepish smile still lingering on his lips, Finch wandered
among them. Their elegance, their fragility, combined with the
vividness of their colouring, gave him a feeling of tremulous
happiness. He wished that there were not so many people. He would
have liked to drift about among the flowers alone, absorbing their
perfume rather than inhaling it, absorbing their rich gaiety rather
than beholding it. A pretty young woman, quite ten years older than
he, bent over the great pompom of a chrysanthemum, within which burned
a sultry orange, and touched it with her cheek. "Adorable thing," she
breathed, and glanced smilingly at the awkward stripling beside her.
Finch grinned in return, but he moved away. Yet, when he had made sure
that she was gone, he returned to the dusky bloom and gazed into it as
though he would discover there some essence of the female loveliness
that had caressed it.

He was roused by the sound of a man's voice shouting through a
megaphone in the inner part of the building where the horse show was
in progress. He looked at his wrist watch and discovered that it was
a quarter to four o'clock. He would not dare to show himself at the
ringside for at least another half-hour. He had cut the last period
at school so that he might have time to see something of the other
exhibits before the events in which his brother Renny was to take part
were due. Renny would expect to see him then, but he would certainly
be sharp with him if he discovered that he had missed any of his
lessons. Finch had failed to pass his matriculation examinations the
summer before, and his present attitude toward Renny was one of humble
propitiation.

He moved into the automobile section. As he was examining a lustrous
dark blue touring car, a salesman came up and began to expatiate on
its perfections. Finch was embarrassed, yet pleased, at being treated
with deference, addressed as "sir." He stood talking with the man a few
minutes, looking as sagacious as he could and keeping his books out of
sight. When at last he strolled away, he threw his shoulders back and
tightened his expression into one of manly composure.

He gave no more than a glance at the display of apples, and the
aquariums of goldfish. He thought he would have a look at the kennels
of silver foxes. A long stairway led to this section. Up here under the
roof was a different world, a world smelling of disinfectants, a world
of glittering eyes, of pointed muzzles and upstanding, vigorous fur.
Trapped, all of them, behind the strong wire of their cages. Curled
up in tight balls, with just one watchful eye peering; scratching in
the clean straw, trying to find a way out of this drear imprisonment;
standing on hind legs, with contemptuous little faces pointing through
the netting. Finch wished he might open the doors of all the cages. He
pictured that wild scampering, that furious padding across the autumn
fields, that mad digging of burrows and hiding in the hospitable earth,
when he had set them free! Oh, if he could only set them free to run,
to dig, to breed in the earth as they had been born to do!

Word seemed to go from cage to cage that someone had come to help them.
Wherever he looked, expectant eyes seemed to be fixed on him. The
little foxes yawned, stretched, shivered with expectancy. Waited . . .

A bugle sounded from below. Finch came to himself. He slouched away,
hurrying toward the stairs, turning his back on the prisoners.

At the head of the stairway an elderly man was drooping mournfully
before an exhibit of canaries. He accosted the boy, offering him a
ticket in a lottery. The prize was to be a handsome bird in full song.

"Only twenty-five cents for the ticket," he said, "and the canary is
worth twenty-five dollars. A regular beauty. Here 'e is in this cage.
I've never bred a grander bird. Look at the shape and colour of 'im.
And you ought to 'ear 'im sing! What a present for your mother, young
man, and Christmas coming in another six weeks!"

Finch thought that if he had had a mother living it would have been an
extremely nice present for her. He pictured himself presenting it, in
its glittering gilt cage, to a shadowy lovely young mother of about
twenty-five. He fixed his hungry light eyes on the canary, trig and
ruddy from special feeding, and muttered something incoherent. The
exhibitor produced a ticket.

"Here you are--number thirty-one. I shouldn't be a bit surprised if it
was the lucky number. Sure you wouldn't like to buy two? You might as
well buy two while you're about it."

Finch shook his head, and produced the twenty-five cents. As he
descended the stairs he cursed himself for his weakness. He had been
short enough of funds without throwing away money. He tried to picture
Renny's being chivied into buying a lottery ticket for a canary.

After this expenditure he refrained from buying a programme of events
for the horse show. The cheaper seats were so filled that he was
obliged to take one near the back among a varied assortment of men and
youths. The man next him was rather the worse for liquor. He held the
bulky paper-bound programme for the events of the week so close to his
nose that they almost touched.

"Damned shilly programme," he was muttering. "Each page shillier than
page before."

Judging was taking place inside the ring. The tanbark was dotted with
men holding their mounts. Three judges, notebooks in hand, strolled
from horse to horse, now and again consulting together. The horses
stood motionless, all but one which capered pettishly at the end of the
reins. The exhilarating odour of tanbark and good horseflesh hung on
the air, which was still cool in spite of the closely packed spectators.

The man with the megaphone announced the winners. Ribbons were
presented, and they disappeared after the defeated competitors into the
regions behind. The band struck up.

"Damned usheless programme," sounded in Finch's ear. "Make nothing of
it."

"Perhaps I can," said the boy, longing to look at the programme, yet
not wanting to be seen in conversation with such a person.

"Buy one for yourshelf!" returned the man loudly. "Don't imagine you're
going to shponge on me for one."

There was a laugh from the near-by spectators. Finch slumped in his
seat, crimson, humiliated. He was thankful for the crash of music from
the band that heralded the Musical Ride.

His spirits rose as he watched the glossy creatures, ridden by soldiers
from the barracks, trip coyly and yet contemptuously through the
intricate evolutions. He allowed himself to be carried away by the
sensuous harmony of sound, of movement, of colour. The lights suspended
from the lofty ceiling, shrouded by bright flags and bunting, quivered
in the metallic vibrations of the air.

The next event was the judging of ladies' saddle horses. There
were fifteen entries, among them Silken Lady, ridden by Finch's
sister-in-law, Pheasant Whiteoak. She came in at the tail of the
string, a large number 15 on a white square attached to her waist.
Finch felt a sudden leap of pride as he watched Lady circle the
tanbark, showing her good blood and her pride of life in every step. He
felt a pleasant sense of proprietorship in Pheasant, too. She was like
a slender boy in her brown coat and breeches, with her bare, closely
cropped head. Odd how young she looked, after all she'd been through.
That affair of hers with Eden that had nearly separated Piers and her.
The two seemed happier now. Piers was awfully keen that Pheasant should
make a good showing in the jumps. A hard fellow, Piers--he must have
given her a rough time of it for a while. A good thing that Eden was
safely out of the way. He'd made trouble enough--been a bad brother to
Piers, a bad husband to Alayne. All over now! Finch gave his mind to
the riders.

A stout man in the uniform of a colonel put them through their paces,
sending them trailing, now swift, now slow, around the ring. Pheasant's
pale face grew pink. Ahead of her rode a short plump girl in immaculate
English riding clothes, a glossy little bell-topped hat, a snowy stock.
A youth next to Finch told him that she came from Philadelphia. She
had a noble-looking mount. The judges were noticing him. Finch felt a
sinking of the heart as the American horse swept rhythmically over the
tanbark. When the riders dismounted and stood in various limp attitudes
beside their horses, Finch's eyes were riveted on Pheasant and the girl
from Philadelphia.

It was as he feared. The blue ribbon was attached to the bridle of the
plump girl's horse. Silken Lady did not even get the second or third.
They were awarded to horses from other towns in the province. Pheasant,
her little face immobile, rode out with the troop of the defeated.

The Ladies' Hunters class came on. The sense of pleasurable
anticipation was enhanced by the joyous throbbing of the drums beneath
the martial air played by the horns. The first rider entered, her
mount, with arching neck and polished hoofs, spurning the tanbark.
With a gay air of assurance he sped lightly toward the four-foot gate.
Then, as the rider dropped his head for the jump, he swerved aside
and galloped easily along the track. The tension was relaxed into
amusement. Laughter rippled over the boxes and broke loudly from the
rear seats. Rider wheeled horse sharply and rode him again at the
gate. He leaped it with ease. Without mishap he jumped the wall, then
the first oxer, but as he cleared the bars he kicked the top rail and
it clattered to the ground. Another try! Again the balking at the
gate, again the leap, but this time two rails were scattered. A bugle
sounded. Rider and horse disappeared, the girl dejected, the beast
ingenuously pleased with himself.

Two more entries came and went without creating a stir. The next rider
was the girl from Philadelphia. The beautiful horse looked too tall
for the plump little figure in the perfect riding-habit. But he knew
his business. He threw himself whole-heartedly into the jumping. Only
one mishap in the twice around--a tick behind. They sailed off amid a
steady beat of handclaps.

Then Pheasant on The Soldier, half-brother to Silken Lady. Finch's
heart beat heavily as they trotted into the arena. It was no joke to
manage The Soldier. He was scarcely a fit mount for a slim girl of
nineteen. He approached the gate sidewise, showing his teeth in a
disagreeable grin. Pheasant trotted him back to the starting point, and
again headed him with soft encouragement toward the gate.

"Give him tashte o' whip!" advised the man beside Finch.

Again The Soldier balked at the jump. Again Pheasant wheeled him and
made a fresh start, but this time a sharp cut as they approached the
gate sent him flying over it like a swallow. Then over each of the
tall white gates he flew, the white "socks" on his hind legs flashing,
his ginger-coloured tail streaming.

Finch was grinning happily. Good little Pheasant. Good boy Soldier. He
added his applause violently to the storm that commended them. Still,
his eyes were anxious as he awaited the second time around. This time
there was no balking, but a swift triumphant flight over gate, over
hedge, over double oxer. But one never knew what The Soldier would
do. At the last gate he swerved aside, galloped past it, and, amid
handclaps and laughter, disappeared.

The Philadelphia girl, Pheasant, and three others were recalled for a
"jump off." All five did well, but the American horse was the best.
Sadly, Finch agreed that the judges were right when he was awarded the
blue ribbon, and The Soldier the red. "But the girl can't ride like
young Pheasant, anyhow," he thought.

Now came the Corinthian Class, grey and chestnut, bay and black,
streaming along the track close on each other's heels. Ah, there was
Renny! That thin, strong figure that looked as though it were a part
of the long-legged roan mare. A quiver of excitement ran through the
crowd, like a breeze stirring a field of wheat. As the sound of the
band died away the thunder of hoofs took up the music, sweeter by far!
Finch could not bear to remain in his seat. He slid past the knees of
those between him and the aisle, and descended the steps. He joined the
line of men that lounged against the paling that surrounded the track.

Here the tanbark looked like brown velvet. Here one heard the straining
of leather, the blowing, the snorting of the contesting glossy beasts,
their heavy grunts as they alighted on the ground after the clearing
of the hedge. His eyes were directed toward its greenness. He looked
up at each horse as it rose, at its rider bending above it, their two
muscular organisms exquisitely merged into the semblance of a centaur.

No women in this contest. Only men. Men and horses. Oh, the
heart-straining thrill of it! As Renny's horse skimmed the barrier,
the hedge, flew through the air, dropped to its thudding hoofs again,
and thundered down the tanbark, its nostrils stretched, its mouth open,
its breath rushing from its great barrel of a body, it seemed the
embodiment of savage prehistoric power. Renny, with his carven nose,
his brown eyes blazing in his narrow, foxlike face, his grin that had
always something vindictive in it, he too seemed possessed by this
savage power.

No woman in this contest? What of the mare? That gaunt roan devil that
carried him, leaped at the tug of his rein, galloped like the east wind
speeding across the waves with him! Ah, she was feminine enough! Every
inch of her. Hadn't she whinnied from her stall cries of challenge to
the velvet-eyed stallion? Hadn't she stood in the straw and given from
her gaunt body a big-boned foal that had not yet been broken? Hadn't
she suckled that foal, nuzzling it gently, snuffing the sweetness of
it? She was feminine enough, by God, thought Finch.

The boy's imagination, liberated by the tumult of plunging horses whose
breath comes in warm gusts against his face as they pass, spreads
itself like a fantastic screen between him and the reality of the scene
before him. He sees Renny's mare, galloping toward him, continue to
bear upon him instead of following the track. He sees her galloping
across him, trampling him, crushing him under hoof, annihilating
him. . . . He next witnesses the release of his soul from the trampled
body. He sees his soul, opaque, iridescent, strangely shaped, leap
to the back of the mare, behind Renny, clasping him about the waist
with its shadowy yet savagely strong arms, and soaring with him above
the circling riders, above the hand-clapping spectators, up among the
lights which rise in rushing billows of colour toward a thunderous sky
above. The drums beat, and the soaring music of the horns accompanies
them. . . . He stands clinging to the paling, a lanky boy with hollow
cheeks, hungry eyes, one bony shoulder-blade projecting a sharp ridge
through his coat. His expression is so ridiculous that Renny, trotting
tranquilly around the track, the blue ribbon fluttering against the
roan's neck, on suddenly discovering him thinks, "Good Lord, the kid
looks little more than an idiot!"

His greeting to Finch, when the boy sought him out among the groups of
men and horses in the enclosure behind the arena, was only a nod. He
continued his conversation with a rigid-looking officer in the uniform
of an American lieutenant. Finch had seen this man taking part in
several jumping events. He had followed Renny with the red ribbon.

Finch stood humbly by, listening to their talk of horseflesh and
hunting. Mutual admiration beamed from their eyes. At last Renny,
glancing at his wrist watch, said, "Well, I must be getting on. By the
way, this is my young brother, Finch, Mr. Rogers."

The American shook hands with the boy kindly, but looked him over
without enthusiasm.

"Grown fast, I suppose," he commented to the elder Whiteoak, as they
turned away together.

"Oh yes," returned Renny. "No bone to speak of," and he added,
apologetically: "He's musical."

"Is he studying music?"

"He was, but I stopped it last summer after he failed in his matric. I
feel regularly up against it with him. Now the music is cut off, he has
taken to play-acting. It seems that he'd rather do anything than work.
But I dare say he'll turn out all right. Sometimes the most unpromising
colt, you know. . . ."

They were now crossing an open paved space, unlighted save by the
blurred beam from a motor-car cautiously moving among the horses that
were being led to stable or station by shouting attendants. However,
a murky daylight made it still possible to distinguish one face from
another.

An ostler, running across the yard, slipped on the thin layer of mud
that covered the pavement and plunged forward, his bullet head coming
in violent contact with the stomach of a burly fellow leading a rearing
blanketed horse.

He roared: "Keep your blurry 'ead out of my stummick, will yer? Wot do
you think this is, a Soccer match?"

The ostler returned a volley of abuse which was drowned by the
whinnying of the horse, outraged by the delay in seeking his supper.
Inside the building the band could be heard playing "God Save the King."

The moving shadows in the yard now became indistinguishable as darkness
fell like a palpable covering overall. The rain, which had been fitful,
now blew in wildly from the east, and at the same moment the roaring
of the lake increased in volume, as though the elements, weary of the
activities of men and beasts, had united to obliterate them.

Renny Whiteoak and the American parted, and Finch, who had been
slouching behind, moved to his brother's side.

"Gosh, it's cold," mumbled the boy.

"Cold!" exclaimed his elder, in astonishment. "Why, I'm hot. The
trouble with you is that you don't get enough exercise. If you'd go in
for sports more, you'd get your circulation up. A foal just dropped
wouldn't feel the cold to-night."

A voice called from the car which they were approaching:

"Is that you, Renny? I thought you were never coming. I'm getting
beastly cold."

It was young Pheasant.

Renny got in and turned on the lights. Finch clambered in beside the
girl.

"What a pair!" said Renny, letting out the clutch. "I'll need to keep
you in a nest of cotton wool."

"Just the same," she persisted, "it's very bad for Baby, my getting
chilled, and I've been away from him too long already. Can't you get
the car started?"

"Something's gone wrong with its blasted old innards," he growled,
then added hopefully: "Perhaps the engine's just a bit cold." He did
various spasmodic things to the antiquated mechanism of the car,
unloosing at the same time, in a concentrated undertone, the hatred of
seven years. Loving and understanding horses, he was bewildered by the
eccentricities of a motor.

Pheasant interrupted: "How did I do?"

No answer came for a moment, then he growled: "Not so badly. But you
needn't have touched The Soldier. Much better not."

"Well, I came second, anyway."

"Might have come first if you hadn't. Lord, if ever I get this cursed
old bus home!"

Pheasant's voice was indignant. "Look at that American girl's horse! It
was a perfect peach!"

"So is The Soldier," muttered her brother-in-law, stubbornly.

Finch reclined in a corner of the car, in a state of depression. The
enveloping, dank blackness of the premature night, the thought of
the hours of study in his cold bedroom that lay before him, seemed
like hands reaching up out of the sodden ground, dragging him down.
He was famishing. He had a piece of chocolate bar in his pocket, and
he wondered if he could extract it and negotiate its passage to his
mouth without Pheasant's becoming aware of it. He felt for it, found
it, cautiously extricated it from its battered silver-paper wrapping
under cover of a sudden fierce outburst from Renny which distracted her
attention. He crammed it into his mouth, sinking lower into the seat
and closing his eyes.

He was beginning to feel comforted when Pheasant hissed in his ear:
"Horrid little pig!"

He had forgotten how shrewd was her sense of smell. She was going to
get even, too. She fumbled in her pocket, produced a cigarette-case,
and the next instant the sharp flare of a match lighted up her little
pale face and showed the sarcastic pucker of her lips cherishing the
cigarette. Sweet-smelling smoke lay heavy on the damp air. Finch's last
cigarette had been smoked that noonday. He might, of course, have asked
Renny for one, but it was scarcely safe to approach him when he was
baffled by the car.

Presently the eldest Whiteoak threw himself back in his seat with a
gesture of despair.

"We may walk home for all of her," he observed, laconically. He too
lighted a cigarette.

Smoke and gloomy silence pervaded the car. Rain slashed against the
sides, and with each flutter of the ill-fitting curtains a chill
draught penetrated the interior. Rain-blurred lights of other cars slid
by.

"But you were splendid, Renny," said Pheasant, to lighten the
depression. "And got the blue ribbon, too! I'd come around, and I saw
the whole thing."

"I couldn't help winning on the roan," he said. "God, what a mare!"
Then, after a moment, he added pointedly: "Though if I'd been ass
enough to take the whip to her, I should probably have come only
second."

"Oh, how cold I am!" exclaimed the girl, ignoring the thrust. "And I
can't help thinking of my poor little baby."

Finch was suddenly filled with intense irritation toward them both,
sitting there smoking. What had they to do when they did get home but
lounge about a stable or suckle a kid? While he would be forced to lash
his wretched brains to the study of trigonometry. He swallowed the last
of his chocolate, and said, in a hoarse voice: "You seemed to be thick
enough with that fool American 'lootenant.' Who was he?"

The abandoned impudence of the words shocked him, even as he uttered
them. He would not have been surprised if Renny had turned in his
seat and felled him to the floor. He was sure he felt a shiver of
apprehension from Pheasant's corner.

But Renny answered quietly enough: "I knew him in France. A splendid
chap. Very rich, too." And he added, enviously: "Got one of the finest
stables in America."

Pheasant moaned: "Oh, my poor little Mooey! Am I never to get back to
him?"

Her brother-in-law's tone became testy. "Look here, my girl, you must
either give up riding in horse shows or having babies. They don't fit."

"But I've just begun both in the last year," she pleaded, "and they're
equally fascinating, and Piers likes me to do both."

Finch growled: "Quote someone besides Piers for a change."

"But how can I? He's the only husband I've got."

"He's not the only brother I have, and I'm tired of hearing his words
chanted as though he was the Almighty."

She leaned toward him, her face a white blur against the dark. "Anyone
who is as self-centred as you are naturally doesn't want to hear about
anyone else. Anyone who would devour a bar of chocolate with a starving
young mother at his side. Anyone----"

"Say 'anyone' again," bawled Finch, "and I'll jump out of the car!"

The altercation was cut short by a vehement jolt. The motor had
started. Renny gave a grunt of satisfaction.

He slouched behind the wheel, staring ahead into the November night.
The roads were almost deserted when they had passed beyond the suburbs.
Even the streets of the villages through which they speeded were
almost empty. The vast expanse of lake and sky to the left was a great
blackness, except for the beam of the lighthouse and two dusky red
lights denoting the presence of a schooner ploughing against a head
wind.

His mind flew ahead to the stables at Jalna. Mike, a handsome gelding,
had got his leg badly cut by a kick from a vicious new horse that
morning. He felt much disturbed about Mike. The vet had said it might
be a serious business. He was anxious to get home and find out what
sort of day he had passed. . . . He thought of the new horse that had done
the damage. One of Piers's purchases. He himself had not liked the
look in the brute's eyes, but Piers cared nothing about disposition
if a horse's body was right. Piers would make over the disposition to
suit himself. That seemed to be his idea. Well, he'd better make this
new nag's temper over and be sharp about it. . . . He scowled in a way
that always moved his grandmother to exclaim ecstatically: "Eh, what a
perfect Court the lad is! He can give a savage look when he's a mind
to!"

He thought of a foal that had been dropped that morning by one of the
farm horses. She was a clumsy, ugly-looking beast with a face like a
sheep and large flat feet, but, lying there in the box stall with her
foal beside her, she had seemed changed. Something noble about the poor
beast, as a gaunt, ugly woman may give a sudden impression of nobility
bending over her newborn child. Extraordinary things, horses--Nature,
an extraordinary thing altogether. The differences between one mare and
another--between a farm horse and a hunter. The strange, unaccountable
differences between members of the same family. His young half-brothers
and himself. The boys more difficult to handle than horseflesh, by a
long shot. They shouldn't be, for they were the same flesh and blood,
got by the same sire. . . . Yet what two boys could be more unlike than
little Wakefield, so sensitive, affectionate, and clever, and young
Finch, whom one couldn't browbeat into studying or shame into taking
an interest in games, who was always mooning about with a sheepish
air? He had seemed more old, more mopey than ever of late. . . . And then
Piers. Piers was different again. Sturdy, horse-loving, land-loving
Piers. They were very congenial, he and Piers, in their love of horses,
their devotion to Jalna. . . . And Eden. He uttered a sound between a
growl and a sigh when he thought of Eden. Not a line from him since
he had disappeared after his affair with Pheasant, nearly a year and
a half ago. That showed what writing poetry could do to a chap--make
him forget decency, spoil the life of a girl like Alayne. What a
disgraceful mess it had been, that affair! Piers had been quieter, more
inclined to moods ever since, though the coming of the baby had done a
good deal to straighten things up. Poor little kid, he must be howling
for his supper by now. . . .

He increased the speed regardless of the slippery road, and called over
his shoulder: "Home in ten minutes now, so cheer up, Pheasant! Have
either of you got a cigarette? I've smoked my last."

"I've done the same, Renny. Oh, I'm so glad we're nearly there! You've
made wonderful time considering the night."

"Have you any, Finch?"

"Me!" exclaimed the boy, rubbing one of his bony knees, which had got
cramped from sitting so long in one position. "I never have any! I
can't afford them. It takes all my allowance, I can tell you, to pay my
railway fare, and buy my lunch, and pay fees for this and that. I've
nothing left for cigarettes."

"So much the better for you, at your age," returned his brother, curtly.

"Chocolate bars are much better for you," purred Pheasant, close to his
ear.

Renny peered through the window. "There's the station," he said. "I
suppose your wheel is there. Shall you get it? Or had you sooner stop
in the car with us?"

"It's a beast of a night. I think I'll go with you. No--I'll--yes--oh,
Lord, I don't know what to do!" He peered forlornly into the night.

Renny brought up the car with a jolt. He demanded over his shoulder:
"What the devil is the matter with you? You seem to have a perpetual
grouch. Now make up your mind, if it's possible. I think myself you
had better leave the wheel where it is and walk to the station in the
morning."

"It'll be a beastly walk in such weather as this," mumbled Finch,
moving his leg with his hands to bring life into it. "My books'll be
all muddy."

"Well, get one of the men to run you down in the car."

"Piers will want the car early. I heard him say so."

Renny stretched back a long arm and threw open the door beside the
youth. "Now," he said quietly, but with an ominous chest vibration in
his voice, "get out. I've had enough of this shilly-shallying!"

Finch scrambled out, giving a ridiculous hop as his numb foot touched
the ground. He stood with dropped jaw as the door was slammed and the
motor rattled away, sending a spray of muddy water against his trouser
legs.

He moved heavily under a weight of self-pity as he went toward the
station house. In the room behind the station-master's office he found
his bicycle propped against the scales. It might not be a bad idea
to weigh himself, he thought. He had been drinking a glass of milk
every day of late in the hope that he might put on a little flesh. He
mounted the scales and began dubiously moving the weights. The sound
of men's voices came from the inner room, argumentative voices, and
high-pitched. The scale balanced, he peered anxiously at the figures,
then his face brightened--a clear gain of three pounds. A childlike
grin lighted his features. The milk was doing him good, all right. He
was gaining flesh. Not so bad that, three pounds in a fortnight. He
would drink more of it. He stepped from the scales and was about to
remove his bicycle when he discovered that a pedal was pressing on the
platform of the scales. Suspicion clouded his brow. Might it not be
possible that the pressure of the pedal had something to do with the
increase in his weight? He set the wheel aside and again mounted the
scales. Eagerly he examined the trembling indicator. The weight flew
up. He moved the brass slide. Four pounds less. He had not gained! He
had lost. He had lost. He weighed a pound less than he had a fortnight
ago!

Gloomily he picked up the bicycle and steered it out of the station.
He heard one of the men ask: "What's that noise out there?" And the
station-master's reply: "I guess it's the Whiteoak boy that goes into
town to school. He leaves his wheel here." The voices were lowered and
Finch could imagine the disparaging remarks they were making about him.

He flung himself on to the saddle and pedalled doggedly along the path
beside the rails. Darn the old bike! Darn the rain! Above all, darn
milk! It was making him thinner instead of stouter. He would have no
more of it.

The driveway that led to the house was a black tunnel. Hemlocks and
balsams walled it in with their impenetrable resinous boughs. The
heavy scent of them, the scent of the fungus growths beneath them,
was so enhanced by the continuous moisture of the past two weeks that
it seemed a palpable essence dripping from the dense draperies of
their limbs, oozing from the wet earth beneath. It was an approach
that might have led to a sleeping palace, or to the retreat of a band
of worshippers of some forgotten gods. As the boy passed through the
oppressive, embalmed darkness he felt that he was moving in a dream,
that he might glide on thus for ever, with no light, no warmth, at the
end to greet him.

In there peace came to him. He wished that he might have ridden on
and on among these ancient trees till he absorbed something of their
impassive dignity. He pictured himself entering the room where the
family would be gathered, wearing like a cloak about him the dignity of
one of these trees. He pictured his entry as casting a chill over the
rough good spirits of these less austere beings.

As he emerged to the gravelled sweep about the house, the rain beat
down on him with increasing violence, and the east wind caused the
shutters to rattle and the bare stalks of the old Virginia creeper to
scrape against the wall. Warm lights shone from the windows of the
dining-room.

He put aside his imaginings and made a dash for the back entrance.

He pushed his bicycle into a dark passage in the basement and went into
a little washroom to wash his hands. As he dried them he glanced at his
reflection in the speckled mirror above the basin--a lank fair lock
hanging over his forehead; his long nose, his thin cheeks, made pink
by the wind and rain. He did not look so bad after all, he thought. He
felt comforted.

As he passed the kitchen he heard the nasal voice of Rags, the Whiteoak
houseman, singing:

    "Some day your 'eart will be broken like mine,
    So w'y should I cry over you?"

He had a glimpse of the red brick floor, the low ceiling, darkened by
many years of smoke, of Rags's buxom wife bending over the hot range.
His spirits rose. He raced up the stairway, hung his wet raincoat in
the hall, and entered the dining-room.




II

THE FAMILY


There was a special dish for supper that night. Finch was aware of
that, before ever he sniffed it, from the ingenuous air of festivity
brightening the faces of those about the board. Doubtless Aunt Augusta
had ordered it because she knew that Renny would be famished after
his long day and strenuous exertion in the horse show. Finch was
supposed to have a hot dinner at school, but he preferred to husband
his allowance by buying a light lunch, and so having a respectable sum
left for cigarettes, chocolates, and other luxuries. Consequently he
had always an enormous appetite by night, for he did not get home in
time for tea. The amount of food that disappeared into his bony person
without putting any flesh upon it was a source of wonderment and even
anxiety to his aunt.

The special dish was a cheese souffl. Mrs. Wragge was particularly
good at a cheese souffl. Finch's eyes were riveted on it from the
moment when he slid into his chair, between his brother Piers and
little Wakefield. There was not very much of it left, and it had been
out of the oven long enough to have lost its first palate-pleasing
fluffiness, but he longed passionately to be allowed to scrape the last
cheesy crust from the bottom of the silver dish.

Renny, after helping him to a thick slab of cold beef, fixed him with
his penetrating gaze and, indicating the souffl by a nod, asked: "Want
the dish to scrape?"

Finch, reddening, muttered an assent.

Renny, however, looked across the table at Lady Buckley. "Some more of
the souffl, Aunt Augusta?"

"No, thank you, my dear. I really should not have eaten as much as I
have. Cheese at night is not very digestible, though cooked in this
way it is not so harmful, and I thought that you, after your----"

The master of Jalna listened deferentially, his eyes on her face, then
he turned to his uncle Nicholas. "Another helping, Uncle Nick?"

Nicholas wiped his drooping grey moustache with an immense table napkin
and rumbled: "Not another bite of anything. But I should like one more
cup of tea, Augusta, if you've any left."

"Uncle Ernest, more of this cheese stuff?"

Ernest waved the offer aside with a delicate white hand. "My dear boy,
no! I should not have touched it at all. I wish we might not have these
hot dishes for supper. I am tempted, and then I suffer."

"Piers?"

Piers had already had two helpings, but, with a teasing look out of
the corner of his eye at Finch's long face, he said: "I shouldn't mind
another spoonful."

"Me, too!" exclaimed Wakefield. "I'd like some more."

"I forbid it," said Augusta, pouring her third cup of tea. "You are too
young a boy to eat a cheese dish at night."

"And you," put in her brother Nicholas, "are too old a woman to swill
down a potful of tea at this hour."

The air of dignified offence, always worn by Lady Buckley, deepened.
Her voice, too, became throaty. "I wish, Nicholas, that you would try
not to be coarse. I know it is difficult, but you should consider what
a bad example it is for the boys."

Her brother Ernest, desirous of preventing a squabble, remarked: "You
have such excellent nerves, Augusta, that I am sure you can drink
unlimited tea. I only wish that my digestion--my nerves----"

Augusta interrupted him angrily: "Whoever heard of tea hurting anyone?
It's coffee that is dangerous. The Whiteoaks, and the Courts, too, were
all indefatigable drinkers of tea."

"And rum," added Nicholas. "What do you say, Renny, to having a bottle
of something really decent to celebrate the prowess of our nags?"

"Good head!" agreed Renny, spreading a layer of mustard over his cold
beef.

Piers in the meantime had helped himself to more of the souffl, and
then pushed the dish to Finch, who, gripping it in one bony hand, began
savagely to scrape it clean with a massive silver spoon.

Wakefield regarded this performance with the patronizing wonder of one
who had shared the dish in its first hot puffiness. "There's a little
stuck on there, just by the handle," he said, helpfully pointing to the
morsel.

Finch desisted from his scraping long enough to hit him a smart blow on
the knuckles with the spoon.

Wake loudly cried, "Ouch!" and was ordered from the table by Lady
Buckley.

Renny shot a look of annoyance down the table. "Please don't send the
kid away, Aunt. He couldn't help squeaking when he was hit. If anyone
is sent away it will be Finch."

"Wakefield was not hurt," said Augusta, with dignity. "He screams if
Finch looks in his direction."

"Then let Finch look in another direction." And Renny returned to the
consumption of his beef with an air of making up for lost time, as well
as putting an end to the matter.

Nicholas leaned toward him. "What do you say, Renny, to a bottle?" he
rumbled.

Ernest checked him, tapping his arm with a nervous white hand.
"Remember, Nick, that Renny is in the high jumping to-morrow. He needs
a cool head."

Renny began to laugh uproariously. "By Judas, that's good! Aunt
Augusta, do you hear that? Uncle Ernie is afraid that a glass of
spirits will make my head hot, and look at the colour it is already!"
He rose energetically from the table.

"Can't Rags get it?" asked Nicholas.

"Of course. And swipe a bottle for himself. . . . The key of the wine
cellar, please, Aunt." He went around to Augusta and looked down on her
Queen Alexandra fringe and long, rather mottled nose. She took a bunch
of keys from a chatelaine she wore at her waist.

Wakefield bounced on his chair. "Let me go, please do, Renny! I love
the cellar and I hardly ever get there. May I go to the cellar for a
treat, Renny?"

Renny, key in hand, turned to Nicholas. "What do you suggest, Uncle
Nick?"

Nicholas rumbled: "A couple of quarts of Chianti."

"Oh, come now, I'm in earnest."

"What have you got?"

"Besides the keg of ale and the native wine, there's nothing but a few
bottles of Burke's Jamaica and some sloe gin--and Scotch, of course."

Nicholas smiled sardonically. "And you call that a wine cellar!"

"Well," replied his nephew, testily, "it's always been called the wine
cellar. We can't stop calling it that, even if there is nothing much in
it. Aunt?"

"I thought," said Ernest, "that we had half a bottle of French
vermouth."

"That's up in my room," replied Nicholas, curtly. "A little rum and
water, with a touch of lemon juice, will suit me, Renny."

"Aunt?"

"A glass of native port, my dear. And I really think Finch should have
one, too, studying as he does."

Poor Finch did not wait for the ironic laughter which followed this
appeal in his behalf to slump still lower in his chair, to crimson in
deprecatory embarrassment. Yet, even as he did so, he felt a warm rush
of love toward Augusta. She was not against him, anyhow.

Renny moved in the direction of the hall, and, in passing Wakefield's
chair, he caught the expectant little boy by the arm and took him
along, as though he had been a parcel.

They descended the stairs to the basement, where their nostrils were
assailed by the mysterious smells that Wake loved. Here was the great
kitchen with its manifold odours, the coal cellar, the fruit cellar,
the wine cellar, the storeroom, and the three tiny bedrooms for
servants, of which only one was now occupied. Here the Wragges lived
their strange subterranean life of bickerings, of mutual suspicion, of
occasional amorousness, such as Wake had once surprised them in.

As soon as their steps were heard by Rags he appeared in the doorway of
the kitchen, the stub of a cigarette glowing against his pallid little
face.

"Yes, Mr. W'iteoak?" he inquired. "Were you wanting me, sir?"

"Fetch a candle, Rags. I'm after a bottle."

The light of sympathy now brightened the cockney's face. "Right you
are, sir," he said, and, dropping the cigarette stub to the brick
floor, he turned back to the kitchen, reappearing in a moment with a
candle in a battered brass candlestick. They had a glimpse of Mrs.
Wragge, rising from the table at which she had been eating, and
assuming an attitude of deference, her face as much like the rising sun
as her lord's resembled the waning moon.

With Rags leading the way, the three passed in Indian file along
a narrow passage that ended in a heavy padlocked door. Here Renny
inserted the key, and the door, dragging stubbornly, was pushed open.
Mingled with the penetrating chill were the odours of ale and spirits.
The candlelight discovered what was apparently a well-stocked though
untidily arranged cellar, but in truth the bottles and containers were
mostly empties, which, in accordance with the negligence characteristic
of the family, had never been returned.

Renny's red-brown eyes roved speculatively over the shelves. A cobweb,
hanging from a rafter, had been swept off by his head, and was now
draped over one ear. He whistled through his teeth with the sweet
concentration of an ostler grooming a horse.

Wakefield, meanwhile, had espied an old wicker fishing basket pushed
under the lowest of a tier of shelves. He dragged it forth and saw in
the candlelight three dark squatty bottles, cobwebbed, leaning toward
each other as though in elfin conspiracy. A liquid clucking sound came
from them as they were disturbed, and, as he cautiously drew one out,
a lambent bronze light played beneath its dusty surface.

"Oh, I say, Renny," he exclaimed, in awed tones, "here is something
stimulative!"

Renny had made his selection, but he now set the bottles on a shelf
and, snatching Wakefield's treasure from him, restored it to its
fellows and pushed the basket hastily out of sight.

"If you had dropped that, you young devil's spawn," he observed, "I
should have put an end to you on the spot." And he added, grinning at
his henchman: "A man must have a secret in his life, eh, Rags?"

A secret in his life! The little boy was filled with ecstasy at the
thought. What magic potion had his splendid brother hidden in this
subterranean place? What stealthy visits did he perhaps make here, what
charms, what wizardry? Oh, if Renny would only make a partner of him in
his secret doings!

He was told to hold the candle while Rags locked the door. He saw
Renny's eyes fixed shrewdly on the servant's greyish-white hands. He
saw the eyes narrow; then Renny transferred one of the two bottles he
carried to his armpit and, with the hand thus freed, gave a sharp tug
to the padlock. It slipped off into his palm. "Try again, Rags," he
said, and his carven face with the long Court nose looked uncannily
like his grandmother's.

Rags remarked, this time successfully securing the door: "I never did
know 'ow to manage them blinkin' padlocks, sir." He was unabashed.

"Not with me looking on, Rags. There, take the candle from the
youngster. He's got it tilted sidewise."

"Yes, sir. But just before I do, let me remove that cobweb from your
'ead, sir."

Renny bent his head and Rags unctuously lifted off the cobweb.

They formed an odd procession, with something of the quality of a
strange religious rite. Rags, in advance, might have been some elfish
acolyte, the full light from the candle showing sharply the bony
structure of his face, the shallow nose, the jutting chin, the impudent
line of the jaw; Wakefield, in his wistful absorption, a young altar
boy; Renny, carrying a bottle in either hand, the officiating priest.
The narrow brick passage along which they passed had a chill that might
well have been associated with the crypt of some ruined cathedral, and
from the kitchen, where Mrs. Wragge was, as usual, burning something on
the range, drifted a thin blue veil of smoke, like incense.

At the foot of the stairway Rags stood aside, holding the candle aloft
to light the others as they mounted upward. "A pleasant evening to you,
sir," he said, "and good luck to the Jalna 'orses. We'll be drinkin'
yer 'ealth down 'ere--in _tea_, sir."

"Keep it weak, Rags. Better for your nerves," adjured his master,
callously, as he pushed the door at the top of the stairs shut with his
heavy boot.

In the dining-room Nicholas sat waiting, his large shapely hand,
adorned by a heavy seal ring, stroking his drooping moustache, an
expression of humorous satisfaction in his eyes. Ernest's expression
was already one of regret, for he knew that he would drink and he
knew only too well that his digestion would suffer for it. Still, a
kind of tonic gaiety was in the air. He could not help smiling rather
whimsically at the faces about him, and at the foreshadowing of his own
lapse!

Augusta sat admirably upright, her cameo brooch and long gold chain
rising and falling on her breast, which was neither large nor
small, but corseted in perfect accordance with the model of her
young-womanhood. She drew back her head and regarded her nephew
expectantly. He dusted the bottle of port and set it down before her.

"There, Aunt. The corkscrew, Wake. . . . Uncle Nick--Burke's Jamaica. . . .
That rascal, Rags, was for leaving the cellar door unlocked, so he
could sneak in and swipe something for himself. But I caught him, thank
goodness."

"He's an incorrigible rascal," said Nicholas.

"He deserves to be flayed alive," agreed Ernest, pleasantly.

"I'd have done the same myself," laughed Piers.

Pheasant had come downstairs and had drawn up a chair beside his. She
was eating a bowl of bread and milk, and the sight of her brown cropped
head and childish nape bent over it brought an amused yet tender smile
to Piers's lips. He stroked her neck with his strong sunburnt hand, and
said: "How you can like that pap beats me."

"I was brought up on it. Besides, it's frightfully good for Mooey."

"Put a little rum in it," advised Nicholas. "You need something to warm
you up after that long cold drive. Incidentally it would be good for
young Maurice, too. Help to make a Whiteoak and a gentleman of him."

"He's both, already," said Pheasant, sturdily, "and I'll not encourage
my offspring in a taste for spirits even at second hand."

Augusta looked upon the redness of the wine in her glass and remarked:
"Our old nurse used to put a little wine in the bottom of our shoes
when we went out in the wet to prevent our taking a chill. We did not
know what it was to wear rubbers, and we never had colds."

"You forget, Augusta," interposed her brother Ernest. "I had severe
colds."

Nicholas said: "That was because you were always kept in when it was
wet."

"I can remember," went on Ernest, "looking down from the nursery window
when I had one of my colds and watching you two--and, of course,
Philip--romping on the lawn with the little pet lamb we had. By and by
Papa would come along. He would pick up little Phil and ride him on his
shoulder. I can see him. He looked so magnificent to me. I can remember
how the wood pigeons were always calling then. . . . I used to shout to
him and throw kisses down from my window."

He had had only one glass of rum and water, but it took only that to
imbue his gentle spirit with sentimental melancholy.

"Yes, I remember," said his brother. "Poor little beggar that you were,
you would have a red flannel bandage about your throat, and, likely as
not, your ears stuffed with cotton wool, smelling of camphor."

"Good Lord!" said Renny. "If only the wood pigeons were thick as that
now! What shooting! Eh, Floss? Eh, Merlin?"

His tone, the word "shooting," which they perfectly understood, aroused
the two clumber spaniels sleeping on either side of his chair. They
sprang up with joyous barks.

Above the barking of the dogs Finch raised his voice: "I think I might
have something. A fellow going on nineteen can stand a drink or two, I
guess."

Renny gently cuffed his dogs. "Down, Merlin. Down, Floss, old pet.
What's that, Finch?"

There was silence now and Finch's voice boomed loudly but with an
ominous break in it. "I say I'm eighteen and I don't see why I can't
have a drink."

Piers said: "Give him a sip of your wine, quickly, Aunt Augusta--he's
going to cry."

Finch with difficulty controlled his temper, gazing down at the remnant
of apple tart that had been saved for him from the family dinner.

"Give the boy a glass of rum," said Nicholas. "Do him good."

Renny put out a long arm and pushed the decanter, which he had filled
with port, across to Finch. "Help yourself, Finch," he said, with a
suddenly protective air.

Finch selected a glass and took up the decanter. He was afraid that
his hand was going to shake. He set his teeth. He would not let it
shake. . . . Not with the eyes of all the family on him. All the family
hoping he would do some fool nervous thing. . . . Piers's white teeth
showing already between his lips, all too ready for a jeering laugh. . . .
He would not let it shake. Oh, God, he was saying to himself, keep my
hand from shaking! He knew that he no longer believed in or feared God,
yet the less he believed in and feared Him, the more often he flung out
these silent invocations for His support.

His hand was steady enough until the glass was almost filled; then it
began to shake. He barely escaped slopping the wine on to the table.
By the time he had set the decanter down he was trembling from head
to foot. He quickly tweaked his cuff over his thin wrist and threw a
furtive glance at the faces of those about him.

Everyone at the table had begun to talk at once. Not noisily or
confusedly, but pleasantly in accord. Smiles flickered over their
faces as visible signs of the geniality emanating from within. Aunt
Augusta began to tell of the old days at Jalna, when Papa and Mama had
entertained in lavish fashion, had even entertained a Governor-General
and his lady. Then, of course, she drifted to social life in England
in the eighties and nineties, when, she now liked to imagine, she had
held an important social position. Nicholas, too, talked of London, but
of a different London, where he and his wife, Millicent, had enjoyed
themselves in the racing set till his funds gave out, and she left him,
and he was obliged to return to the shelter of Jalna.

After two glasses, the mind of Ernest was centred on one thing
only--what he should wear to the horse show the next day. He had a new
fall overcoat of expensive English melton, made by the best tailor in
town, such an extravagance as he had not indulged in for years. It had
been bought with an eye on the horse show, yet the weather was so cold
and wet that Ernest, with his dread of afflicting his delicate chest,
was in a quandary. The tailor had told him that he had never seen a
man of his age with such a slender, upright figure. Not much like poor
old Nick, Ernest thought, who had grown so heavy and who generally
had to lean on a stick because of his gouty knee. . . . Yet what about
the delicate chest? A severe cold at that time of year might lead to
anything. "Now, Renny," he was saying, "what about the atmosphere in
the Coliseum? Was there a noticeable chill there to-day?"

"Chill!" ejaculated Renny, interrupted in a rhapsody on the powers of
the high jumper he was to ride the next day. "Why, there was no chill
at all! It was like a conservatory. A flapper might have gone there in
a chiffon shift, and felt none the worse for it."

He hugged Wake against his side, and gave him a sip from his glass. The
little boy, anxious to be in the very heart of the party, had asked:
"Renny, may I sit on your knee?"

And his elder had demanded: "How old are you?"

"Eleven, Renny. Not so awfully old."

"Too old to be nursed. I mustn't coddle you. But you may sit on the arm
of my chair."

Piers exclaimed, as Renny hugged the child: "Well, if that isn't
coddling!"

"Nothing of the sort," retorted Renny. "It's cuddling. There's all the
difference in the world, isn't there, Wake? Ask any girl."

Piers no longer sat. He stood by the side of the table smiling at
everyone. He looked remarkably well standing thus, with his stocky
figure, his blue eyes softly shining. He talked of the land and the
crops, and of a Jersey heifer he was going to trade for an exquisite
bull calf.

Pheasant thought: "How darling he looks standing there! His eyes are as
bright as Mooey's. Dear me, that huge bottle is almost empty! Strange
that I should have come from a father who is far too fond of his
glass to a husband who is inclined that way, too, when I am naturally
prohibitionist in my sentiments! I'm never going to encourage my little
baby in taking spirits when he gets big."

Aunt Augusta whispered to Finch: "You must go to your studies, my dear.
You should learn a great deal to-night, after those two nice glasses of
wine."

"Huh-huh," muttered Finch, rising from the table obediently. He took
up his books from a side table where he had laid them, sighing at the
thought of leaving this genial, relaxed atmosphere for the grind of
mathematics. As he turned away, the lottery ticket fell from between
the leaves of his Euclid to the floor.

Wakefield sprang from the arm of Renny's chair and picked it up. Finch
was already in the hall. "He's dropped something," and the little boy
peered at it inquisitively. "It's a ticket--look, number thirty-one!
Hello, Finch, you dropped something, my boy!"

Finch turned back angrily. Patronizing little beast, with his cheeky
"My boy!"

"Let's see," said Piers, taking the ticket from Wakefield and examining
it. "Well, I'll be shot if it isn't a lottery ticket! What are you
going in for, young Finch? You're a deep one. Out to make a fortune,
eh, unknown to your family? You're still a schoolboy, you know"--this
taunt because of his failure to matriculate--"and you're not supposed
to gamble."

"What's this?" demanded Renny, suspiciously. "Fetch it here."

Piers returned the ticket to its owner. "Take it to your big brother,"
he advised, "and then run upstairs for his shaving strop."

Finch, glaring, thrust the ticket in his pocket and lunged toward the
hall.

"Come back here!" ordered Renny. "Now," he continued, as the boy
reappeared, "just say what that lottery ticket is for."

"Good Lord!" bawled the goaded Finch. "Can't I buy a lottery ticket if
I want to? You'd think I was an infant in arms!"

"You may buy a dozen if you wish, but I don't like the way you are
acting about this one. What is it for?"

"It's for a canary, that's what it's for!" His voice was hoarse with
anger. "If I can't buy a lottery ticket for a goddam canary it's a
funny thing!"

The outburst of merriment that leaped from the lungs of his brothers
and uncles could have been equalled in volume and vitality by few
families. After the roar had subsided, Renny gave another of his
metallic shouts. "A canary!" he repeated. "Next thing he'll be wanting
a goldfish and a rubber plant!" But, though he laughed, in his heart
he was deeply ashamed for Finch. He was fond of the boy. It was
humiliating that he should be such a sissy--wanting to own a canary, of
all things!

A vigorous thumping came from the bedroom across the hall.

"There, now," cried Ernest, irritated concern clouding his features,
"what did I tell you! You've wakened her. I knew you would. It's very
bad for her to be disturbed like this at her age."

Augusta said, without flurry: "Wakefield, go to my mother's room. Open
the door quietly and say: 'There is nothing wrong, Grandmama. Please
compose yourself.'"

The picture thus conjured of this scene between his small brother and
his ancient grandmother caused Piers to emit a snort of laughter. His
aunt and uncle Ernest looked at him with disapproval.

Ernest remarked: "It is just as well, Piers, to teach the boy to be
polite."

Wakefield crossed the hall, solemn with the weight of his own
importance. He opened the door of his grandmother's room and, gliding
in, looked almost fearfully about that dim chamber, revealed, rather
than lighted, by a night-light placed on a low table near the head of
the bed. Before he spoke, he closed the door behind him to shut out the
robust mingling of voices from across the hall. He wanted to frighten
himself a little--just a little--with the strangeness of being alone
with Grandmother in this ghostly light, with the rain dripping from the
eaves outside her windows, and a single red eye glowing on the hearth,
as though some crouching evil spirit were watching him. He stood very
still, listening to her rather wheezy breathing, just able to make out
the darkness of her face upon the pillows and the restless movement of
one hand upon the crimson quilt.

The flowers and fruit painted on the old leather bedstead which she had
brought with her from the East glowed duskily, less bright than the
plumage of the parrot perching there. A sigh from the bed quivered on
the heavy air like the perfume from some forgotten potpourri of petals
gathered long ago. The bygone memories of the bed were drawn upward in
the sigh. In it Augusta, Nicholas, Ernest, dead Philip, father of all
the turbulent young Whiteoaks, had been conceived, in it all four had
been given birth. There Philip, their father, had died. What tremors,
what pains, what ecstasies, what perversities and dreams the bed had
known! Here Grandmother now spent the greater part of her time.

Her hand rose and hung above the quilt. A tiny red beam shone from the
ruby ring she always wore. She was feeling for her stick. Before she
was able to grasp it and rap again, Wakefield trotted to her side. He
said, like a little parrot: "There is nothing wrong, Grandmama. Please
compose yourself."

He enjoyed the dignified words Aunt Augusta had put into his mouth. He
should have liked to say them over again. Indeed he did repeat: "Please
compose yourself."

She peered up at him from under her shaggy red brows. Her nightcap had
got askew and one eye was completely hidden by it, but the other fixed
him with peculiar intensity.

"Hey?" she demanded. "What's that?"

"Compose yourself," he reiterated, earnestly, and patted the quilt.

"I'll compose this family," she said, savagely, "with my stick! Where's
my stick?"

He put it into her hand and then backed away a little.

She thought a moment, trying to recall what she had wanted, then a
burst of half-smothered laughter from the dining-room reminded her.

"What's that noise mean? What are they shouting about?"

"About a canary, Gran. Finch has a lottery ticket for one." He came
close to her now, looking eagerly into her face to watch the effect of
his words.

The effect was terrible. Her features were contorted by rage. She
glared up at him, speechless, for a moment, then articulated thickly,
"A canary--a bird--another bird in the house! I won't have it! It'll
put Boney in a rage. He won't bear it--he'll tear it to pieces!"

Boney, disturbed by the sound of his name, took his head from under
his wing and thrust it forward, peering down at his mistress from his
perch on the painted headboard.

"Haramzada!" he cursed wildly in Hindu. "Haramzada! Iflatoon! Paji!
Paji!" He rose on his toes and flapped his wings, creating a little
gust of warm air that fanned Wakefield's face.

Old Mrs. Whiteoak had heaved herself up in the bed. She had protruded
from under the quilt her large feet in purple bed-socks, and followed
them by long, yellowish legs.

"My dressing-gown," she gasped. "On the chair there. Hand it to me.
I'll show them whether I'll have a chit-chat flibbertigibbet canary in
the house."

Wakefield knew that he should have run to the dining-room and called
one of his elders. It was an unprecedented thing that Grandmother was
doing, getting up without Aunt Augusta or one of the uncles to help
her. But his desire for novelty, for excitement, was greater than his
prudence. He brought the heavy purple dressing-gown, and helped her to
put it on. He put her stick into her eager, shapely old hand.

But to get her on to her feet! That was a different matter. Drag as he
would at her arm, he could not budge her. "Ha!" she would grunt with
each heroic effort, her face getting more and more the colour of her
dressing-gown.

At last she laid down the stick. "No use," she muttered. "No use. . . .
Here, take both my hands, and pull me up." She held her two hands up
to him, an eager, expectant look in the one eye which her nightcap did
not conceal. It was evident that she was quite hopeful that the little
boy could perform the task. But, when he took her hands and strove with
all his might, the result was that his feet slipped on the rug and his
small body collapsed into her arms. She broke into sudden laughter and
clutched him to her, and he, half laughing at the predicament, half
crying at his own impotence, began to play with the strings of her
nightcap.

"Paji! Paji! Kuza Pusth!" cried Boney, beating the air with his bright
wings.

Mrs. Whiteoak pushed Wakefield from her.

"What were we doing?" she asked blankly.

"I was trying to get you up, Granny."

"What for?" Her eye gleamed suspiciously.

"Why, the canary, Gran. Finch's canary, don't you remember?"

On the instant her old face was alight with rage.

"Remember! Of course I remember. A canary in the house! I won't have
it. I'll stir things up. I'll make a scene. I must get out to the
dining-room."

"Shall I fetch Renny?"

"No. No. No, no, no. He'd put me back in bed. Cover me up, the rascal.
I know him. I must get to the dining-room and give 'em all a fright.
And I must do it quickly or one of them will be in here. Ernest will
come whining, or Nick mumbling, or Augusta rearing up her head. No, no."

"What about creeping, Gran?"

His grandmother threw him an infuriated look. "Creep, eh? One of my
family creep! A Court creep! A Court, let me tell you, never creeps
or crawls, even before his Maker! He walks upright, even if he has to
lean on someone else to do it. Let cowards creep--let snails creep--let
snakes creep----" She looked about her rather wildly. "What was I
saying?"

"You were saying all the things you'd let creep, Granny. You'd just got
to snakes."

"But what was I going to make a scene about?"

"About the canary, Gran."

"Ah, yes. We must attend to that. Try pushing me from behind,
Wakefield. Mount the bed."

Nothing loath to try his force from another angle, the little boy
scrambled on to the bed, and, kneeling behind her, pushed mightily
against her shoulders.

Grunting, straining, her eye prominent with the exertion, she rose.
Rose so thoroughly, in fact, that she all but toppled forward on her
face. But she balanced herself. Like some unseaworthy old vessel,
battered by a storm, she still could ride the waves on occasion with a
staunch front.

Leaning heavily on Wakefield's shoulder, she appeared in the doorway of
the dining-room, and cast an authoritative look over her descendants
gathered there. Shock and concern displaced hilarity on their strongly
marked countenances. Piers, who was nearest her, jumped to his feet and
came to her side. Ernest brought a chair, and together they placed her
in it.

"Mama, Mama," chided Ernest, adjusting her cap, so that her other too
bright eye was discovered, "this is very bad for you."

Augusta said, sternly: "Wakefield, you are a very naughty boy. You
deserve a whipping."

"Let the child be," rapped out her mother. "He minds his business, and
he does what he is told, which is more than you do."

Lady Buckley fingered her cameo brooch and looked offendedly down her
nose.

Reassured that nothing was wrong with her, Nicholas beamed across
the table at his ancient parent. Her unflinching spirit, her temper,
delighted him. "Game old girl," he murmured to himself. "She's
marvellous, and no mistake."

"Are you hungry, Gran?" asked Renny. "Is that what brought you out?"

"No, no, no," ejaculated Ernest. "She's not hungry! She had a large
bowl of cornflakes and puffed rice before she went to bed."

His mother turned her hawklike face on him. "Cornflakes," she muttered.
"Cornflakes--silly leaves . . . puffed rice--silly seeds . . . leaves
and seeds--fit food for a silly canary." She dropped her chin on her
breast, turning a word over in her mind. "Canary." Her brain fumbled
over it like a blind old tigress trying to discover the nature of a
strange morsel. "Canary." Of what did it remind her? Her deep dark eyes
roved over the faces of the clan till they fell on young Finch in the
doorway. He was gazing at her in sheepish fascination. The instant she
saw him she remembered why she had risen so vehemently from her bed. A
_canary_! Finch's canary in that house! A little, chirping, squeaking,
hopping bird at Jalna! She wouldn't have it!

Her face became dark with anger. She found it difficult to speak.

Renny said: "Give her something to eat. She's getting in a fine old
rage."

Wakefield tendered a plate of biscuits and cheese in her direction.
With a savage look she poked it away with her stick.

"Finch," she articulated. "I want Finch."

The boy hesitated.

"Come close where she won't have to shout at you," said Nicholas.

Finch slouched into the room, grinning deprecatingly.

"Now," she said, peering at him from under her shaggy rust-coloured
brows with sudden, lucid firmness, "what's this I hear about a canary?"

Finch, staring into her eyes with a bewitched feeling, could only
stammer: "Oh, look here now, Gran--look here--there's no darned canary
at all----"

"There _is_ a canary," she shouted, thumping her stick on the floor.
"A nasty, flibbertigibbet canary that you've smuggled into the house.
Fetch it here and I'll wring its neck for it!"

"Oh, I say, Gran, it's only a lottery ticket. There's not one chance in
a hundred that I'll win. I don't want the thing anyway."

"Ha!" she retorted, furiously. "You'd lie, would you? Come here!"

He approached guardedly, but she was swifter than he gave her credit
for. With the sweeping gesture of one indulging in some sport, she
caught him a blow on the knuckles, so sharp that it skinned three of
them and doubled him up with the sting of it.

"Such a disgraceful temper!" cried her daughter.

"Steady on, Mama," growled Nicholas.

Ernest rose from his chair, trembling. "Mama, this is very bad for you.
You might have a stroke."

"Stroke, is it?" she shouted. "I gave the brat a stroke--a stroke
he'll remember. I drew the blood, I did! Put out your hand, boy, till I
see it." She was purple with excitement.

Renny set down his glass of rum and water. He came and leaned over her.
"Don't you want to be kissed, Gran?" he inquired on a coaxing note.

She raised her eyes and, from under the rim of her cap, peered into his
face. Its lean redness, thus suddenly brought close to hers, shutting
out her view of the others; his strongly carved nose, resembling her
own; his lips, drawn back from his strong teeth in a smile, hard, yet
still somehow tolerant and tender, caught her attention, submerged her
in an enchantment she could not resist. Renny, bone of her bone, a
Court of Courts, one of the old stock--nothing puling about him.

"Kiss me," she ejaculated. "Kiss me quick!"

Finch, under screen of the embrace, slipped from the room. Going up the
thickly carpeted stairs, he could hear the loud exchange of kisses.

Panting a good deal, the old lady looked around the room triumphantly
after Renny had released her--she seemed to have gathered strength from
his pressing vitality--and, giving a valiant tug to her cap which again
disposed it over one eye, she demanded: "My teeth! I want my teeth. I'm
hungry. Somebody get my teeth."

"Will one of you please get the teeth for her?" murmured Augusta,
resignedly.

Wakefield blithely danced back to the bedroom, reappearing instantly
with the two sets of teeth in a tumbler of water. Mrs. Whiteoak leaned
toward him as he approached, and stretched out her hands. She could
scarcely endure the waiting for them. The little boy joggled the
tumbler before her.

"For pity's sake be careful, child," exclaimed Augusta.

"He should never have been allowed to fetch them," observed Ernest,
and, despising himself for doing it, he poured a little more rum into
his glass.

       *       *       *       *       *

It had been a good evening, Renny thought. What a supper the old lady
had made! And how the old boys had enjoyed their spot of rum! He had
never known Uncle Nicholas more entertaining than when the women were
gone and the four men were alone, the glasses refilled, and the crimson
curtains drawn close. A good day. His horses had done well. He had done
well. He was conscious of a pleasant ache of honourable fatigue in legs
and arms. Not perhaps so much an ache as a wholesome consciousness of
every muscle. How the mare had pulled, had striven!

The eldest of the young Whiteoaks, his lean body curved in an armchair,
his bony weather-beaten face drooping above the dark wood of the table
which reflected the lights of the prismed chandelier, would have made a
satisfying model for an artist who desired to paint a picture entitled
"The Huntsman at Night." He would have found, in the disposal of his
limbs, in the lines of his head, a perfect example of the relaxation of
a man whose joy was in vehement primitive pursuits.

Rags was clearing the table. As he lifted the spirits bottle, of which
a small part remained, the master of Jalna, nodding toward it, observed
curtly: "Yours, Rags."




III

THE HOUSE AT NIGHT


When the order and calm of night had descended upon the turbulence of
Jalna, the old house seemed to settle under its roof with an air of
snuggling, as an old man under his nightcap. It seemed to hunch itself
against the darkness and draw inward. It appeared to tie the strings of
its nightcap under its chin, the jutting porch, and mutter: "Now for
dreams." Like nightclothes it wrapped the outside darkness around it,
and pressed its bulk against the earth. And, as one more dream added to
its weighty store, the thoughts and movements of those inside its walls
flitted shadowlike in room after room.

Finch's room was under the sloping roof of the attic. Its one window
was closed against the dripping leaves of the Virginia creeper which
clung to that side of the house. Up here there was always a faint
smell of damp plaster, and the dreamy mustiness of old books. The roof
needed mending, and the old books--which were mostly discarded farm
journals, dog-eared manuals on horse breeding and showing, and thick
catalogues of equine events--needed throwing away, but there was no
haste at Jalna, no too urgent attempt to arrest natural decay. When the
roof should leak sufficiently to form a puddle on the floor, when the
cupboards should no longer be capable of containing more trash, then,
and then only, repair and clearing out would begin.

Finch, seated under an oil lamp, shaded by a green paper shade on
which were pictured the heavily smiling faces of two German girls, was
writing in his diary. He wrote:

"All but missed train. Rotten day at school. _Must_ swat for math exam.
Had interesting talk with Leigh in spare hour. Horse show. Renny simply
great. Best in the show. Pheasant not bad on The Soldier. Red ribbon.
Motored home. Row about lottery ticket for canary. Gran absolutely
awful. Had two glasses of port!! Saw Joan."

He sucked the abrasions on his knuckles and let his eyes run over
the entries of the preceding days. There was more or less variety in
these. School was more or less rotten. There were noted several good
times with Leigh, and a "h---- of an evening" with George and Tom. One
peculiarity was common to all the entries. They all ended with the name
"Joan." It was either "Saw Joan" or "Did not see Joan."

In looking over the entries, Finch saw nothing either pathetic or
ridiculous in them. Nevertheless he took care to conceal the diary
behind some textbooks on the shelf before he began his evening's work.
He did not intend to run any risk of its being discovered by the prying
eyes of Pheasant or young Wake.

He took out his Euclid and laid it on the table before him. The upper
right-hand corner had to be placed on an old ink stain in the wood. The
book had a habit of opening of itself at page 107. He hoped it would
not do that to-night because, if it did, he might be unable to study.
His jaw dropped and his hand shook as he raised the cover--107 stared
up at him. . . . The pencil he held between his fingers fell with a small
clatter to the floor. He was afraid he would not be able to pick it up.
He stared blankly at the number on the corner of the page--107. Why did
he fear it? I--that was the same as I . . . I, Finch Whiteoak.
O--that was nothing . . . he, Finch, was nothing! Ah, he was
getting at it! That was why he dreaded the number, and no wonder!
Then, 7--that, of course, was magic. Magic 7. I, Finch, am _nothing_.
He closed the Euclid sharply and opened it in a fresh place. Page 70
this time. Again the magic 7, and after that naught. Magic followed by
nothingness, void. . . . That was life, magic, with naught to follow! He
tried again. Page 123. Again the 1. Then two . . . I and another. Two of
us. . . . Then three. I and the other have made a third. Three of us. . . .
He saw himself, himself and Joan together in a bedroom. They were
bending over the crib where lay the Third which they had made, as he
had seen Piers and Pheasant bending over Mooey's crib. Joan, to whom he
had never spoken a word! She was a girl to whom he had been introduced
at a football match by his friend, Arthur Leigh. He had only bowed,
but she had said, "How do you do?" in a clear piping voice, and had
snuggled her round white chin into the fur collar of her coat, and had
drawn in one corner of her mouth, producing by the action a tremulous
yet persistent dimple in her cheek.

The thought of her had troubled him a great deal during the month that
had since passed, but he had made no effort to become acquainted with
her and had never spoken of her again to Leigh, though he should have
liked to know her surname, which he had not caught at the moment of
introduction.

She went to a girls' school not far from his own school, and few days
passed without an encounter on the street. One swift glance was all he
ever gave her as he took off his cap, but his meeting or not meeting
with her always provided the last words for the day's entry in his
diary. It was always either "Saw Joan," or "Did not see Joan."

On the nights when he was obliged to write the negative he felt
invariably depressed and heavy, settling down doggedly to his work. But
when he had seen her, as to-day, he was even more troubled, unable to
settle down at all.

Of course, he reflected, these unhappy moods were nothing new. He
had always had strange thoughts. He supposed that if he had never
met Joan he would have found some other instrument with which to
torture himself. If only he had passed his exams, and Renny had not in
consequence stopped his music lessons! He felt that to-night, if he
had been allowed to spend an hour at the piano, it would have quieted
him, lifted him into happiness, freed him from the sense of longing, of
fear. He did not question the justness of Renny in stopping the piano
playing. He knew that he had spent a lot of time--wasted it, he humbly
admitted--hanging over the keyboard, when he was not practising but
feverishly attempting to compose. How happy he had been at those times!
He could not in his heart of hearts believe that they had been bad for
him--even bad for his school work.

Resolutely he opened his Euclid at the problems and deductions he was
to study for the next day. He placed the corner of the book exactly
on the blot on the table. Then he dropped his pencil again. A bad
beginning to drop one's pencil. . . . He looked down at it where it had
fallen on a discarded sheet of paper on which was written a French
exercise. He wondered at what word the tip of the pencil pointed.
But he would not be so silly as to look. He would pick up the pencil
and set to work. . . . Still, it would be interesting to know the word
. . . perhaps he really ought to know the word . . . perhaps there was a
meaning in this--something to help him.

He dropped to his knees and bent over the pencil, narrowing his eyes
to decipher the blurred letters. The point of lead rested on the word
_ne_. He felt shocked. "Ass!" That's what he was--a silly ass! Thank
God, no one could see him! But stay--he had been mistaken in the word.
It was not _ne_, but _me___--"soul!" Ah, that was different. His
soul--that was groping in the darkness. Strange that he should be
kneeling there with the tip of the pencil pointing out the word "soul."
It made him think of the times he had knelt by that chair, afraid of
God, praying. He wanted suddenly to pray now, but words would not come.
He remembered one night, more than two years ago, when Piers had made
him get out of bed to say his prayers, just to rag him, and he had been
able to remember only two words--Oh, God! _Oh, God!_ What boundless,
what terrible words! Words that unchained one's soul, whirled it
upward, dissolved it. . . .

If once he gave way and began to pray, to let the words of prayer free
his soul, there would be no study for him that night.

He would pick up his pencil and begin to work. . . .

But he found that he could not pick it up. Three times his fingers
wavered above it, but they could not close on it. He groaned, hating
and fearing himself. . . . He began to count the dim medallions of the
carpet. He found that he was kneeling on the sixth medallion from the
north end of the room, and the fifth from the west. Six and five were
eleven--it was the eleventh day of November. Six times five--thirty.
Thirty was the number of his locker at school. Thirty was the number
of marks he had taken in the Euclid examination when he had failed . . .
Christ was thirty years old when He had been crucified. . . .

He thought that if he had a cigarette to smoke he might be able to
pick up the pencil and begin his work. He got to his feet and stole
cautiously down the attic stairs. The door of the bedroom occupied by
Piers and Pheasant stood ajar. A lowered lamp cast a peaceful light
over the white bed and Mooey's cradle beside it. It was the same solid
hooded cradle that had rocked all the infant Whiteoaks. Both the uncles
had wept, and slumbered, and crowed in it. Meg and Renny, Eden, Piers
(the most beautiful baby of all), himself (he could imagine the poor
squalling wretch he had been), little Wake, whom he could remember
gazing from under the hood with great dark eyes. . . . And two or three
babies had died in it. Finch wondered how Mooey could sleep so quietly
there.

He opened the top drawer of the chest of drawers where he knew Piers
sometimes kept an extra packet or two of cigarettes. Ah, there they
were--Piers was good to himself! A large-size tin box of Players,
more than half full. A packet containing at least a dozen Turkish
cigarettes. Finch helped himself, but with caution, and closed the
drawer.

As he turned to go he bent over the cradle and looked in curiously at
young Maurice. He was curled, sweet and warm, in baby sleep. One round
fist, curved against his mouth, pressed the moist flower-petal lips
to one side. There was a damp spot on the pillow where he had been
slobbering a little. Finch went suddenly weak with tenderness as he
looked at him. He put his head under the hood of the cradle and sniffed
him, as a dog might sniff at a sleeping puppy. He kissed his cheek and
felt his own blood turn to some mild sweet nectar, and his bones to
nothing but a tender desire for love.

He took the baby into his arms and bent over him, his lank blond
forelock falling over the little head. He kissed the head, the cheeks,
the mouth extravagantly. He could not be satisfied. He poured out his
soul in love. His eyes filled with tears, which dropped on to the
little hands. My God, was it possible that Piers felt that way?

Voices were in the hall below. Pheasant and Aunt Augusta were coming
up. . . . He thrust the child back into the cradle and drew the covers
over him. Not for anything would he have been caught caressing his
young nephew.

Upstairs he found he was no longer the victim of his nerves. He picked
up the pencil, the Euclid, lighted one of Piers's cigarettes, and set
to work.

       *       *       *       *       *

Lady Buckley had laid aside her bracelets, her brooch, and her gold
chain. She had taken off her black satin dress, her long black silk
petticoat, and now, in her camisole and short white underpetticoat,
was brushing her still abundant hair. Even in such jaunty apparel as
this, her appearance of being on her dignity was not lessened. She
regarded her reflection in the glass with her accustomed air of mingled
complacence and offence. Her complexion had never been good--now it was
mottled and liverish; her eyes had a peculiar glassy dullness, unlike
her mother's, which still retained a clear fire. But her features were
excellent. Her nose--the Court nose, though in a modified form. Not the
fierce, carven feature that her mother and Renny thrust into the world.
An improvement, she thought. More becoming to a lady, the widow of an
English baronet. She began to think of her husband. . . .

How insignificant her parents and her brothers had thought him, with
his pale side-whiskers, and his mild eyes, and his neat little feet!
He had had a little lisp, too. She could almost hear him, even now,
calling her: "Auguthta!" But what character! He had never lost his
self-control, no matter what happened. Nothing ever surprised him.
Even when the word had come from England that two sudden deaths
had brought the baronetcy to him, together with an old house and a
respectable income, he had shown no surprise. He had merely turned from
the cablegram in his hand and remarked: "You had better begin packing
our bags at once, Lady Buckley. We're going home." Heavens, what a
start it had given her! To be addressed as "Lady Buckley" in that cool
tone, without a syllable of preparation. She had not known whether to
laugh or cry. She had never ceased to be grateful that she had done
neither, but had replied with undismayed dignity: "You will need new
flannels for the sea voyage, Sir Edwin." . . . Lady Buckley! How the
title had always stuck in her mother's throat! How disagreeable it was
of her mother, always pretending that she could not remember her name!
Speaking of her to friends as "my daughter, Lady Bunkley"--or perhaps
"Bilgeley." If her mother had not been a Court she would have called it
ill-bred. But, of course, the Courts were like that. Nicholas was very
much like that. So overbearing. He always seemed to think that he and
that dreadful wife of his--Millicent--had been of more importance in
England than she and Edwin had been. She was sure of that because of
the jocular tone he used about the little circle the Buckleys had moved
in. Well, at any rate it had been a much better behaved circle than the
horsy one wherein he and Millicent had splurged and lost everything!

She thought of England. How she longed to be back there! She thought
of the hedgerows, the beds of geraniums about her own house (she did
hope the tenants were keeping things in order), the song of the linnets
on the moist sweet air, her friends. She had been away from all these
things for a year, and it seemed like two. But it was her duty to
remain in Canada till her mother's death. Surely Mama--well, she was a
hundred and one. It almost frightened Augusta . . . what if Mama were to
live for ever! But then, no one lived for ever!

She put on her flannelette nightdress, buttoned up to the chin, with
silk featherstitching at the wrists. Little knobs of hair in wire
wavers stuck out on her head. She drew the curtains closely across the
two windows. How the rain beat! Voices came from the dining-room below.
Renny's voice, exclaiming: "Never! Never!" How odd that he should
exclaim "Never!" that way, as though in answer to her thoughts. . . . She
caught sight of her reflection in the pier-glass, as she stood against
the long dark curtain. She drew back her head and stared. A stately
figure she made, truly. An upright, noble-looking creature, she could
not help thinking. She raised one hand and placed it palm downward
across her brow in the attitude of one searching the horizon for a
sail, in the attitude of one standing on the edge of a cliff, buffeted
by the wind, with the stormy sea below.

She posed thus for a moment like a statue, then turned out the light
and sought her bed.

       *       *       *       *       *

Ernest had felt a little odd coming up the stairs, almost light-headed,
but when he got to his own room he was quite himself, except that
he had a feeling of agreeable exhilaration. He very much liked the
rose-coloured shade for his lamp that Alayne had sent him from New York
on his birthday. It made his room so pretty and cheerful, even on such
a night as this. Really, since this wet dark spell of weather had set
in, he could hardly wait to light the lamp. Even in the daytime it made
a charming spot of colour in the room. Alayne had always been so sweet
to him. Her going had left a real blank in his life. And Eden, too, he
missed him greatly. It was such a pity that their marriage had turned
out as it did. They had been such a lovely young couple, intellectual,
good to look upon.

He stood meditatively, enjoying the soft pink glow that was diffused
over the room. It imparted a fragile liveliness to the Dresden china
figures on the mantelpiece, a tremulousness as of sunrise on the
water-colours on the grey walls. He was lucky to have such a room.
Well, not altogether _lucky_, for his own good taste had made it what
it was, though, of course, the view over the meadows and winding
stream was much to be preferred to Nick's view, which was blocked by a
huge cedar, and beyond it only the ravine.

The little china clock between the shepherd and shepherdess chimed
twelve. What an hour for him to be getting to bed! But what a jolly
evening! He hoped and prayed that the rum and water would do him no
harm. Yes, and he had had a glass or two of wine before the rum. . . . He
hoped and prayed that Mama would be all right after that second supper
of hers. How roguish she had been! He smiled when he thought of her.
Really, one could scarcely believe that he was seventy-one with Mama so
active. . . . He hoped and prayed that he would be like that at a hundred
and one. If he could manage to live that long. There was no reason
why he should not live to a ripe old age. He took such good care of
himself, though, of course, there was his chest--a handicap, certainly.

He remembered his new overcoat. Not a bad idea to try it on now when
he was looking his best, flushed a little, his eyes bright. He got it
from its hanger in the tall wardrobe and turned it round, looking it
over very critically, his lips stern, his eyes knowing. "A damned fine
coat!" He uttered the words aloud in the tone one might use in similar
praise of mare or woman. Gad, it was a handsome coat!

He put it on, and it slipped over him with a firm yet satiny embrace.
He stared at his reflection in the glass. No wonder the tailor had
complimented him on his figure! Slender, upright (when he used a little
will power), with an air of elegance such as one did not associate with
the colonies.

Suddenly he felt the colonial's strange nostalgia for England. He
remembered a top-hat he had bought once in Bond Street. He remembered
exactly what the shopman had looked like, and his pleasantly
deferential manner. He remembered buying a flower for his buttonhole
from such a sweet-faced flower-seller that same morning. He recalled
the agreeable elation he had felt as he had walked lightly down the
street. It had never taken a great deal to elate him. He had a happier
disposition than either his sister or his brother. Eden was like him
in that. They both had a way of seeing the beauty of life--poetic
temperament, though, of course, one couldn't say so before the family.
Certainly he missed Eden's little visits to his room--to say nothing
of Alayne's. Such a pity about that marriage. . . . Twenty years ago he
had bought that hat in England, and he had not been back since! Perhaps
when Mama died, and Augusta returned to her home, he would go back with
her on a visit.

When Mama died! The thought of her death always brought a tremor of
apprehension with it. There was first the dread of losing her, and,
added to that, the prolonged uncertainty as to who would inherit her
money. Not a hint had dropped from her lips. She had thought it enough
for them to know it was willed in its entirety to one member of the
family. Thus her power over them was kept undiminished through the
years. And their suspense. She must be worth between ninety and a
hundred thousand, all in reliable bonds and stocks. Ah, if she should
leave it to him, he would have independence, power in the family! He
would do so many nice things for the boys! Dear boys, it would be best
for them if the money were left to him. . . .

Looking steadily into the glass, his cheeks flushed, his body erect,
he was sure that he did not look more than fifty, or fifty-five at the
most. The coat was so warm, as well as so becoming, he would wear it
to-morrow--no more shilly-shallying about it.

Before he got into bed he went to the basket where his cat, Sasha, lay
sleeping with her kitten beside her. He looked down on them with a wry
smile. Sasha, at her age--she was twelve--to have a mongrel kitten! And
not only to have it, but be brazen about it! He had thought she was
past the age for having kittens--especially mongrel ones--and then, one
morning, she had had this one on his bed. Just given one yell, about
six in the morning, and had it. It had sounded like a yell of triumph,
rather than an outcry of pain. What a jolt it had given him at that
hour in the day! He'd scarcely been able to eat any breakfast. It
wasn't only the sudden birth on his quilt, but the thought that Sasha
. . . it wasn't as though she were a silly young female to be intrigued
by a pair of handsome whiskers!

He murmured, "Kitty, kitty," and touched her with his fingers. It was
as though he had touched a vital nerve that controlled her whole body.
She unfolded like a fan, uncurling her body to its full length, raising
the great golden plume of her tail. She opened her eyes, and then
grinned impudently up at him--a great three-cornered grin that showed
the roof of her mouth and her curling tongue.

"Naughty, naughty," he said, tickling her.

Her kitten butted its little bullet head against her. It should have
been drowned, but his love for Sasha made him weak. It showed no sign
of its mother's pure Persian birth, but there was something charming
about its snow-white underpart, pink nose, and pointed grey ears. It
had white paws, too, that looked large for it--working-class paws. The
father was evidently a handsome fellow, but of the people.

Even after he was in bed he stretched out his hand and felt for the
pair in the basket. It was amusing to lie in bed with one's hand
snuggled against those warm furry bodies. It was comforting.

       *       *       *       *       *

Piers found Pheasant already in bed, her shingled brown head quite off
the pillow on the edge of the mattress, her bright eyes gazing into the
cradle.

"Piers, do you know, Mooey's perfectly wonderful! What do you suppose
he'd done? Got in between _quite_ different layers of the blankets! I
don't see how he managed it. Goodness, you've been a long time."

"We got to talking." He came over and looked down at the
five-months-old baby. "Looks pretty fit, doesn't he?"

"Oo, the precious! Hand him in to me. I want him beside me while you
get ready."

"Don't be silly. I shan't be five minutes. You'll only disturb him."

"I want to see his little toes, don't you?"

"Pheasant, you're nothing but a baby yourself. . . . I say, someone's been
at my top drawer!"

"Not me! Not Mooey! Oh, Piers, if you'd only seen the face he made
then! His mouth just like a pink button and his eyebrows raised. He
looked positively supercilious."

"If I thought young Finch had been at my cigarettes . . ." He muttered as
he undressed.

"Well, he had none of his own to-night. I know that. What would you do?"

"I'd show him. . . . Good Lord, I wish you had heard Uncle Ernest going on
about his new coat after you left! I'll bet you a new silk undie thing
to a pair of socks that he ends by wearing his winter coat after all."

"Then you'd go and say something to discourage him. Just a few words
from you like 'Some day, this, Uncle Ernest,' or you might simply come
into the house shivering."

"Well, you're free to tell him how balmy it is, and how perfect his
shoulders look in the new coat."

"No. I'm not going to bet. It's against my principles. From now on I've
got to be setting a good example to my little baby."

Piers sputtered with laughter. He was in his pyjamas now. "Shall I put
out the light?"

"Piers, come here; I want to whisper."

He came and bent over her. Lying relaxed on the bed, her hair rumpled,
a white shoulder showing above the slipped-down nightdress, she seemed
suddenly very tender and appealing to Piers. She seemed as sweet and
delicately vigorous as one of the young silver birches in the ravine.

His heart quickened its beat. "Yes? What does she want?" His eyes
glowed softly into hers.

She hooked an arm around his neck. "I'm hungry, Piers. Would you--like
a darling?"

He looked genuinely shocked. "Hungry! Why, it isn't any time since you
were eating."

"Yes, it is. It's ages. You forget how long you've been sitting
downstairs talking. Besides, I've fed Mooey. There's practically all
the good of my own supper gone. Anyway . . . will you, Piers?"

He thought, as he descended the steps into the basement: "I'm spoiling
her. Before the kid came she'd never have dreamed of sending me
downstairs for food for her at this hour. She'd have jolly well got it
herself. She's getting just like those American wives in the magazines."

Nevertheless, he sought earnestly in the pantry for something to stay
her. He could hear Mrs. Wragge's bubbling snore from the room beyond
the kitchen. He could hear the old kitchen clock ticking the night away
as eagerly as though the game were fresh to it instead of seventy years
repeated. He lifted an enormous dish cover. Under it three sausages.
He looked between two plates turned together. Cold salmon. He opened a
door. The last of the joint, cold boiled potatoes, beetroots in their
own juice, the carcass of a fowl--that looked promising. No, _high_!
Whew! He shut the door. . . . What quantities of bread and buns all
tumbled together in the bread-box! He chose a bun, split it, buttered
it. That was that. Rather doubtfully he laid a sausage beside it. Cold
rice pudding, packed with raisins. That was the thing! A saucer of that
with cream. . . . Ha! What was this? Plum cake. He cut a slab and devoured
it like a schoolboy. Indigestible, that stuff, for a nursing mother. . . .

Pheasant, round-eyed, sat up in bed. "Oh, how scrumptious!"

She clutched him and kissed him before she ate.

The light out, Pheasant snuggling close to him. Mooey making
comfortable little noises in his sleep like a puppy. The rain beating
on the windows, accentuating the snugness and warmth of the indoors,
the peace. The peace. Why was it that at times like these Eden's face
should come out of the darkness to trouble him? First as a pale
disturbing reflection on the sea of his content, like the reflection
of a stormy moon. Then clear and brilliant, wearing his strange
ironic smile, the blank look in his eyes, as though he never quite
clearly knew why he did things. Piers shut his own eyes more tightly.
He clenched his teeth and pressed his forehead against Pheasant's
shoulder, trying not to think, trying not to see Eden's face with its
mocking smile.

He tried to draw comfort from her nearness and warmth. She was his!
That awful night when Finch had discovered the two in the wood together
was a dream, a nightmare. He would not let the dreadful thought of it
into his mind. But the thought came like a slinking beast, and Piers's
mouth was suddenly drawn to one side in a grimace of pain. Pheasant
must have felt his unease, for she turned to him and put an arm about
his head, drawing it against her breast.

       *       *       *       *       *

Nicholas could not sleep. "Too damn much rum," he thought. "This comes
of drinking scarcely anything stronger than tea. You get your system
into such a state that a little honest spirits knocks your sleep into a
cocked hat."

However, he didn't particularly mind lying awake. His body was in a
tranquil, steamy state, and pleasant visions from his past drifted
before his eyes. The glamour of women he had cared for long ago hung
like an essence in the room. He had forgotten their names (or would
have had to make an effort to recall them), their faces were a blur,
but the froufrou of their skirts--that adorable word "froufrou" that
had no meaning now--whispered about him, more significant, more
entrancing, than euphonious names or pretty faces. And their little
hands (in days when women's hands were really small, and "dazzling" was
a word not too intense for the whiteness of their flesh) held out to
him offering the flowers of dalliance. . . . His thoughts became poetic;
there was a kind of rhythm to them. Realizing this, he wondered if it
were possible that Eden had taken his talent from him. That would be
rather a joke, he thought. What if he began to write poetry himself!
He believed he could at this moment if he tried.

Nip, his Yorkshire terrier, who was curled up against his back,
uncurled himself suddenly and began to scratch the quilt with
concentrated vehemence. "Spider," growled Nicholas, "catch a spider,
Nip!" The little dog, giving vent to a series of yelps, tore at the
quilt, snuggled into it, and at last recurled himself against his
master's back.

Nicholas loved the feel of that compact ball against him. He lay
chuckling into the blanket he had drawn pretty well over his head.
He began to get drowsy. . . . What had he been thinking of? Oh yes, old
days. Affairs. When Nip had begun that bout of scratching he had been
recalling a little affair with an Irish girl at Cowes--it must have
been quite thirty-five years ago, and the memory of it as fresh as her
skin had been then! Ha--he had it! Adeline, that had been her name--the
same name as his mother's. His mother. How she had hung on to Renny
and kissed! And how they had stared into each other's eyes! A thought
came to him with a nasty jolt. Suppose Renny were trying to get around
her--get on the inside track after her money. . . . One never could tell
. . . That red head of his. He might be as crafty as the devil for all
one could tell. Nicholas remembered suddenly how as a child Renny could
get things out of his grandmother. . . . What if all his caresses were
calculated?

Nicholas became blazing hot, his brain a hotbed of suspicion. He flung
the covers from his shoulders and put his arms out on the quilt. Nip
began to smack his lips as though he were savouring the imaginary
spider he had caught. The rain dripped steadily. Nicholas lay staring
into the darkness, going over in his mind encounters between the
two--little things trivial in themselves, but which seemed to indicate
that Renny's influence was unduly strong with the old lady. Good
heavens, if Renny were worming his way in there, how dreadful! He would
never forgive him!

He heard a step in the hall, Renny's step. He felt that he must speak
to him, see his face, discover perhaps some telltale predatory gleam in
his eye. He called: "Is that you, Renny?"

Renny opened the door. "Yes, Uncle Nick. Want something?"

"Light my lamp, will you? I can't sleep."

"H'm. What's the matter with this family?" He struck a match and came
toward the lamp. "Wake's been having a heart attack."

Nicholas growled sympathetically. "That's too bad. Too bad. Poor little
fellow. Is he better of it? Can I do anything?"

"I shouldn't have left him if he hadn't been better. I think he overdid
it helping Gran to get up. He gets excited about things, too. . . . Is
that high enough?" The clear flame of the lamp illumined the strongly
marked features that looked as though they had been fashioned for the
facing of high winds, carved more deeply the line of anxiety between
the brows, accented the close-lying pointed ears.

Nothing underhand, self-seeking, in that face, Nicholas thought, but
I mustn't let the old lady get too doting about him. He's the kind of
man that women. . . . "One thing that was keeping me awake," he observed,
peering shrewdly into the illumined face, "was the thoughts of Mama.
Her spirit, isn't it amazing?"

"A corker."

"It seems impossible to think that some day . . . Renny, has she ever
said anything to you about how she's left her money?"

"Not a word. I've always taken it for granted that you'll get it.
You're the eldest son and her favourite--a Court and all that--you
ought to have it."

Nicholas's voice was sweet with reassurance. "Yes, I suppose that's the
natural thing. Just set the lamp on the table here where I can reach
it. Thanks, Renny. Good-night, and tell Wake that he's to go straight
to sleep and dream of a glorious trip to England Uncle Nick's going to
take him."

"Righto. Good-night."

He took from the mantel his special pipe, the sweet instrument of his
bedtime smoke, and filled it. He stretched his leather-legginged legs
before him, and, as he pressed the tobacco down into the bowl with his
little finger, he gazed thoughtfully at Wake sleeping on the bed. Poor
little beggar! What a time he'd had with him! A rotten bad spell, and
that after weeks and weeks of seeming so well. He supposed it was the
raw chill of the weather they'd been having that had pulled him down.
That and heaving Gran about. He was such a game youngster, he'd tackle
anything.

Wake's hair, rather long for an eleven-year-old, lay in a dark halo
around his face. With his beautifully marked eyebrows, his fringed
white lids, and his breath coming flutteringly through his parted lips,
his appearance was such that it hurt Renny to look at him. Dash it
all--would he ever rear the kid? Well, thank goodness, he was a little
devil sometimes! He leaned forward and gently took the little thin
wrist in his, felt the pulse. Quieter, more even. Wake lifted his lids.

"Oh, hello, Renny!"

"Hello. What are you awake for?"

"I don't know. I think I'm better. I say, Renny, may I go to the horse
show to-morrow?"

"Not if I know it. You'll wait and go with the other kids on Saturday."

"How much can I have to spend?"

"Spend! What on?"

"Why, you know. They take around ice cream and chocolates and lemonade."

"Twenty-five cents."

"Oh. But last year there was a fortune-telling place just outside the
restaurant part. I'd like to get my fortune told."

"Better not. You might hear something bad."

"What do you mean bad? Like dying?"

Renny scowled. "Good Lord, no! Like getting a sound hiding."

"Oh . . . I was thinking I might hear of a fortune being left me."

Renny's voice hardened. "What are you talking about, Wake? What
fortune?" What the devil had the child in his mind?

"I dunno. . . . I say, Renny, I love watching your face. The way your
nostrils go. They're funny. And the way you wiggle your eyebrows. I
love watching you, more 'specially when you don't know it."

How cleverly the little rascal could change the subject! Renny laughed.
"Well, I guess you're the one person who does, then."

Wakefield stole a sly look at him. "Oh no. There was someone else.
Alayne. She loved watching you. I often caught her at it."

His elder sent forth a cloud of smoke. "What surprises me is the number
of things you know which you've no right to know, and how slow you are
on the uptake with useful information."

Wakefield closed his eyes. "He's getting himself worked up to cry,"
thought Renny. He asked: "How about those legs? Nice and warm now? That
nasty feeling gone, eh?" He put his hand under the clothes and began
soothingly to rub them.

Alayne! What was she doing to-night? Was she happy? Forgetting him? Oh
no, she wouldn't forget--any more than he! He wished to God he could
forget! It had always been so easy for him to forget--the natural
thing. And now, after more than a year, a sudden mention of her name
sent the same tremor through him--gave him a sudden jolt, as though
his horse had stumbled. . . . He rubbed the little legs rhythmically.
Wake slept. The room was dimmed by a blue-grey haze of smoke. . . . He
heard Finch moving in the room above and remembered that the boy's
school fees were overdue. He unlocked a drawer and took out a slim roll
of banknotes. Separating three tens and a five, he put them into an
envelope, addressed and sealed it.

In the attic the only sign of habitation was the rim of light beneath
Finch's door. He was about to turn the knob when a bolt was shot on the
inside and he heard the boy's quick breathing.

"Hello," he rapped out. "What's this mean?"

"Oh, darn it all, Renny. I didn't know it was you!" He slid back the
bolt and stood sheepish and red.

"Did you think it was the canary fellow come to get the lottery
ticket?" He grinned down at Finch sarcastically.

Finch mumbled: "Thought it was Piers."

"Why? Had you been pinching something of his?"

The random shot went home. The boy's flush deepened, he stammered a
weak denial, and Renny's grin exploded in a laugh. "You're certainly
going to the dogs! What was it--ties? Cigarettes?"

"Cigarettes."

"H'm. . . . Well, here is your fee for the term. I should have sent it
by cheque, but--the truth is, my account is a bit overdrawn. Just
hand it to the bursar--and no frenzied finance on the way!" He laid a
dollar on the envelope. "Get some fags for yourself, and cut out this
light-fingered business. Also, keep inside your allowance."

Finch's hand shook as he took the money. He brought the lamp to light
his elder down the stairs. "Is Wake feeling rocky to-night?" he asked,
heavily.

"Yes."

"Gosh, I'm sorry."

He watched the lean figure descend, noticing how the lamplight sought
the warm russet of leather leggings and close-cropped head. He wished
to God he'd some of Renny's ginger!

Strength from music--that was what he wanted. He thought of the ivory
expanse of the keyboard, and felt an ache through his soul, a quiver
through his arms. . . .

Carefully he placed the notes in a shabby leather pocket-book; then
from his desk he took an old mouth-organ. He went into the clothes
closet and shut the door. Then, putting his head under the tail of
a heavy overcoat to muffle the sound, he laid his lips against the
instrument and began wistfully to play.




IV

FINCH--THE ACTOR


One afternoon, a month later, Finch was standing among a group of
amateur actors in the narrow passage between the stage and the row
of dressing-rooms in the Little Theatre. They were dispersing after
a rehearsal of St. John Ervine's _John Ferguson_, and Mr. Brett, the
English director, had just come up. Hands in pockets, he lounged over
to Finch, and, with an eager smile lighting his clever, humorous,
actorish face, observed: "I want to tell you, Whiteoak, how awfully
pleased I am with your performance to-day. If you keep on as you're
going now, you are going to make a really splendid Cloutie John."

"Thanks--Mr. Brett," stammered Finch. "I'm glad you think I'm all
right." He was crimson from embarrassment and deep joy. Praise! Warm
praise, before all of them!

Arthur Leigh broke in: "Yes, that's just what I've been telling Finch,
Mr. Brett. He's simply splendid. I'm certain of this, that I'm doing
my own part better since he's been playing Cloutie John. He brings a
feeling of absolute reality into it."

Finch stared straight ahead of him, his fixed expression a burning mask
for the confused elation of his spirit.

"Well, I'm very, very pleased," reiterated Mr. Brett, pushing toward
the door--he was yearning for his tea. "To-morrow at the same hour,
then, and everybody on time."

The door at the end of the passage was opened and a gust of crisp
December air rushed in. The players drifted in a small body on to the
stone steps. The walls of the university rose about them, showing here
and there a lighted window. The arch of the Memorial Tower glistened
in a bright armour of ice. Leigh turned to Finch as they reached the
last step.

"I wish you lived in town, Finch," he said. "I'd like to see something
of you. But there's always that beastly train to be caught."

"I'm afraid I've missed it to-night. I'll have to take the late one.
Ten-thirty."

Leigh looked rather pleased. "That's good news. You'll come home with
me to dinner, and we can have a talk. Besides, I'd like my mother and
sister to meet you. I've been talking about you to them." He turned his
clear, rather feminine gaze eagerly on Finch.

"Sorry. . . . Sorry," muttered the boy.

"What utter nonsense! Of course you can come. Why not?" He slipped his
arm persuasively through Finch's.

"Oh, I don't know. At least--well, my clothes aren't right. And
besides . . . you know I'm no good with women--ladies. Your mother and
sister'd think me an awful dud. I'd have nothing to say, and--and--look
like--Cloutie John."

Leigh broke into delighted laughter.

"If only you would! If only you would both look and act like him!
They'd throw themselves on your neck and embrace you. Come along,
don't be an idiot!" He drew Finch on through the delicate drift of
snowflakes, the air on their faces icy, yet somehow crisply caressing.
Other young figures were moving quickly through the park, silhouetted
against the whiteness.

Finch had, from the first moment of acquaintance, liked and admired
Arthur Leigh, been flattered by the attraction he so evidently had for
the other, but now he experienced a sudden outrush of warmth toward
him which filled him with wonder. He felt that he loved Leigh, wanted
to be his near, his closest friend. The pressure of Leigh's slender,
small-boned body against his made him feel stronger than he had ever
felt before. "Very well," he said, "I'll go."

They boarded a street car and stood together, swaying, hanging by
the straps, smiling into each other's eyes, oblivious of the other
passengers. They recalled amusing moments of the rehearsal, muttered
lines of their parts, were almost suffocated by laughter. They were so
happy they scarcely knew what to do.

But as Leigh put his latchkey into the lock, and Finch stood behind him
before the imposing doorway of Leigh's house, young Whiteoak felt again
an overwhelming shyness.

"Look here," he began, "look here, I--I----" But the door was open and
he was inside the hall, where bright firelight was dancing over the
surfaces of polished wood and brass, where there was such a look of
immaculacy and order as Finch had never before beheld. The sound of
girls' voices laughing together came from the drawing-room. The two
youths darted up the stairway.

"Friends of Ada's," Leigh said, leading the way into his own room. "If
once they captured us, they'd never go home. Mother hates the dinner to
be late, and besides we must have a decent time for talking before you
go. I refuse to hand you over to a parcel of girls."

They threw off their coats and caps. Finch endeavoured to hide his
stupefaction at the sight of so much luxury in a boy's room. Of course,
Leigh was scarcely a boy--he was twenty--but he had never talked about
his home, never seemed to be especially affluent, though he had plenty
of pocket-money. Finch had no idea what business or profession his
father was in.

His host threw open a door and revealed a bathroom of virgin white and
blueness. On a small table by the enamel tub stood a bowl of white
narcissi just breaking into bloom.

"I like to look at lilies while I'm in the tub," explained Leigh. "I
bathe my soul in them while I bathe my skin in suds."

Finch stared, first at the narcissi, then at his friend. "You're rather
like that chap yourself," he mumbled.

"What chap?"

"Narcissus. I mean--you're so--well, it's not hard to picture you
gazing at your reflection in a pool--looking awfully picturesque and
all that."

Leigh looked delighted. "How I wish I had been Narcissus! The rle
would have suited me perfectly--gazing and gazing, and adoring--myself!
We'd better go ahead and wash, old fellow. The girls are gone, and I
hear the first dinner gong." He flung a snowy-white embroidered towel
to Finch and went back to the bedroom whistling. He knew that young
Whiteoak was embarrassed, shy, and he wanted to put him at his ease.

He wanted very much to gain Finch's confidence, even his love. He
felt extraordinarily drawn to the boy, whom he looked upon as much
younger than himself, though the difference was only two years. Still,
Finch was at school yet, while he was in his second year at Varsity.
There was something in Finch's gaunt face and sad eyes that he found
himself constantly remembering, trying to clarify into a definite
attraction. From chance phrases, allusions that Finch had let fall, he
felt that he was misunderstood at home, that there was no one there
to appreciate the sensitive depths of his nature, no one to love him
with understanding and sympathy. He himself had been always so enfolded
in love and understanding. He must ask Finch about his family, try to
learn something that night of the setting of his life. He could not
quite make him out. He knew that his grandfather had been an officer in
India, that his family owned a lot of land, but Finch was so rough at
times, so almost uncouth. . . . He brushed his waving brown hair before
the glass till it shone.

Finch had not been able to bring himself to the point of using the
embroidered towel. He had hung it carefully among others of its kind on
the glass rack, and had rubbed his face and hands dry on a corner of
a bath towel. He now appeared in the doorway very shining with a damp
lock on his forehead and his long red wrists protruding pathetically
from the sleeves of his blue serge coat.

In the drawing-room they found Leigh's mother and sister. Two sisters,
Finch thought at first, the mother looked so young.

"My friend Finch Whiteoak," Leigh introduced him, a protective hand on
his arm. "This is my mother, Finch, and this ill-looking young person
my sister Ada."

In turn their soft hands lay in Finch's bony one. In turn he saw the
soft pale oval of each face, the drooping locks of bronze hair, the
heavy-lidded grey eyes. But the mother's hair had a tinge of gold, her
eyes a tint of blue, and the amused and tolerant expression of her
mouth made him afraid of her.

"Brothers will say such cruel things about their sisters," she said,
with an adoring smile at her son. "I suppose you do it occasionally
yourself."

Finch, breathing heavily, stammered: "Well--I suppose so--at least, I
really don't know."

"Honestly now," said Leigh, "don't you find Ada distressingly
ill-favoured?"

She returned their gaze serenely, and Finch stammered again: "Oh, look
here, Leigh . . ."

Mrs. Leigh observed: "Arthur has talked of you a great deal. He thinks
your acting of the idiot boy quite wonderful."

"Ah, that's easy for me," grinned Finch. "The idiot part."

"Mother," broke in Leigh, "how can you? Cloutie John isn't an idiot.
He's mad. Absolutely, gloriously mad."

Ada Leigh said, in a low deep voice, with a look into Finch's eyes
which set them definitely apart from the others: "Is that easy, too,
for you? The madness, I mean."

Her brother answered for Finch, fearing that he would give another
stammering, grinning reply. "The easiest thing in the world, my child.
All he has to do is to be himself. He's absolutely, gloriously mad
also. Just wait until you see the play. When Cloutie John comes on the
stage, madness, like an electric current, is going to thrill the soul
of that simple-minded audience. We're all thrilled by him, even at
rehearsals."

Ada continued to gaze into Finch's eyes as though Leigh had not spoken.

"I expect I am a little mad," he answered, feeling now not shy, but
oddly troubled.

"I wish you would teach me how to be mad. I am far too sane to be
happy."

"I couldn't teach anyone anything except how to play the fool."

Mother and son were leading the way to the dining-room.

Finch saw that the table, delicately bright, was laid for four.
Evidently Mrs. Leigh was a widow, though she did not look at all like
Finch's idea of one. Perhaps her husband was merely out of town.

Nothing could draw him into conversation. With set face he ate his
way slowly and solemnly through the intricacies of the meal. Leigh,
depressed by the sense that his friend was making no impression but
one of stupidity on his mother and sister, talked little. Ada seemed
to make no effort to please anyone but herself, and her pleasure
apparently lay in making Finch aware of the insistent gaze of her long,
heavy-lidded eyes. Mrs. Leigh alone kept the talk from dying into
silence. Her voice, lighter and higher than her daughter's, flowed
brightly on, though Finch had the feeling that her thoughts were far
away. Across her brightness a shadow fell once when she referred to the
"time of my husband's death, five years ago."

When dinner was over she left them, returning only for a moment to the
drawing-room in an ermine evening cloak to say good-bye before she was
whirled away in a dove-grey limousine. They had followed her to the
stone porte cochre to see her off. Leigh had tucked her in and kissed
both her hands.

"Isn't she the most adorable mother to own?" he demanded, as they
returned to the fireside.

"Rather," agreed Finch, his eyes on Ada. She had settled herself among
the cushions of a deep couch, her narrow sloping shoulders, her slender
arms, from which open filmy lace sleeves fell away, seeming almost
transparent in their whiteness. Between her rather pale lips she held a
Chinese-red cigarette-holder.

Leigh suddenly found his tongue. He talked eagerly of the play to
Finch, criticized Mr. Brett's directing of it, rehearsed one of his own
important speeches, appealing to Finch for criticism.

"Come, Finch," he said, at last, determined to show off his friend
before his sister, "let's do our scene together where you come to the
house at night, after I've killed Witherow. Have you got your whistle
here?"

"Oh no. I can't possibly. I'd feel a frightful fool."

"If it's because of Ada, I'll send her away."

"I wish you would do it to please me," said Ada. "I should love to see
it."

"She's likely to fly into a passion if she doesn't get what she wants.
Aren't you, Ada?" asked her brother.

"You can't make me believe that," said Finch.

"Just the same she's a very determined young person, so you may as well
give in. Wait, I know what we need to loosen things up. A whisky and
soda. That wine at dinner was native and there's simply nothing to it
but gas on the stomach. Come along to the dining-room. You won't want
anything, will you, Ada?"

"No, thanks. I'll just wait here."

In the dining-room Leigh said: "I don't think we need whisky, Finch.
Nothing so common. A nice little _crme de menthe_ or Benedictine, eh?
I said whisky before Ada merely to put her off the scent; she doesn't
like it. But she does like liqueurs, and I don't think they're good for
a young girl, do you? I really have to look after Ada, you know, my
father being dead. What will you have?"

"Oh, I don't care." Finch stared at the glittering array of glasses in
the cabinet Leigh opened.

"Benedictine, then. We'll both have Benedictine. Isn't the colour of
it glorious? I want you to come and stay the week of the play with me,
Finch. You can't possibly go home at night after the performance." At
that moment he definitely made up his mind to take young Whiteoak into
his intimate circle, to make him his most intimate friend. He perceived
his sister's intense interest in him. She too was sensitive to the
inner things of life. She recognized something peculiar, different,
beautiful, in Finch.

"I'm afraid I can't."

Leigh was astonished. He had expected Finch to be most gratefully eager
to accept any offering of friendship from him.

"But why not?"

"Oh, I don't know. But I think I'd better not. Thanks just the same."

Leigh had been accustomed all his life to doing exactly what he wanted
to, to having whatever he desired. His face showed the calm brightness
of youth whose will has never been crossed.

"What nonsense! Of course you'll come. You're only shy. We need see
very little of my mother and Ada, if it's that you mind."

"No. The truth is," Finch burst out, "I should never have gone into
this thing."

Leigh said nothing, only looked at him with bright questioning eyes.

"I believe I'll have another glass of that--er--Benedictine."

"I don't think I would if I were you. It's rather potent. . . . You were
saying----"

Finch carefully set down his empty glass, fragile as a bubble. "You
know I failed in my matric, Leigh."

"Certainly. Consequently you'll not need to swat at all this year. Take
it easy."

"But my family----"

"Tell me about your family, Finch. You've never spoken of your parents
to me."

"They're dead. My eldest brother runs things."

"Your guardian, eh? What sort of chap is he? Hard to get on with?"

"Oh, I don't think so. He's sharp-tempered if you don't toe the mark.
But he's awfully kind sometimes."

"What makes you think he won't be kind this time?"

"He's got no opinion of theatricals and things of that sort. He's all
for horses."

"Ah, I remember. I saw him ride gloriously at the horse show. I'd like
to meet him. I might be able to persuade him that play-acting is good
for you."

"You're quite wrong there, Leigh. He stopped my music lessons because
of the matric business."

"Good heavens!" Leigh restrained himself from saying, "What a beast!"
He asked: "And you were keen about music?"

"Awfully."

"More than about acting?"

"Much more."

"And you've never mentioned it to me!" His tone expressed hurt.

"We were always talking about sport or the theatre."

Leigh, with a gesture almost of petulance, turned to the sideboard. He
refilled his own glass and that of Finch. "You are amazingly reticent,"
he said coldly. "I thought we were friends."

Finch sipped his Benedictine. He did not question why it was so
suddenly given, after having been withheld. He saw Leigh in a
glittering aura, a beautiful and desired being who would go through
life choosing his paths, his friendships, with princely ease. He
exclaimed eagerly: "But we are! We are! At least, I am yours--I mean,
you are mine. . . . Only, you can't understand. I didn't think you'd be
a bit interested in my family or what I cared about. Like music, you
know. . . . I'll be awfully glad to spend that week with you, Leigh, if
you want me. I'll manage it somehow."

His long, hollow-cheeked boy's face was flushed with emotion, his eyes
glistened with sudden tears.

Impulsively Leigh put his arm about his shoulders. "We are friends
then--for always. I can't tell you what you mean to me, Finch. I've
been attracted by you from the first moment I saw you. You're unlike
any other fellow I know. I'm positive you've genius, either dramatic or
musical. We'll see. Tell me all about it, anyhow."

"There's not much to tell--Leigh."

"Call me Arthur."

Finch's eyes lighted. "Oh, may I? Thanks awfully. I'll like that. . . .
There's nothing much to tell, Arthur. I can't play decently yet, but
I'd rather be doing it than anything. I think it's chiefly because I
can lose myself doing these things. Forget that I'm Finch Whiteoak."
He stared in silence at the floor for a moment, his hands thrust in
his pockets, then he raised his eyes to his friend's face and asked
ingenuously: "It's wonderful when you're able to forget yourself
completely, isn't it?"

"It must be. . . . But I couldn't do it, Finch. I'm so damned
self-conscious. I'm always posing. I don't want to forget myself. My
great joy in life is watching my own stunts. But," he added, seriously,
"my feeling about you is not self-conscious. It's real. As real as you
are, and you're as real as one of those spirited horses your red-headed
brother rides so well."

Finch uttered one of his sudden guffaws. "I'm real enough, but I'm no
more spirited than a--than a--why, I guess Renny'd take a fit if he
heard anyone call me spirited."

"Well, I suppose I should have said sensitive, highly strung. . . . And
this--Renny--stopped your music lessons, eh? Because you failed to pass
your matric. Had he given you a good teacher?"

"Splendid. When Renny does anything, he does it thoroughly--even if
it's swearing. I've never heard anyone who can curse like Renny."

"He seems a thoroughgoing beast, but I like him in spite of myself. Is
he married?"

Finch shook his head, and he thought of Alayne.

"Doesn't care about women?"

"They fall for him."

"Are any of your brothers married?"

"Yes. Eden's married; that is--well, he's separated from his wife.
She's in New York. Her name is Alayne. Piers is married, too. He and
his wife live at Jalna."

"Jalna?"

"Yes, that's the name of our place. Indian military station. My
grandfather was stationed there."

Leigh exclaimed: "Look here, Finch, you must ask me out. I'm eaten up
with curiosity to meet this family of yours. You're like a picture
without its frame. I want to be able to see you in that frame. Just
give me a chance to use my charms on your Renny and there'll be no
trouble about the week in town. We'll even have him in to see the show."

Ada's voice came from the drawing-room. "If you are not coming back, I
wish you'd tell me. I'd find a book to read or go to bed."

"What a shame to desert her so!" exclaimed Leigh. He returned with his
quick, graceful movements to the couch where she lay, and bent over
her. "Sorry, little one. Finch has been telling me about his family.
He's invited me to go out to meet them. Aren't you jealous?"

"Frightfully."

"Now we're going to rehearse our scene for you. . . . Come, Cloutie John,
rumple your locks, and show Sis how truly mad you are."

But the rehearsal was a failure. It was impossible for Finch to abandon
himself to his part in that room, with Ada Leigh's critical eyes fixed
on him. Leigh, after a little, saw how impossible it was and gave up
the attempt.

He asked Finch to play. Time after time Finch's eyes had been drawn to
the shining ivory of the keyboard, flushed by the rose-shaded light. He
longed for the feel of it under his hands. He longed to feel the sense
of power, of freedom, that always came with that contact. And this was
a noble-looking grand piano. He had never touched one in his life. . . .
His awkwardness fell from him as he slid on to the polished seat and
laid his hands on the keys. Leigh noticed then what shapely hands he
had despite their boniness. He noticed the shape of his head. Finch was
going to be a distinguished-looking man some day. He was going to help
Finch to attain his full spiritual growth, foster with his friendship
the genius that he felt sure was in him. "Play," he said, smiling, and
leaned across the piano toward him.

The piano was a steed. Finch's hands were on the bridle. A moment more
and he would leap into the saddle and be borne away over wild fields of
melody under starry skies. The steed knew him; it thrilled beneath his
touch. His foot felt for the pedal. . . . What should he play?

He raised his eyes to Leigh's face, smiling encouragement. He saw Ada's
eyes on him, too, mysterious behind a faint veil of smoke. He wished
she were not there. Her presence dimmed the brightness of his contact
with the keyboard, as the smoke dimmed the brightness of her eyes. He
felt confused. He did not seem able to remember one piece from another.

"What shall I play?" he appealed to Leigh.

"Dear old fellow, I don't know what things you've done. Can you play
Chopin? You look as though you could."

"Yes. I'll try one of his waltzes."

But, though his fingers ached to gather the notes, his brain refused to
guide them.

"Oh, hell!" he muttered to Leigh. "I'm up against one of my fool fits!"

Late that night he wrote in his diary, at the end of the account of
his day's doings, not the usual item concerning Joan, but in black,
desperate-looking characters, the words "Met Ada."




V

LEIGH'S INFLUENCE


In the days that followed, the friendship between Finch and Arthur
Leigh strengthened into one of those sudden, passionate attachments
of youth. They wished always to be together, but, as Finch was still
at school, and Leigh was a second-year student at Varsity, this was
impossible. Leigh, however, had a car of his own, and he made it his
habit to call for Finch every noon hour and take him out with him for
luncheon. After the rehearsals it became the custom for Finch to return
to the Leighs' house for dinner and to take the late train home. Finch
explained this to Renny by saying that he had made a friend of a clever
Varsity fellow who was willing to help him with the mathematics which
were his weakness. This was partially true, for Leigh would now and
again work with him for an hour. At the end of these periods Leigh, who
had a bent toward mathematics, found himself nervously exhausted. It
was impossible to make Finch really understand even simple problems.
The most that Leigh could do was to teach him certain tricks, and to
show him how to make use of his excellent memory.

Finch never forgot the lines of his part. The director of the Little
Theatre told him that if the stage were not in such a bad way he would
advise him to make acting his profession. He could not feel any great
elation over Mr. Brett's praise because he was at the moment greatly
harassed by the necessity of spending the last fortnight before the
play in town. More and more rehearsals were demanded. At last he agreed
that his friend should come with him to Jalna to see what his influence
could do toward softening the heart of the eldest Whiteoak on the
subject of play-acting. He had put off the visit several times when
Leigh had suggested it, but at last, in desperation, he threw himself
on Leigh's protection and resource.

It was a Saturday afternoon in the New Year. The January thaw had come
and gone. The weather had become cold again, but there was no snow.
It was an iron day. An iron sky and iron earth, a wind, the metallic
iciness of which might well take the heart out of even a strong man.
Arthur Leigh was not strong, and, as he and Finch strode northward
along the road toward Jalna, it took all his courage to keep up the
pace without complaint. He cast a sidelong glance at Finch. He saw his
tall figure bent against the blast, the end of his long nose getting
pink, a drop of moisture like a tear trickling from his eye. He had a
dogged look as though he had faced such a wind along this road many a
time.

Leigh gasped out, the words whistling between his teeth: "I say, Finch,
do you do this walk every day--in all kinds of weather? Deep snow--and
sleet--and all that?"

"Of course I do. Are you cold, Arthur?"

"I've been warmer. Don't they ever send a car for you?"

"Good Lord, no. Sometimes I get a lift. We'll soon be there now."

They strode on.

A little later Leigh exclaimed petulantly: "I was never made for such a
climate. As soon as I get through college, I'll cut these winters out."

"Atlantic City, eh?"

"Oh, my dear, no! The south of France. The Lido. You and I'll go
together, Finch."

Finch grinned at him lovingly. He did not see where he would ever get
money for travelling, but the thought of being in Europe with Arthur
was beautiful. Leigh never called him "my dear," or "darling Finch"
without his heart beating a little more quickly as in glad response.
He had never been able to call his friend by any term of endearment,
though in secret he had used them many a time. Often the last words
that came into his head before he dropped asleep were "Darling Arthur"
or "My dearest Arthur." Once, in a whim, he had toyed instead with the
words "Darling Ada," but it did not do at all. It made him ashamed.
She was not his darling, and never would be. She was just a strange
and disturbing girl who had a way of haunting his dreams. But he could
say "Darling Arthur" in his mind with a caressing inflection, just as
Arthur said "Darling Finch" aloud without any embarrassment.

Leigh was looking so chilled that Finch was glad when he was able to
steer him at last up the driveway behind the shelter of the spruces and
hemlocks. "Here we are!" he announced, rather boisterously, because he
felt nervous about introducing his friend to his family. It was the
first time he had ever brought a friend home with him from town.

Leigh paused to look at the old house. It stood solidly before him, its
faade, crisscrossed by the bare stalks of the Virginia creeper, dark
red like some ruddy old weather-beaten face, seamed by wrinkles, yet
expressing great power and endurance. The upper windows were veiled by
a coating of frost, but through the lower ones he could see the dancing
brightness of firelight. The wind shrieked about him. Every shutter on
the house seemed to be rattling. He thought: "So this is where Finch
was bred."

A great round stove in the hall sent forth a blasting heat. They hung
their coats and caps on an old-fashioned hatrack, ornamented on the top
by a carved fox's head. An old bob-tailed sheep-dog lay by the stove.
He did not rise when Finch bent and patted him, but rolled over on his
back and waved shaggy deprecating paws.

"Is he old?" asked Leigh.

"Just four years younger than I am."

"Likes the heat, eh?" Leigh held his hands, rigid with cold, toward the
stove.

From the drawing-room came the crackle of flames and the sound of a
strong old voice talking steadily.

"Now I've got you. Cornered, eh? Ha, no you don't! No getting away
from me. . . . Bang, there goes your man! Checkmate!"

A clear treble replied, with a petulant note: "You're not playing
chess, my grandmother; this is backgammon."

"Of course it's backgammon."

"Then why do you use the terms of chess, Gran?"

Silence for a moment, then the old voice, with the tremor of a chuckle
in it: "Because I like to fuss up my opponent."

"I'm not fussed up."

"Yes, you are. Don't contradict me. I won't have it."

"Anyhow, there goes one of your men. Bang!"

"And here goes one of yours! Bang! Bang!"

"Why, Granny, you're on one of the wrong points!"

"Very well. I took the trick, didn't I?"

"Now you're talking as though it were a card game."

"Now I've got you fussed up!"

"But don't you honestly forget when you use those wrong terms?"

"Of course I don't forget. . . . Your play, now."

"But," persisted the treble, "you forgot when you moved on to the white
point."

"Bosh! I've made people believe black was white before this."

Overcome by curiosity, Leigh moved to the doorway and stared into the
room. He saw a large, high-ceilinged parlour, the walls of which were
covered by an ornate gilded paper and hung with oil paintings. Dark red
curtains cherished it against the January daylight. A fresh fire of
birch logs gave it light and heat from within. Leigh wondered if the
furniture with which the room was crowded could be real Chippendale.
If it were, he was sure it would be worth a fortune. With greater
intensity he wondered if the figure before the fire could be real, that
old, old woman in the purple velvet tea-gown, the large lace cap with
gay rosettes of ribbon, the carven, sardonic face. The effect of the
little boy sitting opposite her was one of bright fragility. And yet
he bore a strange resemblance to her, as a little running brook might
bear the reflection of an ancient tree.

Leigh, amazed and delighted, turned to look at Finch. Finch was
grinning deprecatingly at him. "My grandmother and my young brother,"
he whispered, and he took out a large handkerchief and blew his nose,
as though to hide his embarrassed face behind it.

He had tooted his long nose so loudly that the faces of the players
turned toward the door, not so much in inquiry as in resentment at the
interruption.

"Ha, Finch," said his grandmother, "I'm beating Wakefield. Got him all
fussed up."

"That's right, Gran."

"Come and kiss me. Who's the nice-looking boy?"

He kissed her on the cheek. "My friend, Arthur Leigh. Arthur, my
grandmother."

Old Mrs. Whiteoak held out her hand, a shapely hand, though the fingers
now had a clawlike curve to them. Leigh was astonished by the number of
rings she wore, the brilliance of her rubies and diamonds, astonished
too by the grip of her fingers, for he saw now that she was very old
indeed.

"How old do you suppose?" she asked, as though guessing his thoughts.

"Old enough to look very wonderful and wise," he answered.

She showed all her teeth in a pleased grin. "A good speech. Very good.
Not many young men are so apt to-day. . . . Well, I'm past one hundred.
A hundred and one. And I can beat this young man at backgammon. And I
can walk to the gate out there with the help of my two sons. Not bad,
eh? But I don't venture out in this weather. Oh no, no. I stick by the
fire. My next walk will be in April--three months off. You must come
and see me do it."

The parrot, which had been perched in his wooden ring at a short
distance behind her chair, now took his head from under his wing and,
after blinking for a moment, as though dazed by the firelight, flew
heavily to her shoulder and pressed his head against her cheek. Their
two old beaks were turned with preposterous solemnity on Leigh. He
felt as though he were in some strange dream.

"My parrot," she said. "Boney. I fetched him from India over seventy
years ago. He's had two or three different bodies, but the soul's the
same. Moves from one body to another. Transmigration of souls. Ever
hear of that? We learned all about that sort of thing in the East. . . .
He can speak Hindu, too, can't you, Boney?"

The parrot cried, in a nasal voice: "Dilkhoosa! Dilkhoosa!"

"He's making love to me! Ah, you old rascal, Boney! Again--again--say
it again! _Dilkhoosa_--Heart's delight!"

"Dilkhoosa!" cried the parrot, pecking at the hairs on her chin. "Nur
Mahal!"

"Hear him! Light of the Palace, he's calling me. Nur Mahal. Say it
again, Boney!"

"Nur Mahal!" rapped out the parrot. "Mera lal!"

Finch, very much pleased by Leigh's evident delight in the scene,
observed: "I've never seen him in such a good humour. He's usually
swearing or sulking or screaming for food."

"Life's a game," said Mrs. Whiteoak, sententiously. She peered up into
Leigh's face with a quizzical, mocking light in her eyes. Her hand
hovered above the board as though she were about to make a move, a
steady red beam settling on one of her rubies. Wakefield watched her
eagerly. Boney made little guttural noises and thrust forward his green
breast.

But the play was not made. Slowly her chin sank, her lace cap drooped
toward the board, and a gusty breath whistled between her lips.

"She's asleep," said Finch.

"Oh, bother!" exclaimed the little boy. "Just when I was going to beat
her!"

Finch looked at his watch. "A quarter to four. If we're going to see
Renny before tea," he said, hesitatingly, "we had better look him up.
Is he at the stables, Wake?"

"Yes. May I come too?"

"It's too cold for you, and you know it. Don't act like a six-year-old."

Wakefield raised his large dark eyes to Leigh's face. "It's sad, isn't
it, always to be taking care of oneself? I'm always being told to stick
by the fire and not be silly wanting to do things like other boys."

"There's nothing you like better than taking care of yourself,"
interrupted Finch, gruffly. He heard the sound of his uncles' voices
upstairs. In a moment they would be descending. From the dining-room
came the nasal flow of cockney excuses for some misdemeanour pouring
from Rags's lips into Lady Buckley's unreceptive ear. Far off Mooey
began angrily to cry. In the hall the old sheep-dog rose, shook
himself, and uttered a deep-toned bark. All the house was stirring
as the time for tea approached. Grandmother rubbed her long nose and
peered out hazily into her firelit world.

"Life's a game," she announced, as though imparting a morsel of rare
wisdom.

"Let's get out of here," said Finch.

He snatched their caps from the rack and handed Leigh his.

"What about our coats?" gasped Leigh, as they faced the blast at the
opening of the side door.

"We'll sprint to the stables. It's warm enough there."

Running together, they passed a young fellow in leggings with a fine
colour in his cheeks. He picked up a frozen winter pear from the ground
and sent it after Finch's legs.

"That is my brother Piers," said Finch, as they entered the stables.

They found Renny in a loose box, arranging the forelock of a
coy-looking mare with great exactness. Finch made the introduction
without enthusiasm. He hoped little from this meeting.

"How do you do?" said the eldest Whiteoak, with a sharp glance at the
visitor.

He was indeed formidable, thought young Leigh. He did not blame Finch
for being afraid of him. His face, under its peaked tweed cap, looked
as though wind and weather, strong passions, and a high temper had
hammered into it a kind of fierce immobility. . . . God, thought Leigh, he
will be like the old lady when he is her age, if he doesn't break his
neck while riding before he reaches it!

The youths discussed the mare together, her master--rather
ostentatiously, Leigh fancied--turning his back on them, and continuing
his caressing arrangement of her mane and forelock. No admiring
comment or carefully provocative question from Leigh drew more than a
monosyllable from him. Still they persisted. He could not spend the
entire afternoon over the mare's toilette. . . .

No, apparently he was satisfied. He looked her over; then, taking her
head quickly between his hands, he pressed a kiss on her nose. "My
pretty one," Leigh heard him say. The mare's eyes were two beaming orbs
of contentment, her forehead the very throne of love. She uttered a
deep sigh.

Renny came out of the loose box.

"What is her name?" asked Leigh.

"Cora."

A stableman was carrying buckets of water along the passage to the
various stalls. He placed one before the occupant of the stall nearest
them, and a long grey head was thrust forward, yearning lips were
plunged into the cold drink. Renny pushed past the boys and went around
into the stall.

"How is the leg, Wright?"

"Fine, sir. Couldn't be mendin' better."

They bent over a bandaged hind leg.

"It was wonderful, sir, you getting him the way you did. He's going to
make his mark, I'm sure of it. And, for my part, I don't believe he's
spoiled for flat racing, say what they will."

Renny and the stableman stared with concentration at the bandage. The
water in the bucket was lowered three parts of the way down. Coaxing
whinnies, the indolent jangle of buckles, the petulant stamp of a hoof,
were the only sounds.

"How did he get hurt?" asked Leigh, in an attempt to draw nearer
to the master of Jalna through the horses which were so plainly his
absorbing interest.

"Kicked himself." He was pressing a practised thumb along the dappled
grey flank.

"Really! How did he happen to do that?"

"Shied." He straightened himself and turned to Wright. "How is Darkie's
indigestion?"

"Better, sir, but he'll have those attacks just as long as he bolts his
oats the way he does. He's more like a ravening wolf than a horse with
his feed."

A shadow fell across Renny's face. "Has he had his oats?"

"Yes, sir. I divided them into two lots, like you said to. After he'd
had the first lot, I made him wait ten minutes. I've just give him the
last half now."

Renny strode with irritable swiftness to a stall farther down the
passage, where a tall black horse was feeding with ferocious eagerness.
He ceased champing his oats for a second to look back at his master
entering the stall, then, with his mouth full, the oats dribbling from
his lips, he plunged his face once more into his feed-box.

Renny caught his head and jerked it up. "Cut out that guzzling!" he
ordered. "Are you trying to kill yourself?"

The horse tried to shake him off, straining desperately toward his
oats, his great eyes rolling in anger at the interruption. After a
few moments he was allowed to fill his mouth once more, and again
restrained. The rest of the meal was a struggle. He bit at Renny.
Renny cuffed him. He snorted his outraged greed. Renny became suddenly
hilarious and broke into noisy laughter.

"I should think that such irritation would be worse for the beast's
digestion than bolting," observed Leigh.

"Should you?" grinned Finch, highly pleased with his brother.

The horse now was showing his big teeth, as though he too felt a kind
of grim amusement.

Finch whispered to Leigh: "Now would be a good time to speak to him
about the play. At least," he added, rather pessimistically, "as good
as any."

Leigh looked toward the red-haired Renny with some apprehension. "I
suppose so," he said. Then he had an idea--impulsive, extravagant, but
one to break the ice between himself and Finch's brother.

He said: "I wonder, Mr. Whiteoak, if you could tell me where I might
buy a good saddle horse. I have been wanting one for some time"--he was
in truth afraid of horses--"but I haven't found--haven't been quite
able----" His sentence broke down weakly.

There was no need for him to finish it. The arrogant face before
him softened into an expression of almost tender solicitude. Renny
said: "It's a good thing young Finch brought you out. It's a serious
matter, buying a horse if you are inexperienced. Especially a saddle
horse. I was talking the other day to a young fellow who had paid a
fancy price for one and it had turned out not only nasty-tempered but
a wind-sucker. A handsome beast, too. But he'd got badly stung. I
have----" He hesitated, examining a bleeding knuckle which Darkie had
jammed against the manger.

"Yes, yes," said Arthur, eagerly, though he felt a certain resentment
at the ease with which the barrier between had been swept away when the
possibility of a deal in horseflesh had appeared.

Renny took the knuckle from his lips. "I have a lovely three-year-old
here--by Sirocco, out of Twilight Star--the image of his sire. You've
seen Sirocco, of course?"

Arthur shook his head.

Renny regarded him pityingly. "You haven't? Well, I'll take you around
to see him. Every stallion, you must know--that is, every really great
stallion--reproduces himself absolutely only once. And Sirocco has only
done it once. But perhaps"--he had been about to lead the way down the
passage, but he wheeled, as though by an arresting thought--"perhaps
you don't care much about breeding points, and just want a----"

"Not at all," interrupted Arthur. "It must be a real beauty, everything
you say----"

"Horse like that can't be bought cheaply, you know."

"Oh, that doesn't matter." Then he reddened a little, thinking he might
appear pretentious, too affluent, and added: "The fact is, I've been
saving up for a saddle horse for a very long time."

The eldest Whiteoak had already heard, though without great interest at
the time, that Leigh had inherited a large fortune, and that he would
shortly be of age. He said, cheerfully, "Well, in that case"--and led
the way to the stallion's loose box.

Finch followed, wondering what all this would lead to, worrying over
the thought of Arthur in Renny's grip for the sake of him. They
proceeded from the loose box to the stall where the three-year-old
was, and Leigh learned more about saddle horses in half an hour than
in all his preceding life. He thanked God that the day was wild, for
otherwise he knew he would have been forced into a trial ride on the
scornful-looking beast that cast suspicious glances at him down its
nose.

The sound of small feet running came to them, and Wakefield dashed
along the passage, a coat thrown over his head, beneath which his face
looked out, bright-eyed and scarlet-cheeked.

"I simply _flew_ over," he panted, "to tell you to come to tea. It's
five o'clock and there was a perfectly 'normous cake and it's nearly
gone and there's a fresh pot of tea made for _you_, Renny. And for Mr.
Leigh, o' course."

The snow had come at last. He was feathered all over with it.

"You should not have come out in this gale," said Renny. "Was there no
one else to send?"

"I wanted to come! Which nag is that? Is he a good jumper? I must run
around and see my pony. Shouldn't you like to see my birthday pony, Mr.
Leigh?"

Renny caught him by the arm. "No. Don't go around there. Wallflower
is in the next stall and she's feeling very nervous to-day. Go to the
house, Finch, and tell Aunt that Mr. Leigh will follow you in a little
while. Tell her to keep the tea hot for him. Send Rags over with a pot
for me, and some bread and butter. I'll take it here." He picked up
Wakefield as though he had been a parcel, and deposited him on Finch's
back. "Give this youngster a ride. He's got nothing but slippers on.
You deserve a good cuffing, Wake. And see that you keep that coat over
your head." He raised his voice and shouted: "Open the door for this
thoroughbred, Wright!"

Wakefield clutched Finch about the neck, delighted with this sudden
return to the days of pickaback. Finch, however, looked rather glum
when the stableman laughed as he passed them. He thought he detected a
jeering note in his laughter. Wake was much heavier than he would have
believed possible. But when the door had slammed behind them and the
wind had caught him in the back he felt that they would be swept along
without an effort on his part.

The snow came with a flourish across the ravine. The white flakes
rushed endlessly one on another. Already the ground was white. The
lights of the house looked far away. Finch lurched, bent forward, as
though the next moment he would go on his nose.

"I don't suppose," said Wakefield, "you could caper a bit."

"What the hell----" bawled Finch. "Caper! What do you think I am--a
draught horse? Caper! Caper!"

But his sense of fun was roused. He began to caper indeed, skipping,
whirling awkwardly on the gale, feeling suddenly wildly happy. Wake
no longer seemed a drag on him. They were one--a hairy, gambolling
centaur, frisking in the January dusk, stung by the snowflakes into
animal hilarity.

From side to side they swayed and rocked. Far away they heard the
breakers crashing on the beach.

"Centaur," gasped Finch. "Prancing centaur."

Wakefield, believing that he was uttering the cry peculiar to centaurs,
gave a shrill treble neigh that quavered and died among the snowflakes.
He too was happy. The coat had fallen from his head, which he held
high, fancying it to be adorned with a great fan-like beard and a
fierce crest of hair. Again he neighed and again, and in answer to his
neigh came the bellow of the waves.

So, noisy, riotous, snowy, they staggered into the side door. Finch,
depositing Wakefield on the floor, leaned against the wall, his hand to
his side.

"Winded?" asked Wakefield, looking kindly up at him.

"You bet."

"Do you know, I think a beef, iron, and wine mixture would be good for
you. You've grown too fast and you can't stand much, and you look right
now as if you were going to fall in a heap."

The virtue was indeed gone out of Finch, the madness, the gaiety, but
he did not want medical advice from this patronizing youngster. With a
grunt he turned away and slouched to the dining-room.

In the stable Renny had remarked, a shadow on his face: "A delicate
boy, that."

"Yes, so I gathered," returned Leigh. "Perhaps he'll outgrow it. They
often do, don't they? I wasn't a very strong kid myself."

Renny looked him over. "Hmph," he observed, without any note of
encouragement; then added, more cheerfully: "I'd like to take you to my
office and show you the horse's pedigree." He led the way to a small
room partitioned off from a corner of the stable. He switched on a
dangling electric bulb, and, after placing a kitchen chair for Leigh,
seated himself before a yellow oak desk and began to look over a file
of papers.

As he sat engrossed, beneath the hard white light, Leigh studied him
with an access of interest. He tried to put himself in Finch's place,
to imagine how it would feel to be obliged to ask this stern-looking
fellow for permission to do this and that, to face him after failure
in an exam. He was so sensitive himself, he had been so surrounded
by understanding and sympathy, that he could not imagine it. . . . He
wished very much that he were not going to buy the horse. It would be
necessary to board it out; it would be necessary to ride it, and he
did not care for riding. Renny Whiteoak's performance at the horse
show had left him quite unmoved. He was infinitely more impressed
by the sight of him sitting in his chair under the electric bulb,
searching with complete concentration through his records. . . . He had
been driven to buying the horse in order to create a meeting-place
where he and Finch's brother could talk about Finch.

But how was he to begin?

His reflections were broken by a piercing cry somewhere outside,
followed by a cascade of blood-freezing screeches. He turned white with
terror.

Renny Whiteoak remarked laconically: "Pig. Killing it."

Leigh felt relieved, but still shocked. "Oh," he said, and, looking out
at the darkness, he observed: "It seems an odd time for killing a pig."

"Yes, doesn't it?" He raised his eyes from the papers and, seeing
Leigh's face, said: "It will be over in a minute."

It was. Silence fell. Leigh shivered, for the room seemed to him very
cold with a damp chill that he supposed penetrated from the stable.

"Ah, here we are! Now, just draw your chair up to the desk."

Leigh obediently drew toward the desk, and the two bent over the
pedigrees. He followed rather vaguely the intricacies of blood
relationships, and was surprised at the knowledge one man might have of
the qualities of various equine families.

They were still absorbed when a tap came at the door and Wragge entered
with Renny's tea. Leigh began to feel desperate. His chances for
pleading Finch's cause to the head of the clan seemed to be lessening.
With a sudden nervous decision he closed the bargain. The payment was
arranged.

Renny observed, while washing his hands in a basin on a small washstand
in a corner: "It's too bad to have kept you from your tea so long. I
wish I had had Rags fetch enough over here for two. He might just as
well. However, he'll take you over to the house. It's getting dark."

Leigh shivered. He was nervous, he was cold, and the thought of eating
in a stable disgusted him.

"Thank you," he said. "It doesn't matter at all." He shivered again, as
he noticed how Renny rubbed yellow soap on his hands regardless of the
raw knuckle.

Rags set the tray on the desk. He arranged the things on it with the
air of a liveried butler putting the last touches on a table laid for
a banquet. He lifted the cover from a silver dish and disclosed three
thick slices of buttered toast.

"Bit of a juggler I am, sir," he said, "getting the tr'y acrost in a
blizzard like this and never sloppin' so much as a drop."

"Good for you," observed his master, sitting down before the tray and
pouring himself a cup of tea. "But this is no blizzard. It's nothing
but a fresh wind. It's good for you." He took a large bite of toast
with relish.

Now, thought Leigh, is the time to tackle him. He said: "There's
something I'd like to talk to you about, Mr. Whiteoak--by ourselves. I
can find my way to the house without any trouble, really. I--I simply
want to ask you something--explain something--that is----" He felt like
a stammering schoolboy.

Renny looked surprised, but he said: "Yes? If there's anything I can
do---- Very well, Rags, you needn't wait for Mr. Leigh."

"It's about Finch," began Leigh, slowly, feeling his way, like a man in
the darkness of a strange wood. "I'm very fond of him."

"Yes," returned Renny, the alert interest in his eyes changing to
polite attention, "Finch has often spoken of you." Again his expression
changed, this time to a stare at the inquisitive little cockney, who
blinked back at him for a moment and then slid out of the room with a
kind of impudent servility.

As the door closed behind him, words came more easily to Leigh. "I
think, sir, that Finch"--he had the good sense to use moderation in his
statement--"is really a very clever boy. I think he will be a great
credit to you--to Jalna." His subtle mind had discovered that, more
than his horses, the eldest Whiteoak loved his house. A sudden breaking
up of his features into tenderness and pleasure at some praise of
Leigh's for the lofty rooms, the old English furniture, had disclosed
this. He went on: "I am sure he will, if he is allowed a little
margin--a chance, you know, to develop in his own way. There are some
fellows who can't stand the grind of study unless they have some kind
of outlet----"

"Oh, he's been telling you about the music lessons, eh? Well, I thought
it best to stop them for a while. He was always strumming, and he
failed----"

"It was not necessarily the music that caused him to fail. Any number
of fellows fail the first time who don't know one note from another. If
he'd had more music in his life, he might not have failed. It's quite
possible."

Renny, pouring himself more tea, burst into laughter.

Leigh hurried on: "But music has nothing to do with this. This is about
acting."

"Acting!"

"Yes. Finch has great talent for acting. I'm not sure that it is not
greater than his talent for music."

Renny threw himself back in his chair. Good God, was there no limit to
the extraordinary talents of this hobbledehoy? "Where's he been acting?
Why haven't I been told about it?"

"I'm afraid I've been to blame about that. I felt that the expression
of--of some art is so necessary to Finch that I persuaded him--made him
promise not to let anyone put a stop to it."

The fiery brown eyes were on him. "His promises to me are worth
nothing, then!"

"But they are! I give you my word that he has not been neglecting his
work. He'll have no trouble passing next time. He didn't make a bad
showing, you know. I believe it was more nerves than anything that made
him fail."

A knock sounded on the door.

"Come in," said Renny, and Wright entered. He said: "The vet's here,
sir."

"Good," exclaimed Renny, rising. With a movement of suppressed
irritation he turned to Leigh: "What do you want me to do?"

He was faintly suspicious of Leigh. He felt that Leigh had cornered
him. He supposed that Finch had got Leigh working on his behalf. He had
a way of enlisting the sympathies of susceptible people--intellectual
people. There had been Alayne. How she had pleaded for music lessons
for him! The thought of her softened him. He added: "I don't expect
Finch to plug away and never have any fun. I don't object to anything
so long as it's not going to interfere with his studies."

A clumber spaniel that had come in with Wright raised himself on his
hind legs beside the desk and began to lick the buttery crumbs of toast
from the plate.

A feeling of weakness stole over Leigh. His efforts seemed suddenly
futile. The life of this place was too strong for him, the
personalities of the Whiteoaks too vigorous. He could never penetrate
the solid wall they presented to the world. Even Renny's words scarcely
encouraged him.

He watched the spaniel licking the plate in a trancelike silence for
a moment, then he said, with an effort: "If you would only let Finch
feel that. If he could know that you don't despise him for needing
something--some form of expression other than the routine of the school
curriculum--of school games----"

Wright's round blue eyes were riveted on his face. The eyes of all the
horses in the glossy prints and lithographs that covered the wall were
riveted on him, their nostrils distended in contempt.

Renny took the spaniel by the collar and put him gently to the floor.
Outside in the stable a man's voice was raised, shouting orders. There
was a clatter of hoofs.

Leigh said, hurriedly: "Mr. Whiteoak, will you promise me something?
Let Finch spend the next fortnight with me. I'll help him all I can
with his work, and I honestly think I can help a good deal. Then I
want you to come, if you will, to our place for dinner one night
of the play and see for yourself how splendid Finch is. My mother
and sister would like to meet you. You know you're a hero to Finch,
and consequently to us, too. He's told us about what you did in the
War--the D.S.O., you know."

Renny showed embarrassment, as well as impatience. "Very well," he
said, curtly. "Let him go ahead with the play. But no slacking, mind."

"And you'll come one night?"

"Yes."

"Thanks very much. I'm tremendously grateful." But, in truth, he felt
only relief and a weary haste to be off.

"That's all right. And I hope you will like the horse."

"I know I shall."

They shook hands and parted.

Out in the close-pressing snowflakes, the wind urging him with gusto
toward the glowing windows of the house, Leigh felt Finch farther
removed from him than ever he had been since their friendship had
begun. He saw him now as an integral part of the pattern of Jalna.
He could not now separate him, familiar and dear as he was, from the
closely woven, harsh fabric of his family. He almost wished he had
never seen him among his vigorous kin. And yet, if he had not, he
should never really have understood him, known whence had sprung the
spark which was Finch. And, too, in spite of his feeling of chill, of
fatigue, of having his energy sapped by this place, he experienced an
odd sense of exhilaration as he ran up the steps to the door, grasped
its great icy knob in his hand, opened it, pushed it shut against the
wind and snow, was met by the rush of warmth, bright colour, loud
voices. The uncles were now there, Aunt Augusta, Piers, and Pheasant.
Meg and Maurice had come to tea from Vaughanlands, Meg with a fat
six-months-old baby girl in her arms. Fresh tea was brought to him,
toast, and plum jam and cakes. They all stared at him, but talked to
each other, ignoring him. Never, never, he thought, could an outsider
become one of them.




VI

CLOUTIE JOHN


The opening night of the play Finch was wrought up to such a pitch of
excitement that he wondered if he would ever feel natural again. At
one moment he wished nothing better than that the earth might open and
swallow him, put him speedily from sight before the time came for him
to set foot on the stage. At the next he was walking on air in joyous
anticipation, his eyes bright, his lank lock of fair hair almost into
them. His lips would tremble as though he were going to cry or laugh,
but his conversation consisted mainly of monosyllables.

Leigh was nervous, too. He had the part of the hero, mixture of courage
and cowardice, to play, and his soul yearned over Finch, who had not
only to make his first appearance at the Little Theatre, but to make
it before Renny. Leigh had intended that the elder brother should see
the performance late in the week, but Mrs. Leigh, unadvised by him,
had sent the invitation to dinner, naming Monday. There was nothing to
do but make the best of it, induce a complacent state of mind in the
difficult guest by good wine and charming feminine companionship. For
the latter, Leigh put all trust in his mother and sister. In his haste
and perturbation, he took time to speculate as to which of them would
interest Renny the more, upon which his quick glance might linger.
For himself, the two so claimed his life, his love, that he wondered
whether he should ever care for any other woman. He hoped not. His
mother, his sister, Finch--these were enough.

Finch, coming into the drawing-room, where he now felt happily at ease,
found Ada Leigh already there. She said, with her peculiar, slanting
look at him, across a lighted candelabrum: "I suppose you're awfully
nervous."

He was in one of his moments of elation. "Oh, I don't think so. I don't
believe I'm as nervous as Arthur is."

"I think you are. You're trembling."

"That's nothing. It doesn't take anything to make me shake. Why, I
can't pass a teacup without slopping the tea over."

"Ah, but this is different. You're frightened." She was smiling
teasingly. He felt that she wanted him to be frightened. He drew nearer
to her and saw the reflection of a pointed flame in her eyes.

"I am not afraid," he insisted. "I'm happy."

"Yes, you are afraid." There was a little gasping sound in her voice.

"Afraid of what, then?"

"Afraid of me."

"Afraid of _you_?" He tried to look astonished, but he began to feel
afraid, and yet oddly elated.

"Yes . . . and I of you."

He laughed now and he ceased trembling. Quick pulses began to beat all
over his body. He took her hand and began to caress her fingers. He
examined her pink nails as though they were little shells he had found
on some strange shore. . . .

Then she was in his arms. He who had never kissed a girl! He felt
suffocated. . . . It seemed to him an unreal dream that he was kissing
her. She was snuggling under his chin. . . . Over her head he looked out
into the darkness beyond the window, and saw the cluster of candle
flames reflected like a cluster of bright blooms. He saw the reflection
of his own head, the pale green of her dress like a shimmering pool in
the darkness, over which his head was bent. How unreal it all seemed!
He embraced her, excited by the beautiful reflection, by a new sense of
power, of daring, but he felt that he was acting a part. They kissed in
a tremulous dream.

Mrs. Leigh and Arthur were coming down the stairs together. There was
plenty of time for the two in the drawing-room to draw apart, he to
pick up a book and she to rearrange some flowers in a black bowl. No
longer the darkness beyond the window reflected the entwined figures of
the impassioned pursuers of experience.

Arthur went to Finch and threw an arm across his shoulders. "Darling
Finch," he said, in his low, musical voice, "I'm so glad you're not
nervous any more. You've a beam of absolute assurance in your eyes. I'm
the one who is nervous."

How comforting Arthur's caressing arm was! Finch rejoiced in the yoke
of friendship thus laid across his shoulders. He saw Ada's eyes fixed
on them, dark with jealousy.

If only Renny were not coming to dinner, he should be happy, he
thought. He could not conceive of Renny's fitting into the delicately
adjusted contacts of that group. Yet, when Renny came, looking distant
and elegant to Finch in his dinner-jacket, he fitted in marvellously
well. More strangely still, he did not adjust his conversation to the
light current which usually flowed easily about the table, Mrs. Leigh
always guiding its course, but he brought with him something of the
more vigorous, harsh atmosphere of Jalna. His red head, his shoulders
that had the droop of much riding in the saddle, his sudden, sharp
laughter, dominated the room.

Finch had never seen Mrs. Leigh so gay, so like a girl. She seemed
younger than Ada, who was rather silent, seeming in soft veiled glances
to study the newcomer. But, when her eyes met Finch's, a look of
swift understanding passed between them. Finch was so exhilarated by
his experience of love-making, so proud of Renny, that his face was
full of brightness. He looked charming. An observer would have found
it interesting to compare him with the slouching, deprecating, often
sullen youth who appeared at home.

Renny ate and talked with zest. Arthur, delighted with the success
of his plans, found his dislike of the elder brother turning to
appreciation of his generous and fiery temper. He felt his own manhood
strengthened by contact with this sharper fibre. He felt that it would
be good for him to have a man of this sort coming to the house, good
for Ada, too, who was beginning to expect admiration from all males.

Arthur and Finch were leaving for the theatre before the others. Mrs.
Leigh and Ada were upstairs preparing to put on their evening wraps.
While Arthur was ordering a car, the two brothers were left alone in
the drawing-room for a moment.

Why, thought Finch, am I cursed by this sense of the unreality of
things? There is Renny, sitting in the Leighs' drawing-room, smoking.
Here am I, yet I can't believe we are here, that we are real. Is it
because nothing seems real outside of Jalna? Are we all like that, or
just I? Why do these feelings come over me and spoil my pleasure? He
put his thumb to his lips and nervously bit the nail.

Renny turned his head toward him. "Don't bite your nails. It's a
beastly habit."

Abashed, Finch stuffed his hand into his pocket.

"Renny," he asked, after a moment, almost plaintively, "does this room
seem real to you?"

Renny's brown gaze swept the cream and rose and silver of the room.
"No," he said, "I don't think it does."

Thank God, oh, thank God! Things were unreal to Renny, too!

"Well, look here," he went on, anxiously, "do you see it in a
tremendous kind of haze, as in a dream, still, yet moving, like a
reflection in a bubble?"

Renny stared. "It is something like that."

"And I! Do I seem unreal to you?"

"Decidedly."

He could never have let himself go like this with Renny at home. But it
was really wonderful.

"And do you seem unreal to yourself, Renny? Do you wonder why you do
certain things? Wonder if you are anything more than a dream?"

"I dare say. I think you're excited to-night. You'd better hang on to
yourself or you'll forget your lines."

"Do you suppose I'll have stage fright?"

"I think you've got it already."

"What do you mean, got it already?"

"You're afraid of life, and that's the same thing."

In a burst of nervous excitement, Finch whispered, hoarsely: "What do
you think? I kissed Ada Leigh in this room to-night!"

"The deuce you did! No wonder you feel unreal. Did she like it?"

"I think so. We were reflected in the strangest way in the window. Our
selves, only more beautiful."

"H'm." Renny regarded him with genial amusement. "Are you sure she
didn't ask for it?"

"Of course I am." He reddened, but he still leaned over Renny's chair
in a confidential attitude.

"Well, it's an experience for you. She's a pretty girl." Finch breathed
hard. "Don't sprawl over me that way, snuffling in my face. Have you a
cold?"

"Oh no." He straightened himself again, abashed.

Leigh's voice called from outside.

"Coming, Arthur!" Finch hastened out to his friend. . . .

Renny sat puffing at his cigarette, the glow of amusement still
brightening his eyes. Young Finch making love! And it seemed like
yesterday when he had turned Finch across his knee and warmed his seat.
And now he was getting to be a man, poor devil!

He looked about him. An unreal room. Not a bit like the drawing-room
at Jalna. Nothing homelike about it, with all these little pictures
speckled over the walls, all the delicate furnishings, the fragile
ornaments. But it suited the two pretty women. Odd, mysterious women,
attractive, yet uncomfortable.

He rose as Ada Leigh, her face flowerlike above a white fur wrap,
entered the room.

"Mother will be down in a moment," she said, stroking the fur of her
deep collar.

Renny observed her hand. "Yes? Will you take this chair?"

"No, thanks, it's not worth while sitting down. We must be going." She
dropped her cheek against the fur with a feline caressing movement and
drew a deep, quivering breath.

He stood near her, motionless, attentive. He thought: "What the devil's
the matter with the girl?"

She raised her heavy-lidded eyes to his and said: "I wish I were not
going to-night."

"I'm sorry. Are you going to tell me why?"

"There's no time to talk. . . . But I'm very unhappy."

He smiled at her in a puzzled way. He had no faith in her unhappiness.
He was suspicious of her.

"You'll think me very stupid. Talking like this to you--a stranger.
But you're Finch's brother. And you see--oh, I can't explain!"
Her eyes were raised beseechingly to his. "I'm so frightfully
inexperienced--and--and--I thought I felt something I didn't. I
thought"--her expressive face quivered--"oh, I can't go on!"

He said gravely: "I shouldn't worry if I were you. That sort of thing
happens to all of us. We imagine that we feel things, and then we let
ourselves in for things. . . . But you'll soon forget about it."

"Oh, I wish, I wish," she exclaimed, "that I had someone like you to
help me--about life. I know nothing--and Arthur, although he is such a
darling to me, is ignorant. He doesn't really know any more than I do."

Renny thought: "The trouble with you both is that you know far too
much." He said: "I'm afraid you have come to the wrong man for advice.
I don't understand women. I couldn't possibly."

She said, slowly: "I don't quite mean advice."

"What, then, precisely?"

She pushed the white fur back from her throat. "Something more subtle,
I guess. Your friendship--if it wouldn't bore you too much."

He thought: "Ha, my girl, you're one of the deep kind!" And said:
"Good. We shall be friends."

In the theatre, seated between mother and daughter, he experienced a
feeling of exasperation, of being trapped. The two pretty women seemed
like gaolers, and this place a prison. He hated the "arty" atmosphere,
the cold, chaste walls, the curtain. The lack of an orchestra depressed
him. For him a theatre should blaze in gilt and scarlet, the curtain
should present some florid Italian scene, and his spirit should be
borne on the crash of music as on an element. He hated the chatter of
women's voices before the curtain rose. In the buzz of it he talked to
the two on either side of him and forgot which was mother and which was
daughter. He began to be unaccountably nervous for Finch. He had not
wanted him to go in for anything of this sort, but now that he was . . .
His throat tightened. He had trouble in taking a deep breath.

The play began. It increased his low spirits. The religion of the old
man, his quoting of the Scriptures, made Renny want to howl. And Finch,
when at last he appeared! His wild hair, his dirty face, his rags,
his bare feet! Something deeply conservative in Renny disliked very
much the sight of bare feet on the stage. The legs of a chorus girl,
that was quite different, but a man's--his brother's--bare feet were
distinctly ugly. And the way Finch blew on his whistle, the mad way
he danced about, and sat on the floor and jumped up again, and begged
for scraps of food, and slept in the chimney-corner, and was always
appearing suddenly and disappearing! And his Irish brogue!

The applause thundered. Finch was the bright star of the evening. His
face was white and wild with exultation as he was applauded again and
again. Mrs. Leigh and Ada clapped their hands with delicate enthusiasm.
Renny sat between them wearing a displeased grin very like his
grandmother's when her pride had been hurt.

After the play there was a little gathering in the director's room.
Friends crowded about the actors. Finch, not quite rid of his make-up,
showed a dingy smear on his cheek. He trembled when he came to speak to
Mrs. Leigh and Renny.

"Oh, my dear," cried Mrs. Leigh, her hand squeezing his arm, "you could
not have been better! We are all thrilled by you."

Renny said nothing, regarding him with the same grin of disapproval.
To Finch it seemed to say: "Wait until I get you alone, young man." His
feeling of triumph was gone. He felt that he had been making a fool of
himself for the amusement of the audience. Not again during the week
did he recover his buoyancy and complete abandon in the part.

Returning home in the train next day, Renny thought about Finch, and
not only Finch, but all those younger members of the family who were
his half-brothers. What was wrong with them? Certainly there was some
weakness, bred in the bone, that made them different from the other
Whiteoaks. The face of their mother flashed into his mind. She had been
governess to him and Meg before his father had married her. They had
given her rather a rough time both as governess and as stepmother. He
had been the thorn in her side when she had been their governess; Meg,
when she had become their stepmother. Her face flashed into his mind,
coming between him and the wintry fields outside. He realized for the
first time that she had been a beautiful young woman. A warm face,
warm blue eyes that darkened with emotion, an exquisitely modelled
chin and throat. He remembered seeing her temper flare when Meggie had
sat, stolid and plump, blankly refusing to take any interest in her
music lesson. He remembered her sobbing with exasperation over his
misbehaviour. But when she had become their stepmother she had held
herself somewhat aloof from them, encircled by the love of her husband,
absorbed by her too frequent motherhood.

Renny recalled vividly now the fact that when he had come upon her she
had nearly always been reading. Poetry, too. What a mother for men! He
had come upon her reading poetry to his father, while he stared at her,
listening, his eyes enfolding her. She had loved him, and had not long
survived him. Poor young Wake had been a posthumous child.

Poetry in them--music in them--that was the trouble. Eden was full of
poetry, and he had inherited his mother's beauty, too. . . . Where was
he now? They had heard nothing of him in the year and a half he had
been away. How ghastly to think that Alayne was tied to him. . . . At the
thought of Alayne an ache struck him in the breast, an ache of longing
for something that he could not possess. His soul groped, searching for
a way to turn aside from the longing. He wondered at himself. He, for
whom it had been so easy to forget. . . .

He shifted his body on the seat, as an animal, puzzled by pain, changes
its position, bending his lean red face to stare out of the window on
the far side of the car. He saw a frozen stream there and the rounded
black forms of a clump of cedars.

Of what had he been thinking? Ah, yes, the boys! Eden. A damned fool,
Eden. But Piers was no fool. Sound as a nut. A Whiteoak, through
and through. Then Finch, the young whelp, deceiving him. Posturing,
play-acting before a parcel of highbrows. And mad about music, too.
Well, he'd got to work in earnest now if he were going to amount to
anything. . . . There was Wake, fanciful little rascal. No knowing what
he'd be up to in a few years. . . .

Like an eagle whose nestlings were turning out to be skylarks, Renny
regarded his brood, his love, his pride in them, clouded by doubt.

At the station Wright was waiting for him with a dappled grey gelding
harnessed to a red sleigh. The drifts were too high for motoring.
Wright also brought his great coon coat, in which he enveloped himself
on the platform.

As they flew along the glistening road, past drifts where the fine snow
was ruffled in a silver mist, Renny felt that he could not drink in
enough of the freshness of the day. He took great breaths, he let the
wind whistle in his teeth. The sharp hoofs of the gelding sent hard
pieces of clean snow on to the fur robe on their knees.

When they arrived at the stables Piers was there. He asked as Renny
alighted: "Well, how did the matine idol get on?"

"He took the part of an idiot. Too damned well."

"He would," said Piers.




VII

THE ORCHESTRA


Besides Arthur Leigh, Finch had one other friend. This was George
Fennel, the rector's second son. But his friendship with George lacked
the sense of adventure, the exhilaration of his friendship with Arthur.
Arthur and he had sought out each other. They had bridged barriers to
clasp hands. But George and he had been thrown together since infancy.
Each thought he knew all there was to know about the other. Each was
fond of the other and a little despised him. Their bonds were hatred of
mathematics and love of music. But where Finch toiled and sweated over
his mathematics, and ached with desire for music, George made no effort
to learn what was hard for him, concentrating with dogged purpose on
the subjects he liked, early determining that, square peg as he was,
he would be fitted into no round hole. He played whatever musical
instrument was handy without partiality. He liked the mouth-organ as
well as the piano, the banjo as well as the mandolin. He made them all
sing for him of the sweetness of life.

He was a short, thickset youth, yet somehow graceful. His clothes were
always untidy and his hair rumpled. Arthur Leigh thought him boorish,
commonplace, a country clod. He did what he could to draw Finch away
from him, and Finch, during that winter, till the time of the play,
had never seen so little of George. But after the play he had yearned
toward George. For some reason which he could not have explained, he
was no longer quite so happy at the Leighs'. Not that his passage with
Ada had made any palpable difference. He did not follow his advance
by another step or by a repetition. She seemed to have forgotten it.
Mrs. Leigh was even kinder than before. She asked many questions about
the family at Jalna, and when she learned that one of the uncles was
a student of Shakespeare, and that one of the young men was a poet,
she took to talking quite seriously to Finch about literature. She was
disappointed that Renny was unable--Arthur thought unwilling--to accept
two subsequent invitations to dinner.

Whether it were this new interest, this refined probing into the
relationships, temperaments, and tastes of his family, or some change
in Arthur's attitude toward himself, which made him less happy in the
Leighs' house, he did not know, but he felt the change, which was not
so much a change as a development, a new aspect in Arthur's affection
for him. Arthur had become over-sensitive, exacting, critical of him.
Finch was now often finding out that he had, by some gruff or careless
remark, hurt Arthur; that he had, by some coarseness or stupidity,
offended him; that, when he loudly aired his opinions, Arthur winced.
Yet they had hours of such happiness together that Finch went home
through the snow joyous in all his being. The trouble was, he decided,
that Arthur loved him so well that he wanted him to be perfect, as he
was perfect, not knowing how impossible that was.

How different with George! George expected nothing of him and was
not disappointed. They could spend an evening together in his tiny
bedroom in the rectory, working at an uninspired level of intelligence,
chaffing, telling each other idiotic jokes, littering the floor with
nutshells, and finally descending to the parlour for an hour of music
before Finch must hasten home. Finch at the piano, George playing the
banjo, his older brother Tom the mandolin, while the rector would sit
smoking, the long pipe nestling on his beard, reading the _Churchman_,
with rare imperturbability. Tom was a lazy fellow who did everything
badly (except gardening, for which he had a genius), but Finch never
tired of hearing George play the banjo, of watching him as he sat
squarely on his chair, his thick hands playing with great dexterity and
spirit, his eyes softly beaming from under his untidy hair.

George, like Finch, was always hard up. Sometimes they had not between
them two coins to rub together. When Finch was with Arthur he was
continually accepting favours, continually being given pleasures which
he could only repay by gratitude. At times he felt that the fount of
his gratitude must dry up from the unceasing flow.

"But you must not thank me!" Leigh would exclaim. "You know that I love
to do things for you."

But perhaps, when Finch on the next occasion was silently pleased,
Leigh would ask, with a slight frown denting his smooth forehead: "Are
you pleased, Finch, old chap? Do you like the idea?"

How different with George! There was nothing about which he need be
grateful to George. They were both about as poor in this world's
possessions as they well could be. Each owned a few shabby clothes,
his school-books, his watch, and a cherished object or two, such as
George's banjo and an old silver snuffbox which Lady Buckley had given
Finch. When he was going to the rectory, Finch would fill his pockets
with apples; Mr. Fennel would carry a plate of crullers to the boys;
they would both rifle Mrs. Fennel's pantry. It was a pleasant and
inexpensive give and take.

But now that George was seventeen and Finch eighteen they experienced
great longings for more money to spend. Finch had tried several ways of
earning it. He humbly had asked Piers if there were any work he could
do for him on Saturdays, and Piers had put him to sorting apples in
the twilight chill of the apple-house. Between handling the icy fruit,
standing on the cement floor, and the draught from the open door, he
had contracted an attack of bronchitis that had kept him in his bed for
a fortnight. Piers had come to the bedside.

"How long did you work?" he had asked.

"Nearly all the day," Finch had croaked.

"How many hours, exactly?"

"From nine till four, I think, and, of course, I laid off for dinner."

"A day is from seven to five. Well, here is two dollars. Better buy
yourself a bottle of cough stuff. And the next time you want to earn
some money, get a job in a conservatory." He had thrown a new banknote
on to the quilt. Finch had later spent the money on roses for Ada Leigh.

Bronchitis was bad, but missing school for weeks was worse. He had
lain, feverish, his chest torn by coughing, lonely in his attic room,
listening to the sounds that came from below for companionship, unable
to eat the too substantial meals Rags had carried to him, worrying all
the while lest he fail again in his examinations.

But, when he was better, the urge to earn some money had come again.
This time he asked Renny for work, and Renny had given him a saddle
horse to exercise. All the Whiteoaks could ride, but the horses seemed
to know that there was no masterfulness in Finch, and they tried all
their favourite tricks when he rode them.

This one, just recovering from an accident, supposedly quiet as a
sheep, had, in sportive caper, shied at her own gate, and given Finch
a tumble on the driveway. Everyone, from Grandmother to Wakefield,
had joked about Finch's mishap, and because the mare, elated by her
riderless condition, had galloped to the woods, and an hour had been
spent in capturing her, her flank grazed by a broken branch, Renny had
paid Finch, not with money, but with a curse. The pain of a wrenched
ankle was borne in silence, but a scowl darkened his forehead as he
limped to and from the station. To be a figure of fun, that was his
supreme humiliation.

One evening George said to him: "I know a fellow who would rig up a
radio for us for next to nothing."

"H'm," grunted Finch, tearing a bite from a russet apple. "If we only
had that next to nothing."

"They're any amount of fun," sighed George. "You can get wonderful
concerts from New York, Chicago--all over, in fact."

"Good music, eh? Piano playing?"

"Rather. You've heard Sinclair's radio, haven't you?"

"Yes, but he always tunes in for jazz."

"Why don't you interest your family in them? One would be great fun for
your grandmother and your aunt and uncles."

"I'd never get near it. Besides, they wouldn't spend the money on it.
All the old ones are as close as bark to a tree."

"What about Renny or Piers?"

"They detest them. Besides, money is awfully tight at home this winter.
Gosh, you know I can't get any money for anything but my fees and my
railway ticket. What are you talking about?"

George leaned forward, his square, roguish face twinkling. "I know how
we can earn some money, Finch."

Finch flung the core of the russet into the waste-paper basket. "How,
then?" His tone was sceptical.

"By getting up an orchestra."

"An orchestra! You've gone dotty, haven't you?"

"Not by a long shot. Listen here. The other day my father was making
a sick call in Stead, and I drove him there. These people have a
greenhouse, and while I waited outside I strolled about looking through
the windows at the plants. A fellow came out and we got to talking.
He was a grandson and he'd just come out from town because of the
sickness. I soon found out that he plays the mandolin. He's got a
friend who plays it, too, and another who plays the flute. They've been
thinking for some time they'd like to get up an orchestra if they could
find some fellows to play the banjo and piano. He was awfully excited
when I told him we might go in for it."

Finch was staggered. "But your father--what will he say?"

"He won't know. You see, I didn't tell this fellow I was Dad's son.
He thinks I'm just employed by him. I thought it was better because
one's people are so darned silly about who you go with. Of course,
these other fellows are all right, but you know how unreasonable one's
family can be." And he added softly: "One of the chaps is a tailor's
assistant--he's the flautist--and the other works in the abattoir."

"Gee!" exclaimed Finch. "Do you mean to say he _kills_ things?"

"I didn't ask him," returned George testily. "The point is that he can
play the mandolin."

"So you've met them!"

"Yes. At the noon hour. They're awfully decent chaps, and they're quite
old, too. The one I first met is twenty-three, and other looks about
twenty-six or so. They're awfully anxious to meet you."

Finch began to shake with excitement. He took out a box in which were
two cigarettes, and offered it to George. "Have a fag?"

They lighted up.

Finch was too excited to look at George. He fixed his eyes on the
stovepipe-hole in the floor, through which sufficient heat was supposed
to penetrate to warm George's room. He began to wonder whether their
voices could be heard in the kitchen below.

"What about the pipe-hole? Is the servant down there?"

"She couldn't possibly hear. Besides, she's got her steady with her."

"Who is he?"

"Jack Sims. From Vaughans'."

Murmuring voices came from below. The boys moved softly near the
pipe-hole and peered down. In the light from a feeble electric bulb
they saw two arms lying along the dresser. The hands were clasped.
One hand, projecting from a blue cotton sleeve, was plump, a rawish
pink from much washing of clothes; the other, the hairy wrist of which
protruded from coarse cloth, was the gnarled hand of a middle-aged farm
labourer. The voices had ceased and the only sound was the ticking of
the kitchen clock.

The two intertwined hands fascinated Finch. They became for him
symbolic of the mystery, the reaching out, the groping for support of
life. He felt the tenderness, the fire, that each hand drew from the
other and gathered like herbs of comfort for the lonely heart. . . .

George was whispering: "It's a fact, they never get any further than
that."

"You mean any _nearer_, don't you?"

"I mean any _forwarder_."

They broke into suffocating giggles. They threw themselves on the
lumpy couch, uttering explosive squeaks. But, though Finch giggled
hysterically, his mind's eye was still peering down the pipe-hole, his
soul burning to know what were the thoughts of the two below.

"Why didn't you tell me about them before? We might often have taken a
squint down at them."

"There was nothing to it." George's face turned glum. "Now, look here,
Finch, which are you most interested in, the orchestra or those two
silly spoons in the kitchen?"

Finch returned, still grinning: "There's no earthly use in talking
about an orchestra to me. I wouldn't be let go to town for practising
or playing at places. There'd be a hell of a row if I proposed such a
thing."

"No need for you to mention it. I've got it all arranged. You don't
object to making five dollars every now and again, do you?"

Finch sat up and stared. "Would I get that much?"

"Certainly. Lilly, that's the leader's name, says we can easily get
twenty-five dollars a night for playing at dances in restaurants.
That's five each. Not bad, eh, for strumming a few hours? Now don't
interrupt. It'll be the simplest thing in the world for us to work the
thing. By bolting a bit of lunch, we can get in an hour's practice at
noon. Sometimes we can do it after five o'clock by staying in town for
the seven-thirty train. That's easy. Now, for the dances. You remember
my aunt, Mrs. St. John, has been widowed lately."

Finch nodded.

"She's a favourite with your family, isn't she?"

Again he nodded with deep solemnity.

"Very well. My aunt was saying only yesterday that she would like me to
spend a night with her once a week for company. She would be pleased if
I were to bring you along, and, seeing that she's a favourite of your
darned old family, I don't suppose they'd object to your spending a
night in her house, when she's widowed and all that, and I guess Renny
thinks you're more likely to study when you're with me than with that
Leigh chap." George, in his quiet way, thoroughly disliked Leigh.

"But your aunt, won't she be suspicious?"

George smiled gently. "It all fits in beautifully. Auntie is ordered
to bed by her doctor at eight every night. She'll see us get our books
out--the library's downstairs--and then toddle off to her bedroom
and go bye-bye. The dances begin at nine. We'll see life in those
restaurants, too, mind you. And five bucks apiece. . . ."

They whispered, planning together, till it was time for Finch to go
home. There he sat, wrapped in a quilt, studying, to make up for lost
time. But between him and the page returned again and again the vision
of the two clasped hands lying on the kitchen dresser, then Ada's face
with mouth tremulously smiling, quivering from the kisses he had given
her. With an effort he would put these pictures away and drag his mind
back to its task.

Difficult, unlikely as it had seemed, the orchestra came into being.
It flourished. Lunches were bolted and the noonday period was spent in
practice in the parlour above the tailor's shop, into which penetrated
the pungent smell of hot iron pressing damp cloth. The tailor's
assistant was cousin to the tailor, and he and his girl-wife and puny
infant lived also above the shop. He was the oldest member of the
orchestra, being twenty-six. His name was Meech. Finch soon became
well acquainted with all the family, and, as they were kind to him and
admired his playing, his affection rushed out to them. Often, when
the practice was over, he would stay awhile, making himself late for
school, to play Chopin or Schubert before the friendly circle. Then the
thin girl-wife of the young tailor would crouch at the end of the piano
watching his hands as he played. She was so close to him that she was
in his way, but he would not ask her to move. Sitting so, with her eyes
on him, music springing up beneath his hands, he felt firm and strong,
free as air.

"Come along," George would urge, his banjo under his arm, "we shall be
late."

"Don't wait for me," Finch would say over his shoulder, and would be
happier when the banjo, the first and second mandolins, were gone and
he was left alone with the flute and his family.

Finch now saw a new kind of life, the life of shopgirls and their beaux
seeking pleasure at night in cheap restaurants. On the mornings when
the orchestra had an engagement to play that evening, he awoke with
a start, excited in all his being. The way had always been paved the
night before with his family. Poor Mrs. St. John wanted George to spend
the night at her house and would like to have Finch also. There was
never any difficulty. Finch found it was the easiest thing in the world
to lead a double life. Aunt Augusta would send a box of little cakes
or a pot of marmalade to Mrs. St. John. His aunt, though she looked at
him coldly, her head drawn back with her air of offence, had a tender
spot in her heart for the boy. To his amazement, he had won the prize
canary in the raffle, and had smuggled the cage to her room, swathed in
paper, a present for her on her seventy-sixth birthday. It had come as
an inspiration to him that the day on which he had received it was her
birthday. She had told him that his winning the lottery was a good omen
for his future. The two were drawn together. He often visited her room
to see the canary, and they gloated over the prize together. She soon
grew to love it extravagantly. Now she must always keep the door of
her room shut tightly for fear old Mrs. Whiteoak should hear it sing.
Grandmother would never have tolerated any other bird in the house with
Boney. Then there was the fear of Sasha, Ernest's yellow Persian cat,
who had taken to making her toilette on Augusta's doormat. Ernest also
grew fond of the canary. He too would go to his sister's room to hear
it sing, and they would gaze enraptured at the little throbbing body
while it dipped its yellow head from side to side, warbling first to
one long-faced listener, then to the other.

These days Finch lived in a kind of haze. He felt life changing all
around him. New forces were drawing him this way and that. At times he
felt an aching in his breast that was almost a pain, a yearning for
what he knew not. Not for religion. Not for love--he had not attempted
to make love to Ada again--but for something of which religion and
love were only a part. His eyes were troubled, he grew thinner. Yet
he was always hungry. On the days when there was no practice of the
orchestra, he would go, after the school luncheon, to a large shop
much frequented by the boys when they were in funds. There he would
wander up and down past the glittering glass cases of tempting foods
displayed; platters of ham and tongue; fiery red lobsters, and little
pink shrimps; he would droop over the case of cheeses, fascinated. The
cream cheese, Swiss cheese, Camembert, Roquefort, Oka, the dear little
cheeses made by the Trappist monks in Quebec. He thought he should like
to be a monk working in the cool rooms of the monastery, and he would
buy this particular cheese, though he did not much like it, because
of the thought it brought. And at the other side of the shop would be
George, giving his money for cakes and chocolates, and bottled fruit
from California.

They would go off with their spoil, and at recess they and their
friends would devour it in haste, or a feast would be arranged after
school, when they could eat at leisure. They contrived, however, to
put by a respectable sum for the radio, and toward a camping trip in
the summer. Finch would have liked to buy presents for the family from
the wealth that poured in so fast, but where would they think he had
got the money? But he could not resist a necktie for Renny's birthday,
which fell in March. He spent a long time in the haberdasher's choosing
it--two shades of blue in a gorgeous stripe. Renny's eyebrows flew up
in surprise when it was presented. He was touched. But when he appeared
at Sunday tea wearing it, the vivid blue blazing against the highly
coloured flesh of his face, his red hair, a storm of protest arose from
the family. Renny's beauty--which, they declared, required dark colours
to set it off--was ruined by the tie. Now it would have become Piers,
with his blue eyes and fair skin. And the next time Finch saw the tie
Piers was wearing it.

He had better luck with the box of water colours he bought for
Wakefield. To avoid suspicion, for it was a very good box of colours,
he said that it was a present from Leigh. Wake, who was condemned
to his bed that week, was delighted. He painted pictures day in and
day out. Renny, finding his bed littered with them, thought, with
a moment's heaviness: "By God, this poor youngster's going to be a
genius, too!"

Engagements for the orchestra came thick and fast. The young musicians
played with such untiring gaiety; they were so obliging. Finch
conscientiously slaved at his books, and, between practising and
studying and loss of sleep, grew so thin that even Piers was moved to
concern.

"Try to eat more," he advised. "You're growing, and you need plenty of
good grub."

"Eat!" cried Finch, his nerves on edge. "I'm always eating. If I'm
thin, it's my own business. Please leave me alone."

"But," persisted Piers, feeling Finch's arm, "you're getting thinner.
You're soft, too. Now, just feel my muscle."

"I don't want to feel your muscle. If you'd used your muscle less on
me, it mightn't be so hard and I mightn't be so thin."

One day in March, George announced an engagement in a restaurant in
which they had played several times. The members of some athletic club
were having a dance. The two boys had just spent two week-ends with
Mrs. St. John and the orchestra had worked very hard learning new dance
music. They had played at four dances, so Finch had twenty dollars to
add to the hoard hidden on the top shelf of his clothes cupboard in an
old fishing basket. When he stayed at home he studied late into every
night, apprehensive of again failing in his examinations.

On the night of the dance he was very tired. There had been trouble
over spending the night in town, and only a passionate appeal to
Aunt Augusta to intervene for him had made it possible. The rector,
too, was beginning to think that his sister should be able to get on
without George, and even Mrs. St. John herself had become a little less
yearning toward her two young visitors. Finch felt that he could stand
the strain no longer, that for a while the orchestra should take no
new engagements or that someone else must be found to play the piano.
Yet he loved it. It was life--making music, watching the dancing, the
love-making, being in the streets late at night, the freshly earned
money in his pocket.

Mrs. St. John had been slow to leave them that night. Her health was
better, and there was no need for such early retiring. It pleased her
to sit in the library with the two fresh-skinned youths, watching them
at their study, the light touching their thick hair--George's brown,
tousled; Finch's fair, limp, with the lock on the forehead oddly
appealing to her. She liked to watch their hands--George's small,
white, strong, and precise in their movements; Finch's long, bony, yet
beautifully shaped, nervous, uncertain.

They had to assume a trancelike absorption before she would leave them,
and when she did leave, and the strain was over, they fell into a fit
of smothered laughter that, for Finch, threatened to become hysterical.

"Shut up," ordered George, recovering himself, "or she'll hear you and
come back."

Finch buried his face in the crook of his arm and gave forth strange
squeaks. George glowered at him.

"I never saw a chap like you. You never know when to stop anything."
He looked at his watch. "Good heavens, we'll never dare risk taking a
tram. I'll have to phone for a taxi." He opened the door of the library
and listened. "I hear her running water upstairs. I guess she's safe,
now."

He took the receiver from its hook and gave a number. He stared across
the table at Finch, who stared back with wet eyes, his lips stretched
in a hysterical grin. He looked so silly that George snorted into the
telephone. He sputtered idiotically as he ordered the taxi. Finch was
squeaking again. "Of course," said George, slamming up the receiver,
"if you _can't_ control yourself . . ." He tried his best to look like
his father.

George went into the hall and crept up the stairway to the door of his
aunt's room.

Returning, he said: "It's all right. She's getting ready for bed. . . .
I've told the driver to wait around the corner. Now step on the gas,
Finch, for goodness' sake!"

Rushing through the cold spring night, they were filled with the glow
of adventure, thinking of the dangerous life they led. George's banjo
lay across his knees. Finch held a portfolio of music. As George
paid the driver, Finch stared up at a great ruby-red electric sign,
advertising chocolates, hot against the heavy grey sky. "Shouldn't be
surprised if we had snow," he said. "It's cold enough for it."

But inside it was hot. The room was full of young men and girls--the
men, hockey players, lithe and strong, the girls, bare-shouldered,
silken-legged, with laughing red-lipped faces. Some of them knew Finch
by sight as a member of the orchestra, and waved to him as he sat
sounding a note while the musicians tuned up. There was something about
him that they liked. "I say, Doris, there's the boy with the blond
hair! I think he's a lamb. Shouldn't mind dancing with him."

The flute, the two mandolins, the banjo, the piano, gave voice. They
sang of the joy of the dance, of strong limbs, of supple backs, of
touching electric finger-tips. All the brightly coloured crowd galloped
like huntsmen, led by the five hounds, in pursuit of that adroit fox,
Joy.

When the time came for supper, the members of the orchestra rose and
stretched their legs. They had been playing for three hours. A waiter
brought them refreshments. Finch, trying not to seem ravenous, was
irritated when a tall black-haired girl came up to him. "My, you boys
can play," she said. "I'd sooner dance to your music than any of the
big orchestras."

"Oh, go on!"

"Honestly, I would."

He took another sandwich. His gaze did not rise above her shimmering
shins.

"You're a funny boy. Gosh, your eyelashes are almost a mile long!"

He blushed, and raised his eyes as high as the marble whiteness of her
chest.

"I wish we could have a dance together, Mister--what's your name?"

"Finch."

"Oh, and the Christian name?"

"Bill."

"Bill Finch, eh? I wish you'd come and see me some night, will you,
Bill?"

"Rather."

"No. 5, Mayberry Street. Remember that? To-morrow night? Ask for Miss
Lucas."

"No, I couldn't to-morrow."

"The next, then?"

"Yes," he agreed. "The next." He wished she would leave him with the
sandwiches.

A stout fellow came up and took her arm. "Here, Betty," he said, "none
of that." He led her off, but her bold greenish eyes laughed over her
white shoulder at Finch.

He boasted to Meech, the flautist, of the advances she had made, while
they hurriedly consumed cake and coffee. "That's a good sort to steer
clear of," Meech counselled. "There's a lot of bold-looking hussies
here, and no mistake."

The dance went on, the dancers displaying even more freedom of movement
and brightness of eyes than before supper. They had been drinking a
little, but they were not noisy. At two o'clock Burns, the mandolin
player, who worked in an abattoir, passed a flask among the players.
They were very tired. A little later they emptied it.

"One dance more!" the dancers begged at three o'clock. "One dance
more!" They clapped their hands vigorously. Finch felt ready to drop
from the stool. A tendon in his right hand ached horribly. The dancers
seemed to him like vampires, sucking his blood, never tiring of the
taste of it.

The tall girl disentangled herself from the blur of the crowd and
rushed to the piano. She threw her arms about Finch's neck and hugged
him. "Another another," she whispered, "and don't forget your promise!"
He loathed the hot, steamy smell of her. He gasped for breath, his
hands lying, played out, on the keyboard. He tried to draw his head
away.

"Don't be so formal, dearie," she said, releasing him, and again the
thickset man came and dragged her away.

A waiter appeared with a glass jug and glasses. "Have some ginger ale?"
he asked, smiling.

Finch took a glass. Something stronger than ginger ale, he discovered.
A pleasant glow passed into him with the first half of the glass.
After the second half he felt stronger, firmer. He looked over his
shoulder at the others. George Fennel's eyes were shining under his
tumbled hair. Meech, the flautist, showed a pink flush on his high,
pale forehead. Lilly and Burns were laughing together. Burns said, in
a heavy bass voice: "Lilly, here, can't see the strings. He's pipped,
aren't you, Lilly?"

But now they discovered that they could go on. A little gush of energy
swept them into "My Heart Stood Still." The dancers moved in silence,
holding each other tightly. The sliding of their feet sounding like the
dry rush of autumn leaves. The cruel white lights showed them as people
growing old. A blight seemed to have fallen on them. And yet they could
not stop dancing.

Now it was the orchestra that dragged them on. They seemed no more
than manikins operated by wires. Jerkily they went through dance after
dance, and with hot, moist hands clapped for more. The orchestra broke
into song, with the exception of Meech, the flautist. "And then my
heart stood still," they sang, for their repertory was limited, and
they had to repeat their pieces time and again.

At last the dancing feet stood still. It was past four o'clock when the
members of the orchestra descended the narrow stairs and went out into
the darkness of the morning.

Snow had fallen deeply. The city street looked as pure as a street in
heaven. Marble whiteness everywhere, arched by a dark blue sky out of
which hung a great golden moon.

The sweet coldness of the still air was like a joyful caress. They
lifted their faces to it, opened their mouths and drank it in. They
sought to absorb it into every region of their beings. The soft pure
snow beneath their feet was beautiful. They ran in it, ruffling it up.
Lilly took off his hat that his head might cool, but Burns snatched it
and jammed it on his head again. "No, no, you'll take cold, my little
Lilly. My pretty little Lilly," he admonished, rather thickly.

Lilly, his hat over his eyes, trudged along silently, much annoyed.

"I know," went on Burns, "of a place where we could get a good hot
supper. I'm starving."

"So am I!" cried George. "Head on, O Burns! You of the significant
name! Let's make a night of it."

"I ought to get home," objected Meech, "to my wife and little one."

Burns exclaimed: "Wife and little one be----"

"Look out what you say!" interrupted the flautist, standing up to him.

"Keep your shirt on," retorted Burns. "I didn't mean no harm. I only
meant I know a place where we can get a good hot supper, and seeing as
how we got extra pay to-night I'm willing to stand treat for the crowd.
How about it now, eh?"

There was almost instant agreement, and as they tramped along Burns
remarked: "My stomach begins to think my throat is cut."

His companions grunted. They thought it was far from taste in him, a
butcher, to talk of cut throats.

It was a little ill-lighted dingy restaurant to which Burns led them,
but the bacon and eggs were good, and after a whispered consultation
the waiter brought them a jug of beer. The five were ravenous. They
scarcely noticed the other people in the room until their plates were
swept clean and cigarettes were lighted. George then leaned toward his
friends, whispering: "For heaven's sake keep your instruments out of
sight. They'll be after us to play if they spot them."

There were about two dozen people seated at the tables. It was clear
that they were regarding the youths with speculation in their eyes. It
was too late to hide the mandolins and banjo.

One of the men came over to them. He said, with an ingratiating grin:
"Say, couldn't you fellows give us a tune or two? Some of the girlies
are feeling lively and they'd give a good deal to shake a leg."

"What do you take us for?" growled Lilly. "We've been playing all
night. Besides, there's no piano."

"Yes, there is. Over behind the screen there. Just give us one little
tune. The girlies'll be awfully disappointed if you don't." He wheezed
unpleasantly behind Finch's ear.

The "girlies" themselves came, and added their importunities. Something
from a bottle was poured into the empty beer glasses. Finch heard a
strange buzzing in his head. The air in the room moved as though it
were no longer air, but whispering waves. The electric lights were
blurred into a milky haze. He was being led to the piano. He felt
intolerably sad.

About him the others were tuning up. He heard George swearing at a
broken string. He put his hands on the keyboard and blinked at it.
It was a white marble terrace with little black figures of nuns in
procession across it. He sat staring at them, stupefied, they were so
perfect, so black, so sad. Burns said, hoarsely: "My Heart Stood Still."

"Awright," agreed Finch.

It was not he who was playing. It was only his hands, mechanisms which
depended on him not at all. Over and over they played what they were
told to play, firm, strong, banging out the accented notes. He could
see George's face, set like a white mask, and his small white hands
plucking vigorously at the strings. The flute soared and wailed in a
kind of dying scream; the mandolins chirped away as though they knew no
tiring. Burns's red butcher's fists had always made Finch rather sick
as they hovered over the strings. The mandolin seemed like some puny
little animal he was about to slaughter.

They were in the street again. They were all yelling together. They had
no reason to raise their voices. Only some primitive instinct told them
it was the time for yelling. They straggled along the snowy street,
sometimes in file, sometimes strung across the roadway. The strange
snow light--the moon had become too pale to be accounted anything more
than a wan presence in the paling sky--lent an unearthly quality to
their figures. Their cries seemed the cries of spirits rather than of
men.

They did not know where they were going. Up one street and down
another, and, coming upon the first street again, they traversed it for
the second time without recognizing it. Each variation and eccentric
curve was marked on the purity of the snow. Sometimes they were
separated into two parties, two going in one direction and three in
another. Then the far-away shouting of one group would startle into a
panic the other, and they would run, calling each other by name, until
they met again on some corner, and the little band would be reunited.

Once the flautist was lost by the other four. It was some little time
before they noticed that one of their number was absent, though they
realized that all was not well with them. From their hoarse, deep-toned
shouts one high-pitched tenor cry was missing. But at last their loss
was borne in upon them. They stood stock-still, staring blankly at each
other. Who was gone?

Then, all at once, they knew it was Meech.

"Meech! Meech!" they shouted, and they began to run in a body, calling
his name and reeling as they ran.

There was no answer, so they called him by his Christian name.

"Sinden! Sinden! Hi, Sinden Meech!"

At last they found him. He had wandered into a wide, well-lit street
of the prosperous. His arms were clasped about the standard of an
electric light. His head was thrown back and he gazed rapturously
upward.

"This is a clock tower," he declared. "I'm trying to find out what
time it is. One--two--three--four--five"--and he counted loudly up to
twenty-nine. "Twenty-nine o'clock," he announced. "That's as rotten an
hour as I ever heard struck."

"Go to hell," said Burns. "That ain't no clock."

"Yes, it is, too! And I'm going to stop here until it strikes again.
Next time it'll strike--one--two-three----"

The rest of the quintet joined in the counting with explosive shouts.

They were interrupted by a scream from Lilly, doubled up in the middle
of the road. They ceased to count and encircled him, all but Sinden
Meech, who still clasped the standard.

"What's the matter, Lilly?"

"I've got a pain. Say, you fellers, who d'ye do for a pain?"

"Where is it, Lilly?"

"In m-my belly."

"That's no kind of word to say on the street!"

"Well, what shall I call it then?"

"Diaphragm," said George Fennel.

"All right, then. I've a pain in my diagram."

They shouted with sardonic laughter, hopping about in circles like
crows against the snow.

When a lull came, Meech announced, leaving the standard and reeling
toward them: "My father brought up ten children on the piccolo."

They gathered about him, interested.

He continued plaintively: "Is it possible that I can't bring up one on
the flute?"

They howled.

Three figures were seen approaching, a man and two women. The women
were frightened, and the man himself nervous about passing this band of
ruffians on the street. He clasped the arms of the women closely, set
his face, and marched into their midst.

But there was nothing to fear. The five youths gazed wonderingly into
the faces of what appeared to them a portentous apparition. They
crowded close, but they said nothing until the three had passed. Then
George called: "Bye-bye, ladies!"

And Finch cooed: "Ta-ta, gennelman!"

Then a storm of bye-byes and ta-tas followed the retreating figures.

A window was thrown up in the large house opposite, and a man in his
nightclothes appeared in the opening.

"If you hoodlums don't get off this street in double-quick time, I'll
call the police. Now, get a move on!"

The members of the orchestra looked at each other. Then they burst
into jeers, whistles, and catcalls. Finch packed a snowball and sent
it flying through the window into the angry whiskered face. A volley
of snowballs followed. The householder retreated. He was going to
telephone for the police.

Almost at the moment of his disappearance a thick, helmeted figure
appeared at the corner of the street. With terrified looks they
snatched up their mandolins, banjo, and flute, silent participators
in all this rowdyism, and fled along the street and down a lane. From
there they emerged into another street, raced along it, and heard the
policeman's whistle on the clear morning air.

Bright red-gold wavelets of cloud appeared in the eastern sky,
forerunners of the strong tide of day. Blue shadows became visible on
the snow.

Finch and George Fennel found themselves separated from the rest. They
ran on for several blocks, and at last made sure that they were not
pursued. They halted and looked at each other curiously as people who
meet under strange circumstances for the first time.

"Where do you live?" asked Finch.

"With aunt in ole house in College Street."

After a moment's reflection, Finch observed: "I live in ole house, too.
Name of Jalna."

"_In_-deed. Are you going there now?"

"I dunno. Where'd you say you live?"

"I said ole house in College Street."

"Wanna go there?"

"Absolutely. All the time."

"Tha's nice. College Street, you say?"

"Say, have you got anything against that street?"

"No, no. I'm going to take you there."

"All righ', Finch. Goo' friend to me."

Finch put his arm around George's neck and they made a somewhat uneven
progression along the street. Coming upon a milkman, they asked him
their way, but when he had directed them they questioned his directions
so sceptically that he became irritated and whipped up his horse and
left them. However, they followed him to his next place of delivery,
calling: "Hi, there!"

"Well, what do you want?" he snarled, standing in the bluish snow, with
a carrier of milk bottles in his hand.

"Do you stop here or there?" demanded George.

"Funny, ain't you?" sneered the milkman, crashing the carrier into the
waggon, and leaping in after it.

"I suppose we can buy a bottle of milk," said Finch.

"Let's see your money," said the milkman, suspiciously, and his horse
began to plod heavily along the accustomed route.

Finch, trotting alongside, held up a silver coin. The milkman drew in
his horse and sulkily handed out a bottle. "If you'd drunk more o'
this," he said, "and less o' the other, you wouldn't be where you are."

But they discovered, when they had opened the bottle, that the milk was
frozen. They tried disconsolately to dig it out with a penknife, and,
failing this, they broke the bottle off the milk and left the erect
frozen shape standing on the nearest doorstep.

Finch again put his arms about his friend's neck, and again they set
out to find the house of Mrs. St. John.

Finch cuddled George's head against his shoulder. "What are you?" he
asked.

"Goo' boy," responded George.

"Tha's a wrong answer," said Finch, very gravely. "Now tell me again,
what are you?"

"Goo' boy," persisted George, doggedly.

"Tha's a wrong answer."

And thus they proceeded with question and answer until, as by a
miracle, they stood before the door of the house they sought.

"You live here?" asked Finch, politely.

"Yes. . . . You live here, too?"

"No. I live in ole house named Jalna."

"Oh. . . . Well, goo'-bye."

"Goo'-bye. See you later."

They parted, and Finch on the next street took a taxi and drove to
the station. During the ride he kept his face pressed to the window,
observing with drunken interest the streets through which they passed.

There was only a short wait until the early morning train left. The
conductor on this train did not know Finch, but he had a fatherly eye
on him, and awoke him from his heavy sleep before they reached the
station at Weddels', and saw him safely to the platform.

Out here in the open, the sunshine poured down in an unobstructed
flood. The sun was climbing the clear blue sky, his springtime ardour
unabashed by the snowfall of the night before. The snow, in truth, was
now nothing more than a thin white garment on the earth. The earth was
casting it aside and pushing up her bare brown bosom to the sun. She
was straining her body toward him to absorb his heat.

In the ditches, bright runnels of water were gurgling. The bare limbs
of the trees shone as though they had been varnished. A rut in the road
made a bathtub for a little bird. He agitated his brown wings joyously
and sent up a cascade of sparkling drops.

Finch splashed through the melting slush, his face heavy and flushed,
his hair plastered over his forehead. Two farmers in a waggon, passing
him, remarked that that young Whiteoak was growing up no better than
the rest.

He met Rags as he was about to enter the house. The servant observed,
with his air of impudent solicitude: "If I was you, Mister Finch, I
shouldn't gaow into the 'ouse lookin' like that. I'd gaow round to the
washroom and wash my fice. There's no hobject in advertising to the
family, sir, wot kind of a night you've spent."




VIII

THE FOUR BROTHERS


He went in at the side door, and descended, with rather jerky
movements, the short flight of steps leading to the basement. He was
too dazed by the buzzing in his head to notice the sound of voices
in the washroom, and, even when he had opened the door, he did not
at once perceive that it was occupied. However, as he stood blinking
in the warm, steamy atmosphere, he gradually made out the figures of
his brothers. Piers was kneeling beside a large tin bathtub in which
a spaniel drooped, wet and shivering, its face looking pathetically
wan and meek with all the fluffy hair lathered down. Standing braced
against the hand basin was Renny, pipe in mouth, directing the
operations, and perched on a step-ladder was little Wakefield, eating a
chocolate bar.

Finch hesitated, but it was too late to retreat--all three had seen
him. He entered slowly and closed the door behind him. For a space no
one paid any attention to him. Renny laid his pipe on the window-sill,
snatched up a bucket of clear water, and poured it over the dog, Piers
slithering his hands up and down its body to rinse away the lather.

"Good boy, now!" cried Wakefield. "Up, Merlin, up!"

The spaniel, released, straddled on the brick floor a moment, then
shook himself mightily, sending a shower of drops in all directions.

"Hi! Hi!" shouted Wakefield. "You're drowning us!"

Renny tossed a bath towel to Piers, who, his shirt sleeves rolled up on
his white, muscular arms, began vigorously to rub the dog dry.

Renny turned suddenly and looked at Finch.

"Well, I'll be shot!" he exclaimed.

Wakefield peered through the steamy air at him, and then, with a
perfect imitation of the eldest Whiteoak's tone, cried in his clear
treble: "Well, I'll be shot, too!"

Piers looked over his shoulder at the object of their astonishment. He
made no remark, but, releasing the dog, he rose and moved a step nearer
for a closer inspection. Finch stood facing them, his jaw dropped in
an expression of stupid resentment, his face dirty, his collar and tie
askew.

"Well," he snarled, out of the side of his mouth, "do you like the
looks of me?"

"So well," returned Piers, "that I've a mind to stick your head in this
tub of suds."

"You just try it! Just lay a finger on me, any of you! I want to be let
alone, that's what I want. I don't want any damned interference from
anybody!" He fixed his heavy gaze on Piers. "We had a fight in this
room once. Say the word and we'll have another!"

"A fight!" Piers gave a sarcastic laugh. "A fight, you young ass--you
don't call that a fight, I hope? You threw some water in my face and I
knocked you down." He turned to Renny. "Don't you remember? You came
in, and he was lying on the floor with a bloody nose, blubbering."

Finch interrupted vehemently: "I was not blubbering!"

"Yes, you were! You always blubber when you're punished. Snivelling is
your long suit."

Finch, with face distorted by rage, lunged toward him, and the spaniel,
exhilarated by the bath, desiring to have part in the excitement,
sprang upon Finch, barking, and almost overthrew him.

This bundle of wetness pawing him was the last straw to Finch's
nerves. The exuberant barks in his face confused him. He scarcely knew
what he was doing when he kicked the spaniel. Even its yelp of pain
hardly penetrated his consciousness. What did pierce it, with terrible
distinctness, was Renny's expression of white anger. Renny looked very
strange, he thought, white as a ghost, with that aghast expression.

Renny was staring as though he could not believe that Finch had kicked
Merlin. Then his mouth set. He laid down his pipe, and in a stride
was on him. He shook him as a terrier a rat, and then threw him on
to a bench, saying: "If I thought you knew what you were doing, I'd
flay you." He bent and put his hand on the dog's side, and looked
reassuringly into his eyes.

Finch's eyes were on Renny's hand, that hard, strong hand that moved
with such machinelike swiftness and surety. He sprawled on the bench,
his back against the wall, filled with misery, anger, and self-loathing.

Wakefield remarked from his perch: "Usually I'm not on hand when
there's a row." No one heard him.

"Now," said Renny, taking up his pipe again, "I want you to tell me
where you were last night."

"In town," mumbled Finch, brokenly.

"Where? You certainly weren't at Mrs. St. John's."

"I had dinner there."

"Yes?"

He wished Renny's eyes were not so fiercely, so mercilessly,
questioning. It made it hard for him to think clearly, to put himself
in a decent light if possible. Yet, what use in trying when he had
kicked Merlin! If only Piers weren't there, it would be easier to make
a clean breast of it!

Piers was again rubbing Merlin, but he never took his bright blue eyes
from Finch's face, and he never took the small sneering grin from his
lips.

"Well," Finch's voice was still more broken, "there's this orchestra I
belong to. I've never told you about that. But there is no harm in it
really."

"A harmless bird, this!" interjected Piers.

"An orchestra! What sort of orchestra?"

"Oh, just a little one a few of us got up, so we could make a little
money. A banjo, two mandolins, a flute, and I--played the piano."

"God, what an orchestra!" exclaimed Piers, standing up and drying his
arms.

"Who are these fellows?"

"Oh--some fellows I know. Not at school. I--just got in with them." He
must not implicate George. "We practised after school."

"Where did you play?"

"In restaurants. Cheap ones. For dances."

"That's what you were up to when you were spending the night with
George's aunt, eh? Was George into this?"

"No, no. I just happened to meet these fellows----"

"They must be a pretty lot. Who are they?"

"You wouldn't know if I told you. One of them is named Lilly, and
another Burns, and another Meech."

"But who are they? Who are their people?"

"How much did you get for playing?" put in Piers.

This question came as a relief. He raised his haggard eyes to Piers.
"Five dollars a night."

"And how often have you played?"

"I don't--I can't remember--but we've been going out for over two
months."

"What I want to know," insisted Renny, "is who these boys are. Are they
students?"

"No. They work. Lilly's grandfather has a greenhouse. Sinden Meech
is in some sort of tailoring establishment. Burns is in some kind
of--abattoir."

"H'm. . . . And so you're in the habit of knocking about town all night
drinking, eh?"

Oh, if they wouldn't stare at him so! He could not get his thoughts
clear with those relentless eyes on him!

"No, no," he mumbled, wringing his fingers together. "This is the very
first time. . . . We'd been playing for a dance. We got awfully tired. And
they gave us something to buck us up. But not too much, mind you. It
was at the other place where we went afterward that they--someone--gave
us another drink. I guess it was pretty rotten stuff, and when we came
out in the street we--couldn't find our way at first--and we separated
and got together again and then I took the train for home."

Renny rapped his pipe on the window-sill and put it in his pocket.
"You're in no condition," he said, looking Finch over with distaste,
"to listen to a lecture now. Go to your bed and sleep this off. Then
I'll have something to say to you."

"If you were mine," said Piers, "I'd hold your head under that tap for
fifteen minutes and see if that would waken you up."

"But I'm _not_ yours!" Finch cried, hoarsely. "I'm not anybody's! You
talk as though I were a dog."

"I wouldn't insult any dog by comparing him to you!"

Finch's misery became too much for him. He burst into tears. He took
out a soiled handkerchief and violently blew his nose.

Wakefield began to scramble down from his step-ladder. "Let me out of
here," he said. "I'm getting upset."

He hastened toward the door, but as he reached Piers's side he espied a
half sheet of crumpled paper lying on the floor. He bent and examined
it.

"What's this, I wonder?" he said.

"Give it here," said Piers.

Wakefield handed it to him, and Piers, smoothing it out, cast his eyes
over it. His expression changed.

"This evidently belongs to Finch," he said, slowly. "He must have
pulled it out of his pocket with his handkerchief." He looked steadily
at Finch. "Now that you're making a clean breast of it, Finch, will you
give me leave to read this aloud?"

"Do what you darned please," sobbed Finch.

"It's a note from someone to you." He read, with distinctness:

     "DEAREST FINCH,

     "After you were gone last night, I was very much disturbed. You
     were preoccupied--not like your old self with me. Cannot you
     tell me what is wrong? It would be a terrible thing to me if the
     clarity of our relationship were clouded. Write to me, darling
     Finch.

                                                          "ARTHUR."

Piers folded the paper, and returned it to the child. "Give this back
to Finch," he said. "He'll not want to be separated from it." He turned
then to Renny. "Did you take it in, Renny? His friend Arthur calls him
'dearest' and 'darling.' Could you have believed it possible that one
of us should ever have got into such a disgusting mix-up?"

Renny said, his eyes fixed on the spaniel: "This Arthur Leigh calls him
'dearest' and 'darling.'"

"Yes! And rants about the 'clarity of their relationship'!" He gave
a flourish of his hand toward Finch. "Is it any wonder he looks a
wreck--alternately boozing with butchers and tailors and spooning with
a rotter like Leigh?"

"I thought you were a little fool," said the eldest Whiteoak, "but now
I'm disgusted with you. You've been deceiving me, and wasting time
when you should have been studying. As for this neurotic affair with
Leigh--I tell you, I'm sick at heart for you."

Finch could not defend himself. He felt annihilated. He held Arthur's
note in one shaking hand and in the other he gripped his handkerchief,
but he did not hold it to his face. He left the misery of his face
exposed to the eyes of his brothers. Sobs shook his lips. Tears ran
down his cheeks unheeded.

Wakefield could not bear it. Slipping past Piers and Renny, he threw
his arms about Finch's neck.

"Oh, don't cry," he implored. "Poor old Finch, don't cry!"

Renny said: "This is very bad for you," and took him under the arms and
put him into the passage outside.

The little boy stood there motionless, his heart pounding heavily. He
was oppressed by the strife among his elders. He had a feeling that
something frightening was going to happen.

Mrs. Wragge came out of the kitchen carrying a corn broom and a
dustpan. She began angrily to sweep something off the red brick floor
into the pan.

"If that 'usband of mine," she affirmed, "don't quit throwin' refuge
on my clean floors, it'll be the worse for 'im."

"There's another bit, over in the corner," said Wakefield, pointing.

Mrs. Wragge collected it, straightened her back, and looked curiously
at the door of the washroom.

"What might they be doing in there so long?" she asked. Wakefield
replied with dignity: "They might be doing almost anything, Matilda.
What they are doing is washing a dog."

"I thought the master's voice sounded as though he were a bit put out
over something."

"Not more than usual, Matilda."

"Well, it's none of my business."

"You bet it isn't."

"But, just the same, when Wragge told me that Mr. Finch had come 'ome
with his collar hangin' loose and 'is fice dirty at this time in the
morning, I says, 'Look out for squalls.'"

The door of the washroom opened. Renny and Piers, followed by Finch and
the spaniel, came out. Renny picked up Wake and threw him across his
shoulder. Upstairs he set him down in the hall and rumpled his hair.
"Feel better?" he asked. Wake nodded, but he kept his eyes turned away
from Finch. He could not bear to look at him. . . .

Finch lay on his bed all day. He was in a strange state, between
sleeping and waking. He could not think clearly, and his head hurt
him terribly. He felt as though the inside of it had become solid,
while, over the surface, sharp pains trickled down into his neck. He
had an abominable taste in the mouth. He had a light-headed, feverish
feeling. It was impossible for him to arrange the events of the last
twelve hours in proper sequence. He had never been so confused, so
hopeless, in his life. All the muddle-headedness, the fear, the groping
of his years, seemed to have harried him, jostled him, spiritually
dishevelled, to this. He was an outcast in his own home, unspeakably
alone. He asked himself the old question, What am I? He examined his
hand as it lay clenched on the quilt beside him. What was it? Why had
it been formed? Given those strange and delicate muscles--the power to
draw music from the aching heart of the piano? That music was more real
than the hand that made it. The hand was nothing, the body was nothing.
The soul surely less than the grass. He lay as motionless as though the
soul had indeed left the body.

After a time, the thought of music again came to him. He remembered
something by a Russian composer, which his teacher had played to him.
It had been too difficult for Finch to play, but he had the power of
remembering it, of inwardly hearing it, in its entirety, as though it
were again being played.

He lay, letting it sing through him, through every nerve in his body,
like a cleansing, rushing wind. At last he felt peaceful and slept.




IX

ALAYNE


Three weeks later, Alayne Whiteoak sat alone in the living-room of the
apartment which she shared with Rosamond Trent. She had just finished
reading a new book, and she was about to write a review of it for one
of the magazines. She wrote a good many reviews and short articles now,
in addition to her work as reader for the publishing house of Cory and
Parsons.

This was an English novel of Oxford undergraduates who waved white
hands, who talked endlessly and cleverly, always on the verge of the
risqu. She wished they had not sent her this particular book--but then
it was only one of many like it. She felt that she could not do it
justice because she had come to it prejudiced. It was not her sort of
book. She sighed and looked at the books piled about her. She thought
of the procession of books that, in the last year and a half, since her
return to New York, had passed through her hands. A strangely dressed
procession, carrying brazen "blurbs," trampling her spirit, tiring her.

She had none of the angry irritation of a professional reader whose own
creative power is being stifled by continuous critical reading. She had
little creative power in writing. She did not even desire it, but she
wanted certain things from life which life apparently was to withhold
from her. She wanted open space about her, and she wanted freedom to
love. She desired spiritual growth.

When she had first come back to New York, her reaction from the
troubled ingrown life at Jalna was a desire to submerge her personality
in the routine of work, to drown in the roar of the city remembrance
of that strange household--love of Renny Whiteoak. And for a while
it seemed that she had succeeded. Rosamond Trent had been almost
pathetically glad to welcome her back to the apartment on Seventy-first
Street. "You know, Alayne dear, I never hoped much from that marriage
of yours. Not that your young poet was not an adorable creature, but
still, scarcely the type that husbands are made of. It has been an
experience for you--I shouldn't have minded a year of it, myself--but
now the thing is to put it behind you and look steadily forward." Her
voice had had an exultant little crow in it as once more she took
Alayne under her wing.

Mr. Cory felt it badly that the marriage had been so unsuccessful.
He still had a fatherly interest in Alayne, and it had been through
him that the two had met. Eden's two slim books of poetry were still
in print, but the sale of them had dropped to almost nothing. Still,
now and again in some literary article reference was made to the wild
beauty of the lyrics, or to the fresh vigour of the long narrative
poem, _The Golden Sturgeon_. No new manuscript had been submitted to
the publisher by Eden, but once, in a magazine, he had come upon a
short poem by him which was either childishly nave or horribly and
deliberately cynical. Mr. Cory, after reading it several times, could
not really decide. In either case he had a poor opinion of it. He had
been uncertain whether or not to show it to Alayne. He had cut it out
and saved it for her, but when next she came into the office, and he
looked into her eyes he decided against it. No, she had had enough
suffering. Better not remind her of the cause of it. So, instead, he
begged her to come oftener to his house, insisted that she come to
dinner that very night, and when he was alone he tore the poem into
small pieces.

To-night Alayne felt stifled by the air of the city. She went to the
window, opened it wide, and sat on the sill, looking down into the
street. There were few pedestrians, but a stream of motor-cars flowed
by, like an uneasy, tortured river that could find no rest. The smell
of oil, of city dust, dulled the freshness of the spring night. The
myriad separate sounds, resolved into one final roar, sucked down
human personality as quicksand human flesh and blood. Looking down into
the city, a spectator might fancy he saw wild arms thrown upward in
gestures of despair, as by drowning people.

Alayne thought of Jalna. Of the April wind as it came singing through
the ravine, stirring the limbs of the birches, the oaks, the poplars,
to response. She remembered the smell that rose from the earth in which
their roots were twined and lovingly intertwined, a smell of quickening
and decay, of the beginning and the end. She saw, in imagination, the
great balsams that guarded the driveway and stood in dark clumps at the
lawn's edge, shutting in the house, making a brooding barrier between
Jalna and the world. She saw Renny riding along the drive on his bony
grey mare, drooping in the saddle, and somehow, in that indolent
accustomed droop, giving an impression of extraordinary vigour and
vitality. . . . He was no longer on his horse. He stood beside her. His
piercing red-brown eyes searched her face. He moved nearer, and she saw
his nostrils quiver, his mouth set. . . . God, she was in his arms! His
lips were draining the strength from her, and yet strength like fire
had leaped from his body to hers. . . .

Alayne made a small, moaning sound. She pressed her hand to her throat.
Was she to have no peace? Was the remembrance of Renny's kisses to
torture her always? Ah, but if she could, would she part with the
delight of that torture?

She remembered his last passionate kiss of good-bye, and how she had
clung to him and breathed, "Again," and his putting her away from him
with a sharp gesture of renunciation. "No," he had said, through his
teeth. "Not again." And he had moved away and taken his place among his
brothers. Her last sight of him had been as he stood among them, taller
than they, his hair shining redly in the firelight.

To-night she felt invisible cords, charged with desire, drawing her
toward Jalna. She experienced a mystic ecstasy in the secret pull of
them. She gave herself up to it, all her senses absorbed. She became
unconscious of the strangely compounded street roar. She did not even
hear, until it was twice repeated, the buzz of the bell of her own door.

When at last she heard it, she was startled. She had a feeling
approaching apprehension as she went to the door and opened it. In
the bright light of the hallway stood young Finch Whiteoak. Like a
ghost created by her thoughts he stood, tall, hollow-cheeked, with a
tremulous smile on his lips.

"Finch!" she exclaimed.

"Hullo, Alayne!" He got out the words with an effort. His face broke up
into a smile that was perilously near the contortion of crying.

"Finch, my dear, is it possible? You in New York! I can scarcely
believe it is you. But you must tell me all about it."

She drew him in, and took his hat and coat. It seemed so strange to see
him away from Jalna that she felt she might be laying eyes on him for
the first time.

"I ran away," he muttered. "I just couldn't stand it. . . . I've been here
three weeks."

Alayne led him to a sofa and sat down beside him. "Oh, Finch! Poor
dear. Tell me all about it." She laid her hand on his. Isolated thus,
they were intimate as they had never been at Jalna.

He looked at her hand lying on his. He had always been moved by the
whiteness of her hands.

"Well, things seemed absolutely set against me--or me against them.
Darned if I know which. Anyhow, I failed in my matric. I suppose you
heard that. Aunt Augusta and you write sometimes to each other, don't
you? Well, Renny stopped my music lessons. I wasn't even allowed to
touch the piano. And I guess that was all right, too, for I'd sort of
gone dotty about music. I couldn't forget it for a minute. But I'm like
that, you know. Once I get a thing on the brain, I'm done for." He
sighed deeply.

Her hand which was lying on his clenched itself. She withdrew it and
repeated: "He stopped your music." Between her and Finch rose a vision
of Renny's carved profile, its inflexibility deriving the warmth of the
full face. "Yes? And then what?"

"Well, it seemed as though I'd got to have something besides plain
work. A kind of ballast. I felt that I couldn't stick it unless there
was something. So I went to play-acting. The Little Theatre, you know.
I'd made a friend of a splendid chap named Arthur Leigh. He's perhaps
a bit girlish--well, no, not girlish, but over-refined for the taste
of my brothers. Anyhow he liked me, and encouraged me a lot about my
acting. He even got after Renny and persuaded him to come and see the
play I was in. Well, it all turned out badly. I was taking the part
of a half-witted Irish boy, and Renny thought it came too darned easy
to me. I did it too well. He was frightfully fed up with me and my
talents, he said."

He sat silent a moment, pulling at his flexible underlip; then he said:
"You can't imagine, Alayne, how beastly life seems to me, sometimes."

"Can't I?"

"Oh, I know you've had a lot of trouble--Eden, and all that--but still,
in yourself, you're a reasonable being and . . . oh, dash it all, I can
never express myself!"

"I know what you mean, Finch. And perhaps it is so. I don't believe I
am capable of suffering as you are."

"Well, I always bring it on myself. That's one thing," he said darkly.

"Is it possible that Renny could not appreciate the fact that you were
doing a piece of good acting?" How she loved to drag in that name, to
caress it with her tongue, even while her heart was angry against him!

"The trouble was," answered Finch, "that he hated seeing me in that
part. I was in my bare feet, and dirty. I hadn't much on but an idiotic
expression. Renny's awfully conventional."

"But think of some of the men--horse dealers and such--that he goes
about with, seems to make friends of. That's not conventional."

"If you said that to Renny, he'd say: 'Yes, but I don't get up on a
stage with them and charge people admission to watch my antics.' Most
of all, it was the half-wittedness of the part. He thinks I'm a bit
that way already." He pulled his lips again, and then went on more
quickly, so that the tale of his misdeeds might be done with. "So
there was no more play-acting. The next thing was an orchestra. George
Fennel--you remember the boys at the rectory, Alayne--and myself and
three other chaps got it up--a banjo, two mandolins, a flute, and the
piano. All the practising was done on the sly. We played for club
dances. You know the sort of club it would be. Cheap restaurants. But
we made quite a lot of money--five dollars apiece, each night."

Alayne looked at him with a mingling of admiration and amusement. "What
amazing boys! Had you planned to do anything special with all this
money?"

"We bought quite a good radio. We had that at the rectory, of course."

"Where did Mr. Fennel think that came from?"

"Oh, he never asks many questions. He's awfully unpractical. He
probably thought we'd rigged it up out of some odds and ends of wire.
Then some of the money went toward hearing some good music--Paderewski,
Kreisler. But I saved most of it. That's how I got here, to New York.
And then too we'd blow in quite a bit on grub. I'm always hungry, you
know."

There was a peculiar expression on his face, as he said this, that
startled Alayne. A sudden break in his voice. She thought: "Is it
possible the boy is hungry now?" She said: "You're like I am. I'm
always getting hungry at odd times. Here it is, only half-past eight,
and I'm starving. But of course I didn't eat much dinner. Supposing,
Finch, that you tell me quickly how things came to a head, and then we
can have the details over some supper."

He agreed, in his odd, hesitating way, and then, in a muffled voice,
told of the last performance of the orchestra, of his return to Jalna,
of the scene in the washroom. "It wasn't only that I'd been lit, and
was feeling dazed--oh, absolutely awful--but there was something else.
I'd pulled my handkerchief out of my pocket, and with it a note from
Arthur Leigh. There was nothing to that, but he'd called me 'darling
Finch,' and Renny and Piers went right up in the air over it." His face
twitched as he remembered the scene.

"Finch, do you tell me that they read your letter?"

"I told Piers he might."

"But why?"

"I forget."

It was useless; she could never understand them. "But why should they
have been angry? It was harmless enough, surely."

He flushed a dark red. "They didn't think so. They thought it was
beastly. Neurotic, and all that. Oh, you can't understand. It was just
the last straw." He clasped his hands between his knees, and Alayne saw
that he was shaking. She got up quickly. She was afraid he was going to
cry, and she could not bear that. Something in her would give way if he
cried. She must hang on to herself. She said, almost coldly: "So it was
then you decided to run away?"

"Yes. I stayed in my room all day. Lay on the bed trying to think.
Then, when night came, I sneaked out with a suitcase of clothes and got
a late bus into town on the highway. In the morning I took the train
for New York."

"And you've been here three weeks?"

"Yes. I've never written home either."

"What have you been doing, Finch?"

"Trying to get a job." He raised a miserable young face to hers. "I
thought it'd be easy to get one here, but I simply can't round up
anything. There seemed to be dozens ahead of me whenever I answered an
advertisement. Gosh, it's been awful!"

She looked down at him with compassion. "But why in the world didn't
you come to me before? It hurts me to think that you've been walking
the streets here looking for work, and have never come to see me."

"I didn't want to come until I had got something, but to-night--I just
gave in. . . . I--I was so frightfully homesick." He reached out, took her
hand, and pressed it to his forehead. "Oh, Alayne, you've always been
so good to me!"

She bent and kissed him; then she said, assuming a businesslike tone:
"Now we must have something to eat. There are cigarettes. You smoke
while I forage in the pantry."

In the glittering little pantry, with its air of trig unhomeliness, she
discovered some potato salad bought at a delicatessen shop, a tin of
vermicelli with tomato sauce, a lettuce, and some dill pickles. She and
Rosamond took only their breakfast and lunch in the apartment.

Strange fare, she thought, as she arranged the things on the
tea-waggon, for a Whiteoak! She had made coffee, and now she remembered
some jars of preserves given to her by the aunts who lived up the
Hudson. She chose one of blackcurrants in a rich syrup. Last, she added
some slices of rye bread and some little chocolate-covered cakes.

Finch's back was toward her as she entered the living-room. His head
was enveloped in tobacco smoke. He was examining her books. She noticed
how loosely his coat hung on him. The boy looked half-starved, she
thought.

"Great Scott," he exclaimed, turning round, "what a lot of new books,
Alayne! How do you ever get the time to read them all?"

"By not getting time for anything else," she returned. "That one you
have in your hand is very interesting. Take it along with you, Finch. I
believe you might like it."

"Poetry," he commented, turning over the leaves. . . . He looked up
from the book. Their eyes met, and he took a quick step toward her.
"Alayne--have you ever--seen _him_--heard of him?" His face grew
scarlet.

"Eden?" She said the name with composure. "I've never seen him or
heard from him, but Miss Trent, who shares the apartment with me,
insists that she saw him one night last fall outside a theatre. Just a
glimpse. She thought he looked ill. Your aunt told me in a letter that
you had heard nothing."

"Not a thing. I've been afraid ever since I came here that I'd run
up against him. He and I had an awful scene"--oh, Lord, why had he
recalled that time to her?--"I guess he hates me, all right."

She had begun to set the supper things on a small table. He came to
her and touched her arm timidly. "Forgive me, Alayne. I shouldn't have
spoken of him."

She looked up with continued composure. "It doesn't upset me to speak
of Eden. He is nothing to me now. I don't believe I should feel greatly
disturbed if I met him face to face. Now do sit down, Finch, and try to
imagine that this food is not so sketchy. If only I had known you were
coming . . ."

How hungry the boy was! She talked incessantly to cover the fact, to
give him a chance to eat without interruption. He swept the plates
clean, and drank cup after cup of coffee. Over coffee and cigarettes he
gave her news of each separate member of the family. Finally he told
her in detail of the last performance of the orchestra, of the wild
night in the streets afterward. He began to laugh. Finch's laughter
was infectious. Alayne laughed too, and as he imitated the maudlin
outpourings of the different players they could no longer restrain
themselves, and laughed till they were exhausted. Alayne had not given
way to such primitive emotions since leaving Jalna, had had no impulse
to do so.

Rosamond Trent, returning, discovered them thus abandoned to hilarity.
She was astonished to find this lank youth sprawling in the Chinese-red
leather armchair, a fair lock dangling over his forehead, making
himself tremendously at home. She was still more astonished to find
Alayne deeply flushed, weak with laughter.

Finch got to his feet, embarrassed by the arrival of the
sophisticated-looking middle-aged woman whose small bright green hat
looked as though it had been moulded to her head.

"Rosamond," said Alayne, "my brother-in-law, Finch Whiteoak."

Miss Trent looked at him keenly, smiled humorously, and shook his hand
heartily.

"I'm glad you came," she declared. "I don't often find Alayne in such
spirits."

She took to Finch at once. When she heard that he was looking for a
position, she was instantly ready to take him under her wing, to place
him where he would have an excellent chance of advancement. She was in
the advertising business.

"The very thing for him!" she exclaimed to Alayne, energetically
snapping her cigarette-lighter. "I'll see about it first thing in the
morning."

But Alayne could not picture Finch in an advertising office. She had
already made up her mind to see Mr. Cory about him. It required courage
to oppose Rosamond when she had set her mind on taking someone under
her wing, but Finch helped her by boldly saying that he felt a greater
urge in himself toward publishing than toward advertising.

Before he left, Finch helped to carry out the supper things, and in
the kitchen Alayne gave him some money--it was to be only a loan--and
learned from him that he had been forced to pawn his topcoat and his
watch.

In a few days Finch was installed in a minor clerk's position in the
publishing house, and Rosamond Trent had had to satisfy her instinct
for managing by finding him a more comfortable lodging.

It was only a week later that Alayne had a letter from Lady Buckley,
written in a long, graceful hand, with frequent underlinings.

                                               "JALNA,
                                                 "_April 18, 1927_.

     "MY DEAR ALAYNE,

     "I was so _pleased_ to receive your last, and to hear that you
     are in good health and as good spirits as possible, under the
     _circumstances_.

     "We are in fair health, excepting my brother Ernest, who has been
     suffering from a cold. My brother Nicholas is troubled by gout,
     as usual with him in the spring. I reiterate the word _diet_ to
     him, but it has little effect. My mother is excessively well,
     considering her great age. Has come through the winter with no
     more serious ailments than occasional attacks of _wind_ on the
     stomach. Renny is in good health, as always, but is limping about
     on a stick as the result of a severe kick on the knee from a
     vicious _horse_. Luckily the veterinary was in the stable at the
     time and administered _first aid_.

     "It is really at Renny's instigation that I am writing to you
     about our trouble. He is greatly upset in his mind, as indeed we
     all are, excepting perhaps Mama, who seems singularly callous
     about it all. I am sure that by now you are quite _wrought up_ by
     curiosity, so I shall relieve it by coming to the point at once.
     Finch has _disappeared_.

     "Knowing what a closely knit, affectionate family we are, you can
     imagine our _state of mind_.

     "He has been gone four weeks and we are now thoroughly alarmed.
     Wakefield quite threw us into a state at the dinner table
     yesterday by suggesting that perhaps Finch has been _murdered_.
     What a dreadful word that is! I doubt if I have ever written any
     so low word in my correspondence hitherto.

     "Renny has had a private detective on the search for Finch, and
     has traced him to New York. He now declares that, unless he is
     found inside of the week, he will _publicly_ advertise for him.
     This would be very humiliating for us, as we have given out that
     he is away on a visit for his health. As a matter of fact, it was
     none too good. I think the poor boy worried a great deal over
     being denied access to a pianoforte, and I firmly believe this was
     at the root of the _disaster_.

     "You are so sympathetic, dear Alayne. You understand, as no
     outsider could, our extreme devotion as a family, in spite of
     little _surface_ flurries. I trust you will be able to send us
     some word of Finch. Remembering how fond he was of you, we think
     it quite probable that he has sought you out. Pray heaven we shall
     not have to go through the agony of _publicly_ advertising for
     him. Renny has already gone to the length of writing a _complete_
     description of him, and it sounded so unattractive when read aloud.

                                   "Hoping to hear good news from you,
                                           "In urgent haste,
                                               "Ever affectionately,
                                                        "AUGUSTA BUCKLEY.

     "P.S.--Wakefield sends his love. His heart has been very
     troublesome. The Canadian winter inevitably pulls him down, as it
     does me.--A.B."

Alayne wrote by return post:

     "DEAR LADY BUCKLEY,

     "It is as you have guessed. Finch has been to see me. He is
     quite well, and has a position in which he has a good chance of
     advancement. If I were you (and by you, I mean the entire family)
     I should not interfere with him, or try to get in touch with him.
     For the present, at any rate. Finch has been through an unhappy
     time, and I think he should be left quite to himself for the
     present.

     "I will see him regularly, and send you a report of him
     frequently, but you may tell Renny that I absolutely refuse to
     send his address.

     "I am glad you got through the winter as well as you did, and I am
     sorry to hear of the various disabilities, especially that Wake's
     heart has been troubling him. Please tell him that I often, often
     think of him, and wish I could see him.

     "I really do not think you need to worry about Finch.

                                                   "Yours lovingly,
                                                              "ALAYNE."




X

ERNEST'S ADVENTURE


Rags carried in the mail and laid it before Renny, who was sitting
on one side of the fireplace, his injured leg propped on an ottoman,
the top of which was worked in a design in green and silver beads,
portraying an angel carrying a sheaf of lilies. On the opposite side of
the fireplace sat Nicholas, his gouty leg supported by an ottoman of
exactly similar pattern, a glass of whisky and soda at his elbow. He
was chuckling deeply over a month-old copy of _Punch_. At a small table
sat Ernest, stringing afresh a necklet of enormous amber beads for his
mother. His long face drooped above the task in hand with an expression
of serene absorption. Old Mrs. Whiteoak, leaning forward in her chair,
watched every movement of his fingers, gratifying from the glow of
the amber in the firelight her love of colour, as a heavy old bee
might extract sweetness from a flower. Her breath came and went more
noisily over her thrust-out underlip than was usual, partly because of
her attitude, and partly because of the effort of concentration. This
gusty breathing and the occasional chuckle from Nicholas were the only
sounds as Renny read his letters, and they served but to emphasize the
seclusion of the room, the sense of an excluding wall against the rest
of the world which a group of Whiteoaks always achieved.

None of his elders inquired for letters of Renny. Not one of the three
received more than one or two in the whole year, and then it was, as
likely as not, an advertisement.

Wakefield came into the room. "Aunt Augusta wants to know," he said in
his clear treble, "if there are any letters for her."

"Two from England." Renny gave them to him.

"How nice for her!" said Wakefield, looking over his shoulder. "Why,
there's another, Renny, with an American stamp. It's addressed to Lady
Buckley, isn't it?"

"Take her what I gave you," said his brother, curtly, and Wakefield
trotted off to tell Augusta that Renny was holding back some of her
mail.

When time enough had passed for her to read the two letters from
England, she appeared in the doorway.

"Are you sure you have not overlooked one of my letters, Renny?" she
asked. "I was expecting another."

He patted the seat of the sofa beside him. "Come and read it here," he
said.

Lady Buckley looked annoyed, but she came and placed herself beside
him, very upright, with eyebrows almost touching her Queen Alexandra
fringe.

"I'll open it for you," he said, and with a large paper knife, the
handle of which was formed of the foot of a fawn, he carefully slit the
envelope, taking time with the business, as though he liked to touch
this particular letter. She divined whom the letter was from.

She perched her eyeglasses on her nose and took the letter with an
impassive face, but she had barely read a line when she exclaimed on a
deep note: "Thank heaven, he is safe!"

Renny hitched his body nearer to her and peered at the letter. "Well,
I'll be shot!" he muttered.

"Read," she commanded, in a whisper, and they perused the letter
together.

When they reached the line, "You may tell Renny that I absolutely
refuse to send his address," she pointed to it with a dramatic
forefinger, and Renny's teeth showed in a smile that was an odd
mingling of chagrin and gratification.

Wakefield, behind the sofa, intruded his head between theirs and asked:
"Is it about Finch? Has anything happened to Finch?"

Hearing the name, Ernest looked up quickly from his beads. "Is anything
wrong?" he asked. "Any bad news of the boy?"

"He is found," announced Augusta. "He is in New York. He is well."

"The young devil," observed Nicholas, laying down his _Punch_. "He
ought to be brought home and given a sound hiding!"

For once the gentle Ernest agreed. "He ought indeed. I've worried
myself ill over that boy."

"Who is the letter from?" asked Nicholas.

"Alayne. Keep still and I will read it to you." Impressively she read
the letter aloud.

"I'm the only one she sent a message to," cried Wakefield, "excepting
Renny, and his isn't a nice one. She says she won't tell him where
Finch is, doesn't she?"

"Hush," said Augusta. "We don't wish to hear any of your chatter at a
moment like this."

"Alayne," asserted Nicholas, "put ideas in that boy's head from the
very first. It was she, you'll remember, Renny, who persuaded you to
give him music lessons."

"You play the piano yourself," retorted his sister, tartly.

Nicholas puffed at his pipe imperturbably. "I do. But I don't lose my
head over music. I could never become hag-ridden by art. Finch was not
sane about it, and it did him no end of harm."

Renny said: "To think of his having the guts to go to New York alone!
He must have saved all the money he made from that fool orchestra."

"The question is," said his aunt, "what is to be done? It is shocking
to think of Finch exposed to the temptations of that terrible city."

"He must be brought back at once!" exclaimed Ernest, dropping a bead in
his agitation.

So long as he had been faithful to his task, handling the
honey-coloured spheres with delicacy and precision, old Mrs. Whiteoak
had chosen to pay no heed to the conversation, but now she raised her
massive head in its beribboned cap and threw a piercing glance into the
faces about her.

"What's the to-do?" she demanded.

They looked at each other. Had they better tell her?

The look did not escape her. She rapped with her stick on the floor.
"Ha! What's this? What's the to-do? I will not be kept out of things."

"Easy on, Mama," said Nicholas, soothingly. "It's nothing but young
Finch. We've found out where he is."

A feeling of breathlessness came over the room, as always happened
when a piece of news had just been broken to her. How would she take
it? Would there be a scene? Every eye was fixed on that hard-bitten,
smouldering old face.

"Finch, eh? You've found out where Finch is!"

"He's in New York," went on Nicholas. "We have had a letter from
Alayne. She's seen him."

"Ha! What's he doing there?"

"He seems to have some sort of job. I fancy Alayne got it for him."

"Oh, did she? I had always thought she was well connected." She dropped
her chin to her breast. Was she thinking deeply, or was she fallen into
one of her dozes? Boney hopped from his perch and began to peck at the
ribbons on her cap. He pulled at the ribbons till the cap was a trifle
askew.

Suddenly she raised her head and said, emphatically: "I want him. I
want to see Finch. Take the bird away. He's disarranging my cap."

Ernest gingerly replaced Boney on his perch, but not until he had
received a wicked peck on the wrist.

"Haramzada!" screamed Boney, flapping his wings. "Iflatoon! Chore!
Chore!"

Renny observed: "I think it would be a damned good idea to leave him
there for a while. He'll soon get sick of it. Teach him a lesson."

Grandmother arched her neck and turned her beaklike nose toward him.
"You do, eh? You would, eh? And you his guardian! Always ready to cross
my will! Unnatural grandson! Unnatural brother!" Purplish red suffused
her face.

"Nonsense," said Renny. "I'm nothing of the sort."

"You are! You are! You like nothing so well as to cross people. You'd
like to be a tyrant like my father. Old Renny Court. Red Renny, they
used to call him in Ireland. He cowed all his eleven children but
me. Me he couldn't cow." She shook her head triumphantly, then was
transported by rage. "To think that I should bring another like him
into the world!"

"Thanks for nothing!" retorted the master of Jalna. "You didn't bring
me into the world."

"Didn't bring you into the world!" she cried. "You dare contradict me?
If I didn't bring you into the world, I should like to know who did!"

"You forget," he returned, "that you are my father's mother, not mine."

"Well, I should like to know who you'd have been without your father!
An English gentleman, and your mother only a poor flibbertigibbet
governess."

His face was nearly as red as hers. "Now you're confusing me with his
second family. My mother was Dr. Ramsay's daughter. Surely you don't
forget how you hated her."

"Haramzada!" added Boney, rocking on his perch. "Iflatoon! Iflatoon!"

Nicholas broke in, rumblingly: "Stop baiting her, Renny! I won't have
it. Look at the colour of her face, and remember that she's over a
hundred."

His mother turned on him. "Look at the colour of your own face! You're
only envious that you haven't our hot blood. What we want is to have
our quarrel out in peace."

"It's very bad for you, Mama," said Ernest.

"Go on with your bead-stringing, ninny!" ordered his mother.

Augusta cried: "Can we never discuss anything without dissension?"

"Would you serve beef without mustard?" replied the old lady.

"I wonder," observed Wakefield, "if Finch will get into the crime wave
they're having in that country. Rags was telling me about it."

"The child has touched the keynote of the matter," said Augusta.
"Finch will be sure to come under some bad influence if he is left in
New York. How could Alayne watch over him? What can she know of the
temptations that befall a young man?"

"Man!" rumbled Nicholas. "Callow boy!"

"He must be fetched," said Grandmother, "and that at once. Ernest shall
go for him."

If Ernest had been told that he was to join an Arctic exploring party,
he could not have looked more surprised. "But, Mama," he said, "why me?"

"Because," she responded, vigorously, "Nick cannot travel on account of
his knee. Renny cannot travel on account of his leg. Piers is too busy,
and, besides, he has never been there. Eden--what's become of Eden?"

"He's away, Mama."

"Hmph. I don't like this going away. I want the young folk about me.
You had better fetch him, too. You're the one to go."

"I quite agree with Mama," said Augusta.

Mother and daughter looked at each other, amazed to find themselves in
accord.

Old Mrs. Whiteoak moved and settled her teeth into a more efficient
position in her mouth with a crunching noise.

"Mama, must you do that?" asked Ernest.

She disregarded the question, but, with a grim grin at her daughter,
remarked: "Well spoken, Lady Bunkley."

After the first consternation had worn off, Ernest was thrilled through
all his being by the adventure of going to New York. He had always
intended to visit it again. Europe seemed out of the question. But he
had procrastinated, because of lack of money and indolence, till the
intention had become more and more shadowy, and would have melted into
the shadow of other unfulfilled intentions had not the family forced
him to action.

Two days later he was eating his dinner in the train. He felt
extraordinarily pleased with himself as he bent his head above the
menu under the deferential black gaze of the waiter, and felt beneath
him the deep, purposeful throbbing of the wheels. He even enjoyed the
unaccustomed ice water.

As he sipped his coffee at the end of the meal, he did not worry
in the least about his digestion. He felt firm and strong. He gazed
out of the window at the wooded ravines, at the dark blue hills and
ridges slipping by. His eyes delighted in the vineyards, in the peach
orchards, where thousands of little peach trees, white with bloom,
marched above the rich red loam, dyed redder by the setting sun. The
ground beneath the cherry trees was white with their lost petals. All
the farmlands beamed and shone with promise.

The dark hand of the waiter taking up the tip pleased him, the faces of
the other passengers interested. Round-faced, shrewd-looking New York
business men, some of them. He thought rather ruefully: "Been looking
after their interests in Canada, I suppose. . . . Well, if we haven't the
initiative or capital to develop our own country, and if the Mother
Country doesn't do it, why, there's nothing for it but to let the
Americans undertake it."

In the smoking compartment he had a cigar. He would have liked to
engage the man nearest him in conversation, but as soon as the man
showed a disposition to talk Ernest looked down his nose with an
expression of absorption. He could not talk to a stranger, much as he
would have liked to discuss some of the great questions of the day
with someone besides his family and his few intimates. Of the last
there were really only two: Mr. Fennel, whose interests were centred
in protecting his vegetable garden from insects and his parish from
ritualism, which two elderly married ladies and a single young man
were determined to introduce; and a Mr. Sinclair, the last survivor of
another English family, whose father had also retired from the army
and built a house five miles from Jalna. But as he lived alone, and so
had no one to talk to, he came to his discussions with Ernest so full
of explosive vitality that he left him exhausted, and as he believed
nothing that was not in the London _Times_, and it was three weeks old
when he got it, companionship with him had its limitations.

Ernest had travelled little in America, and had forgotten the dreadful
publicity of the sleeping cars. He had difficulty, too, in putting
out his light. When at last he was tucked in, the man in the berth
above him snored so persistently that he could not sleep for a long
while. Still, sleep came at last, fitful, restless because of lack of
air, but still better than lying awake. By sunrise he was propped on
one elbow peering out of the window. He was among the first to enter
the dining-car, having already bought a New York paper and exchanged
a dignified "Good-morning" with two of his fellow passengers. He was
glad that they could not know how long it was since he had travelled by
night.

How good the bacon and eggs and coffee were! How interested that
handsome blonde woman at the table opposite! Every time he raised his
eyes she was looking at him. He hoped there was nothing wrong with his
collar or tie. He passed his hand over his head to make sure that his
hair was smooth. A faint colour rose in his cheeks.

His heart was thudding uncomfortably as they neared the Grand Central
Station. His knees trembled as he stood while the porter brushed his
clothes. Then came terrible suspense as the man disappeared with his
bag, a good English bag that he had bought himself at Drew's in Regent
Street. Then relief at the capture of the bag on the platform. And
scarcely had relief raised its head, like a too early spring flower,
before it was frozen into dismay by the sight of a "redcap" darting
into the throng, the bag clutched in his hand.

By the time the bag was recaptured, Ernest's head was wet with sweat.
He sank on to the seat of a taxi, and, taking off his hat, mopped
his brow, gazing meanwhile anxiously through the window into the
unbelievably crowded street. He had directed the driver to take him to
the Brevoort, because it was there that he had stayed during his last
trip to New York twenty years ago.




XI

ERNEST'S TACT


Alayne's amazement on seeing Finch at her door was a mild emotion
compared with that which she experienced when it opened upon Ernest.
She would scarcely have been more taken aback had one of the tall old
trees of Jalna drawn up its roots and journeyed to visit her. She
suffered him to shake her hand, to imprint a kiss on her cheek. She put
him into the Chinese-red chair, and even then she could not believe in
his reality. Her eyes sought the door, half expecting to behold the
rest of the procession--Grandmother and Boney, Nicholas and Nip, Renny
and his spaniels, Piers and Pheasant, little Wake.

"But, my dear child," said Ernest, "how good it is to see you!"

"Yes, indeed," said Alayne, sitting down near him and trying to make
her voice natural, "it is delightful to see you, too."

"You're looking pale, dear Alayne."

"Ah, well, you know what winter in the city is. I've been tired to
death sometimes."

She realized, now that the shock of surprise was passing, why he had
come. He had come to take Finch home, and, if possible, she would
prevent it.

She turned a look of defence on him. "I suppose you've come to see
Finch," she said.

Ernest was embarrassed. He wished she had not come so directly to the
point. He would have liked to have a little pleasant conversation, and
then have led up delicately to the object of his visit.

"Well, my dear Alayne, I suppose I shall see Finch, now that I'm here,
but it really gives me a much deeper pleasure to see you."

"You're not really going to insist on the poor boy going back with you,
surely!"

"No, no, no. But I want to talk to him, to find out how he is
living--in short, to satisfy the family about him. It's really
dreadful, you know, for a mere boy of his inexperience to be turned
loose in New York."

"He's working! And he's treated with more consideration than he was
at home. I hope you don't mind my saying that. You know yourself that
Finch was not always treated fairly."

Ernest remained invincibly placid. "My dear girl, I don't believe you
understand us. Our family circle is very closely knit."

"I do understand! It's so closely knit that you won't let one of your
number escape. You want to reach out and drag him back again. I know
I'm being awfully rude, but I cannot help it. It is the way I've always
felt about your family."

"We didn't reach out after Eden."

"You knew it was no use. You couldn't control Eden. And you had no
inkling as to where he was."

Ernest regarded her with curiosity. "Do you mind if I ask you
something?"

"What is it?"

"Have you seen Eden since you came back?"

"No, I have not. I suppose I shall never see him again. I don't want
to."

"I'm very sure you don't. You suffered too much because of him."
Ernest was relieved that he had successfully switched the conversation
into a more sympathetic channel. He laid his long white hand on hers
and gently pressed it. She experienced a sudden warmth and sense of
security in being treated with affection by a much older person. It was
nice, and he was nice--she had forgotten how nice, how kind. She had
forgotten, too, how distinguished his appearance, and how agreeable to
the ear his voice. Really, he was a dear, and she must not be too hard
on him. He was less to blame than the others for the tyranny of Jalna.

He exclaimed in admiration at the compactness, the charm of the
apartment. She led him about, showing him all the trig electrical
devices. They delighted him. He had never seen anything like them.
He must press the electric buttons and observe all the resulting
phenomena. Ernest said that he wondered how she had ever endured the
discomforts of Jalna.

Returning, arm in arm, to the living-room, the subject of Finch was
reopened, with more restraint on the part of Alayne and even greater
amiability on the part of Ernest. She gave him particulars about
Finch's work, his chances of advancement.

Ernest listened with sympathy.

"But where," he asked, "does his chance of continuing the study of
music come in?"

"I'm afraid it doesn't come in at all," she replied sadly, "but then,
neither does it apparently at Jalna."

"Oh, I think Renny may relent on that score."

"Tell me, Uncle Ernest," she demanded, looking him in the eyes, "was
it Renny who urged you to come to see Finch or was it to please your
mother? I know how she hates the thought of any of the boys leaving
home."

He was pleased at being "Uncled" by Alayne.

"My dear child," he said, "I did not need any urging. I wanted to see
the boy, and I thought what an opportunity for seeing you. You know, I
had grown very fond of you."

"And I of you! You see, I had no--no----"

"No nice old uncles," he continued for her. "Of course not. Nice old
aunts are one thing, but nice old uncles are quite another. Their
position is unique. . . . Now, as to Renny. If you had heard him talking
to me just before I left, you would have realized how keen he is to
have Finch back."

"When I lived at Jalna," she said, thoughtfully, "I used to think that
very often in those family conclaves of yours Renny was urged"--she
longed to say "harried"--"into taking a stand that----"

"No, no, no! Renny is a man of quick decisions. He knows what he wants
and goes for it."

"Yes, I know," she agreed, in a low tone.

"When we hold those conclaves, as you call them, Renny usually has his
own opinion from the beginning, but it is only after the matter has
been thrashed out by the family that he gives voice to his decision,
and because his decision often coincides with the conclusion the family
has reached----"

"Do the family ever reach a unanimous decision?"

"If you could have heard how fully agreed we were that Finch must come
home----"

"Oh, that I can understand! I wish I had not told you where he is
working."

"My dear, I shall not try to force Finch in the very least. You shall
be present, if you will, when we meet, then you'll see that I only want
an affectionate talk with him."

"But what are you going to do, then? Bribe him to go home with the
promise of music lessons? Has Renny descended to bribing the boys?"

Ernest answered impressively: "Renny had no intention of stopping Finch
from playing the piano except till his examinations should be over.
Once he has written on them, Renny intends, and has intended all along,
that Finch shall begin taking lessons again. He may spend the whole
summer making music if he likes."

"Hmph," muttered Alayne, grudgingly. She wished she could have felt
more enthusiastic over the family's plans for Finch.

Nevertheless, Ernest was a dear. She loved to see him sitting in her
most comfortable chair making attractive but rather vague gestures
with his graceful hands. She was proud of him when Rosamond Trent came
in and discovered them. She had the feeling that when she had talked
of Eden's uncles Rosamond had pictured two rather frowsty old men,
quaint relics of a bygone day. Now she saw that Rosamond found Ernest
charming. She was impressed by the pleasant modulations in his voice.
These he had acquired at Oxford, along with the notion that, while it
might be well for some to slave, it was not well for Ernest Whiteoak.

Ernest invited the two to luncheon with him. As he walked along Fifth
Avenue with them beside him, there was spring in his step and in his
blood. Alayne had a look of breeding; he admired that in a woman above
all things. Rosamond looked essentially a woman of the world; and he
hankered for the world. Again and again he wished old Nicholas could
see him. As a gesture of complete abandon, he ordered lobster. His
guests ordered it, too, but without any air of recklessness. With the
three bright red mounds before them, he could not help but talk of
meals in Victorian London. He told of sitting at a table near Oscar
Wilde, and of having seen Lily Langtry in her prime. He recalled how
Nicholas had rowed for Oxford.

After luncheon they returned to the apartment and Rosamond brought out
a bottle of liqueur. She had prepared a strange cocktail before they
had set out.

"But I thought," exclaimed Ernest, sipping from the diminutive green
glass, "that you had Prohibition here!"

"We have," returned Miss Trent, in her deepest contralto, "but we also
have the speak-easy."

"Speak-easy?" repeated Ernest. "But what in the world is that?"

"Happily there is no need for you to become acquainted with them.
They're stupid places. I may tell you that they are thicker than the
flowers in May here."

"Ah, we could never get on with Prohibition," said Ernest.

"Of course you couldn't!" she commented. "Do you like that liqueur?"

Alayne wished that Rosamond were not so keenly interested in the
subject of drinking. It had an almost morbid fascination for her. It
repelled Alayne to hear the solid, middle-aged woman using the current
tags about Prohibition, talking as though she were a seasoned drinker.
Yet it was really only a harmless affectation, the desire to be
intensely modern. Rosamond was a good honest soul, a loyal, sympathetic
friend.

"We couldn't do with Prohibition at home," said Ernest, didactically.
"Our population is too small." Miss Trent's cocktail, the excitement
of the crowded streets and restaurant, the liqueur on the return, had
gone to his head. His brain was active, but his thoughts somewhat
kaleidoscopic. "Think of our Boundary Line, three hundred miles of it
from coast to coast--or is it three thousand?--without a single fort!
Oh, no, Prohibition would mix things up dreadfully."

His audience looked properly impressed, but Alayne suggested that he
sit down. He refused, and continued to stand gracefully, holding his
glass. "See what Prohibition has done for you! Why, I am told that our
Nova Scotian fishermen have given up fishing. It is more profitable to
smuggle. You get all you want through them."

"Life is a strange muddle," observed Rosamond.

"It is. And the women's vote has made it still more so," he murmured.
"Luckily our women are British in their training, and vote as their
men do. But look at the situation in the Province of Quebec! There the
women have no vote. 'We are Latins!' their Premier exclaims. 'We adore
our women, but we will not give them the vote. It is against all our
instincts.' And I must say I admire them for it."

"Yet they haven't Prohibition, have they?" asked Miss Trent, bewildered.

"No, and never had! Their greatest grievances are Orangeism in Ontario,
emigration to the States, and, of course, smuggling, which is sometimes
a source of Revenue. But the real trouble with the whole Dominion is
the Boundary Line--and these Arctic expeditions--and Transatlantic
flights." He sat down abruptly.

Very soon his slight confusion passed, and he was himself again. It
must be arranged when he was to see Finch. Alayne suggested that they
meet in the apartment, go out to dinner together, and then to the
theatre. Ernest desired that Finch should not be told of his arrival.
It would be a pleasant surprise for the boy to find his uncle awaiting
him. "Because, you know, dear Alayne, I'm not going to scold or
threaten him. Nothing at all of that sort."

"I should say not," said Alayne, truculently.

But she would not agree to Finch's meeting Ernest without preparation.
She telephoned him, asking him to come to see her that evening, and
announced the arrival from Jalna. She delivered Ernest's reassuring
message.

Nevertheless, Finch was shaking when he came into the room. If it
had seemed strange to Alayne to see one of the older generation
of Whiteoaks in New York, for Finch it was an almost staggering
experience. He felt as though he were viewing his distinguished-looking
elderly relative for the first time. He could not remember Uncle
Ernest's ever having been away from Jalna, and he had never been away
himself till now in all his life. Even when they shook hands, and
Ernest spoke kindly to him, he had a sense of unreality and, in spite
of Alayne's reassurance, a sense of foreboding.

He did not know just what he feared. His uncle could not force him to
go home. At his back he had the strength of Alayne's staunch loyalty.
That day he had actually had a word of praise in the office.

"Upon my honour," exclaimed Ernest, putting his hand on the boy's
shoulder, "you're taller than ever, old fellow! And thin! He's really
thinner, Alayne, though I shouldn't have thought it possible. And how
are you getting on?"

Finch braced himself with as much manliness as he could muster, and
replied: "Oh, fine, thanks. That is--all right, I think."

"I'm glad of that. They'll be so glad to hear at home."

Finch was embarrassed. "Were they worrying?" he mumbled.

"Indeed they were. We were all of us greatly worried. But no need to
talk; I can tell them now that you are well and safe." No word of his
going back. Finch breathed easier, and yet there was a queer ache at
his heart. The truth was, in the past few days he had been suffering
acutely from homesickness. Under the delicate April sky, the dusty,
never-resting traffic of the city had made him feel as he had never
before felt in springtime--heavy, tired, stifled, trapped. His feet
dragged, longing for the springing grass. His nostrils seemed unable
to draw in sufficient air to satisfy his lungs. It was only by a great
effort that he could keep his mind on his work. Each night he dreamed
of Jalna, and waked half expecting to find himself in his room under
the eaves. More and more he remembered all that had been beautiful and
kindly and pleasant in his home.

Alayne had intended that they should go to a play, but Ernest suggested
grand opera because Finch was so fond of music. She had acquiesced, and
Rosamond Trent had been able to arrange about the tickets. While they
were at dinner, Alayne had suddenly seen Ernest's sweet thoughtfulness
in a new light. She remembered having heard him say that above all
things he disliked grand opera. "He is a sly old man," she thought. "He
intends to work on Finch's feelings through his love of music."

The opera was _Ada_. Finch had never heard it before. Tears of
happiness filled his eyes, his heart was heavy with the sweetness of
music. Yet it was not the music of the orchestra or the singers that
moved him. It was the music of the old square piano at home. It was
Beethoven's Opus X., which in imagination he was playing. The keys,
alive, eager, rose to meet his fingers. With one part of his brain he
heard the music of _Ada_. With another he followed himself through the
intricacies of the movement.

Every now and again Ernest's eyes slid speculatively toward him. He
wondered whether the boy were happy or unhappy, whether he should have
difficulty in persuading him to come home. The thought of leaving
Finch in New York was intolerable to him. The thought of Jalna without
Finch seemed insupportable. Not that he had ever found him anything
but a commonplace, rather irritating boy. But he was a Whiteoak, one
of themselves. Eden's defection had been the first break. If Finch
left home, it would seem that disintegration of the family had set in.
Besides, there was Mama. It was bad for her to be worried.

He felt suddenly rather tired. It had been an exciting day for him,
full of unusual activities. He felt weighted by his responsibility. At
the same time he experienced a sense of elation at being at the opera
in company with these two well-turned-out women. Ah, if old Nicholas
could only see him! Alayne, he thought, was lovelier than ever.
Sorrow and fatigue had brought out the inward brightness of her, as
the brightness of a jewel is accentuated by calculated and delicate
cutting. And there was a kind of recklessness about her that seemed
new to him. He remembered her as always wearing an air of reserve, of
awareness. Now it seemed that she was one ready to throw off bonds
which chafed her, one craving a broader sweep of air. She fascinated
him. He longed to know what she was thinking. Ah, how tired he was!
Would the opera never end? He stifled a yawn.

But as the crowd surged out, and he felt the cool night air on his
face, he revived. It was like a return to his prime to find himself
steering an evening-cloaked female through a crowd. Really, he must
make a trip to New York every now and again after this. It was not well
to let one's self become frowsty. And with his figure, his carriage,
it was a downright waste. He pressed Miss Trent's firm arm a little
as he guided her. An exquisite perfume rose from the soft fur of her
collar. . . .

They had a little supper in the apartment. Delicate food, Pall Mall
cigarettes, bought specially for him; gay conversation, for Ernest
found it easy to shine before this audience, so uncritical, so, if
he could have known, tolerantly amused by him; and, added to their
tolerance and amusement, a sentimental desire to look through his mind
back into the strange glamour of another day. He sighed as he said
good-night. He was not a bit tired now, and he hated to think how soon
this charming interlude would be over.

It was not till he and Finch were back in his hotel bedroom that there
returned to him with force the consciousness of his mission. He had
arranged that the boy should spend the night with him, and had got a
room for him next to his own. He shrank from the thought of a clash
of wills at that late hour. He wished he could simply pack Finch into
his portmanteau the next day, with his clothes, and carry him back to
Jalna. It was such a nuisance having to be politic with him, tactful
and understanding. It was really a pest the way boys grew up.

There was a distinct air of embarrassment between them when they found
themselves alone in the hotel bedroom together. It was abominably
stuffy, and Ernest went to the window and threw it up.

He looked out for a moment on the confusion of roofs and blinding
lights, at the orange-and ruby-coloured signs that flashed on and off,
at the sinister-looking black spaces beyond which lay one knew not
what, at the white-lettered signs which were painted, tier upon tier,
on the side of a building in the next street, at the strange, blurred
sky which might as well be a stretch of canvas for all its apparent
reality. Up here the sound of the traffic was deadened to a dull rumble
that seemed resentful of the spring night.

Ernest found that he had smudged his finger-ends in opening the window.
He went into the bathroom to wash his hands. Finch had dropped into a
chair by the table, looking very young and wan under the hard electric
light. He had picked up the shiny black Bible belonging to the hotel
and was looking at it with a queer smile. An uncomfortable boy, Ernest
thought. He lathered his hands, and examined his face in the mirror
above the basin. He was looking very well.

On returning to the bedroom he said: "I hate very much to go back to
Jalna without you, Finch. Everyone at home will be disappointed."

"I can't see them disappointed because I don't go back."

"But they will be. You don't understand. You're one of us, aren't you?"

"The odd one."

"Nonsense. We're all more or less oddities, I fancy. And we're proud of
you, though you may not think so."

Finch grunted sarcastically. "You should have heard Renny and Piers
telling me how proud they were of me!"

"Come, come, don't take things so hard. Piers has a rough tongue----"

"He's as hard as nails! With me, anyhow."

"He doesn't always mean it, and, if he does, he's not the important
one. It's Renny who matters."

"Renny thinks I'm an ass."

Ernest sat down beside him. He put all the persuasiveness, all the
eloquence of which he was capable, into his voice. "Renny loves you. He
wants you to come home like a good boy, without any further trouble. He
is willing, after you've tried your examinations, to let you take music
lessons again--to play as much as you want to. All you have to do is to
try your exams."

"What if I fail?"

"You won't fail. You'll pass. You did not fail badly last time. You're
sure to pass."

"And if I do--what then?"

"You have all your life before you. You'll make something fine of it."

"I don't see myself," said Finch wearily.

"Finch, you had a very clever and very lovely mother. She would have
wanted you to develop your talent--to be a credit to us."

"Good Lord!" exclaimed the boy. "This sort of talk is new to me! My
talents--my mother----"

"But, my dear child," cried Ernest in exasperation, for his head was
beginning to ache, "families will make remarks. You don't expect----"

"Gran often makes sneering remarks about her--my mother. I hear her,
though I've pretended not."

"Your grandmother is a hundred and one. Your mother has been dead
eleven years. What have their relations to do with the question in
hand. . . . Really, you are wearing me out! The point is this." Ernest
made a supreme effort. "What is there for you in New York? Crowds,
crowds, crowds. Struggle, struggle. You, a Whiteoak, struggling in a
foreign mob! Uncongenial work. Homesickness. You know you're horribly
homesick, Finch. I've been watching you. You're homesick."

"Don't!" cried the boy in anguish, putting his head on the table. "I
can't bear it! Oh, Uncle Ernest, do you really think I'd better go
back?"




XII

EDEN DISCOVERED


Two evenings later Eden Whiteoak was sauntering along lower Fifth
Avenue, one hand thrust in a pocket of a rather shabby tweed jacket,
the other carrying a light stick. The change in him since he had
disappeared from Jalna was remarkable. He had become thin almost to
emaciation. His movements were still graceful, but the bright vigour
of his carriage was gone. He seemed to progress only by an effort of
the will, either because of bodily weakness or because of extreme
despondency. If he had removed his hat, one would have seen that his
hair, which had lain like a shining metal casque upon his head, was now
rough and unkempt. Above the hollows in his cheeks two feverish spots
burned where had been only a fresh glow. The beauty of his large blue
eyes seemed accentuated. They still retained their peculiar unseeing
expression, which sometimes disturbed one in company with him, and his
lips still curved in their odd half-smile.

He was feeling himself near the end of his tether, and he was filled
with a cynical dislike toward the moving mass of people who shared the
pavement with him. This dislike, through some whim or perhaps some old
resentment, was directed chiefly toward those of the opposite sex. And
his aversion was at the moment centred upon their legs, which, like the
sleek antenn of insects, moved mechanically past him. It seemed to him
that if ever he should look back upon this night of humid, unseasonable
heat, he would recall it as being borne along its course by innumerable
silk-clad legs.

Four girls approached abreast, wearing French heels and flesh-coloured
stockings, their eight legs flashing in quick rhythm. "Beasts," he
thought. "Beasts. Why cumber ye the earth? Why, in God's name? I
wish I could help you off it. Four. Why should there be four of you,
all alike?" He glanced up at their faces, heavy-eyed, smooth-cheeked,
crimson-mouthed faces. He scowled at them. Beasts. A little later he
singled out one walking with a thin, undersized youth. Her skirt was
very short. Her calves large, caught inward abruptly at knee and ankle.
Her feet ridiculously short. Oh, the grotesque shape of her! Why should
she exist? Why, oh why? How could the spotted-faced youth endure her?

The darkness of his brow deepened. He kept his eyes on the pavement,
trying not to see the women. But presently he was jostled by one. He
almost staggered, her progress had been so relentless, so direct.
He turned his head and his angry eyes swept her. He saw her heavy
middle-aged legs, her huge, pallid, aggressive face, her heavy breasts,
smothered beneath a brassire, her close hat pulled over one eye, the
other eye glowering through horn-rimmed spectacles. Why, oh, why should
she exist? Why cumber ye the earth, fat beast? They exchanged looks.
She thought: "Oh, if we could only _really enforce_ the law to protect
lovely young men like that! I'm sure he's been drinking. He stumbled
right against me."

There was no air. The air seemed to have been sucked out of the street,
leaving it a vacuum through which a dreamlike procession marched,
a procession so dreamlike that it required no air. The faces, the
legs, passed in a blur before Eden's eyes, until at last the form of
an old woman stood out clearly. She was in rusty black, wearing an
old-fashioned bonnet, the strings of which were tied in a greasy bow
beneath her withered, jutting chin. Her slate-coloured eyes, which had
once been as blue as Eden's, were fixed in the unseeing stare of one
who had looked too long on life and could bear to look no more. Her
sunken upper lip gnawed always the pendulous lower one. The turned-out
toes of her large shoes could barely be seen beneath the heavy width
of her draggled skirt. Instantly she appeared as something precious
to Eden. His heart leaped. He surveyed her appraisingly, feeling a
new joy in the poetry of life. Here was a woman who had meaning. One
could understand why she existed, not cumbering the earth, gracing
it--beautiful. Ah, the gracious, exquisite reality of her waddling
legless form! There she was--a woman. He was jostled, almost pushed
from the kerb as he stared. He drew a banknote, his last, from his
pocket, and hurried after her. He pressed it into her hand. The hand, a
claw, closed over it. She shambled on without a glance at him.

He felt elated, and suddenly rather hungry. A row of people sitting on
high stools before a counter in a drug store attracted him. He went in.
There was only one empty stool, between two young girls. He would not
take it, but stood waiting until there was a space at the end, beside
an elderly man. He ordered tomato soup and wafers. As he drooped over
the mug containing the thick liquid, which tasted as though it were of
the tinned variety, a fit of coughing came on him. He had difficulty
in suppressing it, and, by the time he had, his appetite was gone. He
drank the rest of the soup, but left the wafers. Out in the street he
found that there was now a faint movement of air. He entered the little
garden in Madison Square, sat down on one of the benches, and lighted a
cigarette. A feeling of extreme lassitude crept over him, from the legs
upward, at last reaching his head and making him drowsy. The figures
passing through the park became shadowy. He saw as in a dream the
twilight arch of the sky, the far-off hazy moon, the rows of lights,
like strings of bright beads in the surrounding buildings.

He was weary with a deep sickness of dejection. He remembered his young
strength, his gifts--and they had come to this! And he was twenty-five!
Surely he was held in derision of the gods. He remembered Jalna, his
brothers, Alayne. He had harmed them all in one way or another, he
supposed. But he did not think of them clearly. Himself only he saw
with great clarity. His own white face, like the face of a drowning
man, risen for a moment on the crest of a wave.

What was there for him to do? He could not now earn his living. He
could not go home. He had parted from the woman with whom he had been
living because he could no longer contribute to their joint expenses.
She would have been glad to have paid all--but, Christ, he had not come
to that! How they had quarrelled, and she had rained tears whom he had
thought too hard ever to shed one! How he had grown to hate her heavy
arms! To be free of them--that was the one bright spot.

The smell of damp earth rose from the roots of the new grass about him.
The sound of traffic was lulled to a deep hum. He felt isolated, as
though he were on an island in the midst of a lonely sea. He was alone.
Utterly alone. A wave of loneliness swept over him, so engulfing that
beside it the homesickness of Finch was little more than a ripple. He
sank back on the bench, his chin sunk on his chest.

Two people had come and seated themselves beside him. They were talking
steadily, but in low tones--a mellow old voice and a boyish one. He
scarcely heard them. Another fit of coughing came upon him, and he
clung to the back of the bench for support. When it was past he took
off his hat and wiped his forehead with his handkerchief. The elder
of the two men leaned forward and looked toward him with compassion.
Eden, embarrassed, took out a cigarette, struck a match. His face was
illuminated.

"My God!" cried Ernest, springing up. "Eden, is it you?"

Eden looked up at him, too astounded for speech.

"Speak, Eden! Tell me what is the matter."

Eden's mouth quivered. "Everything, I guess."

"But that cough! It's simply terrible. How long have you had it?"

"Several months. Don't bother. It will be all right when the warm
weather comes."

"But the weather is hot now!"

"It's unseasonable. Probably be cold again to-morrow. . . . Please don't
trouble about me. Tell me why you are here. Is that young Finch?"

Finch got to his feet, trembling. He was bewildered, frightened by this
sudden meeting with Eden. He remembered his last encounter with him.
That summer night when he had discovered Eden and Pheasant in the birch
wood together. His mind fastened on an incident strikingly similar in
both meetings, and yet how dissimilar! On each occasion Eden had, at a
moment of climax, struck a match, illuminated a face. But in the first
instance it had been the white, terrified face of Finch; now it was his
own, hollow-cheeked, feverish. Then he had exclaimed bitterly: "What a
worm you are, brother Finch!" Now he said, in a low tone of reckless
self-possession: "Hullo, Finch! You here, too? God, what a meeting!"

"Hullo!" returned Finch, but he could not hold out his hand. His heart
sank when he looked at Eden. He had helped to bring him to this.

"Eden, Eden!" cried their uncle. "I am distressed to find you looking
so ill. I could not have believed----"

"Oh, I'm not in such bad shape as I look." He stared at these newly
arrived members of his family in satiric mirth. "Lord, what a quaint
pair you are! When did you come here, and why?"

Ernest and Finch glanced at each other uncomfortably.

"I--he----," mumbled the boy.

"He--I----," stammered Ernest.

Eden broke into laughter. "I see it all! You ran away, Finch, and Uncle
Ernest came to fetch you. Or was it the other way about? Never mind,
it's enough that you're here! I wouldn't have believed you'd have the
guts."

"You must come back to my hotel," said Ernest.

"I wish I could invite you to my lodgings, but they're too tough for
you, by a long shot."

Ernest was greatly upset. He turned to Finch. "Get a taxi. Eden isn't
fit to walk."

On the way to the hotel, Eden asked: "Have you seen Alayne?"

"Yes, I've had dinner with her--and luncheon. M-yes. She's looking
lovely, Eden."

"She would! Some women thrive on marital troubles. They find them more
stimulating than babies."

In the hotel bedroom Ernest said: "What you need is a good hot
toddy, but how am I to get you one? Do you know if there is one of
those--er--'speak-easy' places about?" His heart failed him as he
spoke. The thought of searching for such a place was abhorrent to him.

"No, thanks," said Eden. "I couldn't possibly take anything." He drank
a glass of water and fidgeted about the room, talking in a way that
seemed to Ernest rather strange and wild. Finch sat by the window
smoking, and took no part in the conversation. Eden did not speak to
him.

After a time Eden announced his intention of going, but just as he
took up his hat he was attacked by another fit of coughing. His last
strength seemed to go into this. After it was over, he flung himself
on the bed and shivered from head to foot. He was plainly so ill that
Ernest was distraught. He sent Finch running downstairs to inquire
about a doctor. The next morning he sent a telegram to Renny which read:

     "Have found Eden very ill please come at once cannot cope with
     this.--E. WHITEOAK."




XIII

THE CIRCLE


On the morning that followed, another member of the Whiteoak family
might have been seen ascending in the hotel lift, attended by a porter
carrying a rather shabby suitcase. When they alighted, he limped
vigorously after the man and knocked with impatience on the designated
door. It was opened by Finch.

When the porter had been tipped and the door closed behind him, Renny
swept his eyes over the boy and gave a grunt, half of satisfaction at
beholding him, half of derision.

Finch, red in the face, drew a step nearer. The elder took him by the
arm, then kissed him. Finch seemed to him little more grown up than
Wakefield. Joy and pure love surged through Finch. Animal joy and love
that made him want to leap on Renny and caress him roughly like a
joyous dog. He stood still, grinning sheepishly.

"Where's Eden?" demanded Renny.

"In there." He nodded toward the next room. "Uncle Ernest's with him."

Ernest himself then entered. He looked white and drawn.

"Heavens above!" he exclaimed. "I'm thankful you've come," and he
gripped Renny's hand.

"This is a pretty mess," said Renny. "Have you a doctor? How ill is he?
What's the matter with him?"

"It is indeed," returned Ernest. "I don't know when I've been so upset.
I called a doctor as soon as he was taken badly. I think he's a good
one. He's got a German name, but I dare say he's all the cleverer for
that." He braced himself and looked Renny in the eyes. "Renny, it's the
boy's lungs. They're in a bad way. He's in great danger, the doctor
says."

Renny's brow contracted. He set the point of his stick in the centre
of the geometrical pattern of the rug and stared at it. He said in a
low voice: "His mother died of consumption."

"Yes. But none of the children have shown any tendency that way. I
suppose he's been exposing himself."

Renny began to limp nervously up and down the room. Ernest asked,
solicitously: "How is your knee? It is a shame to have brought you
here, when you're not fit, but I--you understand----"

"It's nothing. I wish I had our own doctor to see him. This man may be
an alarmist."

"I don't know, I hope so. He says that he must have the very best care."

"We must take him home. . . . What does Alayne think of this?"

"She's terribly upset, naturally. She's shocked. There's no hatred in
her toward Eden. She thinks that he simply can't help being what he is.
Unfaithful. I agree, too. What do you think?"

"I think he's a damned nuisance. All these brothers of mine are." He
turned his incisive gaze suddenly on Finch. "I hope you're going to
behave yourself, now," he said.

Finch pulled at his underlip.

"Are you?"

"H'm-h'm."

Ernest put in: "It's God's mercy that the boy ran away. We should never
have heard of Eden till too late."

Both men stared at Finch. He writhed inwardly, not knowing whether he
was being commended or jeered at.

Ernest continued: "Alayne had got him quite a decent position in a
publishing house, as costing clerk. I saw this Mr. Cory and got him to
let him off at once. I had to have his help with Eden. I couldn't be
alone here, not knowing what might happen. I little thought, when I
left home, the time I'd have."

"Well, it's a good thing he's been of some use," replied Renny. "Now,
you'd better take me in to Eden."

Eden was propped up in bed, not seeming so ill as Renny had expected
until he had taken the hot dry hand and felt the thinness of it,
noticed the sharp outline of the limbs under the coverings.

Renny seated himself on the side of the bed and surveyed his brother.
"You have got yourself into a pretty state, haven't you?"

Eden had been told that Renny was coming, but it seemed too unreal to
see his family thus gathering about him. It frightened him. Was he so
dreadfully ill? He withdrew his hand quickly from Renny's and raised
himself in the bed. He said, excitedly: "I don't like this at all! What
in hell's the matter? Does that doctor say I'm going to die?"

"I haven't been told anything of the sort," returned Renny, with
composure. "Uncle Ernest wired me that he had come across you, and that
you were on the rocks. Well, you are, aren't you? What are you getting
up in the air about?"

Sweat stood on Eden's forehead. "He wired you! Show me the telegram!"

"I can't. It's at home. For heaven's sake, keep your hair on! You don't
feel like dying, I suppose?" He grinned as he asked the question, but
he was filled by a great anxiety. All that was sturdy in him rushed out
toward Eden to protect him.

"Tell me what he said! Had he seen the doctor yet?" He dropped back on
the pillow. "Never mind. You wouldn't tell me the truth."

"I'm going to take you home."

Eden's agitation had subsided. He stared at his brother hungrily. "God,
it looks good to see you sitting there! But I wish you'd take a chair!
You make the bed sag. You're no featherweight, Renny . . . Look at my
arm." He thrust it out from the sleeve, thin, dead-white, blue-veined.
Renny scowled at it.

He got up, dragged a chair to one side of the bed and reseated himself.

"I can't think how you got yourself into such a state. You don't look
as though you'd had enough to eat. Why haven't you sent to me for
money?"

"Should you have sent it?"

"You know I should."

"And now you want to take me home?"

"That's why I'm here."

"Good old patriarch! The two lost lambs. Young Finch and I. . . . But what
about Piers? He'd not stand for that. God, I should like to see his
face if it were suggested!"

"I did see it. I told him I might fetch you if you were fit to travel."

Eden laughed, suddenly and maliciously. "Poor Piers! What did he say?
That he'd poison all his pigs and then take a dose himself?"

"No," Renny returned, sternly. "He remarked that you were a waster and
always would be. He said that if you were coming home to--to----"

"To die. . . . Go on."

"That he'd take Pheasant away till it was over."

Again Eden was moved to mirth, but this time there was an hysterical
note in it.

"It's a good thing you're amused," Renny observed calmly. "I should say
that the joke is on you." He thought: "I wish I knew what is in the
bottom of his mind. I wish I knew what he's been up to the past year."

But Eden's laughter brought on a fit of coughing. Renny watched him,
his hard, thin frame tense with misery. "Can I do anything?" he
entreated.

Eden raised his head, which he had buried in the pillow. His hair was
plastered in damp locks on his forehead, his face flushed crimson.

"Look here, Renny."

"Yes."

"My mother died of lung trouble, didn't she?"

"The doctor called it that, but I think she simply pined away after
Wake's birth. Father's death was hard on her."

"That's the way I'll go!"

"You've not been having a posthumous baby."

"Might that bring it on, do you think?"

"If a woman were inclined that way."

"Well, I'm free from that cause."

"But perhaps you've been begetting one!"

"If I have, it will be posthumous, poor little devil."

"If you are determined to look on the black side of this trouble,
you'll die and no mistake," declared Renny, emphatically. "Buck up!
Be a man! I'm going to take you home. You'll get good care--the best
care----"

"Who will take care of me?"

"A nurse, I suppose."

Eden answered, hoarsely vehement: "Like hell she will! I tell you, I
hate women! I won't have a nurse about me. I loathe them--starchy,
flat-footed, hard-eyed--I'll not go home if you make me have a nurse!
I'll die first!"

Ernest, his face puckered by anxiety, came into the sick-room. Finch,
drawn by morbid curiosity, slunk after him.

Ernest said, reproachfully: "This will never do. The doctor says he
must be kept quiet. I don't think you realize how ill he is, Renny." He
poured something into a glass and brought it to Eden.

Renny regarded the proceeding with intense irritation and concern.
He remarked: "I realize that he's making this affair as difficult as
possible."

Ernest, looking down his nose, smoothed Eden's pillow.

"Perhaps you expect Uncle Ernie to nurse you," observed Renny,
sarcastically.

Finch guffawed.

Renny wheeled on him. "What----" he began. "What----"

"Let the lad be," said Ernest. "Finch, my boy, take the hot-water
bottle and fill it."

Eden did not want the hot-water bottle, but he pretended that he did,
since the need of it made him appear rather more ill-used. Finch, with
Renny's eye on him, slunk out with the bottle.

"I'll die before I'll have a nurse," Eden persisted, in a weak voice,
after a silence broken only by the running of a tap.

The hot-water bottle was put in with him. Ernest patted his back, and
said: "If it were not for Meggie's baby, she would be the very one! She
would be perfect. She is almost perfect in every way."

"Yes," agreed Renny. "She is."

"Couldn't she get someone to look after the kid?" asked Eden.

"She has a sort of companion, but she'd never trust it to her entirely.
She's a perfect mother." After a little he continued, hesitatingly: "Do
you know, I have an idea. It may not be feasible, but"--he looked from
one to the other--"but the whole affair is so unusual. . . ."

"What is your idea?" asked Renny.

"Oh, I'm afraid it would be impossible. We'd better not discuss it.
We had better think of someone possible. . . . Eden, if the thought of a
trained nurse is so intolerable to you, how would it do if we engaged
some elderly woman who has had experience----"

"I saw one on the street!" interrupted Eden. "Wonderful old body!
Tatters, and a face like one of the Fates."

Renny asked of Ernest: "Do you think he's a little light in his head?"

Finch gave a muffled snort of laughter.

"Not at all," said Ernest. "You don't understand him, that is all. . . .
Now the person I have in mind is Mrs. Patch. She is reliable. She has
had experience in nursing----"

Finch, unable to stop himself, interjected: "She ought to do. She's
buried three of her own with T.B."

"Finch," said his uncle, sternly, "that remark was in very bad taste.
I'm surprised at you!"

"Don't mind me," said Eden, faintly smiling. "Only please tell me about
this idea of yours. Whom had you in mind?"

Ernest answered, looking, not at him, but at Renny: "I was wondering
whether Alayne might be persuaded to nurse him."

This sudden mention of her name seemed to conjure Alayne's bodily
presence before the occupants of the room. A subtle embarrassment
dimmed their vision of each other. Ernest, after uttering the words,
was moved to wish that he could recall them. They had seemed to him to
besmirch her present aloofness, to drag her again into the shame and
darkness of her last days at Jalna. He looked rather pathetically into
the faces of his nephews, seeing each in his relation to those days.

Renny, experiencing a feeling of shock by the proposal, stared at Eden
lying on the bed, dishevelled, ill, beautiful. He saw him as again the
possessor of Alayne. He felt in himself the pain for something he could
never possess. No, she must not do such a thing. It would be cruel to
ask her, and yet . . . if she could bring herself to do it . . . he thought
of her as standing reluctant in the room, midway between himself and
Eden. . . .

"She's not quite a saint," he said.

Finch, crouching in a big chair, twisted his fingers together. Figures
in a dream, that was what they were--gesticulating, hiding their
troubled eyes, disappearing, reappearing, beckoning one who had eluded
them to return, seeking to draw her again into the circle. Again, in
spite of himself, he spoke. "Do women," he asked, "ever take a man back
after a thing like that?"

His brothers regarded him in silence, too astounded to speak. It was
Ernest's mellow voice that answered.

"Many a woman has taken a man back to her bed after such an
escapade. . . . I was only suggesting that if Alayne could be persuaded to
return to Jalna with us--to help look after Eden--how splendid it would
be. . . . I was thinking of her hands. They're so cool, so capable."

"You must think she's without character," said Renny.

"Not at all! I think she has great strength of character, or I should
not suggest such a thing. . . . She's sick and tired of her life as it is.
If she should return to Jalna she might never leave it again. Mama is
really too much for Augusta."

Renny turned to Eden. "What do you think? Should you like Alayne to
nurse you?"

Eden rolled over, hiding his face in the pillow.

Finch exclaimed: "He doesn't want her! He doesn't want her!" He could
not bear the idea of Alayne's being drawn again into Jalna, as into a
whirlpool in which she would be sucked under.

"Let him be," said his uncle. "Let him have time to think."

The three sat with their eyes on the hunched-up figure on the bed.
In and out, through the mazes of their thoughts, the shape of Alayne
moved, in a kind of mystic dance. The roar of traffic from below rose
as a wall around them.

At last Eden rolled over and faced them. "I give you my word," he said,
"that unless Alayne comes to help me get well, I shall die." His eyes
were challenging, his mouth feverish.

Finch said over and over again to himself: "It's a shame--a shame to
ask her."

"You are the one to ask her," said Ernest to Renny. "You must see her
at once."

"How soon can he travel?"

"In a few days."

"I think you are the one to ask her. You've been talking to her."

"No--no. It must be you, Renny."

"I will bring her here, and he shall ask her himself."

"I am afraid it will upset him."

"I'll prepare her, but he must do the asking."

"Very well," said Eden. "Bring her here to see me. She can't refuse
that."

       *       *       *       *       *

Renny's feelings, as he stood waiting for Alayne to answer her door,
were a strange mixture. He had a disheartened, hangdog feeling at being
forced, through his solicitude for Eden, to come on such an errand.
He had scarcely slept for two nights. In a city he was miserable as
a wild animal trapped. Yet stirring all through him was a ruthless
exhilaration at the thought of once more becoming a moving force in
Alayne's life, in tearing her from her security and exposing her to the
tyranny of passions and desires which she had thought to set aside.

As she stood before him, his thought was that she was in no way
striking, as he had pictured her in his fancy. She was less tall, her
hair was a paler gold, her eyes more grey than blue, her lips closed in
a colder line. Yet, his reaction to this meeting was greater than he
had expected. He felt a magnetic fervour coursing in his blood as his
hand held hers. He wondered if this were palpable to her. If it were,
he marvelled at her self-control.

Alayne's sensations were the very reverse of his. Standing before her
in the flesh, his characteristics were even more intense than in her
memory. He was taller, more incisive, his eyes more burning, his nose
larger, more arrogantly curved at the nostrils. Inversely, his effect
on her was less profound than she had feared. She was like a swimmer
who, dreading the force of the current, finds himself unexpectedly able
to breast it. She felt that since she had last seen him she had gained
in self-confidence and maturity.

With the conflict of these undiscovered emotions surging between them,
they entered the living-room.

He said: "One after another we are appearing. Only wait and you shall
have Gran at your door with Boney on her shoulder."

She gave a little laugh, and then said, gravely: "But it is too bad
that it is trouble that brings you."

"Yes." He looked at her shrewdly. "You know how serious Eden's
condition is?"

"I have talked about it with your uncle." Her face was quite calm.

He said, his eyes devouring her: "God, it seems strange to see you!"

"And you!"

"Has the time seemed long or short to you?"

"Very long."

"Short to me. Gone like the wind."

"Ah, well, you have your horses, your dogs, your family. I am rather a
lonely person."

"But you're busy." He glanced at the books on the writing-table.

She gave a little shrug, and then said: "I am afraid I think too much
and take too little exercise."

"You should have more exercise. I do my best thinking on horseback.
Do you remember our rides together? You thought I was a stern
riding-master, didn't you?"

"Our rides together," she murmured, and in a flash saw herself and
Renny galloping along the lake shore, heard the mad thud of hoofs, the
strain of leather, saw again the shining, flying manes. Her breath came
quickly, as though she had indeed been riding. "How is Letty?" she
asked. Letty was the mare she had ridden.

"Beautiful as ever. Ready--waiting for you to ride her again."

"I am afraid I shall never do that," she said, in a low voice.

"Aren't you ever coming to visit us?"

"Renny," she said with sudden passion, "we said good-bye on that last
night. You should not have come here to see me."

"Have I disturbed you?" he asked. "You look cool enough in all
conscience."

"That is what I wish to be. I--I want to forget the past."

He spoke soothingly, as to a nervous horse. "Of course. Of course.
That's right, too. I should never have come if I weren't so worried
about Eden."

She opened her eyes wide. "I cannot do anything for Eden," she said,
abruptly.

"Not come to see him?"

"Go to see Eden! I could not possibly. Why should I?"

"When you have seen him you won't ask that question. He's a sick man. I
don't believe he'll get over this. His mother went in consumption, you
know."

Consumption! They would still call it that at Jalna. What a terrible
word!

"I am the last person Eden would want to see."

"You're mistaken. He's terribly keen to see you."

"But why?"

"There's no accounting for the desires of anyone as ill as Eden.
Possibly he has something to say to you that he thinks is important."

"That is what has brought you here?"

"Yes."

A flash of bitter disappointment pierced her. He had not sought her
out because he must set eyes on her, but for Eden's sake. She said: "I
cannot see him."

"Oh, but I think you will. You couldn't refuse."

He sat doggedly smoking, endeavouring to override her opposition, she
felt, by his taciturn tyranny.

She murmured: "It will be a difficult scene for me."

He replied: "There will not necessarily be a scene. Why should women
always expect scenes?"

"Perhaps I learned to expect them in your family," she retorted.

He showed his teeth in the Court grin, which, subsiding, left his face
again dogged.

"You will come, Alayne," he said. "You can scarcely refuse to see him
for five minutes."

"Do you know," she said, "I believe I guess what he wants. He is
frightened about himself and he wants me to look after him--nurse him
back to health!"

"That may be," Renny replied, imperturbably. "At all events he
absolutely refuses to have a trained nurse. I don't know how Aunt
Augusta and Mrs. Wragge will make out with him. Uncle Ernest suggested
old Mrs. Patch, and Finch said at once that she ought to know something
of nursing consumption, as she had buried three of her own with it!"

He looked shrewdly into her eyes to read the effect of his words there,
and saw dismay, even horror.

"Mrs. Wragge--Mrs. Patch," she repeated. "They would be the end of
him!" Her mind flew to the scene of Jalna. She saw Eden, beautiful
Eden, lying on a bed, neglected by Mrs. Wragge or Mrs. Patch.
Another thought struck her. "He should not be in the house with the
boys--Wakefield, Finch. It would be dangerous."

"I had thought of that," said Renny, "and I have an idea. You remember
Fiddler's Hut?"

Was she likely to forget it? "Yes, I remember."

"Very well. Early this spring I had it cleaned up, painted, made quite
decent for a Scotch couple who were to work for Piers. Something went
wrong. They did not turn up. Now, I'm wondering whether it might not be
made quite a decent place for Eden. We have quantities of furniture at
Jalna that could be spared. If some pieces were taken to the cottage
and some rugs, it wouldn't look so bad. It might be made quite nice.
And if only you would see Eden and use your influence----"

"My influence!"

"Yes. You have a great deal of influence over him still. You might
persuade him to have a trained nurse. God, if you only knew how
troubled I am about him!"

Suddenly he seemed, not domineering, but nave to her; pathetic in his
confidence in her. She did not look into his eyes, which for her were
dark and dangerous, but at the troubled pucker on his forehead, above
which the rust-coloured hair grew in a point.

She pictured the mismanagement of a sick-room at Jalna. She thought of
Fiddler's Hut, embowered in trees and rank growths. And Eden terribly
ill. All her New England love of order, of seemliness, cried out
against the disorder, the muddle-headedness of the Whiteoaks. She was
trembling with agitation, even while she heard herself agreeing in a
level voice to accompany him to the hotel.

In less than an hour she found herself, with a sense of unreality, by
Eden's bed, pale, with set lips.

He lay, his fair hair wildly tossed, his white throat and breast
uncovered. She thought of dying poets, of Keats, of Shelley sinking in
the waves. Young as they had been, both older than he. And his poetry
was beautiful, too. She still loved his poetry. She knew it by heart.
What might he not write if he could only be made well again! Was it her
duty to Art? To the love she still felt for his poetry, his beauty? Ah,
he had been her lover once, lying with that same head on her breast!
Dear heaven, how sweet their love had been, and--how fleeting!

Their love had been a red rose, clasped, inhaled, thrown down to die.
But the faint perfume of it lingering made her soul stir in pain.

Eden caught her hand and held it. He said, huskily: "I knew you'd come!
You couldn't refuse me that--now. . . . Alayne, don't leave me. Stay
with me--save me! You've no idea how I need you. I refused to have
a nurse because I knew it was only you who could help me. It's your
strength--your support. . . . I can't get well without it."

He broke into a passion of tears, and, with his eyes still wet, fell
into a paroxysm of coughing.

She looked down on him, her face contorted like a child's, in the
effort to keep from crying. She heard herself promise in a broken voice
to accompany him back to Jalna.




XIV

THE ARM OF JALNA


The train seemed to be flying with passionate purpose through the
night. The engine shot forth smoke and sparks, its bright eye glared,
its whistle rent the air. Its long hinderpart, trailing after it, the
intricate, metallic parts of which revolved with terrific energy,
seemed no less than the body of some fabulous serpent which, having
swallowed certain humans, hastened to disgorge them in a favoured spot.
In the steel cavern of its vast interior their tender bodies lay secure
and unharmed. It seemed to Finch, imaging it thus, that its journey
was made for the sole purpose of returning five souls to the walls of
Jalna, from which they had wandered.

Eden had borne the journey well. Renny had taken a compartment for his
comfort, and had shared it with him that he might be on hand to wait on
him. Ernest, Finch, and Alayne had had berths at the other end of the
coach. The four--for Eden had not been visible to the other occupants
of the coach--were the subjects of much conjecture. The men--tall,
thin, absorbed in themselves and their female companion--made
their numerous passages from end to end of the coach in complete
obliviousness of the other travellers. Thus the Whiteoaks revealed
their power of carrying their own atmosphere with them. With calculated
reserve they raised a wall about themselves, excluding the rest of the
world. In the smoking compartment not one of them exchanged more than
a glance, which itself lacked any appearance of friendliness, with any
other passenger.

They were met on their arrival by two motor-cars. One was of English
make, a very old car but still good, owned by Maurice Vaughan, Renny's
brother-in-law, and driven by him. Eden was installed in it, and with
him went Ernest and Renny. Watching their departure, Alayne wondered
why Renny had not chosen to ride with her. She was relieved that the
propinquity of a long drive had not to be endured, but she felt a quick
disappointment, even resentment, that he had shunned her. His mixture
of coldness and fire, of calculation and restrained impulse, had always
disturbed her. To be near him was to experience alternate moods of
exhilaration and depression. She was glad that she was not to be in the
house with him. Fiddler's Hut was near enough.

As she settled herself in the familiar shabby car of the Whiteoaks
beside Finch, beheld the remembered form of Wright, the stableman,
driving, and dressed to the height of his power for the occasion,
she wondered what had been the force which had impelled her to this
strange return. Had it indeed been the shadow of her dead love for
Eden--springing desire to cherish his life for the sake of his
poetry? Or was it that, knowing Renny willed it so, she had no
self-denying power to resist? Or was it simply and terribly that the
old house--Jalna itself--had caught her in the coil of its spell, had
stretched forth its arm to draw her back into its bosom?

Finch and she said little. An understanding that made words no
obligation had been born between them. He too had his moving thoughts.
He was passing through the town where his school was. What a great
city it had seemed to him until he had seen New York! Now it looked as
though it had had a blow on the head that had flattened it. Its streets
looked incredibly narrow. The crowd, which had seemed to him once to
surge, now merely loitered. They had different faces, too, less set,
more good-humoured. And how jolly the policemen looked in their helmets!

When they had left the town and were flying along the country road,
past fields of springing corn and gardens bright with tulips and heavy
with the scent of lilacs, Finch's face was so happy that Alayne said,
with a half-rueful smile: "Glad to be home after all, aren't you?"

He assented with a nod. He longed to tell her that part of his gladness
was due to her presence, the miracle of her riding beside him in the
spring, but could not. He tried to make her understand by a look, and
turned toward her with his wide, not unattractive smile.

She smiled in return and touched his hand, and he thought she
understood, but she was only thinking: "What will become of him now? Is
this a good or a bad step for him?"

They came to the low white cottages of Evandale, the blacksmith's, Mrs.
Brawn's tiny shop, the English church on its high, wooded knoll, the
vine-covered rectory. The wind blew, high and fresh, scattering the
last of the orchard blossoms. They entered the driveway of Jalna just
as the occupants of the other car were alighting. Renny had Eden by the
arm.

They were crowded together in the porch. The lawn seemed less spacious
than Alayne had remembered it. The great evergreen trees, with their
heavy, draped boughs, seemed to have drawn nearer, to be whispering
together in groups, observing the return.

Rags flung wide the front door, disclosing, as in a tableau, the
grandmother, supported by Nicholas and Augusta. Her face was set in a
grin of joyous anticipation. She wore her purple velvet tea-gown, her
largest cap, with the purple ribbons. Her shapely old hand, resting
on the ebony stick, bore many rich-tinted rings. Behind her, down the
hall, the sunlight, coming through the stained-glass window, cast
strangely shaped bright-coloured patches. Still grasping her stick, she
took a step forward and extended her arms.

The arrival had been well timed for her. After a sound night's sleep,
she had just arisen refreshed, her initial vitality not yet lowered by
the agitations of the day.

"Ha!" she exclaimed. "Ha! Children. . . . All my children. . . . Kiss me
quick!"

They pressed about her, almost hiding her--Ernest, Renny, Finch, Eden.
Loud smacks were exchanged.

"Dear me, Nicholas," said Ernest, with some anxiety, as his mother
embraced Eden, "do you think she should do that? The contagion, I mean."

"She'll scarcely catch anything at her age," rejoined Nicholas,
composedly. "God, how changed the boy is!"

"Yes. . . . What a time I've had, Nick! If only you knew what I've been
through! The responsibility and all! How has Mama been?"

"Marvellous. Renny's letter has given her a new lease of life. I wonder
what prompted him to write to her instead of to Augusta."

Ernest stared, incredulously. "You don't mean that he wrote to Mama
about Alayne's coming and getting the cottage ready for them?"

"He did. Right over Augusta's head. The old girl is nettled, I can tell
you. And serve her right. She's too hoity-toity about here by far."

"H'm! He should not have done that. It wasn't fair to Augusta. And Mama
is so helpless. What could she do?"

Nicholas gave one of his subterranean chuckles. "Do? Do? She has driven
us nearly crazy. If she had had her way most of the furniture would
have been carried from the house to furnish Fiddler's Hut. Things
haven't been dull here! Look at her now."

Old Mrs. Whiteoak was again seated in her own chair. To protect her
from draught a black and gold Indian screen had been placed at her
back. On top of the screen Boney, in brilliant spring plumage, was
perched, his beady eyes fixed on her cap, the gay ribbons of which
intrigued him. On ottomans on either side of her she had commanded Eden
and Alayne to sit. She took a hand of each. It was almost a sacramental
act.

Her mind had never grasped the fact that Eden and Alayne were
estranged, separated. She saw them now only as an inseparable pair who
had disappeared for a long time and were now returned miraculously to
her. Her activities of the past days had brightened her eyes and reset
her strongly marked features in the mould of authority.

"Ha!" she ejaculated. "And so you're here! At last, eh? My young
couple. Bonny as ever. Lord, what a time I've had getting ready for
you! What a to-do! Eh, Augusta? A to-do, eh? Alayne, my dear, you
remember my daughter, Lady Bunkley? She's failing. I notice it. This
climate don't agree with her. It takes an old war-horse like me to
stand it. I've lived through India and I've lived through Canada.
Roasting and freezing. All one to me."

Augusta looked down her nose. She was greatly chagrined by the old
lady's remarks. She said: "It is no great wonder if I am unwell. It has
been a trying time." She directed her offended gaze toward Renny.

He did not see it. His eyes were fixed on his grandmother. He was
absorbing her aspect, delighting in her. Some perversity of his nature
had impelled him to write to her, asking her to oversee the furnishing
of the Hut for Eden and Alayne--she was the one above all who would
see to it that the Hut was made comfortable. This he wrote, knowing
that she was capable only of making things difficult for his aunt. His
feeling toward Augusta was not altogether dutiful, though, on occasion,
he would be demonstratively affectionate. She too often interfered with
the boys. She too often sounded the note of England's superiority, of
the crudity of the Colonies. He admired her, but he resented her. He
admired his grandmother and resented not her most flagrant absurdities.
Now her air of hilarity, of the exaltation of a superior being, moved
him to tenderness toward her. He forgot for the moment his anxiety over
Eden. He forgot his smouldering passion for Alayne. He was satisfied to
see her sitting at his grandmother's right hand, for a while, at least,
a member of his tribe. He felt the tug of those unseen cords between
himself and every being in the room.

Eden's exhaustion after the journey was, for the moment, forgotten in
the excitement of the home-coming. He felt the cynical bliss of the
prodigal. He was at his own hearth again, he was loved, but he knew he
was unchanged. He smiled mockingly at Alayne across the purple velvet
expanse of Grandmother's lap, across the glitter of her rings as they
pressed into the flesh of the two captured hands. He felt an exquisite
relief in the knowledge that Alayne would be with him at Jalna, to care
for him as she had done once before when he was ill. He could not have
borne anyone else about him. If he were to die, it would not be quite
so horrible with her beside him. . . . But he could not help that mocking
smile.

"I am trapped," Alayne thought. "Why am I here? What does it all mean?
Is there some plan, some reason in it all? Or are we just mad puppets
set jigging by the sinister hand of a magician? Is the hand this old
woman's? Not hard to think of her as Fate. . . ."

"Shaitan! Shaitan ka batka!" screamed Boney, suddenly perceiving her as
a stranger.

"Tell the bird to hold his tongue!" cried Grandmother. "I want to talk."

"Hold your tongue, Bonaparte!" growled Nicholas.

Alayne thought: "Is Eden going to die? And if he does--what? Why am I
here? If I can nurse him back to health, can I ever care for him again?
Ah, no, no--I could not! What are Renny's thoughts? Why was I such a
fool as to think that his presence no longer swept over me like a wave
of the sea. Oh, why did I come?" Her brow contracted in pain. Old Mrs.
Whiteoak's rings were hurting her hand.

"Shaitan! Shaitan ka batka!" raged Boney.

"Nick!"

"Yes, Mama."

"Ernest!"

"Yes, Mama."

"Tell the bird to hush. I'm asking Alayne a question."

They composed the parrot with a bit of biscuit.

"Are you glad to be home again, child?"

"Y-yes. Oh, yes."

"And where have you been all this time?"

"In New York."

"It's a poor place from what I hear. Did you weary of it? Had Eden a
good position?"

All the eyes in the room were on her. She hedged. "I went away once for
a change. To visit cousins in Milwaukee."

The strong rust-coloured eyebrows shot upward. "Milwaukee! China, eh?
That's a long way."

Nicholas came to the rescue. "Milwaukee's not in China, Mama. It's
somewhere in the States."

"Nonsense! It's in China. Walkee-walkee--talkee-talkee! Don't you think
I know pigeon English?" She grinned triumphantly, squeezing Alayne's
hand.

"Walkee-walkee--talkee-talkee!" chanted Wakefield.

"Nicholas!"

"Yes, Mama."

"Hush the boy. I must not be interrupted."

Nicholas put out a long arm and drew Wake to his side. "Listen," he
said, with a finger up; "an improving conversation."

Grandmother said, with her dark bright eyes on the two beside her:
"What's the matter? Why haven't you got a child?"

"This is too much," said Augusta.

Her mother retorted: "It's not enough. . . . Pheasant's had one. Meggie's
had one. May manage another. . . . I don't like this business of not
having children. My mother had eleven. I should have done as well. I
started off smartly. But, look you, when we came here the doctor was
so hard to get at, Philip was afraid for me. Ah, there was a man, my
Philip! The back on him! You don't see such straight backs nowadays.
No children. . . . H'm. In my day, a wife would give her husband a round
dozen----"

"Shaitan!" cried Boney, his biscuit gone and his eye on the stranger.

"--and, if there was one of them he wasn't quite sure about, he took it
like a man--ha!"

"Shaitan ka batka!"

"He knew even the most reliable mare . . . skittish now and then."

"Ka batka!"

"Hey, Renny?"

"Yes, old dear. Great days those!"

Eden withdrew his hand from his grandmother's. There was a look of
exhaustion on his face. He got to his feet; his lips were parted, his
forehead drawn in a frown. "Awfully tired," he muttered. "I think I'll
lie down for a bit." He looked vaguely about.

"Poor lad," said the old lady. "Put him on the sofa in the library."

Eden walked slowly from the room. Ernest followed him, solicitous, a
little important. He covered him with a rug on the sofa.

Grandmother's eyes followed the pair with satisfaction. She then turned
to Alayne. "Don't worry, my dear, we'll soon have him well again. Then
let's hope you'll----"

"Mama," interrupted Nicholas, "tell Alayne about the Hut. What a time
you've had, and all that."

This was enough to distract her attention from the necessity of
multiplying. She now bent her faculties to a description of the downy
nest she had prepared.

Nicholas said in an undertone to Renny: "It was appalling. The Hut
could not possibly have held the furniture she insisted on sending to
it. There was only one thing to do, and that was to carry the things
out at one door and bring them back through another. Augusta, poor old
girl, was at her wits' end."

The master of Jalna showed his teeth in appreciation. Then, his face
clouding, he asked: "What do you think of Eden? Pretty sick boy, eh?"

"How bad is he? I couldn't gather much from your letter."

"I don't quite know. I must have Dr. Drummond see him. The New York
doctor says his condition is serious. Not hopeless."

"American doctors!" observed Nicholas with a shrug. "Fresh air. Milk.
We'll soon fill him out. . . . Gad, what a trump that girl is! Gone off in
looks, though."

"Nonsense," denied Ernest, who had come up from behind. "She's lovelier
than ever."

Renny offered no opinion. His eyes were on her face. He read there
spiritual acceptance of her changed condition. A calm embrace of
even Boney. A trump? No. A proud spirit subdued by passion. He moved
circuitously to her side among the pieces of heavy inlaid mahogany. He
sat down on the ottoman that had been occupied by Eden.

"I want to tell you," he said, "how happy it makes me to have you here."

Old Mrs. Whiteoak had fallen into a doze. Fate seemed to be napping.
Alayne and Renny might have been the only two in the room, each so felt
the isolating power of the other's proximity.

"I had to come. He wanted me--needed me so terribly."

"Of course. He needs you. . . . And when--he gets better?"

"Then I shall go back."

But the words sounded unreal to her. Though she had left her
possessions in the apartment, had made preparations for only a summer's
stay, the words sounded unreal. The apartment, with its artistic
rugs, its pretty lamps, its bits of brass and copper, seemed of less
importance than the ebony stick of this sleeping old woman. Rosamond
Trent seemed of no importance. This room spoke to her. Its cumbersome
furniture had a message for her. Its thick walls, enclosing that
subjugating atmosphere, had a significance which no other walls could
have. She might not grasp the unqualified meaning of it. She had not
courage for the attempt. The room might be only a trap, and she--a
rabbit, perhaps--a limp, vulnerable rabbit--caught!

His tone, when he spoke again, was almost crisp. "Well, you've come,
and that's the great thing. I can't tell you what a load it takes off
my mind. I believe it will mean recovery for Eden."

She must work, she must strain for Eden's recovery. And that was right.
One must obey the laws of one's order. But what a fantastic interlude
in her life this summer was to be!

Augusta had gone out. Now she reappeared in the doorway and motioned
them to come. They rose and went to her, moving cautiously so as not to
awaken the grandmother.

"He has fallen asleep," said Augusta. "Done out, poor boy. And you must
be so tired, too, my dear. Shouldn't you like to come up to my room
and tidy yourself before dinner? I'll have a jug of hot water taken up
to you."

Alayne thanked her. She would be glad to change her dress and wash.

"Then," continued Augusta, "I shall take you to the cottage--I think
we had better drop that horrid name of Fiddler's Hut, now that you are
going to live there--and show you our preparations. I suppose I should
say my mother's preparations." And she directed a reproachful look at
Renny.

He returned her look truculently. "I like the old name," he said. "I
don't see any sense in changing it."

"I shall certainly never call it that again."

"Call it what you please! It's Fiddler's Hut." He gave an angry gesture.

"Why should one cling to low names?"

"You'll be sneering at Jalna next!"

Alayne thought: "Have I ever been away? Here they are, wrangling
in exactly the same fashion. I don't see how I am to bear it. What
has come over me now I am in this house? A mere movement of his arm
disturbs me! In New York it was possible--here, I cannot! I cannot!
Thank God, I shall be under another roof!"

A red patch of light, projected through the coloured glass of the
window, rested on Renny's head. His hair seemed to be on fire. He said,
contemptuously: "The _cottage_, eh? Better call it Rose Cottage, or
Honeysuckle Cottage. Make it sweet while you're about it!" It was a
passion with him that nothing about the place should be changed.

The front door was thrown open, and Wakefield ran in. With him came a
rush of spring wind and three dogs. The two spaniels began to bark and
jump about their master. The old sheep-dog sniffed Alayne and wagged
the clump of fur that was his tail. He remembered her.

Wakefield held out a small bunch of windflowers. "I've brought these
for you," he said. "You're to keep them in your room."

Alayne clasped him to her. How adorable his little body felt! So
light, so fragile, and yet how full of life! "Thank you! Thank you!"
she breathed, and he laughed as he felt the warmth of her mouth against
his ear. He wrapped himself about her.

"Child," admonished his aunt, "don't be so rough with Alayne! She is
coming to my room now. She is tired. You're dragging her down."

Renny removed the little limpet, and Lady Buckley took Alayne by the
arm.

As they mounted the stairs, she said: "You have done nobly and rightly.
I cannot express how I admire you for it. I wish I could say that I am
sure you will be rewarded for your self-sacrifice, but I have not found
it so in life." And she sighed. "I have discovered a nice young Scotch
girl who will come from the village every day to work for you at--you
know where. I refuse to call the cottage by that odious name, even
though Renny be disagreeable to me."

They sought Augusta's room, and she poured water from the heavy ewer
into the basin, that Alayne might wash her face and hands.

       *       *       *       *       *

Finch, too, had gone to his room. The creak of the attic stairs, as
he ascended, was to him the voice of the house. It welcomed him, and
chided him. The attic complained that it had been so long deserted by
him. No one there, all those weeks, to listen to the voice of the house
at night. All that he might have heard it say on those nights was now
lost to him for ever. The walls of his room did not seem to be standing
still. They seemed to move, to quiver in consciousness of him. The
faded flowers of the wallpaper stirred as in a gust. He stood there,
snuffing the familiar smells: the plaster, damp in one spot where the
roof leaked--there was his water basin just where he had left it,
placed to catch the drops; the faded carpet, not swept too thoroughly
by Mrs. Wragge--it had a peculiar, fuzzy smell; the mustiness of the
old books in the cupboard; and, permeating all, the essence of the
house itself, which held a secret never to be told, though he thought
he came near to guessing it.

He threw open the window and let in the air. The trees, sombre and
friendly, exhaled their teasing, resinous scents. Little rosy cones,
like tiny candles for a fte day, stood upright on a mossy spruce.
All the trees showed a green film of moss on that side of the trunk
nearest the house, as if a visible sign of their communion with it. The
leaves of the deciduous trees, in their newly opened freshness, were of
a gloss unimpeachable and pure. Beyond the trees, the meadows, moist
and verdant; the paddock, where a group of leggy foals stood in awe of
their own newness; the apple orchard, where the pinkish-white blossoms
were falling with every breeze to the dark red earth, like flowers
before the feet of June, young Summer's bride. The stream, its surface
broken in a thousand sunny splinters, hastened down into the ravine,
where only the trunks of the silver birches stood bright against the
shade. A mourning dove uttered its pensive, wooing call.

Finch threw out his arms and drew the beauty of it into his soul. He
sent his spirit out of the window to meet the morning. His spirit
returned to him, laden with the morning, heavy with the sweetness of
it, as a bee with honey.

He thought of his last day in this room, its humiliation. He had
dreaded the home-coming as ignominious. But Piers had not been present
to jeer at him. He had crept back, scarcely noticed, under the
screen of Eden's illness. Only Uncle Nicholas had growled, under his
moustache: "Well, young man, I hope you're ashamed of yourself. What
you need is a good hiding."

And Renny, overhearing, had remarked, curtly: "If it hadn't been for
the kid we'd never have found Eden."

Cantankerous, magnificent Renny!

Behind him he heard a light step. He turned and saw Wakefield in
the doorway. The dignity of his bearing, the gravity of his small
countenance, showed him to be in a mood which Finch detested. A darned
patronizing mood that expressed itself in the most high-flown words at
his command, words garnered from his conversations with Aunt Augusta
and Mr. Fennel.

"I see," he said, enunciating clearly, "that you have repented you of
your folly."

Finch hung on to himself. It was hard to keep his hands off the
insufferable little fellow, but he must. A bad way that would be for
reinstating himself. He wondered why Wakefield had no respect for him.
Other small boys had for their seniors. In the house of one of his
school friends he had seen an inquisitive young brother dismissed with
a mere nod of the head.

No harm in trying that on Wake, anyhow. He suspended the brush he had
begun to use on his hair, and gave his head a peremptory jerk toward
the door. The expression of his face, reflected in the looking-glass,
was one of cold authority.

Wakefield did not move. He said: "I knew full well that you would
repent you of your folly."

Finch threw down the hairbrush and bore down upon him. But you could
not really hurt anything as fragile as this youngster. Why, his bones
were only gristle! Finch flung him over his shoulder and ran down the
stairs with him hanging limp and unresisting. But the instant Wake
was set on his feet in the hall, his cock-a-hoop air returned, and he
deftly placed himself at the head of the procession now entering the
dining-room.

"Aha!" cried Grandmother, showing every tooth, "that's what I like to
hear! Young lads racketing about!"

They were around the table, with the portraits of Captain Philip
Whiteoak in his uniform and old Adeline in her heyday smiling down on
them. Behind their chairs glided the form of Rags, his expression that
queer mixture of servility and impudence, his shiny black coat, dragged
on in haste at the last minute, very much up at the nape.

There they were, consuming large slices of underdone roast beef;
potatoes roasted in the pan; turnips smothered in brown gravy;
asparagus weltering in drawn butter; a boiled pudding with hard sauce;
and repeated cups of hot tea. Alayne was touched because they had
remembered that she did not eat pudding. There were jam tarts for her.
"Baked in the little shell pattypans you like!" Grandmother pointed
out. And there was sherry to drink, too. A New York clubman would have
paid a pretty price for such sherry as this. How old Adeline liked it!
She threw back her head, her cap-ribbons trembling, to drain the last
drop. Renny whispered: "I'll send some of this sherry to Fiddler's Hut
for Eden. Some good porter would buck him up, too. Do him more good
than milk." Alayne's thoughts flew on swift wings of compassion to
Eden, stretched on the sofa in the next room. She had had a glimpse of
him as she passed, covered with a magenta crocheted afghan. Confusing
for him, she thought, all this robust conversation. Nicholas, Ernest,
their mother, were all talking at once. About food. What Ernest had
had to eat in New York; what Nicholas had eaten in London, twenty-five
years ago. What Grandmother had eaten in India, seventy-five years
ago. Augusta, in contralto tones, extolled the flavour of English
strawberries, lettuce, and cauliflower. There was an altercation among
Augusta, Renny, and Wakefield as to whether or not the child should eat
the fat of his beef. Only Finch was silent, eating as though he would
never get enough.

Sunshine, coming through the yellow blinds, bathed them all as in
the thunderous glow of a Turner sunset. The salient features of each
were mordantly emphasized. Grandmother's cap, her eyebrows, her nose;
Augusta's fringe, the carriage of her head; Nicholas's shoulders, the
sardonic droop of his moustache; Ernest's long white hands; Wake's
glowing dark eyes; Renny's red head, his Court nose. And in the essence
of them there was no conformation to a standard. Life had not hammered
them, planed them, fitted them to any pattern. After the weary wit
of the talk to which she had listened, rather than taken part in, at
dinners of the past year, all this gusto, this spendthrift tossing away
of energy! But perhaps they were right. Perhaps they had some secret
which others had lost or were losing. They did not save themselves.
They were built on a wasteful plan. Like shouldering trees, they thrust
down their roots, thrust out their limbs, strove with each other,
battled with the elemental. They saw nothing strange or unlikely in
themselves. They were the Whiteoaks of Jalna. There was nothing more to
be said.




XV

VAUGHANLANDS


That same afternoon Renny and Wakefield descended the slope that led
from the lawn into the ravine, crossed the bridge over the stream,
and reascended the opposite slope, along the winding diversities of
the continued path which led them, at last, to an open oak wood, the
property of Maurice Vaughan. The house itself stood in a hollow, and
so thick was the foliage of the surrounding trees, following a month
of rains, that only the smoke from one of its chimneys, rising in a
delicate blue cloud, was visible to them, though they could hear the
sound of a woman's voice singing inside.

A field of corn lay between them and the lawn. In it a village boy
stood beating indifferently on a pan to ward off the crows. The crows
circled above him or fed at a short distance, with derisive side
glances in his direction. Walking among them were two white gulls,
flown all the way from the lake for this inland recreation.

The boy was startled by having his pan and stick snatched from him.
"Think you'll frighten crows by those feeble taps?" demanded Renny.
"Listen to this!" He created a terrible din, not far from the boy's
ear. The crows rose straight in the air, screaming. The gulls, flying
low abreast, sailed in the direction of the lake.

The brothers walked on, the little one clutching his elder's sleeve. By
the time they had reached the gap in the cedar hedge which bordered the
lawn, the beating on the tin had grown faint, and did not noticeably
oppose the full clear tones of the woman's voice, singing inside the
house.

"Renny!" Wakefield tugged at the sleeve. "Why did Piers bring Pheasant
and Mooey over here, just when Eden and Alayne have come?"

"Because Piers can't abide Eden."

"Why?"

"You couldn't understand."

"Did Piers and Pheasant come over here so that Eden could come home and
be nursed?"

"Yes."

"But I thought Meggie couldn't abide Pheasant."

"Well, she's made friends with her for Piers's sake--and Eden's."

Wakefield's eyes, though dark with thought, were troubled. "I find it
hard," he said, "to keep things straight in my mind."

"You don't need to. The less you think about them the better."

"But I've got my own ideas, just the same." His tone was truculent.

"You've too many ideas. You're too inquisitive."

Wakefield raised his eyes, with the perfect touch of appeal in them.
"I suppose it's my delicate health," he said. How well he gauged his
elder! He was drawn against his side as they went into the house.

No one in the dim parlour. The sitting-room, the dining-room, empty.
Still, the sweet, full woman's voice flooded the house. They went up
the stairs. Wakefield ran along the hallway, knocked on a door, and,
almost immediately, opened it.

The room discovered was splashed with sunshine coming through the
swaying branches of trees. It was bright with highly glazed, gaily
coloured chintz. A vase holding daffodils stood on the centre table. On
the table also was a silver tray bearing a teapot, a plate of scones,
and a small piece of honey in the comb. Meg was enjoying one of her
little lunches.

"Ha!" said Renny. "Nibbling as usual, eh?" He bent and kissed her.

Wakefield pressed against her back, holding his hands over her eyes.
"Guess who it is!"

She drew down his hands till they lay on her breast, and turned her
face back to his. They kissed. "Oh," he exclaimed, "I taste honey on
you!" He looked greedily at the square of honeycomb.

"I had no appetite for dinner," she exclaimed, "so I began to feel a
little faint, and had this brought to me. I don't really want it. You
may finish it, Wake, darling."

He took the honeycomb in his fingers and began to devour it, Meg
regarding him with indulgence, Renny with affectionate concern.

Renny asked: "Do you think that is wholesome?"

"Oh, yes. It's a natural food. It couldn't possibly hurt him."

"To think," she exclaimed, "that you have been in New York since I
saw you last!" She regarded him as if she expected to find something
exotic in him. "What you must have seen! But before any of that, tell
me about Eden. This is a great shock. Is he very ill? If he is in
danger, I don't know how to bear it. Poor lamb. And he was always so
well. Everything started with that wretched marriage of his. The day he
first brought that girl to Jalna, I saw trouble ahead." She screwed up
her courage. "Renny, is Eden going to----" She glanced at the child. He
must not hear anything terrible.

"Well, he has a spot on one lung. He's very thin. . . . I think he isn't
quite so ill as that doctor made out. But he'll need a lot of nursing."
He thought: "What will she say when I tell her that Alayne is here?" He
continued: "Everything depends on fresh air and good nursing."

Meg exclaimed: "I should be the one to nurse him! But there's Baby. I
can't expose her."

He reckoned with her indolence. "What about this 'mother's
help'--whatever you call her--couldn't she look after the youngster?"

Meg moved on her chair to confront him. Her short, plump arm lay across
the table, her milk-white sensuously curved hand drooping over the
edge. Her voice was reproachful. "Trust my baby to Minny Ware! She's a
featherbrain. One never knows what she will do next! Sometimes I wish I
had never seen her."

They were silent a moment. The voice of the singer came cooingly from a
distant room. He could not tell Meg yet that Alayne was at Jalna.

She said: "It seems terrible to me to banish Eden to the Hut."

"It isn't safe to have him in the house with the boys."

"And Finch is back! What a frightful responsibility life is for some
people! While others . . . That is what takes my appetite--worry."

"Finch will be all right, now. . . . He's a queer young devil. You can't
get at him."

She observed, with complacence: "Finch would never have run away if I
had been at home. Aunt Augusta simply cannot understand boys."

Renny was listening to the voice. He asked: "Is that girl always
singing?"

His sister nodded, as though in confirmation of inexpressible things.
She bent toward him, whispering: "You know, it's going to be terribly
trying for me having Pheasant here. Nothing but my love for Piers would
induce me. She made up to Minny Ware at once. Already they are talking
together in corners. . . . I ignore them."

A heavy step was heard in the hall. A knuckle touched the panel of the
door.

Meg's smooth brow showed a pucker, but she murmured: "Come in."

The tap came again. "He didn't hear you," said Renny. "Hello, Maurice!"

The door opened and Vaughan appeared. His greying hair was rumpled, his
Norfolk jacket hung unevenly from his broad shoulders.

"Been having a nap?" asked Renny.

He nodded, grinning apologetically. "Anything private under discussion?
I only came for my pipe. Left it somewhere about." He thought: "Why
does Meggie look at me that way? A damned funny look."

"I was just asking Meggie whether Miss Ware ever stops singing," said
Renny. "A joyous sort of being to have about. I wish we could borrow
her for Jalna." He thought: "Marriage is the devil. She's got old
Maurice just where she wants him."

Meg thought: "Why is it that I can never have my own brother to myself?
Is there no such thing as privacy when one is married?"

Vaughan had found his pipe and tobacco-pouch. He filled the pipe
deftly, considering that his right hand had been crippled in the war.

Meg's full blue eyes were fixed on the crippled hand, and the leather
bandage worn about the wrist. It was the sight of that which had
melted her heart toward him. Yet now its movement had the power to
irritate her. It was abnormal, even sinister, rather than pathetic. She
said, reproachfully: "Renny says that he does not think Eden is very
seriously ill. You had me so terribly frightened." She turned to her
brother. "Maurice said Eden looked half dead."

"He looked that way to me," Vaughan said, doggedly.

"He did look pretty seedy after the journey," agreed Renny. "But he had
a sleep and something to eat, and he's more like himself now. We've got
him moved into Fiddler's Hut." In a moment more he must tell her that
Alayne was returned. He felt a constriction in his throat.

She asked eagerly: "How did you get him there? Could he walk so far
over rough ground?"

"Wright and I took him. Half carried him. . . . They've rigged it up very
comfortably. You'd be surprised. Gran had a glorious time ordering
everyone about, and Aunt Augusta has the hump." No, he could not tell
her yet. . . .

Vaughan knew what was on Renny's mind. He observed, staring at the bowl
of his pipe: "He'll take a lot of nursing. Lord, did you notice his
wrists and knees?"

"There you go again!" cried his wife. "You seem determined to frighten
me." She placed a hand on her heart. "If you knew what a weight I feel
here!"

"I'm sorry," said Vaughan. "I seem destined to put my foot in it. . . . I
only meant----"

"Please stop," she interrupted, dramatically. "Let me see for myself
how he is. . . ." Her agitation found vent in correcting Wakefield. He
was wiping his fingers on the edge of the traycloth.

He was sticky, argumentative. Before he was quelled, another knock
sounded on the door, this time a quick tattoo, signalling a delicate
urgency.

"It's Baby," said the singer's voice. "She's been crying for you."

Wakefield flung wide the door. A blonde young woman stood there,
holding in her arms a plump infant.

Meg's face was smoothed into an expression of maternal adoration. Her
lips parted in a smile of ineffable sweetness. She held out her arms,
her breast becoming a harbour, and received the child. She pressed a
long kiss on its flower-petal cheek.

At forty-two she had been made a mother by Vaughan, and he had
realized his dream of becoming the father of her child. But their
inner selves had not been welded together by the birth. She who had
never yearned toward motherhood now became extravagantly maternal,
putting him outside the pale of that tender intimacy. Sometimes he
found himself with the bewildered feeling of a dog whose own door is
closed against it. He loved this child as he had never loved Pheasant,
who had been so lonely, so eager for love. Meg had named it Patience.
"But why?" he had exclaimed, not liking the name at all. "Patience is
my favourite virtue," she had replied, "and we can call her Patty for
short."

It was an odd thing that while "Mooey," as he was nicknamed, the child
of the boy and girl, Piers and Pheasant, was a serious infant, staring
out at the world from under a pucker in his brow, Patty, the child of
middle-aged parents, was lively, with inconsequent exuberance. She
bounced now on her mother's lap, kicked out her heels, and showed her
four white teeth in a hilarious grin.

Her uncle poked her with his finger. She reached for his red hair.
"Ha," he said, "you young vixen! Look at her, Maurice."

"Yes. She can give a good pull, too"

Meg turned smiling to Minny Ware. "Don't go," she said, graciously.
"Sit down, please. I may want you to take Baby again."

Minny Ware had had no intention of going. The infant had not so longed
for the society of its mother as she had longed for the society of men.
It was ill going for her when there was a man about and she not bathed
in his presence. At this moment of her life it was her hot ambition to
capture the master of Jalna. But he had a wary eye on her. She almost
feared that he scented her desire.

She sat with crossed knees, watching the family group about the baby.
A bright blue smock, very open at the throat, showed her rather thick
milk-white neck and full chest. The smock was short, and beneath it
were discovered excessively pink knickers, and stockings such as only a
London girl would have the courage to wear.

She had, as a matter of fact, been born, not in London, but in a remote
part of England, where her father had been rector of a scattered
parish. She had rarely known what it was to have two coins to rub
together. When her father had died, two years after the close of the
War, she and another girl had gone up to London, keen after adventure,
strong and fresh as a wind from their native moor. For several years
they had earned a precarious living there. They managed to preserve
their virtue, and even kept their wild-rose complexions. But life was
hard, and after a while they thought of London only as a place from
which they longed to escape. Mercifully, the friend had a small legacy
left to her, and they decided to go to Canada. A short course was taken
at an agricultural college. Armed with this experience, they set out
to run a poultry farm in Southern Ontario. But they had not sufficient
capital to support them while they became accustomed to conditions
so different. The seasons were unfavourable; the young chicks died
in large numbers from a contagious disease; the turkey poults were
even more disappointing, for they succumbed to blackhead. The cost of
putting up the poultry houses had been greater than they had expected.
Grain was very expensive; food was dear. At the end of two seasons
they were stranded, with just enough left to pay their debts. They did
this, for they were inherently honest, and turned their thoughts again
cityward.

If they had been stenographers, they might easily have got situations.
As it was, they tried unsuccessfully to get taken on by the proprietors
of small high-class shops, as doctors' or dentists' assistants. At
long last they got employment as waitresses in a tea-shop. A year of
this, and Minny Ware's feet became afflicted. To stand on them all
day, to carry heavy trays, was an agony too great. One night she read
an advertisement for a "mother's help" and companion--a Mrs. Vaughan
the advertiser. The place was in the country, the child an infant. She
longed for the country, and she "loved babies." She applied for the
position by letter in excellent old-country handwriting. She explained
that she was the daughter of a clergyman, and had come to Canada to
raise poultry. Having failed in that, she felt that nothing would be so
congenial to her as a position in charge of a young child. She did not
mention her experience as waitress. The fact that she had failed in an
undertaking commended her to Maurice. He had always a fellow-feeling
for failures. Meg liked the idea of her being the daughter of a parson.
Minny Ware had now been with them for five months.

As soon as there was an opportunity, she said in a low tone to Renny:
"New York must be great fun."

"I suppose it is," he returned. "I wasn't there for fun. I dare say you
would like it. Do you want to go there?"

"Who doesn't? But do you think they would let me across the line?"

"Not with that London accent, I'm afraid."

She gave a rich, effortless laugh, which, having passed her lips, left
her face round and solemn, like a child's. She said: "You must teach me
how to speak, so they will take me in."

"Are you so restless, then?" His eyes swept over her, resting on the
freckles that accentuated the whiteness of her rather thick nose. "You
have looks that are unusual. You've got a voice. What are you going to
do with them?"

"Exploit them in the States. There's nothing to keep me here." Her
eyes, of an indeterminate colour, narrow above high cheek-bones, looked
provocatively into his.

The frustrated torrent of his passion for Alayne turned, for a moment,
toward this girl. As he realized this, he felt an intense, inexplicable
irritation. He looked beyond Minny Ware to his sister.

"Alayne," he said, "has come back to look after Eden." Let Meggie fly
into a rage, if she would, before an outsider.

"Alayne come back . . ." she repeated the words, softly, curling her lip
a little.

"Eden begged her to come."

"She has not much pride, has she?"

"She's full of pride. She's too proud to care what you or anyone else
thinks."

"Even you?" Her lip curled again.

Minny Ware looked eagerly from one face to another. Could she make
herself a place here?

Renny did not answer, but his eyes warned Meg to be careful.

She sat, winking very fast, as though to keep back tears or temper, her
full cheek rested against her closed hand. She was, in truth, blinking
before a new idea. . . . If Alayne and Eden were reconciled, so much the
better. Let Alayne provide for the poor darling. There was no use in
Alayne's pretending she was poor. Americans always had plenty of money.
Eden might be delicate for a long time. And if he--if Alayne fancied
that he were not going to recover--that she could capture Renny through
Eden's death--she would find how mistaken she was!

In any case Renny must be protected from Alayne. There was only one
way by which he could be protected. A wife. And here, at hand, was
Minny Ware. Meg's perceptions, slow but penetrating, left no doubt in
her mind that Alayne loved Renny--that Renny was intensely aware of
Alayne. Very different this controlled awareness from the calculated
passion and abrupt endings of his affairs with other women, which Meg
had sensed rather than observed. Affairs which her stolid pride had
made her overlook.

She absorbed the picture of Renny and Minny Ware side by side. Should
she, she asked herself, be willing to see them so attached for the rest
of their days? Her heart's answer was in the affirmative. Though she
was ready to find fault with Minny--for being careless, for making up
too readily to Pheasant--it was certain that Minny was the one woman
she would be willing to accept as a sister. She knew already what it
was to hate two women married to her brothers. From the first, Minny's
lavish light-heartedness, her physical exuberance, her good temper
under correction, her willingness to be at another's beck and call, had
caused Meg to look on her with favour, even an approaching affection.

Could Renny have a wife better suited to him? People would say that he
had married beneath him. That prospect did not trouble Meg. It was her
opinion that, no matter where a Whiteoak should seek his mate, the fact
that he married her placed her above questioning. And, whatever Minny
had been forced to do, the fact remained that she was the daughter of
a clergyman, and had been nicely reared. Even though her skirts were
too short and her stockings strange--well, life in post-war London was
doubtless strange. She had rebuked Minny for the flamboyancy of her
clothes, but the girl had been adamant. She had said, in effect, that,
if Mrs. Vaughan did not like her clothes, she would go. She could not
dress soberly to fit her situation. It would break her spirit.

To understand Meg Vaughan, it must be remembered that she had led a
life of extraordinary isolation. She had been educated by governesses.
She had made no friends. Her brothers, her elderly uncles, her
grandmother, had sufficiently filled her life. During the long years of
her estrangement from Maurice, she had acquired a taste for solitude.
Those long hours in her chamber--what did she do with them? Brush
her long hair that showed a feather of grey above the forehead? Eat
comforting little lunches? Dream, with her head supported on her short
plump forearm? In winter three weeks would pass in which she would not
set foot out of doors except to go to church.

Now here she was, with a husband and a baby, and a companion whom she
desired to marry to her favourite brother. She was as comfortable as a
plump rabbit in its burrow. She longed to secure Renny in a peace as
nearly approaching hers as was possible to his turbulent nature. One's
mate must not matter too much, if one were a Whiteoak. Maurice did not;
Minny would not. One's children mattered terribly. Her breast rose in a
heavy sweet breath when she thought of Baby.

Meg did not know what it was to be socially ambitious. How could she,
since they were the most important people thereabout? She did not take
into account rich manufacturers or merchants who had built imposing
residences only a few miles away on the lake shore. She had not changed
the position of a piece of furniture since she had come to Vaughanlands.

During the rest of Renny's stay she was sweetly, solidly acquiescent
toward him. He left thinking how perfect she was. In Maurice's stable,
looking over a new mare from the West, he told Maurice that Meggie was
perfect, and Maurice agreed.

When the two women were alone, Minny Ware exclaimed: "Let me brew a
fresh pot of tea. They spoiled your little lunch."

"Do," said Meggie. "We'll have it together."

They looked into each other's eyes and smiled. Then Minny's eyes filled
with tears. She snatched up the infant and kissed it extravagantly.




XVI

WOODLAND MEETINGS


Eden was pathetic. He was like a capricious child, weak and tyrannical.
He could not in those first weeks bear Alayne out of his sight.
There was so much to be done for him that only she could do to his
satisfaction. The young Scotch girl came every day to help; their meals
were carried to them in covered dishes by Rags, from the house. But
Alayne must move his hammock from place to place, following the sun;
she must make his eggnogs, his sherry jelly, read to him, sit with him
at night by the hour when he could not sleep, encourage and restrain
him. Like a child, he was sweetly humble on occasion. He would catch
her skirt, hold it, and say, brokenly: "I don't deserve it. You should
have left me to die"; or, "If I get better, Alayne, I wonder if you
could love me."

She was endlessly patient with him, but her love was dead, as his was,
in truth, for her. A tranquillity, born of the knowledge that all was
over between them, gave them assurance. The mind of each was free to
explore its own depths, to see its own reflection in the lucent pool
of summer. Eden, with his invincible desire for beauty, read poems
in the opening scroll of violets, tiny orchids, hooked fern fronds
that covered the woodland. He read them in the interlacing pattern of
leaves, branches, the shadows of flying birds.

In all these Alayne read passion. She thought only of Renny.

She had seen little of him, and then only in the presence of Eden or
others of the family. She had several times taken tea with old Mrs.
Whiteoak and Augusta. On all occasions the talk was of Eden's health.
He was improving. Almost from the first Alayne had been convinced that
his illness was not to be fatal. He was responding to rest and good
food. She could imagine his life in New York. But how weak he was!
Once, adventuring across the orchard path to the edge of the paddock to
watch a group of romping, long-legged foals, he had met Piers. Piers,
sturdy and sunburnt in the sunlight. There had passed no word, but a
look from Piers, and a forward movement that had shocked the sap from
Eden's legs.

He had tottered back through the orchard, and flung himself on his bed.
After a while he had muttered: "I met brother Piers. God, what a look!
There was murder in it. To think I'd let him see I was afraid of him!"
He did not venture that way again.

Alayne brooded on this meeting for a little, and she felt angry at
Piers. But her thoughts, like strong, cruel birds, flew back to Renny.
Yet her care was for Eden. She wished there were more sunshine for
him. June was windless, and sometimes they felt suffocated under the
lush greenness that enclosed them. Fiddler's Hut was half hidden by
a twisted creeper that shadowed the small-paned windows. It seemed
impossible to keep Eden in the sunlight for more than half an hour
without the necessity of moving him. Even the path that wound from the
door across the little clearing was bordered by such a growth of fern
and bracken that an adventurer along it was certain of wet knees. Here
summer not only was born and flourished, but seethed with life. Each
morning was fresh and lucent, as though the first morning on earth. The
jewelled leaves of the wild grape and bracken scarcely dried before
another dew.

Weeks ago she had asked Renny if something might not be done to let in
air and sunshine. Nothing had yet been done. Enough that he had brought
Eden back to Jalna. It would require effort to rouse him to further
action. The family now took it for granted that Eden would recover.

She had left him in a comfortable chair, a glass of milk at his elbow,
a book in his hand. A splash of sunlight, of a richness suggesting
autumn rather than June, gave the effect of his being a figure in a
tableau, as she looked back. This effect was heightened by the pensive
immobility of his attitude, and by the, one might almost think,
conscious pose of his hands and beautifully modelled head. She had come
near to touching his hair in a passing caress, as she had left. She
was glad now that she had not. She went down the moist path, past the
spring, overgrown with wild honeysuckle, and followed it swiftly, as it
rose into the wood.

She must have exercise. Her muscles were aching for movement. In
walking she discovered that these weeks had brought fresh physical
strength to her. She distended her breast and drew deep breaths. This
was her first walk since she had come to Jalna.

A bridle path, smooth with pine needles, lay through the wood. On each
side of it, raising waxen bells to the light, clustered frail lilies of
the valley. A clump of poplar saplings, looking pale and lost against
the thick trunks of the pines, were covered by silvery unfolding
leaves, as though a flock of wan butterflies had settled there. High
in the pines she heard the plaintive notes of a mourning dove. Here
and there rose the towering pallid bole of a silver birch, shining as
though from an inner light.

The notes of the mourning dove were drowned by the rapid thudding of a
horse's hoofs. Alayne drew out of sight behind a massive, moss-grown
trunk. She peered out to see who the rider might be. It was Pheasant,
riding bare-headed astride a slender Western pony. They passed in a
flash--padding hoofs, flying mane, great shining eyes, and, above,
little white face and tumbled dark hair. Alayne called her name, but
the girl did not hear, and in a moment was gone beyond a curve.

It was Alayne's first glimpse of Pheasant since her return. She felt
a quick out-going of warmth toward her. Poor wild, sweet Pheasant,
married so young to Piers! If she had not known her, she would have
taken that flying figure on horseback for a boy.

The bridle path emerged from the pine wood. Irrelevantly appeared
a field planted with potatoes. The potato plants, lusty and strong,
in flower, compact in the midst of the woodland, were not unlovely.
Neither was the bent old man, Piers's labourer, unlovely in his blue
shirt, in his attitude of patient hoeing.

She followed the path, now in the full blaze of sunshine. The woods
about were no longer pine, but oaks and birch and maple. In every
hollow were gay gatherings of wood lilies, white and purplish pink, and
through all the trees sounded the ring of bird song. An oriole flashed.
She caught the blue of a jay's swift wing and thought she saw, but was
not sure, a scarlet tanager. Then again came the hoof beats. Pheasant
was returning. Alayne trembled, looking down on the path, where in the
dust lay the little hoofprints.

Pheasant was beside her. She had leaped from her horse. His breathing
sounded, quick and passionate. His velvet nose was introduced between
the faces of the two girls.

"Pheasant!"

"Alayne!"

Their eyes embraced, their hands touched; they wavered, laughing, then
kissed. The horse, puzzled, flung back his head, shaking his bridle.

"Let's sit down in the wood," cried Pheasant. "How splendid our meeting
like this! Away from all the family, you know. Those people. Well,
we're different, after all, you and I. We can't talk just the same,
be ourselves, when they're all about us." And she added, quaintly: "I
think you're noble, Alayne! But how can I tell you what I think? I'll
never forget how beautiful you were to me. And now you've come back to
nurse Eden!"

They sat down among the trees. The grass was long and so tender that
it seemed to have grown in a day. The horse began to crop, petulantly
jerking up, with a sidewise movement of the head, great succulent
mouthfuls. Pheasant sat with her back against a young oak.

On her white forehead, above the pale oval of her face, a lock of dark
hair lay like a half-opened fan. Alayne thought that she had never
seen such beautiful brown eyes. Her mouth was small and she opened it
little when she spoke, but when she laughed, which was seldom, she
opened it wide, showing her white teeth.

"Isn't life a funny tangle?" she said. "It would take a lot of
untangling to straighten us, wouldn't it, Alayne?"

"Does it bear talking about? Hadn't we better just talk of you and me?"

"I suppose so. But perhaps God is trying to untangle it all, or perhaps
it is just that we are becoming more mellow with age. Do you think,
perhaps, that we are becoming more mellow with age, Alayne?"

Alayne had forgotten how quaint, how pathetically sagacious she was.

"Perhaps we are becoming more mellow," she agreed, soberly. "Let us
hope so. . . . I cannot see us as free agents--just marionettes in a
strange dance." Her mouth tightened in a bitter line.

The sunshine flickered over Pheasant. She was visualizing that macabre
dance. "I can picture it," she said. "Renny leads. Then the uncles, the
aunt. All of us dancing after--holding hands--bowing--looking over our
shoulders. Wake last, with little horns, and a pipe, playing the tune."
Her eyes glowed into Alayne's. "I've such an imagination, Alayne. I can
make pictures by the hour. It's a great help to have an imagination.
Piers has very little, and he says he wishes I hadn't so much. He
thinks I'd be a better wife and mother if I hadn't so much. What do you
think?"

"I think," said Alayne, "that you're an adorable child. They tell me
that you're a mother, but I can't believe it."

"Wait till you see Mooey! He's simply wonderful. Not so fat as Meg's
baby, but such a look in his eyes! It quite frightens me. . . . Still, I
don't believe there's any truth in the saying that the good die young.
I shouldn't look on old Mrs. Whiteoak--Gran--as specially good, should
you? Not that I should insinuate that she's ever been immoral--Heaven
forbid that I should cast a stone at anyone--but I think she's been
cynical, rather than pious, all her long life, don't you?"

"I do. And I should not worry about Mooey dying young if I were you. . . .
Tell me, Pheasant, who is this Miss Ware? Meg brought her along once
when she came with some shortcake for Eden. She seems a strange sort of
girl. English, isn't she?"

"Yes. She's a sort of companion to Meg, and she's nice to me. She's mad
about men. I actually have to keep my eye on her when Piers is about."
. . . She plucked nervously at the grass, and added: "Meg wants to marry
her to Renny."

What were the birds in the treetops doing? What strange happening had
taken place among the inhabitants of the burrows underground? Through
all the woodland was an inexplicable stir. Alayne felt it run along the
ground, up the tree trunks, along the branches into the leaves, which
strangely began to flutter. Had a shadow fallen across the sky? What
had the child been saying?

Meg, with her stupid stubbornness of purpose, had set out to marry
Renny to this woman whom she had chosen--for what purpose? She saw
Renny, with his air of mettle. She saw Minny Ware, her narrow,
strangely coloured eyes laughing above her high cheek-bones, her wide
red mouth smiling, her thick white neck. She heard that full, rich
voice, that effortless, ringing laugh.

She forced herself to speak steadily. "And Renny, does he take kindly
to the idea?"

Pheasant frowned. "How can one tell about Renny? He thinks: 'This is
a fine filly.' Well, he's a judge of good horseflesh! Last night all
of us went over to Jalna. Minny played and sang. Renny seemed to hang
about the piano a good deal. Everybody fell in love with her singing.
The uncles couldn't keep their eyes off her, and, if you'll believe me,
Gran actually pinched her on the thigh! She was a success. But Renny'll
never marry her. He won't marry anyone. He's too aloof."

At these last words, Alayne felt a sharp pang, and withal a sickly
sense of comfort, as of the sun shining dimly through mist.

As though aware of the presence of concentrated emotion, the horse
ceased cropping, raised his head, and looked startled. Pheasant went to
him and took the bridle in her hand. "He's getting a bit restless," she
said. "And I must go. I promised not to be long away."

They walked along the path together, Pheasant leading the horse. In the
potato field the old man was leaning on his hoe, gazing pensively down
on the strong plants as though in deep thought.

"What are you dreaming about, Binns?" called out Pheasant.

"Bugs is here," he answered, and fell again into thought.

The horse's hoofs sounded indolently on the firm, moist path. Overhead
a network of bird song was being woven, in intricate, ever-changing
pattern.

"How idle the old man is!" said Alayne.

"There is a psychological reason for that." Pheasant assumed her
sagacious look. "It's because the fields are scattered, far apart,
among the woods. It makes a man lazy to see the woods all about him.
Noah Binns isn't earning his salt to-day." Looking back over her
shoulder, she called: "Wake up, Noah!"

"Bugs is here," answered the old man, not raising his head.

When they entered the pine wood they met Minny Ware, pushing a
perambulator in which sat Meg's infant, Patience. Minny wore a very
short dress of vivid green, and a wide, drooping hat, fit for a garden
party.

"Oh, hallo," she exclaimed, with her London accent. "The fashionable
world goes a-walking, eh?" She turned, tilting the perambulator on its
back wheels and surveying Alayne from under the brim of her hat.

"How do you like the weather?" she asked. "Glorious, eh? I've never
seen so much sunshine in all my life."

"At Fiddler's Hut the foliage is too dense. We don't get nearly enough
sunshine." Alayne's voice was cold and distant. She could scarcely
conceal her antagonism for this full-blooded girl. She felt that beside
her she looked colourless, listless.

"How is your husband?" asked Minny Ware. "Better, I hope. It must be
rotten to have anything wrong with one's lungs. I believe mine are made
of indiarubber." The full, effortless laugh gushed forth. She looked
ready to burst into song. "Thank you," returned Alayne rigidly. "He is
getting better."

Minny Ware went on blithely: "Mr. Whiteoak was suggesting to me that I
go over one day and sing to him. He thought it might cheer him up. Do
you think he'd like it?"

"I dare say he would." But there was no note of encouragement in her
voice.

"I should go mad without music myself," said Minny. "I suppose you get
wonderful music in New York."

"Very good." Alayne's lips scarcely moved. She looked straight ahead of
her.

"I'll be going there myself one day. I'll have to get you to put me on
to the ropes."

Alayne did not answer.

Patience was making bubbly noises and holding up her hands toward the
horse.

Pheasant laughed. "She's a perfect Whiteoak! Look at her, she's asking
to get into the saddle."

With a swift movement of her white bare arm, Minny lifted the child
and swung it to the horse's back, and supported it there. "How's that,
Ducky?" she gurgled. "Nice old gee-gee!" She clapped the horse on the
flank.

"For God's sake, be careful, Minny!" cried Pheasant. "He's nervous."
She patted him soothingly.

"Is he?" laughed Minny. "He seems a docile little beast. Doesn't she
look a lamb on horseback?"

Patience indeed looked charming, the downy brown hair on her little
head blown, her eyes bright with excitement. She clutched the rein in
her tiny hands and cooed in ecstasy.

"She's a perfect Whiteoak," averred Pheasant again, with solemnity.

Alayne did not think she cared for babies, especially Meg's baby.
Perhaps it was that she did not understand them, had had nothing to do
with them in her life. For something to say she admired the grace of
the horse.

"He's from the West," said Pheasant. "He's been badly used. We found
welts all over him, when we had him clipped. He's been branded twice.
I think that must hurt, though they say not." She glanced at her wrist
watch. "I think you'd better put Patience in her pram. I must be
getting home."

Minny Ware took the baby in her arms. She pressed her full red mouth
to its soft cheek. "Music and babies," she murmured, through the kiss.
"They're the soul and body of life, aren't they? I couldn't get on
without them. In England I always had a baby about, looking after it
for one of my father's sick parishioners."

Alayne saw Minny as a symbolic figure--a song on her moist red lips,
a baby against her swelling breast. Songs and babies--an endless
procession from her vigorous body. With a fresh pang, she saw her as
Renny's wife, singing to him, bearing his children. Minny was revealed
to be a fit mate for one of the Whiteoaks. One whose formidable
physical strength and spiritual acquiescence could be welded into their
circle. She saw herself as a disparate being; an alloy that never could
be merged; a bird brooding on a strange nest, crying to a mate to whom
her voice would ever be alien.

She slipped her finger into the child's tender palm. The little hand
closed about her finger and drew it toward the inquisitive mouth.

Pheasant sprang to the saddle with casual accustomedness. Her loose
white shirt showed a tear, revealing a thin young shoulder. She
chirruped. In an instant the horse, which had been walking indolently,
with drooping head, became an object of force, of speed. Its thudding
hoofs sent up a spray of pine needles. The dark curve of its flank
swam beneath the rider. Horse and rider disappeared behind a bend in
the path.

The two young women walked on together. When they reached the point
where Alayne must turn into the narrow footpath leading to Fiddler's
Hut, Minny Ware said: "Shall I come one day, then, and sing?"

"Yes, do," answered Alayne. After all, Eden might like her singing. He
hadn't much to amuse him, shut in among the trees. He must get tired of
reading and being read to.

She found him sitting on the ground beneath a cedar-tree that rose,
a pointed spire, behind him. She asked, anxiously: "Do you think you
should sit on the ground? I'm afraid it's quite damp."

He pushed back his hair petulantly. "I was so beastly hot. There seemed
to be more air down here."

"Sometimes I wonder," she said, looking at him with a pucker on her
forehead, "if you should have come here at all. It might have been
better if you had gone to the mountains or one of your Northern lakes.
Even now, if you would like to go, I would go with you."

"No." He turned his head away sulkily. "I'm here, and here I'll stay.
If I get better, well and good. If I don't--it doesn't much matter." He
stretched out his hand, plucked a wood lily, and tore off its petals
one by one.

"That's nonsense," said Alayne, sharply. "It matters a great deal. Have
I come all this way for something that does not matter?"

"It does not matter to you."

"Yes, it does."

"You don't love me."

She did not answer.

"Do you love me?" he insisted, childishly.

"No."

"Then in what way do I matter to you? For God's sake, don't say my
writing matters to you!"

"But it does! And you do--for yourself. Can't you understand how my
feeling for you may have changed into something quite different from
love--yet something that makes me want to care for you, make you well
again?"

She went to him, and stood looking down on him with compassion. She
must take his mind from the subject of his illness.

"I met that Minny Ware just now. She offers to come over some day and
sing to you. Will you like that?"

"No," he said. "I shan't like it. I don't want her coming here. She's
stupid. She's silly. I can imagine the noise she would make--stupid and
silly."

On an impulse she could not restrain, Alayne said: "Meg is scheming to
marry her to Renny."

His face was almost comic in its surprise. "Marry her to Renny! But
why? Why should she want to marry that girl to Renny?"

His eyes, with their veiled gaze, looked into Alayne's, but she saw
that his swift mind was hot on the trail of Meg's devious motives.
"That girl," he repeated. "That girl. Renny. I can't see it. But wait!"
The light of malicious understanding crept into his eyes. "She's
afraid--that's what it is--afraid! She'd marry him to an imbecile
rather than have that happen."

"Have what happen? How mysterious you are!" But her heart was beginning
to beat uncomfortably.

He narrowed his eyes to two slits and peered up at her. Sunlight and
leaf shadows, playing across his face, gave it a sardonic grimace.
"My poor girl, don't you see? Deceased husband's brother! Meggie
thinks there is a fair chance of my dying, and she's afraid you'll
marry Renny. She's going to fix him up with a nice plump songstress
instead. I see it all. I'll engage she'll do it. Poor Reynard. That
sly red-headed fox will be helpless. She'll bait the trap with such a
sleek plump pullet. And she'll lead him to it and let him sniff--God,
he hasn't a chance!"

She stood looking down at him, under the flickering leaf shadows.
Her face looked greenish-white. Her heart sank under a weight of
apprehension. She felt that they were helpless, moved inexorably by
soulless forces. They were being woven into the pattern of Jalna. They
could no more extricate themselves than the strands caught in the loom.
Vibrating on the heat, she felt the deep-toned hum of the loom through
all her being.

He was regarding her with heartless interest. "You mind?" he queried,
mischievously. "You mind as much as that?"

"As much as what?" she asked angrily, hate for him rising in her.

"Your face! Oh, your face!" He changed the expression of his own visage
into one of dolour. "It's like this!"

Tears of anger, of shame, stung her eyelids.

"And now you're going to cry! Is it for me? Or Renny? Or yourself? Tell
me that, Alayne!"

She could not bear it. She turned and went swiftly toward the cottage.
He remained a little, savouring the moment. He said to himself: "I am
alive--I am alive! The worms are not gnawing me--yet!" He turned his
hand about, examining the wrist that had been so round, so firm. "No
mould--yet!" He felt his pulse. "Still kicking!"

He got up--it seemed to him that he felt stronger--and followed Alayne
into the cottage.

The little Scotch maid was laying the table. Rags would be here any
minute with their dinner. Through a crack of the door of Alayne's room
he could see her standing before the little looking-glass, her hands
raised to her hair. Her arms and shoulders were bare, and the graceful
sweep of their lines brought to him a moment of remembered emotion.
Not so long ago those arms had held him. Not so long ago delicate and
extravagant caresses had passed between them. And how soon over! The
remembrance of them as meaningless as a shadow from which the substance
has fled.

But the shadow disturbed him. He wandered about the room, humming a
tune.

Alayne came from her room. He looked at her with curiosity. His
erotic proclivities, his sensitiveness, had given him the power of
putting himself in the place of one of the opposite sex, of gauging
with uncanny precision emotions alien to himself. So now, beneath
her studied calm, he was conscious of the turbulence of the thoughts
created by his words.

She knew something of this sexual clairvoyance, but had not fathomed
its dark depths. If she had realized the full knowledge he had of her
at that moment, it would have been impossible for her to remain under
the same roof with him.

She had changed to a thinner dress of a pale green that seemed to have
caught its colour from the atmosphere, for, though it was noonday,
the room lay in a green twilight because of the rich foliage that was
reared between its windows and the sun.

"How nice and cool you look!" he said, his eyes resting on her.

She did not answer, but went to the window and looked out between the
leaves of the trumpet vine. She thought of Renny, and his promise to
cut away some of these creeping things. Why did he not come? Was it
callous absorption in his own doings that made him neglect his brother,
or did he wish to avoid her? She told herself that she was angry at
him. Vehemently she asked herself why it was that her love for him
should so often be driven to put on the hair shirt of irritation.

It was July when at last he came. A dim day after a week of intense
heat. When they looked out in the morning, their little woodland world
had been shrouded in an unearthly fog. Thin films of vapour covered
the abnormally large leaves, gathering at the tips and forming clear
drops. The seething summer life of the wood was silent, apparently in
a deep languor after the restless activity of the past week. There
was no bird song; only from the little spring, hidden under its bower
of honeysuckle, came a faint murmuring, like the very breath of the
sleeping grass. As the morning drew on, the fog lifted slightly and the
sun was distinguishable, but almost as wan, as somnolent, as the old
moon. Each day the path that led from the door became narrower, more
closed in by the urgent growth of flowers and weeds. Few used it. The
visits from those at the house had become rarer, either because of the
heat and lassitude of the month of July or because they were absorbed
by some new interweaving of the threads of the pattern that was being
woven at Jalna. Eden and Alayne were left very much to themselves,
spending drowsy days, cut off by his illness and her shrinking from
meetings with the family.

She felt apathetic now. They might go on like this for ever, passing
their days in that green shade, their nights in fantastic dreams. She
was startled, almost afraid, when, on this morning, she saw Renny's
figure detach itself from the mist which lay thick under the orchard
trees, and which had made his body appear to be but another trunk,
and emerge into the path. She saw that he wore a loose white shirt
and riding breeches, but he carried in one hand some implement and in
the other a long trailing piece of vetch, covered with little purple
flowers.

He moved with such energy along the path, seemed so unoppressed by the
humid air and the fog, that she fancied it moved aside for him, was
lightened and dispersed at his approach.

Eden had actually been trying to write. He raised his eyes from the pad
that lay on his knee and, like Alayne, looked almost startled toward
the door, as Renny stood there.

An expression of embarrassment made the elder brother's features
appear less carved than usual. He knew that he had been remiss, even
heartless, but he had, since their return, a feeling of shy avoidance
toward them. Although Alayne had come only to nurse Eden, to win him
back to health, and then again part from him, she seemed now to belong
to him. She must not be sought out, brooded on, hungered for, with
a pain as for something one could never possess. Renny had retired,
with an almost animal fatalism, to wait for events to turn out as they
would. He was watchful. His instincts were invincible. He was conscious
of the presence of those two in the very air he breathed, in the earth
beneath his feet. Yet the summer might have passed without his going
to them, had not Augusta that morning drawn his attention to the
unusual growth of the vine that covered the porch, to the great size
of the geranium leaves in the beds, to the difficulty of keeping down
weeds in the garden, and to the need for cutting the lawn. All these
evidences of rank growth drove him to inspect the still ranker growth
at Fiddler's Hut. Those two might almost be enclosed now by such a
hedge as enclosed the Sleeping Palace.

As he passed through the orchard he had noticed a clump of purple
vetch, wound and curled about itself into a great mound, beautiful,
showing through the mist. He had detached a long strand of this and
brought it to Alayne. It hung dangling from his hand, almost touching
the doorsill. His spaniels appeared on either side of him.

Eden was pathetically glad to see him. His face broke into a boyish
smile, and he exclaimed: "You, at last, Renny! I thought you'd
forgotten me! How long do you think it is since you were here?"

"Weeks, I know. I'm ashamed. But I've been----"

"For God's sake, don't say you've been busy! What must it be like to be
busy! I've forgotten!"

"Did you ever know?" Renny came in and stood beside him. The dogs
entered also, with great dignity, their plumed legs and bellies
dripping from the wet grass. "Shall I turn them out?" he asked Alayne.
"I'm afraid they're making tracks on the floor."

"No, no!" objected Eden. "I like them. How fine they look! And you,
too. Doesn't he, Alayne?" The dogs went to him and sniffed his thin
hands.

"He looks as he always does," she answered, coldly. Now that he stood
before her, whom her whole being had ached to see, she felt antagonism
for his vigour, his detachment. How little he cared for Eden, for her,
for anyone but himself!

His brown eyes were on her face. He moved toward her, half shyly, and
offered the vetch.

"I picked this," he said, "in the orchard. Funny stuff. A weed--but
pretty. I thought you might like it."

"We have so few growing things about us," said Eden.

Alayne took the vetch. Their hands touched. Deliberately she had
manoeuvred so that they must touch. She must feel the torment of that
contact. . . . The vine clung to her hands as she put it into a vase.
When she drew them away it still clung, was dragged from the vase, its
tendrils seeming to feel for her fingers.

She sat down by the window. Renny took a chair beside Eden. He
looked him over critically. "You're getting stronger," he observed.
"Drummond"--the family doctor--"says you're improving steadily. He
thinks you'll be almost recovered by fall."

"Silly old blighter!" exclaimed Eden. "He hasn't seen me for weeks!"

"There is nothing to do but continue the treatment. You're getting the
best of care."

"Everyone avoids me," continued Eden. "One would think I had the
plague! The only one who comes is Wakefield, and I must send him away.
If it weren't for Rags, I should not know what is going on in the
house."

"What has he been telling you?" asked Renny, quickly.

"Nothing in particular, excepting that Piers and his wife are home
again. I suppose Meggie couldn't put up with them any longer."

Both Renny and Alayne wondered how he could bring himself to repeat
that bit of news. There was surely no shame in him. She looked out
of the window, and Renny down at his boots. After a silence he said:
"Meggie comes to see you."

"Not often. There's some excuse for her. It's a long walk, and she's
getting fat. Once she brought that Ware girl. I suppose you know her?"
He regarded Renny with a mocking and lightly contemptuous smile.

"Yes. I gave her a lesson or two in riding."

"Ah. . . . How does she sit a horse?"

"Like a sack of meal."

Eden broke into laughter. "I wish Meggie could hear you!"

"Why?"

"Can't you guess?"

Alayne could not bear it. He must be stopped. "Eden," she interrupted,
in a harsh, dry voice, "it is time for your eggnog. I must make it."
She rose and, in passing him, gave him a look of impassioned appeal.
Her lips moved, forming the word, "Don't."

When the brothers were left alone, Renny demanded: "What do you mean?"

"Oh, nothing! Only that she seems to be a pet of Meggie's. But
honestly, it's a deadly thing to be cooped up with one person all the
time. That one face. That one voice. Those eyes. Even though you care
a great deal for the person--feel all kinds of gratitude, as I do.
Picture yourself here, between these four walls, day and night, with
only Alayne!" With bright malice his eyes sought Renny's. They seemed
to say: "You may be well--sound as one of your own horses--but look how
I can torment you! What would you give to have what I have--and which
is nothing to me?"

Renny said, imperturbably: "Well, you're improving, at any rate. That's
the main thing."

If he were touched on the quick, he hid the pain well--red-headed devil!

Alayne brought the eggnog. Eden stirred it, gazing contemplatively into
the yellow liquid. The two watched him, weak, unscrupulous, holding
them, as it were, in the net of his mockery. There was a vibration in
the air about them as if all three were antagonists, each of the other.

Renny began to talk, in a desultory fashion. News of his stables, news
of the family. The uncles and Aunt Augusta stuck to the house pretty
much because of the heat. Gran was well. Word had just come that Finch
had passed his examinations. He was a happy boy. They'd make something
of him yet!

At last he rose. "Now what about this greenery? I've shears and a saw
here, and if you'll show me what you want cut down----"

"You go with him, Alayne," said Eden. "It's so beastly foggy out. I'll
stop here and see if I can do anything with this."

Renny glanced at the pad on Eden's knee. What was written looked like
poetry. Good Lord, was he at it again! Renny had hoped that his illness
might have cured him of this other disability. But no, while Eden lived
he would make verse, and trouble.

Outside, the fog still enveloped the woodland, delicate and somnolent.
The pale moonlike sun scarcely illumined it. The drip of moisture from
leaves mingled with the muted murmur of the spring.

"It's rather a strange morning," said Alayne, "to have chosen for
cutting things. It will be hard to know what the effect will be." She
thought: "We are alone, shut in by the fog. We might be the only two on
earth."

"Yes," he agreed, in an equally matter-of-fact tone. "It's a queer
morning. The branches seem to spring out from nowhere. However, that
won't prevent their being lopped off." He thought: "Her face is like a
white flower. I wonder what she would say if I were to kiss her. The
little hollow of her throat would be the place."

She looked about her vaguely. What was it she wanted him to do? The
path, yes. "This path," she said, "should be widened. We get so wet."

He followed it with his eyes. Safer than looking at her. "I'd need a
scythe for that. I'll send one of the men around this afternoon and
he'll cut down all that growth. Now I'll thin out these long branches."

Before long, boughs, heavy with their summer growth, lay all about. And
all about green mounds of low growing things: dogwood, with its waxen
berries; elderberry, its fruit just going red; sumach, the still green
plumes of which were miniature trees in themselves; aconite, still in
flower; and long graceful trailers of the wild grape. And wherever he
had stridden, in his heavy boots, tender growths lay crushed. His dogs
ran here and there, chasing into cover the squirrels and rabbits she
had tried to tame. Symbolic of him, she thought, in one of those waves
of antagonism which would ride close upon the waves of her love.

"No more," she exclaimed, at last. "I'm afraid to think how it will all
look when the sun comes out."

"Much better," he assured her. He stopped and lighted a cigarette. His
expression became one of gravity. "I must tell you the real reason why
the uncles and aunt have not been to see you. You're sure Rags has said
nothing to Eden?"

"Nothing." She was startled. She feared some strange development of the
situation.

He went on. "We've been worried"--he knitted his brow and inhaled the
smoke deeply--"about my grandmother."

His grandmother! Always that imposing, sinister, deplorable old
figurehead of the Jalna battleship!

"Yes? Is she not so well?"

He returned, irritably: "She's quite well. Perfectly well. But--she's
given us all a bad fright, and now she's behaving in--well, a very
worrying fashion. I thought Eden had better not be told."

Alayne stared, mystified beyond words.

"Pretended she was dying. Staged a regular deathbed scene. Good-byes
and all. It was awful. You couldn't believe how well she did it."

Alayne could believe anything of old Adeline.

"Tell me about it."

"Don't repeat any of this to Eden."

"Certainly I will not."

"It gave us a terrible fright. I had come in rather late. About one
o'clock, I think. I had just put on the light in my bedroom. Wakefield
was awake. He said he couldn't sleep because moonlight was coming into
the room and the cupboard door stood ajar. It worried him. He wanted me
to look into the cupboard, to make sure there was nothing there. I did,
to please him. Just as I stuck my head into it a loud rapping came from
below. Gran beating on the floor with her stick. The kid squeaked,
he was so nervous. I left him and ran down to her room. Aunt Augusta
called out: 'Are you going to Mama, Renny? I don't see how she can be
hungry, at this hour!' Well, in her room there was the night-light,
of course. I could see her sitting up in bed, clutching her throat.
She said: 'Renny, I'm dying. Fetch the others.' You can imagine my
feelings."

"Yes. It was terrifying."

"Rather. I asked her where she felt the worst, and she only gave
a sort of gurgle. Then she got out: 'My children--I want to tell
them good-bye. Every one. Bring them.' I got some brandy from the
dining-room and managed to give her a swallow of that. I propped her
up on the pillows. The parrot kept biting at me, as if he didn't want
anyone near her. Then I went to the telephone, and Drummond promised to
be over immediately. Then I ran upstairs. Got them all up. Finch from
the attic. Little Wake. God, they were a white-looking lot!"

"And she was only pretending?"

"She had us all going. We crowded about the bed. She put her arms
around each one in turn. I thought: 'That's a pretty strong hug.' And
she'd something to say to each. A kind of message. Tears were running
down Uncle Ernest's face. Wake was sobbing. She had us all going." The
red of his face deepened, as he recalled the scene.

"And then?"

"Then the doctor came. Pulled down her eyelid. Felt her pulse. He
said: 'You're not dying.' And she said: 'I feel better now. I'd like
something to eat.' The next morning she told us that she'd been lying
awake and she'd got an idea she'd like to know just how badly we'd feel
if we thought she was dying."

Alayne said, through tight lips: "I hope she was satisfied."

"She must have been. We were a sorry sight. . . . And if you'd seen us
trailing back to bed! Hair on end. Nightclothes. We were figures of
fun, I can tell you!"

"It was abominably cruel of her."

"Perhaps. But a good one on us. And, I guess, a great satisfaction to
her."

"You were sufficiently harrowed!"

"If only you could have seen us!"

She smiled in rather bitter amusement. "I think I begin to understand
you."

"Me?"

"You--as a family."

"We're easy to understand--when you know us."

"But we are friends--aren't we?"

"Are we? I don't believe I can manage that."

"Don't you think of me, then, in a friendly way?"

"Me? Friendly? Good God, Alayne! And you call Gran tormenting!"

"Well--about her. You spoke of some odd behaviour." She was a fool to
get on dangerous ground with him. Better talk about old Adeline.

He went on, frowning: "The trouble is this. Ever since that night she's
always wanting to see her lawyer. Has him out every few days. It must
be a plague for him. And it makes things tense at Jalna. I don't worry
about her will. But I know the uncles are worrying. And one can't help
wondering. I suppose you know that she's going to leave everything she
has in a lump sum to one of us. I suppose everyone is really wondering
just how sorrowful he looked that night. Rather wishes he had the
chance to do it over again. You remember I told you that Uncle Ernest
cried. I believe Uncle Nick thinks that Uncle Ernest feels rather cocky
about that. Wishes he could have dug up a tear or two." He gave one of
his sudden staccato laughs.

"If it comes to that," she said, ironically, "Wakefield cried too."

"And Mooey! Did I tell you he was down, too? The old dear missed him.
She looked around and said: 'Somebody's not here! It's the baby. My
great-grandson. Fetch the baby down!' Pheasant flew upstairs and
brought Mooey. If you'll believe me, the little devil simply howled.
And now Piers and Pheasant are hopeful about him!" This time his
laughter reached Eden's ears.

He appeared in the doorway of the cottage. The fog was really
dispersing. He stood, after all this lopping of branches, in a bath of
vague sunlight.

"What's the joke? You might tell it to me."

Alayne called back: "It isn't really a joke. Just something Renny finds
amusing. How did you get on?"

"I've done it!"

"Done what?" asked Renny.

Alayne answered: "Finished what he was writing. Didn't you notice that
he was writing?"

"Oh, yes. A poem. I suppose that's a good sign." He forced his features
into a grin of approbation.

"Splendid." As they drew near to the young poet she said: "I'm so glad,
Eden. Is it good?"

"I'll read it. No, I'll wait till Renny's gone. I say, what a shambles
you've made of the place!"

Renny looked disappointed. "When it's been raked over it will look
better. Shall I trim this Virginia creeper now?"

"No. I like a little privacy."

"But you've said a hundred times----" cried Alayne.

"My good girl, never remind a person of temperament what he's said a
hundred times."

"But it's dreadful to have that vine clinging round you!"

"No, it isn't. It makes me feel like a sturdy oak."

Renny examined the vine critically. "I think he's right. It would be a
pity to touch it. It's always looked just like that."

"But," Alayne protested, "everything in the cottage is damp!"

The brothers agreed that the vine had nothing to do with the dampness.

A figure was approaching along the path. It was Minny Ware, in a vivid
blue dress. She carried a bowl of jelly mounded with whipped cream.

"I've had such a time to find my way," she said. "It's the first time
I've been in this direction by myself. I hadn't realized how large the
estate is. Mrs. Vaughan sent this."

"Not so large as it once was," observed Renny, gloomily.

Alayne took the jelly and wondered what she would do with Miss Ware.
Eden seemed rather pleased with her.

"Come in," he said, "and let's look at you. We'll pretend you're a bit
of blue sky."

They went into the cottage. Minny Ware seated herself in a wicker chair
by the open door. Eden's remark had made her radiant. Renny sat on a
bench, holding the collars of his dogs. Alayne disappeared into the
kitchen, carrying the bowl of jelly. She did not want to be in the room
with the girl.

Minny Ware, elated at being left alone with the two men, exclaimed:
"_Isn't_ this atmosphere the most depressing!"

"You don't look depressed," said Eden, his eyes absorbing the freshness
of her cheeks and lips, the gaiety of her gown.

"It's weather to make a man virtuous," said Renny.

This remark evoked a gush of laughter from Minny, effortless as an
oriole's song.

Eden continued to be pleased with her. He said: "I wonder if you are
too depressed to sing to me. You promised to, you know."

Minny Ware thought she couldn't, was sure she would disgrace herself
by trying to sing on such a morning as this, but after some persuading
she threw back her head, clasped her hands before her, in the attitude
of a good child, and sang three little English songs. Alayne remained
in the kitchen. Covertly she watched the three through a crack in the
door. She saw Renny's intent gaze on the throbbing white throat, the
full bosom. She saw Eden's appraising eyes also fixed on the girl,
who appeared to have forgotten their presence. The first song was of
a country lover and his lass, with a touch of Devon dialect in the
refrain. The second song told of little birds in springtime innocently
building their nest. The third--yes, the third was a lullaby. This she
softly crooned, her ripe lips parted in a smile. She remembered the
presence of the brothers and, as she finished, her eyes sought theirs.
She seemed timidly to ask for approbation.

The last long-drawn sweet note had been too much for one of the
spaniels. He raised his muzzle and gave vent to a deep howl.

"Did he hate it so?" asked Minny Ware, looking askance at the dog.

"Down, Merlin," said Renny. "He's like his master. He's not musical."

Her face fell. "I thought the other night you enjoyed it."

"I enjoyed this, too. But you sang more passionate things the other
night. I suppose something else in me was appealed to then."

"Oh, I love passionate music!" She spoke with abandon. "I only sang
these simple little things to please your brother, as he's not well."

"Thank you," said Eden with gravity. "That was nice of you."

"Oh, now you're laughing at me!" she cried, and filled the room with
her laughter.

Alayne came in and sat down on a stiff-backed grandfather's chair. She
felt icy before this exuberance. Only with the two spaniels, held by
their collars, did she feel any sense of companionship in the room.

When Eden and she were alone, she said: "If your sister thinks she will
bring _that_ to pass, she is mistaken. He hates her. I could see it in
his eyes."

"How clever you are!" he cried. "You can read him like a book, can't
you?" His glance was full of merriment.




XVII

NIGHT MEETINGS


While Eden and Alayne were struggling for his renewed health at
Fiddler's Hut, the family group were living in a morbid complicity of
emotions, the two strongest of these being fear and jealousy. Since
old Adeline had, as Renny put it, staged her own deathbed scene, they
apprehended, one and all, that this sudden interest of hers in her
final act was but the foreshadow of the spectre itself. The thought of
it hung over them like a pall. The idea that she should pass from their
midst was unbelievable. . . . Captain Philip Whiteoak had died; young
Philip and his two wives had died; several infant Whiteoaks had passed
away in that house; but that the involved pattern Adeline had woven in
and out of those rooms, round about their lives, could be shattered was
incredible. Shivers of foreboding ran through this pattern, such as
might run through the intricate web of a spider when the old spinner
himself, curled in the very centre, is shaken by some dire convulsion.

If she was aware of any change in the atmosphere, she made no sign. She
seemed in even better health than usual, and ate with increasing gusto,
in preparation, it seemed to them, for the chill fast approaching.
Neither did they talk to each other of what was in their minds, but
of other things they talked even more than usual. Augusta, Nicholas,
and Ernest sought out each other more frequently in their rooms.
They discussed their pets, Nip, Sasha, and her kitten, their amazing
sagacity. They grouped themselves, with chirrups and tweets, about the
cage of Augusta's canary. Forced cheerfulness sapped their energy.
They were like people watching each other for symptoms of some disease
which it was necessary, for their peace of mind, to ignore. Each one
discovered, with grim satisfaction, the symptoms he sought in the
others, and believed he had successfully hidden his own.

Augusta had little hope of gain for herself. She was passionately
desirous that Ernest should be the heir. Nicholas thought that
they plotted against him, and he feared Renny more than the two of
them together. And Augusta and Ernest feared Renny and thought he
plotted against them. And Renny believed that all his three elders
were plotting against him. Even Mooey, Piers's infant son, became an
object of suspicion. Had not his great-grandmother demanded that Mooey
be brought to her? Was she not always pushing bits of biscuit and
peppermints into his hand? And she was always exclaiming: "Bring my
great-grandson to me! I want to kiss him--quick!"

Piers did not hope greatly for himself, though he felt a thrill of
exultation when his grandmother would cry: "Boy, you're the image of
my Philip! Back and thighs just like his. And those bright blue eyes
of his, too!" But both Piers and Pheasant thought it truly remarkable
that on her deathbed--even if it were a pretence--Grandmother should
have called for Mooey. Frightfully old people were often drawn to
frightfully young ones. They had things in common--thinking mostly of
food and sleep--being near the beginning and the end, and all that sort
of thing.

Mooey laughed every time he saw his great-grandmother. To certain of
the family his laughter sounded sinister.

Wakefield, with the shrewdness of a child living among grown-up folk,
was conscious of the air of dread and suspicion that had crept into
every corner of the house, even to the basement, where the Wragges
discussed the situation from every angle. They quarrelled bitterly over
it, for Wragge was of the opinion that the peppery and taciturn master
of Jalna should inherit, while Mrs. Wragge, whose bias in favour of
primogeniture was strong, thought that Nicholas should be his mother's
heir. Nicholas too was in the habit of giving her little presents of
money, when she "did" his room.

Wakefield soon discovered that his elders were troubled when he hung
about his grandmother's neck and whispered in her ear. This gave him
an agreeable sense of power. He began to lavish delicate attentions
on her. He carried little nosegays to her, and handfuls of wild
strawberries, which brought out a rash on her grand Court nose. He
would steal up behind her and press his hands over her eyes, demanding,
in a deep voice: "Who is it, my grandmother?"--invariably being
vociferously kissed for it.

One day he announced that he was making a special prayer for her each
night.

"Ha!" she cried. "Praying for me, eh? What is it that you say?"

"It depends," he replied, his palms together between his bare knees,
"on what sort of day you've had. If your appetite's been not so good,
I pray that it may be better. If it's been good, I pray for lemon tart
next day. If you've been worked up into a rage, I pray that you may
have more consideration shown you to-morrow."

"The darling!" exclaimed his grandmother. "Oh, the precious darling!
Praying for his old Gran!" And she made a habit from that day of asking
him each morning what his prayer for her had been the night before.

She took to giving him quite valuable things. One stormy afternoon when
he was bored, she opened the door of the Indian cabinet, containing
the ivory, ebony, jade, and lapis-lazuli curios which he always longed
to play with, but must not touch, and filled his two hands with things
which she said he was to keep. Her sons and daughter were genuinely
alarmed.

"Mama!" chided Augusta. "You must be crazy!"

"Mind your business, Lady Bunkley!" retorted old Adeline. "I'll give
away my bed if I choose, or my head. I tell you, this child is the
apple of my eye."

Nicholas and Ernest emerged from cover and conferred with each other in
the open.

"It's really very worrying, Nick," said Ernest.

"The child is literally _worming_ his way into Mama's _inmost_
affections. Dear knows how it will end!"

"Renny must be spoken to," said Nicholas. He spoke to Renny.

"It's very bad for my mother, to know that she is being constantly
prayed for. I must ask you to put a stop to it."

"The hell I will!" rejoined Renny. "It can't hurt her to know that Wake
is praying for her. It tickles her to death."

"That's exactly the danger," put in Ernest, lugubriously. "At her age
it might tickle her to death. She's too old to be prayed for."

"Ha, ha, ha!" shouted Renny.

Nicholas and Ernest came to the conclusion that Meg and Renny were
putting the child up to it. Wakefield's face continued to be a mask of
piety, but there was a secret little smile on his lips.

Finch, scarcely noticed by the family once their rejoicing over his
return had subsided, was only an observer of this drama. Tension was
relaxed for him, not increased. The strain of his examinations was
over. He had passed. Not gloriously--he had come near the tail end of
the candidates--but passed, nevertheless. It was as though an aching
tooth were drawn. He could look at his dog-eared textbooks without a
sinking at the heart.

It was beautiful to him to spend these hot summer days in the country.
He imagined with horror what they must be in New York. Yet there were
moments when he remembered with a strange regret the lights in the
harbour at night, the interesting foreign faces one met in the streets,
the kindness that had been shown him at Cory and Parsons'. He would
wonder vaguely if he had missed something by coming home with Uncle
Ernest, something he could never have again--a chance to get on in the
world, to be respected instead of sneered at or just tolerated. But
this was home, and here was music. Twice a week he went to the city
and had music lessons. Two hours daily he was allowed to practise on
the old square piano in the drawing-room. It was not enough, and he
would have made up the deficiency by some extra practice on the piano
at Vaughanlands but for an insurmountable shyness of Minny Ware. Her
presence in that house took all the virtue out of his playing. Her
laughter frightened him. He felt that she regarded him as a curiosity.
And there was something in her oddly coloured eyes, slanting above her
high cheek-bones, that disturbed him to the depths of his being. Her
eyes seemed to invite him while her mouth laughed at him. . . . No, he
could not practise in the house where Minny was.

On the occasions when she came to Jalna he felt certain that she was
making up to Renny, and he felt certain that Meg approved. Unbearable
if those two were to marry. He couldn't stand that laughing, slant-eyed
girl in the house. If only Renny and Alayne might be married! He was
deeply conscious of their love for each other. He would have liked to
talk with Alayne these days, of life and art, and the meaning of both.
In Alayne he felt a stability, a clarity, which he craved for himself,
but he could not go to see her because of Eden.

One day, when he was sent to the rectory on a message, Mr. Fennel
questioned him about his music. When Finch told him that he was
dissatisfied with the amount of practising he got, the rector offered
to let him practise on the church organ, and gave him a key so that he
might let himself into the church at any time. This was the beginning
of a new happiness. Miss Pink, the organist, finding him rather baffled
by the organ, offered to help him for a while each week after choir
practice. Soon he wrung from the old organ music so passionate that
Miss Pink quite tingled when she heard it, and wondered if it were
quite right to draw such sounds from the pipes of a church organ.

Finch went more and more frequently to the church to play. At first he
went only in the daytime, then was captivated by the mystery of playing
in the twilight, and at last, wandering along the road one night in the
moonlight, he was seized by the desire to play in the church by night.
He climbed the long flight of steps to the churchyard, passed through
the glimmering gravestones and in at the portal. Outside it was sultry.
Warm dust had lain thick on the road, but in here there was a coolness
as of death and the austere presence of God. Finch had never been
alone in the church at night before, and he felt the Presence there in
the moonlight as he never felt it when people sat in the pews and Mr.
Fennel moved about in the chancel.

Finch's belief in God seemed to be something that would not die. In
spite of the boyish blasphemies of his schoolmates, or the half-amused
tolerance of young men like Arthur Leigh, or the cynical references
to Christ as a curiosity which he had heard among the staff in the
publishing house, his belief in Him remained secure, terrible, and
strangely sweet, somewhere deep within him. Music had freed him from
the terror of God that had troubled his boyhood, but there in the
church he felt in his very fibre the power of the Almighty Presence.

On that first night he played little. He sat with his long hands on the
keys, searching his heart, trying to find out, if he could, what was
in it of good and evil. Now its depths seemed less turgid than usual.
He looked into it and saw a white light glimmering. God living in him.
Not to be beaten down. The white light, pointed like a flame, quivered,
drew upward. Sank, writhed as though in agony. He brooded over his
heart, trying to discover its secret.

Had this white flame anything to do with the pale shape that sometimes,
in moments of exaltation, emerged from his breast and floated for
a space, face down, close beside him, before it was dissolved into
the darkness? That pale shape he knew was himself, his innermost
essence, drawn from his body by some magnetic force. Did the
shape--himself--emerge from the body in search of something without
which it would never rest? If the white flame he saw in his heart was
God in him, was this white shape perhaps himself in God?

In this dark tangle of thought one thing was clear to him. He was
being searched for, as he was searching. Not by God, whose eye already
held him; not by Christ, who had one awful night shown him His pierced
hands; but by that Third Person. It was He who strove to speak in the
white flame. It was He who, at last, after Finch had sat long before
the organ in the moonlight, touched the boy's fingers on the keys;
and the night was full of music. The moonlight sang through the dim
aisles. Through the stained glass a lyric light swept singing across
the chancel. The organ, though Finch's fingers did not move, filled its
every gilded pipe with divine melody.

The white flame in his heart struggled, writhed in agony no more. It
filled his heart to overflowing. . . .

Afterward he wandered for a long while up and down the empty aisles.
He touched the walls with his hands. His hands were full of magic. He
raised his eyes to the memorial windows, in memory of his grandfather,
his father, and the mother of Meg and Renny. There was none in memory
of his own mother. Sometime, he thought, he would place one there. The
central figure would be that of a youth, with a distraught face and a
breast open to expose his heart, in which a pale light would shine. No
one but himself would understand the significance of the window, and he
would come, a mature man, and sit beneath it, remembering this night.

He went out into the churchyard and stood in the moonlight. Below,
on the road, he saw two men whose figures he knew. One was Chalk,
the blacksmith, reeling slightly, the other was old Noah Binns, a
labourer at Jalna. He descended the steps and followed them at a little
distance. Chalk talked without ceasing in an argumentative tone, until
he turned in waveringly at his own door next the smithy. Finch caught
up to Binns and walked abreast of him, where the blacksmith had been.
Binns plodded on, not seeming to notice the change of companion. Finch
wondered greatly what were the thoughts of an old man like Binns. Had
he ever experienced anything such as he had just experienced in the
church? He could play the fiddle a little. Had he ever felt music as
Finch had felt it to-night? Finch kept staring into his face, and at
last the old man turned and looked into his. He showed no astonishment,
only a flicker of pleasure that one had come to whom he could impart
information. He clumped along several paces in silence, choosing
carefully the words in which the portentous news should be phrased.
Then he said: "Bugs is here."

"Eh, what?" said Finch, startled.

"Tatie bugs," said Binns. "They've come."

"Ho!" said Finch. "What's the cure?"

"Paris green. Ain't no other."

They clumped on through the soft, moonlit dust.

At last they came to Binns's cottage on the outskirts of Evandale.
Binns opened his gate. He stood looking up at the full moon, then he
turned to Finch: "There's a curse on it all," he said.

Finch shivered. "Do you think so?" he asked.

"Yes," returned old Binns. "Every year bugs comes. And more bugs. It's
a curse on us for our sins." He went into his cottage.

Finch could not bear to go indoors. He kept to the road that led past
Jalna, through the village of Weddels', down to the lake. This was
four miles from the church. A rush of cool air rose from the lake.
It was stirring softly, as though in its sleep. It glittered in the
moonlight like a great monster, clothed in bright armour. As it slept,
white foam curled from its lips along the shore. Finch undressed and
ran out into the water. He plunged, he swam, he floated on its dark,
bright surface, his body white as foam. It seemed that he could not
sufficiently surrender himself to it. He wanted to be one with it, to
make it one with him. He felt that if he could completely surrender
himself to the lake he would be able to understand life. He rested on
its glimmering darkness, as on the rise and fall of a deep bosom. He
closed his eyes tightly, and saw the unnameable colour of life. It
swam in intermingling circles, wave upon wave, before his closed eyes.
He felt inexpressibly powerful and pure. He felt completely empty of
thought. The flame within him had consumed all thought, and left only
instinct, the instinct to become one with the lake. . . .

His eyelids lift. He stares into the glowing face of the moon,
fascinated. The lake speaks to him. It speaks with his own voice, for
it is he. He hears the words rise from its dark bosom, floating on the
golden air. "My beloved spake, and said unto me, Rise up, my love, my
fair one, and come away. For, lo, the winter is past, the rain is over
and gone; the flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of
birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land. . . .
Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away. O my dove, that art in the
clefts of the rock, in the secret places of the stairs, let me see thy
countenance, let me hear thy voice; for sweet is thy voice, and thy
countenance is comely."

Suddenly he turns over, swims strongly, plunging, wrestling with the
lake. It is no longer a part of him, but an antagonist. At last he is
tired out, and, wading to the shore, he lies down on the smooth sand
and watches the moon sink behind the treetops.

This was the first of many nights. More and more often he slipped
out of the house and went to the church to play. The church, which
on week-days seemed to belong to no one, on Sundays to the Whiteoak
family, at night belonged to him. He would play for hours, afterward
wandering about the fields or along the roads, and, on warm nights,
going to the lake. At night he was fearless and free. In the daytime,
depressed by lack of sleep and nervous excitement, he had an air of
slinking, of avoiding the others. Renny, noticing the shadows under his
eyes, told Piers to give him some work on the farm land to set him up.
For a terrible week he was subject to Piers, to his robust ragging,
while his back ached, his palms blistered, and he felt ready to drop
from fatigue. No music those nights. A dead-beat stumbling to bed.
Finch could see that the farm labourers, the stablemen, were vastly
amused by his weakness, his stupidity. They would let him struggle with
a task too heavy for him, without an offer of assistance, while they
tumbled over each other to wait on Piers. He could not understand it.
Things came to a head at the end of the week in a quarrel. Finch was
kicked. He retaliated with a blow from his bony fist on Piers's jaw.
The next day Finch had to stay in bed, and Renny ordered that he should
be allowed to go his way in peace. No use to trouble about him. He was
a problem that could not be solved.

The next night he resumed his playing in the church.

Returning home past midnight, he let himself in at the side door of
the house and was just passing his grandmother's room when her voice
called: "Who is there? Come here, please."

Finch hesitated. He had a mind to steal up the stairs without
answering. He did not want her to know that he had been out till that
hour. She might get to watching him. Questions might be asked. Still,
she might really need someone. Worst of all, she might be about to
stage another deathbed scene. That would be appalling.

As he hesitated, she called again, sharply: "Who's there? Come quickly,
please!"

Finch opened the door of her room and put his head inside. By the
night-light he could see her propped up on her two pillows, her
nightcap shadowing her eyes, her old mouth sunken. But her expression
was inquiring rather than anxious; her hands were clasped with
resignation on the coverlet.

He felt suddenly tender toward her. He asked: "Want a drink, Grannie
dear? Anything I can do?"

"Ha, it's you, is it, Finch? Well, well, you don't often visit me at
this hour. You don't often visit me at all. I like boys about me. Come
and sit you down. I want to be talked to."

He came to the bedside and looked down at her. She took his hand and
pulled him close, and closer till she could kiss him.

"Ha!" she said. "Nice smooth young cheek! Now sit here on the bed and
be a nice boy. You are a nice boy, aren't you?"

Finch gave his sheepish grin. "I'm afraid not, Gran."

"Not nice! Who says so?"

"I don't think anyone has ever called me a nice boy, Gran."

"I do. I do. I call you a very nice boy. If anybody says you're not a
nice boy he'll hear from me. I won't have it. I say you're a very nice
boy. You're a pretty boy, too, in this light, with your lock hanging
over your forehead and your eyes bright. You've got an underfed, aye,
a starved look. But you've got the Court nose, and that's something to
go on. Life will never down you altogether when you've got that nose.
You're not afraid of life, are you?" She peered up at him, with so
understanding a look in her deep old eyes that Finch was startled into
saying: "Yes, I am. I'm awfully afraid of it."

She reared her head from the pillow. "Afraid of life! What nonsense. A
Court afraid of life! I won't have it. You mustn't be afraid of life.
Take it by the horns. Take it by the tail. Grasp it where the hair is
short. Make it afraid of you. That's the way I did. Do you think I'd
have been here talking to you this night--if I'd been afraid of life?
Look at this nose of mine. These eyes. Do they look afraid of life? And
my mouth--when my teeth are in--it's not afraid either!"

He sat on the side of the bed, stroking her hand. "You're a wonderful
woman, Gran. You're twice the man I'll ever be."

"Don't say that. Give yourself time. Mother's milk hardly dry on your
lips yet. . . . How's that music? I hear you thumping away at it. Coming
on?"

"Pretty well, Gran." He stopped stroking her hand and held it tightly
in both of his. "There's nothing I like quite so much."

Her arched eyebrows went up. "Really! Well, well, I expect you get that
from your poor mother. She was always tra-la-la-ing about the house."

He closed his eyes, picturing his mother singing about that house. He
said, in a low voice: "I wish she had lived, Gran."

Her fingers tightened on his. "No, no. Don't say that. She wasn't fit
to cope with life. She was one of those people who are always better
dead--if you know what I mean."

"Yes, I know," he answered, and added to himself: "Like me!"

What was the boy thinking? She peered up at him. "Don't get ideas in
your head," she said, sternly.

"I'm no good, Gran."

Her voice became harsh, but her eyes were kind. "None of that now! What
have I been telling you? Piers has been knocking you around. I heard
about it."

He reddened. "I landed him a good one in the face."

"You did, eh? Good for you! H'm. . . . Boys fighting. Young animals. My
brothers used to fight, I can tell you. In County Meath. Take their
jackets off and at it! My father used to pull their hair for it. Ha!"

Her eyes closed, her hand relaxed. She fell into a doze.

Finch looked at her lying there. So near to death. A year or two at
the most, surely. And how full of courage she was! Courage and a good
digestion--she'd always had both. And in what good stead they had stood
her! Even in her sleep she was impressive--not pathetic, lying there,
toothless, with her nightcap over one eye. He tried to absorb some of
her courage into himself. He fancied it might be done. Here alone with
her at night in her own stronghold.

A gust came down the chimney and the night-light flickered. Boney,
perched on the head of the bed, stirred, and made a clucking noise in
his sleep. Finch thought it would be best for him to go, while she
slept. He was withdrawing his hand, but her fingers closed on it. She
opened her eyes.

"Ah," she muttered, "I was thinking. I didn't doze. Don't tell me I
dozed. I like a spell of thinking. It sets me straight."

"Yes, Gran, I know. But it's not good for you to lose so much sleep.
You'll be tired to-morrow."

"Not a bit of it. If I'm tired, I'll stop here and rest. It's the
family that makes me tired, fussing over me. Fuss, fuss, fuss, ever
since that night." She looked at him quizzically. "You remember the
night I nearly died?"

He nodded. He hoped she wasn't going to try anything like that again.

She saw anxiety in his eyes and said: "Don't worry. I shan't do that
again. It might be boy and wolf. They mightn't come running when I'd
really need them. But they fuss, Finch, because I have Patton out.
I like to see my lawyer. I keep thinking up little bequests for old
friends--Miss Pink--the Lacey girls--even old Hickson and other folk in
the village." A shrewd gleam came into her eyes. "I suppose you're not
worrying about who I'm going to leave my money to, eh?"

"God, no!"

"Don't curse! Too much God and hell and bloody about this house. I
won't have it."

"All right, Gran."

"I'm going to give you a present," she said.

"Oh, no, Gran, please don't!" he exclaimed, alarmed.

"Why not, I'd like to know?"

"They'd all say I'd been sucking up to you."

"Let me hear them! Send anyone that says that to me."

"Well, please let it be something small that I can hide."

"Hide my present! I won't have it! Stick it up! Put it in full view!
Invite the family to come and look at it! If anyone says you're sucking
up send him to me. I'll take the crimp out of him!"

"Very well, Gran," agreed Finch, resignedly.

Her old eyes roved about the room. "I'll tell you what I'm going
to give you. I'm going to give you that porcelain figure of Kuan
Yin--Chinese goddess. Very good. Good for you to have. She's not afraid
of life. Lets it pass over her. You're no fighter. You're musical.
Better let it pass over you. But don't let it frighten you. . . . Fetch
her over here, and mind you don't drop her!"

He had seen the porcelain figure all his life, standing on the
mantelpiece, amid a strange medley of bowls, vases, and boxes--Eastern
and English, ancient and Victorian. It was so crowded on the
mantelpiece that he felt reasonably hopeful that the little goddess
would not be missed by the family. He lifted her gently from the spot
where she had stood for more than seventy years, and carried her to his
grandmother. The old hands stretched out toward the delicate figure,
closed round it eagerly.

"If you could see the place," she said, "where I got this! Another
life. Another life. Most of the English out there were down on the
East, down on the Eastern religions--but I wasn't. They understand a
lot that we don't. Western religions are flibbertigibbet beside Eastern
religions. Don't tell that I said that! Here, take her"--she put the
goddess into his hands--"something for you to remember me by."

"As though I could ever forget you, Gran!"

She smiled mockingly, and for a flash he saw, toothless and all as she
was, Eden's smile on her face. "Well, time will tell. . . . Look in her
face! What do you see?"

He knitted his brow, his face close to the porcelain oval of the
statuette's. "Something very deep and calm. . . . I--I can't quite make
it out."

"Well, well, take it along. You'll understand some day. Good-night,
child, I'm tired. . . . Wait--do you often prowl about like this?"

"Sometimes."

"What do you do?"

"You won't tell on me. Gran?"

"Come, come, I'm over a hundred. Even a woman can learn to keep her
mouth shut in that time!"

He said, almost in a whisper: "I go to the church, and play the organ."

She showed no surprise. "And you're not afraid alone there at night,
with all the dead folk outside?"

"No."

"Ah, you're a queer boy! Music, always music with you. Well, a church
is an interesting place once you get the parson and the people out of
it. Real music can get in then, and a real God! Nothing flibbertigibbet
about religion then."

She was very tired; her voice had become a mumble; but she made a
last effort and said: "I like your coming in like this. My best sleep
is over by midnight--just catnaps after that. Night's very long. I
want you, every time you've been at the church, to come for a chat
afterward. Does me good. Come right in--I'll be awake." And as she said
the word "awake" she fell asleep.

And so these strange night meetings began. Night after night, week
after week, Finch crept out of the house, had his hours of happiness,
of faunlike freedom, and crept in again. He never failed to go to her
room, and always she was awake, waiting for him. Her eyes, under their
rust-red brows, fixed on him eagerly, as he glided in and drew the
door to behind him. He looked forward to the meetings as much as she.
Bizarre assignations they were, between the centenarian and a boy of
nineteen. Like secret lovers, they avoided each other in the presence
of the family, fearing that some intimate look, some secret smile,
might betray their intimacy. Finch came to know her, to understand the
depths of her, sometimes mordant, sometimes touchingly tender, as he
was sure no other member of the household understood her. She no longer
seemed old to him, but ageless, like the Chinese porcelain goddess she
had given him. Sometimes, in the beam of the night-light, propped in
her richly painted bed, she looked beautiful to him, a rugged reclining
statue carved by some sculptor who expressed in it his dreams of an
indomitable soul.

One night in August, she startled him by asking abruptly: "Well, boy,
whom shall I leave my money to?"

"Oh, don't ask me that, Gran! That's for you to say."

"I know. But, just supposing you were in my place, whom would you leave
it to? Remember, it's going in one lump sum to somebody. I won't have
my bit of money cut up like a cake! Right or wrong, my mind's fixed on
that. Now then, Finch, who's to get it, eh?"

"I say--I can't possibly----"

"Nonsense! Do as I tell you. Name the one you think is most deserving.
Don't pretend you haven't thought about it. I won't have it."

"Well," he answered with sudden determination and even a look of
severity on his lips, "I should say, since you ask me, that there's
only one person who really deserves to have it!"

"Yes? Which one?"

"Renny!"

"Renny, eh? That's because he's your favourite."

"Not at all. I was putting myself in your place, as you told me to."

"Then because he's head of the house?"

"No, not that. If you can't see, I can't tell you."

"Of course you can. Why?"

"Very well. You'll be annoyed with me, though."

"No, I shan't. Out with it!"

"Well, Renny's always hard up. He's brought up the lot of us. He's
had Uncle Nick and Uncle Ernie living here for years. Ever since I
can remember. You've always made your home with him. He likes having
you. It wouldn't be like home to him if you weren't here. And he likes
having the uncles and Aunt Augusta. But, just the same, he's at his
wits' end sometimes to know where to dig up money enough to pay wages,
and butcher bills, and the vet, and all that."

She was regarding him steadfastly. "You can be plain-spoken," she said,
"when you like. You've got a good forthright way with you, too. I can't
see eye to eye with you on every point, but I'm glad to know what you
think. And I'm not angry with you." She began to talk of something else.

She did not bring up the subject again, but talked to him of her past,
recalling the days when she and her Philip were young together, and
even went back to the days of her girlhood in County Meath. Finch
learned to pour out to her his thoughts, as he had never done to anyone
before, and probably never would again with such unrestraint. When at
last he would steal up to his room, something of her would be still
with him in the figure of Kuan Yin, standing on his desk.




XVIII

DEATH OF A CENTENARIAN


Old Adeline was being dressed for tea by Augusta. That is, she was
having her hair tidied, her best cap with the purple ribbon rosettes
put on, and her box of rings displayed before her. She had felt a
little tired when she waked from her afternoon nap, so she had had
Augusta put a peppermint drop into her mouth, and she mumbled this as
she looked over her rings. She chose them with special care, selecting
those of brilliant contrasting stones, for the rector was to be
present, and she knew that he disapproved of such a show of jewels on
such ancient hands, or indeed on any hands.

Augusta stood patiently holding the box, looking down her long nose
at her mother's still longer one curved in pleasurable speculation.
Adeline chose a ring--a fine ruby, set round with smaller ones. She was
a long time finding the finger on which she wore it, and putting it on.
The box trembled slightly in Augusta's hand. Her mother bent forward,
fumbled, discovered her emerald ring, and put it on. Again she bent
forward, dribbling a little from the peppermint on to the velvet lining
of the box.

"Mama," said Augusta, "must you do that?"

"Do what?"

"Dribble on the velvet."

"I'm not dribbling. Let me be." But she fumbled for her handkerchief
and wiped her lips.

She put on six rings, a cameo bracelet, and a brooch containing her
Philip's hair. She turned then to the mirror, adjusted her cap, and
scrutinized her face with one eyebrow cocked.

"You look nice and bright this afternoon, Mama," said Augusta.

The old lady shot an upward glance at her. "I wish I could say the same
for you," she returned.

Augusta drew back her head with an offended air and surveyed her own
reflection. Really, Mama was very short with one! It took a lot of
patience. . . .

Adeline stretched out her ringed hand and took the velvet-framed
photograph of her Philip from the dresser. She looked at it for some
moments, kissed it, and set it in its place.

"What a handsome man Papa was!" said Augusta, and surreptitiously wiped
the picture with her handkerchief.

"He was. Put the picture down."

"Indeed, all our men are good-looking!"

"Aye, we're a shapely lot. I'm ready. Fetch Nick and Ernest."

Her sons were soon at her side, Nicholas walking less heavily than
usual because his gout was not troubling him. They almost lifted her
from her chair. She took an arm of each and said over her shoulder to
Augusta, "Bring the bird along! Poor Boney, he's dull to-day."

The little procession moved along the hall so slowly that it seemed to
Augusta, carrying the bird on his perch, that they were only marking
time. But they were really moving, and at last had shuffled their way
to where the light fell full upon them through the coloured glass
window.

"Rest here a bit," said their mother. "I'm tired." She was tall, but
looked a short woman between her sons, she was so bent.

She glanced up at the window. "I like to see the light coming through
there," she observed. "It's very pretty."

They were in the drawing-room, and she was established in her own
chair, with Boney on his perch beside her. Mr. Fennel rose, but he gave
her time to recover her breath before coming forward to take her hand
and inquire after her health.

"I'm quite well," she said. "Don't know what it is to have any pain,
except a little wind on the stomach. But Boney's dull. He hasn't
spoken a word for weeks. D'ye think he's getting old?"

Mr. Fennel replied, guardedly: "Well, he may be getting a little old."

Nicholas said: "He's moulting. He drops his feathers all over the
place."

She asked Mr. Fennel about a number of his parishioners, but she had
difficulty in remembering their names. Augusta, who had begun to pour
tea, said in an undertone to Ernest: "I seem to notice a difference in
Mama. Her memory . . . and what a long time she was coming down the hall!
Do you notice anything?"

Ernest looked toward his mother anxiously. "She did seem to lean
heavily. Perhaps a little more than usual. But she ate a very good
dinner. A very good dinner indeed."

Finch had come up behind them. He overheard the words, and thought he
knew the reason why his grandmother showed a certain languor in the
daytime. It would be strange if she did not, he thought, remembering
her vigour, her clear-headedness of the night before. He had a guilty
feeling that he was perhaps sapping her vitality by his midnight
visits. . . . He came to his aunt's side.

Augusta handed him a cup of tea. "Take this to my mother," she said,
"and then come back for the crumpets and honey."

Crumpets and honey! Finch's mouth watered. He wondered if he should
ever get over this feeling of being ravenous. And yet he was so thin!
He felt discouraged about himself. He wished his aunt would not send
him about with tea. He invariably slopped it.

Old Adeline watched him with pursed mouth as he drew an occasional
table to her side and set her tea on it. Her greed equalled his own.
Her hands, trembling a little, poured what tea had slopped into the
saucer back into the cup, raised the cup to her lips, and drank
gustily. The rings flashed on her shapely hands. Mr. Fennel marked them
with disapproval.

His voice came muffled through his curly brown beard. "Well, Finch, and
how goes the practising?"

"Very well, thank you, sir," mumbled Finch.

"The other night I was in my garden quite late. About eleven o'clock. I
was surprised to hear the organ. You are quite welcome to use it in the
daytime, you know." Gentle reproof was in his tone.

"I rather like the practising at night, sir, if you don't mind."

His eyes moved from Mr. Fennel's beard to his grandmother's face. They
exchanged a look of deep complicity like two conspirators. Her gaze was
clear. The tea had revived her.

She said, setting down the empty cup: "I like the boy to practise at
night. Night's the time for music--for love. . . . Afternoon's the time
for tea--sociability. . . . Morning's the time for--er--tea. Another cup,
Finch. Is there nothing to eat?"

Pheasant appeared with tea for Mr. Fennel, and Piers with the crumpets
and honey. He was in white flannels.

"Ah," observed the rector, "it is nice to see you looking cool, Piers!
You looked pretty hot the last time I saw you."

"Yes, that was a hot spell. Things are easing off now. Late August, you
know. The crops are in. Small fruit over. Apples not begun."

"But there is always the stock, eh?"

"Yes, always the stock. I don't get much time for loafing. But this is
Pheasant's birthday, and I'm celebrating it by a day off and a clean
suit."

"Her birthday, is it?" said Mr. Fennel. "I wish I had known! I would
have brought some offering, if only a nosegay."

Grandmother blinked rapidly; she smacked the honey on her lips.
"Pheasant's birthday, eh? Why wasn't I told? Why was it kept from me? I
like birthdays. I'd have given her a present." She turned toward Meg,
Maurice, and Renny, who had just come into the room. "Did you know, my
dears, that we're having a birthday party? It's Pheasant's birthday,
and we're all dressed up for it. Look at the rector! Look at Piers!
Look at me! Aren't we trig?" She was all alive. She grinned at them,
with the malicious and flashing grin for which the Courts had been
famous.

Meg approached her and dropped a kiss on her forehead. "I had heard
nothing of any birthday," she said, coldly.

"Maurice," exclaimed Grandmother, "haven't you brought a birthday
present for your daughter? Are you going to neglect old Baby just
because new Baby's on the scene?"

Maurice slouched forward somewhat sheepishly. "I must do something
about it," he said.

Pheasant's little face was scarlet with embarrassment. She surveyed the
family with the startled, timid gaze of a young wild thing.

"She's blessed," said Piers glumly, "for she expects nothing."

Grandmother absorbed this saying. "H'm," she said. She swallowed a
piece of crumpet, and then added: "It's the unexpected that happens.
She's going to get a present. And from me!"

A chill of apprehension fell on the company.

Mr. Fennel, feeling it, observed: "There's nothing so pleasant, I
think, as an unexpected present." But even to himself his words sounded
lame. He could utter no ghostly comfort that would calm these troubled
waters.

Old Adeline finished her crumpet with dispatch, drank another cup of
tea. Then she demanded: "How old are you?"

"Twenty." Despite Renny's encouraging look, the word came in a whisper.

"Twenty, eh? Sweet and twenty! I was twenty once--ha! 'Come and kiss
me, sweet and twenty! Youth's a stuff will not'--what was it? My old
memory's gone. Come here, my dear!"

Pheasant went to her, trembling.

Adeline spread out her hands, palms down, and examined her rings.
Meg, with unaccustomed agility, sprang to her side. "Granny, Granny,"
she breathed, "don't do anything rash! A bit of lace. A little money
to buy herself something pretty. But not--not----" She caught her
grandmother's hands in hers and drew the jewelled fingers against her
own plump breast.

"Mama," said Ernest, "this excitement is very bad for you."

"Bring the backgammon board," said Nicholas. "She likes a game of
backgammon after tea."

"I've not finished my tea," rapped out his mother. "I want cake. Not
that white wishy-washy cake. Fruit cake."

Never was fruit cake so swiftly, so passionately, produced. She
selected a piece, laid it on her plate, and, as though there had been
no interruption, again spread out her hands, palms downward.

She shot a glance at Meg, kneeling by her side.

"Get up, Meggie," she said, brusquely but not unkindly. "You've nothing
to be humble about." But Meg still knelt, her hands to her breast, her
eyes jealously guarding the rings.

With a decisive movement, Adeline removed from the third finger of her
right hand the ring of glowing rubies. She took the girl's thin brown
hand in hers and put it on her middle finger. She looked up into her
face, smiling. "Give you colour, my dear. Give you heart. Nothing like
a ruby. . . . I'll try some of that pale cake now."

Pheasant stood transfixed, reverently holding the brilliantly decorated
hand in the hand that wore only her wedding ring. Her eyes were starry.

"Oh," she half-whispered, "how lovely! What beauties! Oh, you darling
Gran!"

Piers was at her side, sturdy, defiant, all aglow.

"Splendid!" exclaimed Renny. "Let me see how it looks on your little
paw!"

But Wakefield intervened, took her hand, and fluttered his long lashes,
examining the stones. He said, judicially: "You've got a fine ring
there, my girl. I hope you take care of it."

Meg still knelt, her eyes damp, her hands clenched. "It's unjust," she
gasped. "It's unfair to me and my child!"

Renny put his hands under her arms and heaved her to her feet. He
whispered vehemently into her ear: "Don't make a show of yourself,
Meggie! Remember, Mr. Fennel's here." Inwardly he thanked God for the
presence of Mr. Fennel. It had certainly saved them from a terrible
scene. She relapsed against his shoulder.

The rector himself was wishing that the tea party had been more placid.
He observed, pulling at his beard: "I always think that an unexpected
present is the most delightful." He could not resist adding: "And
jewels are so beautiful on young hands."

Adeline appeared not to have heard. She finished her cake, eating the
moist crumbs from her saucer with a spoon. But after a little she
extended her bereft right hand toward him, with a flourish, and said:
"You don't think they suit my old hands, eh?"

He knew how to mollify her.

"I have never seen hands," he said, "better shaped for the wearing of
rings."

She clasped them on her stomach and surveyed the scene before her.
There was trouble in the air, and she had brewed it. She had, directly
or indirectly, made almost every being in the room. The pattern of
the room was centrifugal, and she was the arch designer, the absolute
centre. She felt complacent, firm, and strong. She fixed her eyes on
Renny, and gave him a waggish nod. She knew he did not mind young
Pheasant's having the ruby. He grinned back at her. He had Wakefield on
his knee.

Adeline kept on wagging her head at Renny, but now with reproof. "Too
old to be nursed," she said.

"I know," replied Renny, "but he will clamber over me." He pushed
Wakefield from his knee.

"Poor darling! He looks like a young robin pushed from the nest! Tell
me, did you pray for me last night?"

"Yes, my grandmother."

She looked triumphantly about her. "He never misses a night! And what
did you pray?"

Wakefield drew up his eyebrows. "I prayed--let's see--I prayed"--his
eyes lit on Pheasant's hand--"that you would give a present to-day,
and--get one!"

She struck the arm of her chair with her palm. "Ha! Listen to that!
A present! Now who would give me a present? No, no, I must do all
the giving. Till the last. Then you can make me a present of a fine
funeral. Ha!"

Nicholas growled to Ernest: "I shall have to cuff that young rascal
before he'll stop this mischief of praying."

"It's very depressing for Mama," said Ernest, gloomily. "It must be
stopped."

"A game of backgammon will divert her."

Ernest looked dubious. "The last time I played with her she wasn't very
clear about it."

"Never mind. She must be diverted. She's in the mood to give presents
all round. I don't know what has come over her."

He found the backgammon board, and the velvet bag containing the
dice and dice-boxes. He said to Wakefield, hovering near: "Ask your
Grandmama and the parson if they will play backgammon. Place the small
table between them. I shall cuff you if you persist in this praying
business."

"Yes, Uncle Nick."

The little boy flew away, held whispered conversations, flew back.

"Uncle Nick!"

"Yes."

"I've placed the table, and the parson, and Gran. They said they were
nothing loath."

Finch said: "He made that last up. They didn't put it in those fool
words."

"You are odious, Finch," retorted Wake. He adored his Aunt Augusta's
vocabulary and had no self-consciousness in employing it.

The opponents faced each other. Bearded, untidy Mr. Fennel; gorgeous,
ancient Adeline.

"I'm black," she said.

Very well, he was white. The men were placed on the tables. The dice
were thrown.

"Deuce!" from the parson.

"Trey!" from Grandmother.

They made their moves. The dice rattled. The emeralds on her left hand
winked.

"Doublets!"

"Quatre!" She pronounced it "cater."

The dice were shaken; the players pondered; the men were moved.

"Deuce!"

"Trey!"

"Cinq!"

"Ace!"

The game proceeded. Her head was as clear as ever it had been. Her eyes
were bright. She fascinated Finch. He stood behind Mr. Fennel's chair
watching her. Sometimes their eyes met, and always there was that flash
between them, that complicity of conspirators. "Afraid of life!" her
eyes said. "A Court afraid? Watch me!"

He watched her. He could not look away. Across the chasm of more than
eighty years their souls met, touched fingers, touched lips.

One by one she got her men home. One by one she took them from the
board. She had won the first game!

"A hit!" she cried, striking her hands together. "A hit!"

Two groups had formed in the room, away from the players and Finch,
who stood behind the rector, and Wakefield perched on the arm of his
grandmother's chair. One of these groups consisted of Meg, Nicholas,
Ernest, and Augusta, who in undertones discussed what portent the
gift of the ring might have. The other group was composed of Piers,
Pheasant, Maurice, and Renny, who talked rather loudly, in an effort to
appear unconscious that there was trouble in the air. As Grandmother
cried, "A hit!" the faces of the members of both groups turned toward
her, and they clapped their hands, applauding her.

"Well played, my grandmother!" cried Wakefield, patting her on the back.

Finch's eyes sought hers, found them, held them. She felt suddenly
tired. She was very tired, but very happy.

"You have me badly beaten," said Mr. Fennel, stroking his beard.

"Ah, yes. I'm in good form to-day," she mumbled. "Very good
form--to-night."

Boney shuffled on his perch, shook himself, gaped. Two bright feathers
were loosened, and sank slowly to the floor.

Mr. Fennel stared at him.

"He doesn't talk now, eh?"

"No," she answered, craning her neck so as to see the bird. "He doesn't
talk at all. Poor Boney! Poor old Boney! Doesn't talk at all. Doesn't
say curse words. Doesn't say love words. Silent as the grave, hey,
Boney?"

"Shall we have another game?" asked Mr. Fennel.

The two groups had resumed their preoccupations. Renny's laugh broke
out sharply.

"Another game? Yes, I'd like another game. I'm white!"

Mr. Fennel and Wakefield exchanged glances.

"But, Gran," cried Wakefield, "you were black before!"

"Black! Not a bit of it, I'm white."

Mr. Fennel changed the men, giving her the white ones.

The men were placed. The dice shaken. The game proceeded.

"Deuce!"

"Cinq!"

"The Doublet!"

But her head was no longer clear. She fumbled for her men, and could
not have got through the game had not Wakefield, leaning on her
shoulder, helped her with the play.

She was beaten, but she did not know it.

"A double game!" she said, triumphantly. "A double game! Gammon!"

The rector smiled indulgently.

Finch felt himself sinking beneath a cloud.

"But, my grandmother," cried Wakefield, "you're beaten! Don't you know
when you're beaten?"

"Me beaten? Not a bit of it. I won't have it! I've won." She was
staring straight ahead of her into Finch's eyes. "Gammon!"

Mr. Fennel began gathering up the men.

"Another game?" he asked. "You may make it backgammon, this time."

She did not answer.

Wakefield nudged her shoulder. "Another game, Gran?"

"I'm afraid she's a little tired," said Mr. Fennel.

But she was still smiling, looking straight into Finch's eyes. Her eyes
were saying to him: "A Court afraid? A Court afraid of death? Gammon!"

Again Boney shook himself, and another feather fluttered to the floor.

Nicholas had risen to his feet, and was looking across the room.
Suddenly he shouted: "Mother!"

They were all on their feet, except Wakefield, who still hung on her
shoulder, realizing nothing.

Her head sank.

Finch watched them as they gathered about her, raising her head,
holding smelling-salts to her long nose, forcing brandy between her
blanched lips, wringing their hands, being frightened, half-demented.
He had seen her spirit, staunch and stubborn, leave the body. He knew
it was futile to try to recall it.

Boney watched the scene with one detached yellow eye, apparently
unmoved, but when they carried her to the sofa and laid her on it, he
left his perch with a distracted tumble of wings and fluttered on to
her prostrate body, screaming: "Nick! Nick! Nick!" It was the first
time he had ever been known to utter a word of English.

He was with difficulty captured and taken to her bedroom, where he took
his position on the head of the bed and relapsed into stoical silence.

Piers telephoned for the doctor. Meg was sobbing in Augusta's arms.
Ernest sat beside the table, his head buried in his arms across the
backgammon board. Pheasant had flown upstairs to her bedroom to bedew
the ruby ring with tears. Nicholas drew a chair to his mother's side
and sat with his shoulders bent, staring blankly into her face. The
rector dropped his chin into his beard and murmured a short prayer over
the body, stretched out so straight that the feet, in black slippers,
projected over the end of the sofa. Again she looked a tall woman.

Mr. Fennel was about to close the eyes. The heavy lids resisted. Renny
caught his arm.

"Don't close her eyes! I won't believe she's dead! She can't have died
like that!"

He put his hand inside her tea-gown and felt her heart. It was still.
He brought a mirror and held it before her nostrils. It bright surface
was undimmed. But he would not have her eyes closed.

Soon Dr. Drummond came and pronounced her dead, and himself closed her
eyelids. He was an old man, and had brought all the younger Whiteoaks,
from Meg down, into the world.

Ernest rose then and came to her, trembling. He stroked her face, and
kissed it, sobbing: "Mama . . . Mama." . . . But Nicholas sat motionless as
a statue.

Renny could not stay in that house. He would go to Fiddler's Hut and
tell Eden and Alayne what had happened. He flung out through the side
door into the grassy yard where the old brick oven stood. A waddling
procession of ducks cocked their roguish eyes at him; Mrs. Wragge and
the kitchenmaid peered after him with curiosity from a basement window.
Galloping colts in the paddock came whimpering to the fence as he
hurried past. Red and white cows in the pasture, heavy-uddered, turned
their tolerant gaze after him. He entered the orchard. The days were
already shortening. The red sun showed between the black trunks of
the trees. He noticed that all colours were intensified into a sombre
brightness. Little rosy mushrooms were rosetted here and there in the
lush grass. The orchard fence was smothered in goldenrod.

Between the orchard and the "old orchard" lay a field of potatoes. Old
Binns was digging them and laying them in shallow ridges on the black
loam. In that long day he had done perhaps a half-day's work. He leaned
on his spade and shouted: "Hi! Mr. Whiteoak! Hi!"

Renny stopped.

"Yes?"

"What do you s'pose be here now?"

"What?"

"Blight. Blight be here."

Renny threw up his hand.

"Put down that spade!" he shouted. "No more work here to-day!" He
strode on.

No spade should stir the surface of the land she had loved. That land
must lie quiet, mourning for her to-day, and to-morrow, and the next
day.

Old Binns watched Renny disappear into the glowing density of the old
orchard. He was aghast. Never in his life before had he had such an
order. He must be going to lose his job! He thrust his spade deep into
the soil and turned up three potatoes. Feverishly he thrust and grubbed
for the potatoes. Never before had he worked with such vehemence. He
kept muttering angrily to himself: "Blight be here, anyhow. Dang him!"

The old orchard, unpruned since a decade, displayed a fantastic
exuberance of foliage. The branches of the apple-trees, which later
would be weighted with ripe fruit, never to be garnered, swept to the
ground. Among them grew clumps of green hazel and sumach, with its
rose-red plumes. Creepers of various kinds had caught at the lowest
boughs and clambered up them, as though striving to drag the trees
themselves to the earth. A discarded mowing machine was hidden beneath
a rank growth of wild grapevine, its presence never to be guessed.
As Renny moved along the path, wild rabbits bounded from his way, and
heavy moths sometimes blundered against his face. As he neared the
cottage he heard the spring talking secretly among the grasses.

Doors and windows of the cottage stood open, but there was no sound of
voices. He went to the front door and looked in. Alayne was writing at
a table, and Eden lay on the sofa, a cigarette between his lips and
a book drooping from his hand. His face and body had filled out, his
cheeks were brown, but Alayne looked pale and more slender. They had
not heard Renny come up, and to him the room and its occupants, in the
intense sunset glow, appeared unreal as in a tableau. It seemed unreal,
fantastic, that they should be sitting unmoved, aware of nothing.

He made some incoherent sound, and, as though a spell had been broken,
they both looked up. The pallor of Alayne's cheeks, which had seemed
intensified by the reddish light, appeared now to be touched into
flame. Eden smiled, and his smile froze. He started up.

"Renny! What's the matter?"

Alayne too rose.

He tried to speak to them, but no words would come. He stood silent,
leaning against the doorpost, his face contorted into a forbidding
grimace.

The two stood petrified, until Eden got out: "For Christ's sake, Renny,
speak to us! Tell us what's wrong?"

He looked at them, filled with a strange antagonism for them, and then
said, harshly: "She's dead. . . . Gran. . . . I thought I should let you
know."

Avoiding their eyes, his face still contorted, he turned hastily down
the path and disappeared into the pine woods.




XIX

JALNA IN MOURNING


There she lies, the old woman, in her coffin; wreaths, sprays, crosses
of sweet flowers, all about her. She has been bathed, embalmed, dressed
in her best black velvet dress. Her hands are crossed on her breast,
but they have left her only her wedding ring, worn to a mere thread of
gold. If one could see inside the ring, one might decipher the words
"Adeline, Philip, 1848." She wears her best lace cap that has long been
put by in a lavender-scented box awaiting this occasion. On a silver
plate on the coffin is engraved the date of her birth, her death, her
name, including her Christian names--Adeline Honora Bridget. All has
been done for her that it is possible to do. All is arranged, perfected
for her burial. She has been on this earth a long time, but now she is
to be put into it for an infinitely longer period.

There is an ineffable air of dignity, of pomp, about her. She looks
like an ancient empress, with that faintly contemptuous smile on her
lips, that carven nose. She might have lived as the centre of court
intrigues, instead of having passed three-quarters of her life in this
backwater, with only her family to lord it over. Ireland and India, two
countries the names of which begin with "I," have left their mark on
her. Her life has been lived, dominated by "I."

At her head and her feet stand tall silver candelabra bearing lighted
candles. Finch placed them there, when he stole downstairs to his last
meeting with her, after the rest were all in bed. His gaunt young face
was that of a mystic as he glided about her, touching each waxen column
into flame.

Augusta, in the morning, ordered them to be taken away, exclaiming
against such popish practices, but Nicholas said: "Let them be. Pomp
suits her."

By ones, twos, and threes her descendants came to mourn over their
progenitress. Nicholas remained by her side all day, refusing food,
his leonine head dishevelled, one end of his grey moustache caught in
his teeth. Ernest wandered in and out, tall and elegant in his black
frock coat. He escorted visitors to the casket, drawing their attention
to the chiselled features, the beautiful expression of his Mama. He
whispered the word a great many times to himself those days, for soon
she would be gone, and he would have no Mama. All the sarcastic things
she had ever said to him were obliterated from his mind, and only the
times when she had been kind remained. He remembered how she had been
dependent on him for certain things, and tears ran down his cheeks.

It was not so with Augusta. The contemptuous smile on her mother's
lips seemed to be especially directed toward her. Every now and again
some humorous jibe from those lips would crop up in her mind. She kept
remembering the last of them: how, when she had been dressing her
for the last tea, she had remarked: "You look nice and bright this
afternoon, Mama," and her mother had returned: "I wish I could say the
same for you!"

Augusta recalled happenings of her childhood. They were clearer to
her than the events of the past year. She remembered the time of her
marriage, when on the eve of her wedding day her mother had said to
her: "I don't think I need give you any advice, my dear. Buckley's not
much past your shoulder. You needn't be afraid of him!" Mama could
remember his name quite easily then; but once he had come into the
title, it had always been Bunkley or Bilgeley or Bunkum!

Augusta reproached herself for recalling such little frictions at
a time like this. Her sorrow was real, but her memory was very
uncomfortable. . . . She led Wakefield to the coffin. It was his first
sight of death. She said, in impressive tones: "Look at her long,
Wakefield. Try to impress her face on your mind. She was a very
wonderful woman."

The little boy was awestruck. He felt dizzy from the heavy scent of
flowers. He gazed long at the calm face, at the shapely old hands
folded in resignation.

"But, Aunt," he exclaimed, his clear treble sounding incongruous in
that room, "she looks _so_ nice! Isn't it a _pity_ to bury her?"

Her old friends--there were not many left--agreed that they had never
seen a corpse look so natural. Down in the basement Rags declared to
his wife and the kitchenmaid, and a little gathering of workers from
the stables, the farm, and Vaughanlands: "Bless me, if the old lady
don't look more natural than 'erself!"

What of Renny? Like one of the horses among which he spent so much of
his time, his feeling toward death was one of almost animal alarm. He
drew away, shivering, from the sinister presence that shadowed the
house.

After one look at the face of the dead woman, he left the room and
did not return to it until the hour of the funeral. Death, as he had
seen it during the War, had not affected him greatly. He had been
overseas when his father and his stepmother had died. This experience
was to him terrifying. He left the arrangements for the funeral to
Augusta, Ernest, and Piers. In one matter only he took an interest,
the choosing of the pallbearers. These, he decided, must be the four
eldest grandsons. Eden expostulated, he was not strong enough yet to
undertake such a thing. Alayne thought, and said with some vehemence,
that it would be wrong, impossible for him to tax his strength so. But
Renny was adamant. Eden looked to him almost as well as ever; he should
and must take his place among his brothers to bear the body of their
grandmother to her grave. He went to Fiddler's Hut, and the three sat
about the table talking excitedly, his red hair in an unkempt crest,
his lean narrow face flushed, the sharp lines of his face set against
opposition. Eden gave in.

The day of the funeral broke infinitely lovely. There had been a heavy
dew, which lay like a sparkling veil across the lawn. It was a still
day, except for the chatter of small birds in the evergreens along
the drive. There was a tender aloofness about the day, as though
summer hesitated, drawing a deep breath before departing. Old Adeline
had loved such a day as this. If she had been living, she would have
assuredly taken one of her little walks as far as the gate, supported
by her sons. But instead she was to take her last ride. During her
lifetime she had consistently refused to get into a motor-car, but she
had asked to have a motor hearse at her funeral. "I like to think,"
she had said, "that I'll have a ride behind a motor instead of a horse
before I'm laid away. No one can say that I was old-fashioned."

Wakefield was awed to see all the family, even to Finch, in deep black.
He would have liked a black suit himself, but he had to be content
with the black band that Meggie stitched on the sleeve of his grey
Norfolk jacket. He felt very conscious of this badge of mourning, very
dignified and aloof. He greatly wished that he were big enough to be
one of the pallbearers.

The funeral cortge was almost ready to leave the door. The four who
were to carry the coffin stood shoulder to shoulder, Eden and Piers
near enough to hear each other breathing! Renny had had trouble with
Piers before he could persuade him to be, even for so short a time,
near Eden. But he had overridden them both. There they were beside him,
and he was head of the clan. Short prayers were said by Mr. Fennel. The
pallbearers raised the coffin to their shoulders.

The hearse moved slowly from the door, followed by a car in which
rode the four brothers. This in turn was followed by one in which
were Augusta, Nicholas, Ernest, and Mr. Fennel. Next the Vaughans and
Wakefield. Pheasant had made an excuse of some baby ailment of Mooey's
to remain at home. She peeped through a curtain above and saw Eden's
fair head shining among his brothers', and she made little moaning
sounds, remembering her short and sultry passion for him. It had nearly
wrecked her life and Piers's, but tragedy had been averted--she was
safe, safe with Piers and her baby!

Alayne also had stayed behind. She had gone for one long look at that
aloof old face, which indeed had always looked kindly on her. Shrewd as
old Adeline had been, Alayne felt sure that she had never guessed that
she had ceased to love Eden, any more than she could be convinced that
she was not an American heiress.

Alayne had left the house in a mood of deep depression. She had felt,
not the aversion of a sensitive animal from the presence of death, as
Renny had, but a profound shrinking from the mourning of the inanimate
Jalna. It had seemed to her that the solid walls had drawn nearer to
enclose that body, that the ceiling had lowered to shelter it, that the
very doors had narrowed to delay its passage from thence. . . . Leaving,
she had looked back at it from the edge of the lawn, and it seemed to
her that the whole house had shrunken into itself with grief!

After the chief mourners there followed the friends of the family, and
many people from the surrounding villages and countryside in motors and
old-fashioned buggies, a long procession. Here was the funeral of one
whom the oldest of them could remember, from their earliest days, as a
married woman. A landmark was gone. Not a tree, not the steeple of a
church, but a living, dominating being! Many of the mourners had not
seen her for years, but her tall form, her rust-red hair, her piercing
brown eyes, were impressed on their memories for ever. Every now and
again some story of her temper or her idiosyncrasies would float about.
To-day it was remembered how until the last year she had never--or
almost never--missed a morning service in the grey stone church built
by Captain Whiteoak, driving there in her shabby phaeton behind the
two stout bays. And, though she might have been close-fisted enough in
some ways, she had each Christmas given a present to every child in
her own village of Evandale, built on what was once part of the estate
of Jalna. In her last years she had depended on Ernest to buy these
presents for her. Next Christmas the children would miss that.

So, though she had been almost as immovable as a tree, her reputation
grew, year by year, as girth is added to a tree. Those who had come
to pay respect to her remains felt that they were taking part in a
momentous and climacteric occasion.

To stout Hodge, who had driven her phaeton for the past thirty years,
her death had been a tragedy. The meaning of his life was gone.
No longer would he groom the bays--each nearing thirty--to satin
sleekness, on a Sunday morning, polishing their jangling harness to a
bright finish. No longer wash down the creaking wheels of the phaeton
or put on his tight coachman's coat with the velvet collar. His dignity
was gone. He was nothing but an ageing stableman.

He had come to Nicholas with tears on his cheeks, and said: "I suppose,
sir, I'll never need to bring out the old phaeton again. . . . It does
seem hard."

And Nicholas had growled: "My brother and I will use the phaeton for a
long time yet, I hope." Nicholas would have preferred to go to church
in a motor-car, now that the widow's veil of his mother would no longer
dominate the phaeton, but one could not hurt Hodge. He was the one old
servant left. The others came and went, and had no old-fashioned pride
in their work.

Renny, in the car with his brothers, was thinking of the phaeton. He
was remembering how his grandmother delighted in having her horses
possess the middle of the road, thereby preventing him or any other
motorist from passing. But him in particular. Yes, she had liked to get
the best of him. God, but she was game!

He wished she might have seen the number who had turned out to do her
honour. It seemed too bad that she could never know. And the flowers!
A car filled with them. He liked that wreath of roses and carnations
from the Hunt Club. . . . He looked his brothers over. It was good to see
Eden fit again. A summer at Jalna was bound to do it. Good, too, to see
him and Piers riding in the same car. It had taken some will-power to
bring that about. He wondered if it were possible to bridge that chasm.
He was afraid not. Wives brought into the family had a way of messing
things up. A good thing probably that he had never married. His mind
dwelt, for one aching moment, on the thought of Alayne. The funeral
procession became a phantom procession. She was in his arms. He closed
his eyes, giving himself up to the desire that tore at his heart.

When he opened them again, they rested on Finch, who was sitting
between Piers and him, his long legs very much in the way. Finch
had been in a detached, almost hallucinated state of mind since his
grandmother's death, but now, of all times, with his face exposed to
the gaze of Renny and Piers, he had broken down. He was giving way to
spasmodic sobs; even the frequent wiping of his eyes on a large folded
handkerchief could not keep them dry. Poor young devil, Renny thought,
and he put his hand on the boy's bony knee, at which he cried the more.
He felt that Piers was regarding him with contempt, but Piers did not
see him. His eyes were fixed on Eden's back, before him on the front
seat with Wright.

The funeral procession, phantom momentarily to Renny, was nothing but
phantom to Piers. The one reality was Eden, sitting before him. Eden
well again. Eden ready for more mischief. Eden, whom he longed to beat
with his fists into insensibility. Except for that one glimpse of him
by the paddock, he had not seen him since that summer day two years ago
on the night of which young Finch had come white-faced to tell him that
Eden and Pheasant were in the birch wood together. If only Eden had not
got away that night! If only he could have had it out with him! Now, he
supposed, they would never have it out.

Eden was conscious of Piers's eyes on the back of his head. He would
have given a good deal to know what was in Piers's mind. Melodramatic,
blood-and-thunder thoughts, no doubt. He smiled a little, as he
imagined them, but he shifted uneasily in his seat. He pitied himself,
rather. Here he was, on his first outing of the entire summer, and it
a funeral! Had been forced, dragged into it, and into a proximity with
Piers that, in spite of his cynicism, made his nerves feel shaky. He
could not feel as the others did about his grandmother. They had seemed
to expect her to go on living for ever. She had had a longer innings
than he would ever have. He ached all over, had an uncomfortable,
trembling sensation, after the effort of carrying his share of her
coffin. Alayne had been against it. She had known he wasn't fit for it.
And ahead of him lay the journey from the hearse into the church, and
from the church to the grave-side. He wished that he had sat behind and
looked at Piers's back instead of having Piers glaring, in that early
Victorian way, at his.

The car stopped. The first of the cortge was on the driveway of the
churchyard. He removed his hat and inhaled the sweet air. He was
surprised to see what a crowd had gathered. He looked with apprehension
at the steep that led to the church door. They had her out of the
hearse. God, that scented, embalmed breath from its interior! He
shouldered his share of the burden.

Mr. Fennel had met them. All was orderly confusion. The brothers strove
together under that dead weight up the gravelled drive. Piers saw that
Eden was overtaxed, half-fainting, and wished the way were twice as
long. As they reached the church door Maurice came and took Eden's
place, and Eden, his forehead dripping with sweat, dropped behind.

He had heard the rector's words, from a long way off.

"I am the resurrection and the life, saith the Lord: he that believeth
in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live. . . . We brought nothing
into this world, and it is certain we can carry nothing out. The Lord
gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the Name of the Lord. . . ."

He was in a pew between Renny and Finch. He could not think clearly.
His blood was singing in his ears. The chancel was veiled in a mist. If
Alayne could see him, exhausted like this, how anxious she would be!
She was always connected now in his mind with anxiety for him.

He became conscious that Finch was breathing in a queer snuffling way.
He turned his eyes toward him, and saw his drooping boy's figure, and,
beyond, Piers's brown hand lying on his knee. A fist! Surreptitiously
his eyes slid to Piers's face, sunburnt, full-chinned, with strong,
short nose. Of what was he thinking? Of his proximity? Of Pheasant? Of
Gran lying there at the chancel steps?

"My heart was hot within me, and while I was thus musing the fire
kindled. . . ."

He became conscious of the voice from the chancel, resonant, mournful:

"Behold, thou hast made my days as it were a span long: and mine age is
even as nothing in respect of thee. . . ."

Poor old Gran! How she would resent that! He could fancy her
exclaiming: "Not a bit of it! I won't have it!"

The voice swept on:

"O spare me a little, that I may recover my strength: before I go
hence, and be no more seen."

Good poetry David wrote! And he had known life--not bridled himself!
Lovely fragments came, clear as crystal:

". . . seeing that is past as a watch in the night . . . and fade away
suddenly like the grass. In the morning it is green, and groweth up:
but in the evening it is cut down, dried up, and withered."

Ah, well, he was only twenty-six. He had seen and experienced a good
deal, and would experience a deal more. Write poetry that would be
remembered--for a day, at any rate. He was almost well. The desire to
write surged up in him. He became wrapped in contemplation of his own
personality. He forgot to rise when a hymn was sung until Renny touched
him on the arm, then he rose hesitatingly to his feet. So long since he
had been to church. . . .

    "Day of Wrath! O day of mourning!
    See fulfilled the prophets' warning!
    Heaven and earth in ashes burning!"

He wondered whether anyone in heaven or on earth disliked hymns as
much as he did. They made him want to throw back his head and howl
like a dog. But he made no sound whatever, meekly taking a corner of
the hymn-book Renny offered him. Renny did not sing either, or poor
snuffling young Finch, but Piers raised his lusty baritone.

    "What shall I, frail man, be pleading,
    Who for me be interceding,
    When the just are mercy needing?"

From a pew behind a woman's voice rose, clear and beautiful.

    "With Thy favoured sheep O place me,
    Nor among the goats abase me,
    But to Thy right hand upraise me."

He recognized the voice as Minny Ware's. He followed it, absorbed by
its beauty. He glanced at Renny, wondering if he too was following it,
but Renny seemed to be engrossed in the hymn, his lips silently shaping
the words.

All through Mr. Fennel's eulogy of the Christian qualities of old
Adeline, Eden's mind played with the thought of Minny Ware. He recalled
her as he had seen her on various occasions, always in bright colours,
full of vitality, ready to give laugh for smile. He thought of her
snowy neck rising columnlike from her turned-back collar. He rested his
mind on the music of her voice. He decided that he would ask Alayne
to have her come more often to sing to them. No, he would go over to
Vaughanlands himself, and hear her sing with the piano. He was getting
restless. He couldn't loaf about much longer. He must get work of some
kind, though what it would be, God only knew!

His brothers were rising. Now it was time to carry the coffin to the
graveyard. Surely Maurice would take his place again. Renny left the
pew, but Eden did not move, though Finch was pressing behind him. He
sent a glance, almost of entreaty, toward Maurice, who seemed undecided
what to do. But Eden was not to be let off. Renny had made up his
mind that it was seemly for the brothers to bear the coffin, and bear
it they must, though one of them faint. He threw a look, half-harsh,
half-affectionate, toward Eden, and, with a curt motion of the chin,
indicated that he was to follow. The four took up their burden.

They had lowered her into the ground. Earth had been thrown into the
grave. The last words were being spoken: "Earth to earth, ashes to
ashes, dust to dust." . . . Meggie's soft weeping was mingled with Mr.
Fennel's voice. "Who shall change our vile body, that it may be like
unto his glorious body. . . ."

Ernest's face was white and bleak. His jaw had dropped a little. He was
inwardly sobbing to himself: "Mama, Mama!" Now she was to be "no more
seen." . . .

Augusta, in deepest black, had drawn back her head, facing the
concourse with the dignity of sorrow. If she had been isolated from her
surroundings, one might easily have been persuaded that her expression
was one of profound offence. Was she, perhaps, offended by death? On
her next birthday she would be seventy-seven.

The face of Nicholas was like a rock, scarred by the lashings of
long-past storms. He stood, massive, looking stoically into the dark
aperture before him. But he did not see it. He saw himself, a little
lad of five, sitting in the pew he had just left, leaning against his
mother, with three-year-old Ernest on her other side, both getting
very drowsy. Mama was voluminous in a snuff-coloured, billowing dress,
lovely for tiny boys to curl up against, and the broad satin ribbons
of her bonnet delightful to fondle. What a fine rich red her hair
was then! Strange how it had slipped a generation and struck fire in
Renny! Beyond was Papa's stalwart figure, his fresh-tinted stubborn
profile that had descended, first to Philip, then to Piers, but not so
aristocratic in the last generation. Well, you couldn't do anything
about it. You were hurled into this world, floundered about a while,
and were hurled out of it. . . . Ernest had taken his arm. "Come along,
Nick," he said. "It's over. We're going."

Ernest led him through the maze of gravestones. His gouty knee gave him
some nasty twinges; once or twice he stumbled. Queer how things looked
unnatural to him. Even the people who came up to speak to him. The
elder Miss Lacey had taken one of his hands in both of hers.

"Dear Nicholas," she said. "It's terrible, isn't it? I know just how
you feel! Losing our father as we did, last year. He was ninety-two!"

He looked at her vaguely. He did not see her as she now was, but as she
had looked forty-five years ago when she was making up to him, wanting
to marry him. He'd have done a sight better if he'd taken her instead
of that flyaway creature he had chosen. He'd have had a family, and his
father might have left Jalna to him instead of to his younger brother.
He rumbled a few words appreciative of her sympathy, and limped on.

A strong wind, smelling of the hot dry land, had sprung up. The long
grasses of the graveyard rippled before it joyously. "It is not yet
evening," they seemed to sing. The wind swept low, as though to gather
fresh sweetness from the roses, lilies, and carnations mounded in the
Whiteoak plot. A number of white clouds were borne along the sky in
orderly procession, like choristers in snowy surplices. The drone of
the organ still came from within the church.

Renny moved urgently toward his car, Wakefield dragging at his arm.

"Renny, Renny, may I drive home with you? I see Eden getting in with
Meg and Maurice."

"All right, youngster."

He was glad to have the little boy with him, glad to get away from that
place. At the grave-side he had stood with raised head, his eyes on the
distance, and again something in his attitude suggested the fear of a
sensitive horse toward death. Now he snuffed the wind, pressed Wake's
hand against his side, and made an effort to restrain his eagerness to
leave that place.

Wakefield said: "I don't think my grandmother could have had a nicer
day for her funeral, do you? And I think she would be glad, if she
could know, what a monstrous crowd there is."

       *       *       *       *       *

The churchyard was deserted.

The body of Adeline lay at last in the family plot, which was enclosed
by a low iron fence around which were festooned rusted chains and
little spiked iron balls. Under a burden of earth and sod and drooping
flowers, she lay stretched out by the side of all that was left of her
Philip, whose bones were now probably bare. At their feet lay young
Philip, and at his side his first wife Margaret. In a corner reposed
Mary, his second wife, surrounded by a little group of infant Whiteoaks.

All that was lacking was Adeline's name, soon to be graven on the
granite plinth that towered above the graves. . . . All was over for her,
her tempers, her appetites, her sudden dozes, her love of colour, of
noise, of family scenes. No more would she sit, velvet-gowned, ringed,
capped, with Boney at her shoulder, before the blazing fire. No longer
would she entreat, with a sudden tremulousness of that bold heart:
"Somebody kiss me--quick!"

She would be "no more seen."

One of meditative mind might, knowing her character, speculate on what
sort of tree should possibly be nourished, in far future days, from
that grave. A flamboyant, Southern tree would perhaps be favoured were
this not a Northern land. In consideration of this, a Scottish fir
might well draw sustenance from the hardy frame and obdurate spirit.




XX

THE YOUNG PRETENDER


Wakefield scented excitement in the air from the moment when he first
opened his eyes. There was something in the way the window curtains
fluttered in the breeze that made him think of the bellying of sails.
There was something unusual in the smell of the air, as though it
had come from a long way off, a different country, full of strange
adventure. A tiny cockerel, just learning to crow, had somehow escaped
from the poultry house and found his way to the lawn. Every few
minutes he raised himself on tiptoe, flapped his wings, and essayed a
plaintive, yet boastful, crow.

Wakefield, lying across the sill in his pyjamas, watched him with
eyes still soft with sleep, but already lighting into mischief. The
shoulder of his pyjamas was ripped, and a tear in the seat fluttered
as the breeze ran along his back. Since Meg had married, his clothes
were not kept in very good order, but that gave him no concern; to
improve his mind, to broaden his experience, were of more importance to
him than mere sartorial perfection. The sun warming a bare shoulder,
the fluttering of a torn pyjama suit, were more stimulating than tame
tidiness. He noticed that one feather of the half-grown tail of the
cockerel was awry, and he had a fellow-feeling for him. He watched him
strutting about, between crows picking up nice morsels from the lawn.
Before each peck there was a short, gay period of scratching. Wakefield
felt that he would like to get his breakfast in such a way. He had a
vision of himself energetically pawing the ground, turning up buttery
morsels of toast, or, better still, chocolate creams wrapped in silver
paper.

He thought he would see what time it was. He did not wish to spend too
much of his day in meditation. He went to the dressing-table where,
among Renny's rather meagre toilet articles, lived the alarm-clock.
It was a temperamental clock, though it bore across its forehead the
words "Big Ben." It lost twenty minutes every day, and might have been
counted a sluggard but for the fact that its alarm had to be set half
an hour later than the time when one wished to be called, so urgent was
it in its desire to go off. How many a time the little boy had wakened
at night to see Renny half-undressed, his face close to the face of
Big Ben, with a look as of determination to keep the upper hand in the
constant duel between them! It was twenty minutes to ten. There would
be little left of breakfast to tempt one of wayward appetite. He opened
Renny's top drawer, and there, among the neat rows of ties and mounds
of handkerchiefs, he discovered a small tin box marked Chest and Lung
Tablets. These were richly flavoured with liquorice and, while not
large in bulk, might be counted on to stay one until something more
intriguing than half-cold porridge and tepid tea turned up.

He laid one on his tongue and, when he had got into his clothes,
dropped a few more into a pocket of his knickers. His ablutions were a
miracle of producing the most pleasing effect with the least effort.
However, he spent a good deal of time on his hair, for he had found
that its sleekness invariably produced a favourable impression on his
elders, with the exception of Piers, who took delight in rubbing it the
wrong way.

He was about to go downstairs when he heard the peculiar bubbly cooing
by which young Maurice was wont to express his pleasure in the morn. He
glided to the door of Pheasant's room and looked in. No one was there
save the infant, sitting on a quilt on the floor, sucking something out
of his bottle. When he saw Wakefield he kicked convulsively and took
the bottle from his lips, a waggish smile widening his mouth, showing
all his pearl-like teeth.

"Nug-nug! Ee-ee! Nug-nug!"

"Hello, Mooey!" returned Wakefield, kindly. "Glad to see your old
uncle, aren't you?"

"Nug-nug! Brrrr!" bubbled Mooey, and replaced the nipple in his mouth.
He sucked energetically, the muscles in his lip quivering, his eyes
turned slightly toward his nose.

Wakefield took him under the arms and raised him to his feet. Mooey
stamped his bare soles energetically on the quilt, but the bottle fell
from his grasp and a shadow troubled his pink brow. His motto was "One
thing at a time and that done thoroughly." This promenading in the
middle of a drink confused him.

"Ba!" he declared, trying to see his uncle's face. "Bub-bub-bub!"

Wakefield walked him the length of the room between his knees. "Nice
walk," he said, dictatorially. "Bad old bottle."

But Mooey was of a different opinion. There, on the quilt, lay his
bottle, still half-full of delicious sweetened water, and here was he,
leagues away, held by two vice-like hands, while tweed-knickered legs
and leather brogues imprisoned him on either side.

"Ha-ha-ha-ha!" he cried, but his "ha" was of lamentation, not mirth.

"Hush," said Wakefield, sternly, "or you'll have your mother fussing
about! What's the matter with you? Why don't you step out and learn
to walk when I'm taking all this trouble with you? Do you know what's
likely to get you, if you're naughty? Well, a big wolf is, and gobble
you right up."

Happily Mooey was unable to take in the import of this dire
possibility, but when he threw back his head, and looked up into
Wakefield's face, he saw something in that smooth, alive visage that
brought tears welling into his eyes, and made him raise his voice in
a despairing wail. Wakefield propelled him to the door and balanced
himself on one leg while he shut it with his foot. He then returned
him to his quilt, on which he dropped him so precipitately that the
infant's faculties were occupied, for the moment, in recovering his
balance.

Wakefield picked up the bottle and shook it. He removed the nipple and
tasted the insipid fluid. At this sight, an expression so outraged
came into Mooey's wet eyes that Wakefield was moved to reassure him.

"Can't you trust your uncle?" he asked. "You're very much mistaken if
you think I want any of this beastly stuff. And if you weren't such
a little fathead you'd never let them put you off with it! Now I'm
going to give you something really nice. And it's good for you, too,
'specially as you sound sort of wheezy."

Mooey made noises indicative of a broken spirit, and watched Wakefield
fascinated as he took two of the Chest and Lung Tablets from his pocket
and dropped them into the bottle. He placed his palm on the opening and
shook the bottle vigorously. It took the tablets some time to dissolve,
but at last the water took on a dark, rather poisonous colour, and
Wakefield assumed that sufficient of the medicinal quality of the
tablets had been absorbed. He replaced the nipple and put the bottle
into the outstretched hands of his nephew.

"There you are, my boy!" he said, heartily, and a benevolent smile
curved his lips as he observed the gusto with which Mooey returned to
his drink.

He was not a Boy Scout. He had not the physical strength to take part
in their enterprises. However, he liked the idea of beginning each day
with a kind act. He was one whom it would be impossible to hamper by
sectarianism, but who, nevertheless, was willing to take something of
good from any creed.

He descended the stairs lightly.

In the hall below he was interested to see that Rags had just let
someone in at the front door. It was Mr. Patton, Grandmother's lawyer.
He carried his brief-bag, and, as Rags divested him of his coat, he
gave Wakefield a pleasant but rather nervous smile.

"Good-morning," he said, "and how are you?"

"Thank you, sir," answered Wakefield, "I'm as well as can be expected,
after all I've gone through."

He had heard Aunt Augusta make this same remark to Mrs. Fennel the day
before, and he saw no reason why a remark so fraught with mournful
dignity should not serve for any member of the family.

Mr. Patton looked at him sharply. "H'm," he said, dryly. "I suppose so.
Well, well."

Aunt Augusta appeared in the doorway of the sitting-room. She held out
her hand to Mr. Patton, and Wakefield saw that almost all the family
was gathered in the sitting-room. Uncle Nicholas sat in an armchair in
a corner, filling his pipe; Uncle Ernest was by a window, nervously
rubbing the nails of one hand against the palm of the other. Piers and
Renny stood together talking, and Mr. Patton was barely inside when Meg
and Maurice arrived. Meg was carrying her infant daughter, Patience.
Wakefield was consumed by curiosity. He was also humiliated to find
that a family conclave had reached such a point as this without his
knowledge.

Finch came along the hall, rather more sheepish than usual, and he too
made toward the door of the sitting-room. Wakefield caught his arm.

"What is it?" he asked, eagerly. "What are they up to?"

"The will. Patton's going to read the will."

"The will? Oh! Then we'll know who's going to be the heir, shan't we?"

"Shut up," whispered Finch, and pushed past him.

But Wake was not to be put off so easily. He followed Finch into the
sitting-room and drew up a chair beside Mr. Patton where he sat at the
square table, with some papers spread before him.

Mr. Patton looked at him over his glasses.

"I don't think the child should be allowed to stay," said Aunt Augusta.

"Of course he shouldn't," agreed Piers.

"Wake, darling," said Meg, joggling Patience on her knee, "run along
and feed your rabbits."

Wakefield did not demur, but he hitched his chair a little nearer the
table and pushed Aunt Augusta's bottle of smelling-salts within reach
of Mr. Patton, in case of need.

"Put that child out," growled Nicholas from his corner, pointing at
Wake with his pipe.

"I don't see----" began Renny, but Piers took the little boy by the arm
and put him into the hall.

He stood there ruffled, like a young robin pushed from the nest,
looking at the door so inexorably shut against him. He heard someone
hurrying down the stairs and saw that it was Pheasant.

"Oh," she said, as she saw the closed door, "I am late! I had to run
upstairs to Mooey. I wonder what I'd better do."

"Go and fetch Mooey," advised Wakefield, glumly. "P'r'aps they'll let
you in if you've a kid in your arms. Meggie's got _her_ baby."

Pheasant stared. "How funny! I've heard of women taking babies to
police courts to influence the jury. Maybe she thinks. . . ."

"There's only the family in there," said Wakefield, "and I think it was
filthy to put me out."

"Did they? I wonder if they'll want me! Piers didn't say to come, but
then he didn't say not to come. I wonder. . . ."

Wakefield could not conscientiously encourage her.

"I think you'd better not go in, my girl," he advised. "You're safer
out here with me."

"If they think I'm after the old money!" she cried angrily.

"I bet I get it," he said, boastfully.

"I bet you don't!"

He put his eye to the keyhole. He could see nothing but Mr. Patton's
hands fumbling among papers. A good deal of coughing came from within.
The family seemed to be collectively clearing its throat. Then Mr.
Patton began to speak in a mumbling, unintelligible voice.

Wakefield looked around to where Pheasant had been standing. She was
just disappearing up on the landing. He thought he would go out for a
breath of fresh air while the will was being read.

"I wonder how long it will take," he said to Rags, who had just missed
seeing him with his eye to the keyhole.

"It'll take some time," replied Rags, dusting the mirror of the
hatrack, topped by a carved fox's head; and he added sarcastically: "I
expect you'll 'ave time to order yerself a new touring car, in cise
you're the old lidy's heir."

"There isn't any 'in case,'" said Wakefield, on a sudden impulse. "I
am."

"Of course you are!" jeered Rags. "Sime as I won the Calcutter
Sweepstikes! We'll go around the world on a tour together."

"It's all very well to laugh," returned Wakefield, gravely, "but it's
the truth! She told me so herself, not long before she died."

Rags gaped at him, duster in hand. He could not help being impressed.
"Well, if wot you s'y is true, them in there will get the surprise of
their lives."

"Yes," agreed Wakefield, "and they'll feel meaner after shutting me out
and all."

"I wish I knew if you're telling the truth."

"You'll know soon enough."

Wakefield went out into the morning. He sauntered along the flower
border, brilliant with marigolds, zinnias, and asters. Bright cobwebs
veiled the cedar hedge where the sun had not yet struck. A birch-tree
was letting fall little yellow leaves into the moist green of the lawn.

What should he do to pass the time until the reading of the will was
over? This was an important hour in his life, he felt, and should be
spent in no trivial fashion. He began to feel qualms of hunger, but the
thought of re-entering the house was intolerable to him. The blue and
gold of the morning, the little breezes that skipped about like young
lambs, the spaciousness of open air, were necessary to his mood. He
strolled, hands in pockets, to the back of the house, and there came
upon a tub set beneath an eave, full of rain-water. He squatted beside
it, peering at his reflection, darkly bright in the water. So looked
the heir to the Whiteoak millions! He lengthened his face, trying to
make his nose into a Court nose, and when it began to ache from the
strain he eased it with a hideous grimace or two.

The sight of these grimaces reflected made him burst out laughing, and
the tiny cockerel, which had followed him, responded with a boastful
crow.

"What have you to crow about?" asked Wakefield. "If you were me, you
might crow. What are you heir to, I'd like to know? A dirty old nest,
and a worm or two. Do you know what I am? I'm heir to the Whiteoak
millions, and it'll pay you to crow when I tell you to, and not before!"

The cockerel looked at him so hard that it turned its head almost
upside down. Its bright amber eye glittered with greed.

Then in the rain-water Wakefield discovered a blackbeetle half-drowned,
lying on its back, only a feeble kicking of the legs showing it to be
still alive. He picked a blade of grass and with it steered the beetle
round the tub. A dear little boat making a tour of the world. He made
it call at various ports--Gibraltar, Suez, Ceylon, Penang. How he loved
these names in his geography lessons with Mr. Fennel! Lucky, lucky
beetle!

Alas! Just as they reached Shanghai, it sank. Rather ungrateful of it.
Not many Canadian beetles had a chance to go to Shanghai!

He peered down at it, lying on its back in the depths of the tub. It
must be rescued. He pushed up his sleeve and put his slender brown arm
into the water, found the beetle, and laid it right side up in the
sunshine. He lay down beside it, watching with satisfaction the slow
but sure return to life. It was his second kind act that morning.

A slender, pale worm was descending on a gossamer thread out of the
sky. The lightest breeze swung it, now above the tub of rain-water,
now above the grass. Unperturbed, it continued its descent, the silver
thread lengthening, let out from some invisible reel. A robin ran
across the yard, a peewee said "peewee" from a maple tree.

The worm had arrived. An undulation passed through its slender body;
it moved delicately beneath a towering blade of grass. But Wakefield
was not to discover its destination or why it had descended to this
sphere from another. A swaggering black ant fell on it, worried it,
choked it, slew it. He was such an important, toplofty fellow that
he was quite above conveying the body to the anthill. Apparently he
put his feelers to his mouth and whistled, for a company of little
ants appeared from nowhere, snatched it, fought over it, dragged it,
trailing palely, through the grass-blades, out of sight. Wakefield was
not the only spectator of the tragedy, for a strange fellow in a fuzzy
yellow waistcoat and a saffron-coloured stern appeared on the rim of
a burdock leaf, and stared goggle-eyed, now and again wringing his
antenn.

Wakefield did not like the looks of him. He plucked the burdock leaf
and turned it upside down on top of him.

"Here endeth," he said, "the second lesson."

The peewee chanted "peewee"; the cockerel crowed.

Wakefield threw him a Chest and Lung Tablet.

"Perhaps this will help your voice," he said. "I've never heard
anything so squeaky. Suck it slowly."

The cockerel bolted it, and liked the liquorice flavour so well that
it came close, on the look-out for another. It was then that it
espied the blackbeetle, making cumbersome attempts to reshoulder the
responsibilities of life. The cockerel cocked an eye, pecked, gulped.
There was no beetle in sight.

Wakefield rose, dusted his bare knees, and uttered a sigh of bliss. A
third kind act, providing the cockerel with a beetle! His cup was full.

But not his stomach! It seemed hard that he, heir to the Whiteoak
millions, should go empty.

He crouched before a window of the basement kitchen and peered into the
twilight depths below. He could see Mrs. Wragge kneading dough, her
red fists pounding it so vigorously that one could not help wondering
whether it might not hurt the dough. Bessie, the kitchenmaid, was
paring vegetables in a corner, her hair in her eyes. Rags, cigarette in
mouth, was cleaning knives, dipping the cork first in a little puddle
of water on the knife-board, then in a small mound of Bath brick,
before he angrily furbished the blades. Rags was always angry when he
was in the basement. No matter how cool his temper might be above, it
rose to boiling point as he clattered down the stairs. No, Wakefield
did not want his breakfast from that galley!

He ran across the fields, climbed the sagging rail fence, and was on
the road. Soon he was opposite the door of the blacksmith shop, between
its tall elms. John Chalk, the smith, was shoeing a grey farm horse. He
glanced at Wake from under his shaggy brows, and went on hammering the
shoe.

When he dropped the hoof, and straightened his back, Wakefield
remarked: "My pony's cast that last shoe you put on her."

"That's queer," said Chalk. "Are you sure it was that one? She'd no
right to cast that one so soon."

Wake looked at him dubiously. "Hadn't she? I had my doubts of it when
you put it on. I thought it was a very queer-looking job."

Chalk glared. "I like your cheek! There was never a shoe better put on
than that shoe, and I'd like you to know it!"

Wakefield folded his arms. "I don't want," he said, "to take my custom
from you."

"You and your custom!" bawled the blacksmith. "You and your one little
pony that I could pick up under my arm like a sheep! Take it away, and
be darned to you. I guess I can make ends meet without it!" He wiped
his brow with a blackened hand.

"Well," said Wake, "if it only was one pony you might be snifty! But
it'll likely be a whole string of racehorses before long. You see, I'm
the heir to the--my grandmama's money."

"A likely story," jeered Chalk. "The old lady'ud never leave it to a
little whippersnapper like you!"

"That's just why she did it. She knew I needed it--what with my weak
heart and all. I've known it for a long time, but the family's just
finding it out this morning."

Chalk regarded him with mingled admiration and disapproval. "Well, if
that's true, and you've got the old lady's money, I pity them, for of
all the high-cockalorum, head-up-and-tail-over-the-dashboard young
rascals I ever set eyes on, you're the worst." He began to hammer so
loudly on his anvil that further conversation was impossible. Though
fast friends, their intercourse was often stormy.

He let the smith feel the weight of his gaze for a few moments, before
he moved on with dignity along the straggling street. At the Wigles'
cottage he stopped. Muriel, as usual, was swinging on the gate. He
brought it to a standstill so abruptly that the little girl fell off.
Before she could begin to cry, Wakefield took her by the hand and said:
"Come along, Muriel. I'm going to take you with me for a treat."

The door of the cottage opened and Mrs. Wigle stuck out her head.

"Muriel!" she called. "Don't you dare leave the yard! Come back here
this instant moment!"

"But he'th taking me out for a treat!" whined Muriel. "I want to go out
for a treat!"

"Treat nothing," retorted her mother. "The last time he took you out
for a treat you came home in rags and tatters. Treats may be fun for
him, but he ain't going to take my daughter to 'em!"

Wakefield listened to this tirade with a reproachful air.

"Mrs. Wigle," he said, "it wasn't my fault that Muriel fell in the
stream, and the old sheep tossed her about, and the burrs got in her
hair. I did what I could to save her. But I'd forgotten the sheep's
name, and she won't come for any other name but her own. You see, all
our animals have names, we make such pets of them."

Mrs. Wigle came down the path, her arms rolled in her apron. She looked
somewhat mollified.

"Where did you plan to take her this morning?" she asked.

"Only to Mrs. Brawn's shop to buy her something nice to eat."

"Well, fetch her straight back here afterward. And there's one thing I
wish you'd tell me. Have you ever heard your brother say aught about
mending my roof? It leaks into the best room like all possessed every
time it rains."

Wakefield knitted his slender black brows. "I've never heard him say
a single word about it, Mrs. Wigle. He doesn't seem to mind what roof
leaks so long as the stable roof doesn't. But I'll tell you what I'll
do--I'll mend your roof myself!"

"Bless the child! As though you could mend my roof!"

"I mean, I'll have it mended for you. You see, I've inherited all my
grandmama's money, and I'll be wanting to do all sorts of nice things
for ladies that have been kind to me. Come along, Muriel."

Mrs. Wigle was dazed before the splendour of it. A little boy with all
that fortune! Beautiful to see him holding her Muriel by the hand. She
followed them, rolling her arms tightly in her apron, into Mrs. Brawn's
shop. She did not give him time to tell his news to fat Mrs. Brawn. She
poured it out for him, and the two women stood, wrapped in admiration,
while he scrutinized the contents of the window.

"I was so excited," he murmured, half to himself, "that I couldn't
eat my breakfast. 'Air,' I said, 'I've got to have air.' . . . I think
I'll have two currant buns, a little dish of custard cakes, and three
bottles of Orange Crush. Muriel, what would you like?"

He stood before the counter, slender, fragile, the toe of one crossed
foot resting on the floor, his dark head bent above the bottle from
which the lovely drink ebbed through two straws into his throat. Before
him stood the unopened bottles, the custard cakes, a currant bun. He
held the other bun, soft, sticky, warm from the oven. At his shoulder
was the tow head of Muriel, her eyes raised adoringly to his face, as
she munched a bun. She would have followed him to the ends of the earth.

Above his head the voices of the two women babbled on, discussing his
wonderful prospects. Mrs. Brawn cared nothing that he owed her twenty
cents and was fast running up his account. Mrs. Wigle forgot her leaky
roof. She rolled and unrolled her hands in her apron. From the stove
in the back room was wafted the insidious smell of burning cakes.
Wakefield's head was full of beautiful thoughts--like whirling golden
coins.




XXI

BEQUEST


In the hall he almost ran into Mr. Patton, who was putting on his
coat. Mr. Patton had the uncomfortable expression on his face of one
who has eaten something that has disagreed with him. The expression on
the face of Renny, who was accompanying him to the door, was even more
uncomfortable. He said: "You're sure there's no doubt of her sanity?"

Mr. Patton puckered his lips. "None whatever."

"Well, she had a right to do what she liked with her own money,
but--it's rather hard on my uncles."

"Yes, yes. . . . Yes, indeed."

"And so entirely unexpected. She never seemed to care especially for
him. She was much more partial to Piers."

"You never can tell."

"With women--I suppose not."

"Nor men, either. It's extraordinary what some of them will do." Mr.
Patton took his hat from the rack, looked into it; then, casting a
furtive look into the silent sitting-room, he added, in a muffled tone:
"I actually tried to dissuade her. I don't mind saying this to you.
But--she was----" He shrugged.

"Not very tolerant of interference. I know."

Mr. Patton said, picking up his brief-bag, and looking into Renny's
eyes with some embarrassment: "It's hard on you, too. Particularly as
in most of the former wills----"

Renny scowled. "I'm not worrying about that. How many wills did you say
there have been?"

"Eight during the twenty years I have looked after her affairs. Some
changes, of course, were only minor. In most of them you----"

They became conscious of the little boy's presence. He was staring up
at them inquisitively. Renny saw a question coming, and took the back
of his neck in a restraining hand. Mr. Patton's lips unpuckered into a
smile.

"He's looking pretty well," he remarked.

"There's no bone to him. Just gristle. He's got no appetite."

The lawyer felt Wake's arm. "Not very firm! Still, his eyes are bright;
but then your family runs to bright eyes."

"Who----" began Wakefield, and Renny's fingers tightened on his neck.

He and Mr. Patton shook hands. The lawyer hurried out to his car.

"But who----" began Wake again.

The master of Jalna took out a cigarette, struck a match on the
underside of the hatrack, and, after its flare had lighted the
cigarette and been reflected in his eyes, threw it into the
umbrella-stand. He turned then toward the fantastic silence of the
sitting-room. Wakefield followed.

This was the strangest room he had ever been in. The drawing-room
had seemed strange when Grandmother lay there in her coffin with the
lighted candles about her and the presence of death making the air
heavy, but this was stranger still. For, though the air was heavy as
death, it was pregnant with the life of battling emotions.

Nicholas still sat in the corner with his pipe. He held it in his
teeth, and stared at Renny and Wakefield as they came into the room
without seeming to see them. He stroked the back of Nip, his terrier,
with a large trembling hand, and seemed to be unaware of his presence
also.

Ernest was rubbing the nails of one hand against the palm of the other,
as though he had never stopped, but now he did stop, and began to tap
his teeth with them, as though all the polishing had been leading up to
that. Augusta looked more natural than the others, but what disturbed
Wake was that her eyes, fixed on Ernest, were full of tears. He had
never seen tears in them before.

The eyes of Piers, Maurice, and even the infant, Patience, were on
Finch, and Finch looked more miserable than Wakefield had ever seen
anyone look in all his life. Certainly he had not fallen heir to a
fortune!

"But who?" he entreated, in his penetrating treble. "_Who?_"

All the eyes, dark and light, intense and mournful, turned on him.
Words froze on his lips. He began to cry.

"No wonder the child weeps," said Augusta, regarding him gloomily.
"Even he is conscious of the outrage of it."

Nicholas took his pipe from his mouth, tapped it over the hearth, then
blew it out with a whistling sound. He said nothing, but Piers broke
out: "I always knew he had a yellow streak. But how he accomplished
this----"

"My mother," declared Augusta, "must have been demented. Let Mr. Patton
say what he will----"

"Old ninny," said Piers, "to allow a woman of that age to play ducks
and drakes with her money! It's a case for the courts. We must never
stand for it. Are you going to let yourself be done out of what is
really yours, Renny?"

"Really _his_!" cried Augusta.

"Yes, really _his_! What about those other wills?"

Augusta's glazed eyes flashed away the tears. "What of the will in
which all was left to your Uncle Ernest?"

Ernest suddenly seemed to feel weak. He sat down and twisted his
fingers between his knees, and his underlip between his teeth.

"That was years ago!" retorted Piers.

"She was sane then. She _must_ have been _quite mad_ when she made this
will."

Ernest held up his hand. "Don't! Don't! I can't bear to hear Mama
spoken of so!"

"But, Ernest, the money should be yours!"

"I can do without the money."

Piers glared at Augusta. "I don't see why the blazes you insist that
the money should come to Uncle Ernest! What about Uncle Nick? What
about Renny? Renny's had the whole family to keep for years!"

"Shut up!" growled Renny, savagely.

"How dare you insult us?" cried Augusta. "This is my brothers' home!
I have been here to look after my mother. What could she have done
without me, I should like to know?"

"Kept up an establishment of her own! She'd plenty of money!"

Nicholas pointed with his pipe at Piers. "Say one word more!" he
thundered. He struggled to rise, but could not. Ernest sprang up,
trembling, and went to him. Grasping his arm, he pulled him to his
feet. Augusta also went to him, and the three stood together facing the
younger generation.

"I repeat what I said," said Piers.

Renny interrupted: "It doesn't matter what he says! I've never
grudged----"

Nicholas exclaimed, sardonically: "Well, now, that's handsome of you!
Very handsome of you! You haven't grudged us a roof! Our meals! We
ought to feel grateful. Eh, Augusta? Eh, Ernest?"

Renny's face went white. "I don't understand you. You purposely put me
in the wrong!"

Augusta drew back her head with an almost snakelike movement. "If I had
ever known! If I had ever dreamed! But, never mind, I shall be going
back to England soon."

"For God's sake, be fair!" cried Renny. "Have I ever acted as though
I didn't want any one of you here? I have always wanted you. I always
wanted Gran!"

Piers burst out: "That's the trouble! Renny's been too generous. And
now this is the thanks he gets!"

"You to talk!" snarled Nicholas. "You who brought your wife here, when
everyone was against it!"

"Yes, and who was she?" thrust Augusta.

Nicholas proceeded: "And what did she do? Made a little hell here!"

"Eden would have been all right," cried Ernest, "if only she had let
him alone!"

Piers strode toward them, his hands clenched, but Meg interrupted with:
"Everyone talks so selfishly! As though his side of the question was
the only one. What about me? Put off with an old India shawl and a big
gold watch and chain no one ever carries the like of now!"

Augusta cried, passionately: "My mother's watch was a valued possession
to her! She thought you, as the only granddaughter, should have it, and
those India shawls are priceless nowadays!"

"Yes! I've seen Boney make his bed on this one!"

Piers was trying to shoulder himself from Renny's restraining hand.
"Do you expect me," he muttered, "to let them say such things about
Pheasant? I'll murder someone before I've done!"

Renny said, with composure, though he was still white: "Don't be a
fool! The old people are all wrought up. They don't know what they're
saying. If you care a straw for me, Piers, hang on to yourself!"

Piers bit his lip and scowled down at his boots.

Meg's voice was heard again. "When I think of the lovely things she
had! I could have borne her giving the ruby ring to Pheasant, if she'd
treated me fairly afterward. But a watch and chain--and a shawl that
Boney'd made a nest in!"

"Margaret!" thundered Augusta.

Meg's face was a mask of obstinacy. "What I want to know is who the
ruby ring really belongs to!"

"_Belonged_ to, you mean, before your grandmother gave it away,"
corrected Maurice.

"I think," said Ernest, "it was the one she intended for Alayne."

"As though Alayne needed one of my grandmother's rings!" Meg's mask of
obstinacy was broken by temper.

Renny said, with a chest vibration in his voice: "Each grandson's
wife is to have a piece of jewellery, or the grandson a piece for his
prospective wife. As I understand the will, Aunt Augusta and I are to
make the choice. Isn't that so, Aunt?"

Augusta nodded, judicially. "Pheasant already has her bequest."

"She has nothing of the sort!" said Piers, vehemently. "The ruby ring
was a present entirely outside the will."

"I agree," said Renny.

A sultry lull fell on the room for a moment, in which could be heard
the ticking of the clock, the heavy breathing of Nicholas, and the
loud tap of a woodpecker on a tree near the open window. The momentary
silence was broken by Augusta's contralto tones.

"The whole situation is disgraceful," she said. "I've never known
such insensibility. Here I and my brothers are put off with not very
valuable personal possessions of my mother's, and expected to be
content while all the squabbling goes on among the rest of you over her
jewels."

Nicholas added fuel to the flame: "And the memory of our mother is
insulted by one nephew who says she sponged on Renny----"

"And we, too," put in Ernest.

Nicholas continued, gnawing his grey moustache: "While another nephew
benevolently tells us that he's never grudged us shelter and our meals!"

"If you're going to bring that up again," Renny exclaimed,
despairingly, "I shall get out, and that's flat!"

Maurice Vaughan said, heavily: "What we should all do is to get down to
brass tacks, if possible, and find out why your grandmother did such an
extraordinary thing as to leave all her money to Finch."

Augusta reared her head in his direction. "My mother was
deranged--there is no doubt of it."

"Have you anything to go on?" asked Vaughan. "Had she been acting
strangely, in your opinion?"

"I've noticed a difference."

Meg asked eagerly: "What sort of things, Auntie?"

"For one thing, I overheard her several times talking to herself."

Talking to herself! The phrase produced a strange tremor in the room.
Those in the corners appeared to draw toward the centre, as though
their intense individualism were about to be merged.

"Ha!" said Vaughan. "Did you notice anything singular in what she said?
Did she ever mention Finch's name?"

Augusta pressed her finger to her brow. "M--yes. Yes, she did! She
muttered something once about Finch and a Chinese goddess."

Nicholas leaned forward, clasping his gouty knee. "Did you ask her what
she meant?"

"Yes. I said: 'Mama, whatever do you mean?' and she said: 'That lad has
guts, though you mightn't think it!' . . . I did wish she would not use
such coarse expressions!"

Vaughan looked at the faces about him. "I think that is sufficient
proof. Do what you like about an appeal, but I think no one who was
sane would ramble like that."

Nicholas rolled his grey-crested head from side to side. He growled:
"That's nothing. If anyone could hear my mutterings to myself, I might
easily be considered dotty."

Piers flashed: "You may be, but the rest of us aren't! It's a case for
the courts!"

"Yes, indeed!" chimed Meg. "We might easily arrange to have the money
divided equally."

Augusta cocked her Queen Alexandra fringe. "If it could be done--it's
really the just way out of the difficulty."

Ernest raised his long face from gnawing his forefinger. "It seems to
me," he faltered, "that I've never known Mama brighter than she was
that last day."

Meg exclaimed, ironically: "If you call it _bright_, giving away her
most valuable ring on a mere whim!"

"For the Lord's sake," shouted Piers, "try to get your mind off that
ring! One would think it represented a fortune!"

"It quite probably does," returned his sister suavely. "What can you
know of the value of jewels--you, a crude boy who has been nowhere,
seen nothing?"

Piers's eyes grew prominent. "I should like to know what you've seen
and done?" he inquired, sarcastically. "You spent nearly twenty years
trying to make up your mind to marry your next-door neighbour."

Meg burst into tears, and the baby, hearing her mother cry, put her kid
slippers in the air and wept with all her might.

Above the noise Maurice called to Piers: "I won't have you insulting my
wife!"

"Make her let my wife alone then!" retorted Piers.

Augusta boomed: "Is it our duty, I wonder, to make an appeal? To settle
the matter in court?"

"What's that you say?" asked Nicholas. "I can't hear you for the noise
those girls are making!"

"I said I wondered if we should go to law about it."

The sound of crying ceased as suddenly as it had begun. All the heads
in the room--they seemed to Finch, sitting guiltily on his ottoman,
to have swollen to the size of balloons--turned, as though drawn by a
magnet, facing Renny. It was one of those volcanic moments when the
entire family shouldered all responsibility upon him. The faces, which
had been distorted with emotion, gradually smoothed out as though each
had inhaled some numbing incense, and an almost ceremonial hush fell on
the room. Renny, the chieftain, was to speak. Goaded, harried, he was
to give expression to the sentiments of the clan.

He stood, his hands resting on the table, his red hair raised into a
crest as though distraught, and said, in his rather metallic voice: "We
shall do no such thing! We'll settle our affairs in our own way without
any intervention from outsiders. I had rather give up Jalna than take
Gran's will into court! As to her sanity--sane or insane, her money was
hers to do what she liked with! I believe she was perfectly sane. I
think I never knew a better brain than hers. All her life she knew what
she wanted to do--and did it. And if this last act of hers is a bitter
pill for some of us, all we can do is to swallow it, and not get
cockeyed fighting over it. Imagine the newspaper articles! 'Descendants
of Centenarian at War over Will'! How should we like that?"

"Horrible!" said Ernest.

"No, no, no. It would never do," muttered Nicholas, indistinctly.

"Newspapers--outsiders gossiping!" Augusta gasped. "I never could bear
that!"

"But still----" wavered Meg.

Piers said: "You are the one most concerned, Renny. If you're willing
to take it lying down----"

Nicholas heaved himself about in his chair and looked sombrely at
Piers. "I can't see why you persist in regarding Renny as the one
chiefly concerned. It's very irritating. It's impertinent."

Renny broke in: "That's beside the point, Uncle Nick! The point is that
we can't go to law over Gran's will, isn't it?"

Nicholas gave a proud and melancholy assent. No, they could not go to
law. The wall about them must be kept intact. Their isolation must not
be thrown down like a glove, to challenge notoriety. Bitter as the
disappointment was, it must be borne. The Whiteoaks would not supply a
heading for a column in any of the tawdry newspapers of the day. Gossip
for the neighbourhood! Their affairs settled by a court! They were a
law unto themselves.

The temporary breach in their protective wall closed up, knitting them
together, uniting them against interference. Renny had spoken, and a
sigh of acquiescence, even of relief, rose from the tribe. Not one of
them--not, in his heart of hearts, even Piers--wanted to go to law over
the will. That would have been to acknowledge weakness, to have offered
submission to a decree from outside Jalna.

Even Maurice Vaughan felt the hypnotic spell of the family. Impossible
to fight against it. Knuckle under and bear with them, that was all one
could do. They raised Cain, and then they took hands and danced in a
circle around the Cain they had raised. They sowed the wind and reaped
the whirlwind, but they wanted no outside labour to help garner that
harvest. . . . Maurice took his baby daughter and dandled her. She was the
image of her mother. He wondered if she would have her mother's nature.
Well, she might do worse. Meggie was almost perfect. He was lucky to
have got her. And the baby, too!

Piers was standing with his back to the mantel, looking at Finch with
narrowed eyes. "There's one thing I think we should find out," he said.

He got no further, for at that moment a tap sounded on the folding
doors, they were drawn apart, and the dining-room was discovered, with
the table set for dinner.

Rags said, addressing Augusta: "The dinner has been ready for some
time, your ladyship. You seemed so occupied that I thought I 'ad better
not disturb you before." His eyes flew about the room, his impudent
nose quivered, scenting trouble.

Augusta rose and passed her hands down her sides, smoothing her dress.
She said to Renny: "Shall you ask your sister and her husband to
dinner?"

He thought: "She's punishing me for what Piers said about her and
the uncles stopping here so long. She won't take it on herself to
invite Meg and Maurice to dinner. Lord, as though there weren't enough
trouble!" Well, he would not give her the satisfaction of appearing to
notice anything. He said: "Of course you two will stay to dinner."

"There's Baby," said Meg.

"Tuck her up on the sofa. She's all but asleep."

"Oh, I don't think I had better!" Her tears overflowed again.

Nicholas hobbled up, stiff after sitting so long in one position, and
tucked his hand under her arm. "Come, come, Meggie, stop your grizzling
and have a good dinner," he rumbled. "'More was lost at Mohacs Field.'"

Even with old Adeline gone, they retained the air of a procession
as they moved into the dining-room. Nicholas first, holding by the
arm plump-cheeked Meg; next Ernest, struggling against self-pity,
comforted by Augusta at his side, full of pity for him. Then Piers,
Finch, and Wakefield. Finch looked as though he did not see where he
was going, and when Piers jostled against him in the doorway he all but
toppled over. Maurice and Renny came last.

Maurice said, grinning: "So you're to have the old painted bedstead!
What are you going to do with it?"

"Get into it and stay there, if this sort of thing keeps up," returned
the master of Jalna.

He sat down at the head of his table and cast his sharp glance over the
clan. Still a goodly number, even though Gran and Eden were missing.
After a while young Mooey would be big enough to come to table. . . . But
Pheasant was not there. He frowned. Just then she entered timidly, and
slid into her place between Piers and Finch.

"Where have you been hiding all morning?" asked Renny.

"Oh, I thought I was superfluous," she answered, trying to appear
sophisticated, entirely grown up, and not at all nervous.

Piers pressed his ankle against hers. She trembled. Was it possible
that he was signalling her--telling her that Mooey was the heir? Her
eyes slid toward his face. No jubilation there. A grim, half-jocular
look about the firm, healthy lips. Poor little Mooey had not got the
money. Then who had? Her gaze, sheltered by long lashes, sought one
face after another, and found no answer. Had there been a mistake?
Was there perhaps no fortune after all? Under cover of the voices
of Maurice and Renny, discussing the points of a two-year-old with
determined cheerfulness, she whispered to Finch on her left: "For
goodness' sake, tell me, who is the lucky one?"

His voice came in a sepulchral whisper:

"Me!"

She whispered back: "There may be thousands who would believe you, but
I can't."

"It's true."

"It is not!"

Yet, looking into his eyes, she saw that it was. She began to laugh,
silently, yet hysterically, shaking from head to foot. It was too much
for Finch; he, too, shook with soundless mirth, very near to tears. The
eyes of all at the table were turned on them in shocked disapproval or
disgust. Finch--an indecent young ruffian. Pheasant--a hussy.

Augusta saved the moment from tragedy by declaring, sonorously:
"They're mad! They must be mad."

The meal proceeded. With decisive movements of his thin muscular hands
Renny cut from the joint portions to the taste of each member of the
circle--for Nicholas, it must be very rare, with a rim of fat; for
Ernest, well done, not a vestige of fat; for Augusta, well done _and_
fat. For all, generous pieces of Yorkshire pudding. For Wake alone fat,
when he hated fat! "See that he eats it, Aunt!" And--"Wakefield, you
must or you won't grow strong!" Then the usual slumping on his spine
until Meg transferred the despised morsel from his plate to hers.

To a family of weaker fibre such a scene as the one just passed in the
sitting-room might have ended all appetite for dinner. It was not so
with the family at Jalna. The extravagant and wasteful energy of their
emotions now required fresh fuel. They ate swiftly and with relish,
only in an unusual silence, for they were still oppressed by that empty
chair between Nicholas and Ernest, and into their silence was flung,
every now and again, the sharp memory of the harsh old voice, crying:
"Gravy! I want more gravy! Dish gravy, please, on this bit of bread!"

Ah, how her shadow hung on them! How the yellow light, sifting through
the blinds, threw a sort of halo about her chair! Once Ernest's cat
crept from his knee to the empty chair, but no sooner was she seated
there than Nicholas's terrier leaped to drag her down, as though he
knew that empty seat was sacred.

Renny fed his spaniels with scraps from his plate. He shot swift
glances at the plates of his aunt and uncles. He urged their
replenishment, but they steadfastly refused. He set his teeth. They
were remembering, he was sure, what Piers had said; out of hurt pride
they were refusing second helpings.

When a steamed blackberry pudding came, with its syrupy purple sauce,
deep melancholy settled on them. It was the first pudding of this kind
they had had since her death. How she would have loved it! How her nose
and chin and cap would have pressed forward to meet it as it advanced
toward her! How she would have mashed the pudding into its sauce, and
dribbled the sauce on her chin! Ernest almost found himself saying
aloud: "Mama, must you do that?"

They ate the pudding in heavy silence. Finch and Pheasant were barely
able to restrain their insane laughter. Wakefield's eyes were bright
with admiration as they rested on the tall silver fruit-dish in the
middle of the table. From its base sprung a massive silver grapevine,
beneath the shelter of which stood a silver doe and her fawn. It was
heaped with glowing peaches and ripe pears. Aunt Augusta had had it
brought out on the day of the funeral, and it had remained. Wakefield
wished it might remain for ever. He wished he might have been placed
opposite it instead of at the far end, so that the nearness of the
darling little fawn might take his mind off the terrible silence. He
knew now quite definitely that he had not inherited Grandmother's
money, and he did not so very much mind. He had had a nice morning
pretending that he was the heir, and he did not see why the others
could not accept their disappointment as he did. . . . Funny to think of
Finch. . . . Would Finch take Gran's room now and sleep in the painted
bed? He pictured Finch propped on the pillows with Boney perching at
the head. Finch, in a nightcap and teeth like Grandmother's! Wake was
rather frightened by this picture. He put his head to one side and
reassured himself by the sight of Finch looking wretched, beyond the
fruit-dish. A queer greyish colour over Finch's face made him remember
something. He puckered his forehead, winked fast, and then broke the
silence.

"Renny," he questioned, with great distinctness, "was Finch born with a
caul?"

The steaming cup of tea halfway to the lips of the master of Jalna was
suspended; his eyebrows shot upward in astonishment.

"A _caul_!" he snapped. "A _caul_! What the devil--what put that into
your head?"

Meg broke in. "I think it is too bad of you, Renny, to swear at Wake!
He was only asking a natural question!"

"A _natural_ question! Well, if you call _cauls_ natural, I'll be----"

"There you go again!"

"No, I don't."

"Only because I stopped you! Really, you can't _speak_ without
swearing!"

Piers asked: "But was he?"

"Was who?"

"Finch. Born with a caul."

"Yes, he was," answered Meg, stroking Wakefield's hair.

"Extraordinary!" said Nicholas, wiping his moustache and staring at
Finch. "I had never heard of one in the family."

Meg said: "His mother kept it in a little box, but after she died it
disappeared."

Ernest observed: "It is supposed to be a good omen. To bring luck."

Piers laughed. "Aha! Now we've hit it! Good luck! It's the caul that
did it!" He laughed into Finch's face. "Why didn't you let us know
about it before? We might have been on our guard. Gosh, you're a dirty
dog, Finch, to go sneaking around with a caul on your head, rounding up
all the ducats in the family!"

Finch pushed back his chair and rose, shaking with rage. "Come outside
with me!" he said, chokingly. "Only come outside with me! I'll show you
who's a dirty dog--I'll----"

"Sit down!" ordered Renny.

Nicholas thundered: "Have you no sense of decency, you young ruffian?"

Everyone began to talk at once. Wakefield listened, astonished yet
not ill-pleased, as one who had sown the seed of a daisy and raised a
fierce, thorny cactus. A caul. To think that one little word like that
should raise this storm.

Finch sat down and rested his head on his hand.

Ernest looked across at him not unkindly. "You need never be afraid of
the water," he said. "One who is born with a caul is never drowned."

Augusta asked of Wakefield: "But, my dear, however did you hear of such
a thing?"

"Finch told me himself. I wish I'd got one!"

"So do I!" said Piers. "It seems a shame that Finch should have all the
luck."

Pheasant could remain in doubt no longer. "But what _are_ they?"

"One doesn't explain them," replied Augusta, looking down her nose.

Renny regarded Finch with no good eye. "I don't like your telling the
youngster about such things. I don't like it at all. I'll have a word
with you about this. Another cup of tea, Aunt, please."

Good appetite had attended all the Whiteoaks at dinner, but Finch had
eaten as though famished. In spite of the fact that he was in acute
disfavour, looked upon with suspicion and reproach, something inside
him was ravening for food. He felt that if he could appease that
something he might not feel so light-headed. But he rose from the table
unsatisfied. . . . If only he could escape and hide himself in the woods!
Press his hot forehead against the cool earth and his breast upon the
pine needles! He made a stumbling effort to go into the hall instead
of returning to the sitting-room with the others, but Nicholas laid a
heavy hand on his shoulder.

"Don't go away, boy. I should like to ask you a few questions."

"Yes," agreed Ernest, on his other side, "I should like to find out
something of the inside of this affair, if possible."

Finch returned, as between gaolers, to the torture room. He heard the
clock on the landing strike two, and this was echoed in a silvery tone
by the French clock in the drawing-room, and in an abrupt metallic
voice by the clock on the mantelpiece of the sitting-room. Nicholas
took out his large hunting-case watch and looked at it. . . . Ernest
looked at his nails. . . . Meg hung over her baby. . . . Maurice dropped
into a comfortable chair and began to fill his pipe with his active
hand, the disabled one lying, unmoved and smooth, on the leather arm of
the chair. Finch, seeing it, felt a sudden morbid envy of it. It was
hopelessly injured, neglected, let alone. . . . Renny took the muzzle of
one of his spaniels in his lean brown hands, opened it, and examined
the healthy white teeth. . . . Piers, in a corner, laughed at Pheasant. . . .
Augusta produced a piece of crochet work from a bag, and a long,
stabbing crochet-hook. . . . Finch saw them all as torturers.

There was Rags, closing the folding doors upon them, seeming to say:
"There naow, I leave you to your own devices! Whatever you may gaow
through, it's all the sime to me!"

But not yet were they to settle down. A voice came from Grandmother's
room, crying: "Nick! Nick! Nick!"

Ernest clapped his hands on his ears.

"Boney!" ejaculated Nicholas, hoarsely. "God, what has come over the
bird?"

"He has made up his mind," said Augusta, "to torture us."

Ernest cautiously removed his hands from his ears. "It is unbearable! I
don't know what we are going to do about it."

Maurice suggested: "Perhaps it would be better to put him away, as he
seems to be out of sorts and all that."

Every blazing glance in the room branded him as an outsider.

"He will be all right," said Renny, "as soon as he's done moulting. He
ought to have a few drops of brandy in his drinking water. I remember
Gran used to give him that for a tonic. Fetch him in here, Wake. He
needs company."

The parrot was brought, squatting glumly on his perch, and placed
in the middle of the room beside the ottoman on which Finch had
uncomfortably disposed his lanky form. Boney ruffled himself, shook his
wings, and three feathers drifted to the floor.

"It's uncanny," muttered Nicholas, "that he should have forgotten his
Hindu, and should say only my name."

"It's dreadful," said Ernest.

"I think," declared Augusta, "there's something portentous about it.
It's as though he were trying to tell us something."

"He looks strangely agitated," said Ernest.

Everyone looked at Boney, who returned melancholy stare for stare out
of cold yellow eyes.

After a silence, Nicholas heaved himself in his chair and turned to
Finch. "Did my mother ever give you reason to believe that she was
going to leave her money to you?"

"No, Uncle Nick." Finch's voice was scarcely audible.

"Did she ever speak to you of the disposal of her property?"

"No, Uncle Nick."

"Did she ever speak to you of having made a new will?"

"No--she never spoke of any will to me."

"You had no faintest idea that her will was in your favour?"

"No."

"Then you would have us believe that you were as much surprised as we
were this morning when Patton read the will?"

Finch flushed deeply. "I--I was terribly surprised."

"Come, come," put in Piers, "don't expect us to believe that! You never
turned a hair when Patton read the will. I was looking at you. You
knew damn well what was coming."

"I didn't!" shouted Finch. "I didn't know a thing about it!"

"Stay!" said Nicholas. "Don't get blustery, Piers. I want to untwist
this tangle, if possible." His eyes, under his shaggy brows, pierced
Finch. "You say you were as astonished as the rest of us by the will.
Just tell us, please, what in your opinion was my mother's reason for
making you her heir."

Finch twisted his hands between his knees. He wished some tidal wave
might rise and sweep him from their sight.

"Yes," urged Ernest, "tell us why you think she did such a thing. We
are not angry at you. We only want to find out whether there was any
reason for such an extraordinary act."

"I don't know of any reason," stammered Finch. "I--I wish she hadn't!"

He did himself no good by this admission. The words coming from his
mouth, drawn in misery, made him the more contemptible.

Nicholas turned to Augusta. "What was that about Mama's talking to
herself? Something about a Chinese goddess."

Augusta laid down her crochet work. "I couldn't make it out. Just some
mumbled words about Finch and the goddess Kuan Yin. It was then she
said that he had more--you know what. I prefer not to repeat it."

"Now, what about this Chinese goddess, Finch? Do you know what my
mother meant by coupling your name with such a strange one?"

"I don't see why she should have," he hedged, weakly.

"Did she at any time mention a Chinese goddess to you?"

"Yes." He was floundering desperately. "She said I might
learn--she--that is, she said I might get to understand something of
life from her."

"From her?"

"Yes. Kuan Yin."

"This is worth following up," said Vaughan.

"It sounds as though Gran and Finch were both a little mad at the
time," said his wife.

"At the time," repeated Nicholas. "Just how long ago did this
conversation take place?"

"Oh, quite a bit ago. At the beginning of summer."

Nicholas said, pointing at Finch with his pipe: "Now, tell us exactly
what led up to this conversation."

Ernest interrupted him, nervously: "The little Chinese goddess Mama
brought from India! Of course. I have not seen the little figure for
some time. Strange I didn't miss it! Have you noticed it lately,
Augusta?"

Augusta tapped the bridge of her nose sharply with her crochet-hook, as
though to stimulate her faculty of nosing out secrets. "No--I have not.
It is gone! It is _gone from Mama's room_! It has been stolen!"

Finch burned his bridges. "No, it hasn't. She gave it to me."

"Where is it?" demanded Nicholas.

"In my room."

"I was in your room this morning," said Augusta. "I thought I smelled
something strange. The goddess was not there! I should have noticed
instantly!"

Finch cared for nothing now but to have this cross-questioning done
with. He said, with weary contempt for the consequences: "You did not
see her because she is hidden. I keep her hidden. The stuff you smelled
was incense. I was burning it before her at sunrise. I forgot to shut
my door when I came down."

If Finch had suddenly produced horns on his young brow, or hoofs
instead of worn brown shoes, he could scarcely have appeared as a
greater monstrosity to his family. The monotonous pressure of their
various personalities upon his bruised spirit was violently withdrawn.
The recoil was so palpable that he raised his head and drew a deep
breath, as though inhaling a draught of fresh air.

They drew back shocked from a Whiteoak who had risen at sunrise to
burn incense before a heathen goddess. What sort of abortion had the
English governess--young Philip's second wife--produced? That they,
Courts and Whiteoaks--gentlemen, soldiers, "god-damming" country
squires--should come to this! A white-faced, wincing boy who did
fantastic things in his attic room while his family slept! And to this
one had old Adeline, toughest-fibred of them all, left her money!

Their invincible repugnance toward such a deviation from their
traditions caused a tremor of bewilderment to shake their tenacity.
Finch, slumping on his ottoman, seemed a creature apart.

But this spurious advantage was soon past. The circle tightened again.

Nicholas, his chin gripped in his hand, said: "When I was at Oxford
there were fellows who did that sort of thing. I never thought to see a
nephew of mine . . ."

"He'll be turning Papist next," said Piers. "Look at those candles he
set up around poor old Gran!"

"Yes, and you allowed him to do it!" exclaimed Augusta, accusingly to
Nicholas.

Nicholas ignored this. He continued: "You expect us to believe that
you hoped to gain nothing by my mother's will, when in secret she was
giving you valuable presents?"

"I didn't know it was valuable."

Meg cried: "You must have thought it was very strange that she
should be giving away things she had treasured all these years! The
goddess--the ruby ring!"

"What motive had you in hiding the present?" probed Nicholas.

"I dunno."

"Yes. You do know. Don't lie. We're going to get to the bottom of this!"

"Well, it was hers, I thought. I didn't think--I knew she wouldn't want
it mentioned."

"And what else?"

"I thought I'd get into a row."

"Just for having a present given you? Come, now!"

Ernest interjected: "But why should she have given him anything? I
can't make it out!"

Piers grinned sarcastically. "Look at him, and you'll understand.
He's such an intriguing young devil. I am always longing to give him
something."

Renny spoke, from where he sat on the window-seat. "Cut that out,
Piers."

Nicholas continued: "Were you often alone with my mother? I don't
remember ever finding you together!"

Finch writhed; his chin sank to his breast. He set his teeth.

Renny said: "Make a clean breast of it, Finch! Hold your head up."

He was intolerably miserable. He could not bear it. Yet he must bear
it. They would give him no peace till they had everything out of him.

"Buck up!" said Renny. "You didn't steal the goddess, or the money
either. Don't act as though you had!"

Finch raised his head. He fixed his eyes on Augusta's crochet work,
which lay on her lap, and said in a husky voice:

"I've been going to the church to practise on the organ at night. Once,
when I came in very late, Gran called me. I went into her room and we
talked together. That was the night she gave me the goddess. After that
I went often--almost every night." He stopped with a jerk.

There was a sultry silence while they waited for him to go on.

Nicholas nudged him, almost gently. "Yes? You went every night to my
mother's room. You talked. Would you mind telling me what about?"

"I talked about music, but not much. She did most of the talking. The
old days here--her life in India, and about when she was a young girl
in the Old Country."

Ernest cried: "No wonder she was drowsy in the daytime! Awake half the
night talking!"

Finch was reckless now. They might as well have something to rage
about. "I used," he said, "to go to the dining-room and get biscuits
and glasses of sherry, and that made her enjoy it more. It helped keep
her awake."

"No wonder she was drowsy! No wonder she was absent-minded!" cried
Ernest, almost in tears.

Augusta said, with dreadful solemnity: "No wonder that for the last
month her breakfast trays have come away almost untouched!"

"I saw her failing day by day!" wailed Meg.

Nicholas cast a grim look at those about him. "This has probably
shortened her life by years."

"It has killed her!" said Ernest, distractedly.

"He's little better than a murderer!" said Augusta.

He could look them in the eyes now. They knew the worst. He was a
monster, and a murderer. Let them take him out and hang him to the
nearest tree! He was almost calm.

Their tempers were surging this way and that like waves driven by
variable winds. They were all talking at once, blaming him, blaming
each other, desperately near to blaming old Adeline! And the voice
of Uncle Nicholas, like the voice of the seventh wave, was the most
resonant, the most terrible. It was the voice of the wronged eldest son.

Presently the voice of Piers, full of malicious laughter, disentangled
itself from the others. He was saying: "The whole thing is a tremendous
joke on the family. We thought Finch was queer. A weakling. But, don't
you see, he's the strongest, the sanest, of the lot? He's been pulling
the wool over everybody's eyes for years. Poor, harmless, hobbledehoy
Finch! Well-meaning, but so simple! I tell you, he's as cool and
calculating as they make them! He's had this under his hat ever since
he came back from New York!"

"Rot!" said Renny.

"You'd stand up for him, Renny! Why, he's fooled you all along! Didn't
he trick you into thinking he went in to Leighs' to study, when he was
up to his eyes in play-acting? Didn't he trick you nicely over the
orchestra? He was supposed to be studying then, and he was playing the
piano in cheap restaurants, and coming home drunk in the morning! And
now he's tricked you out of Gran's money!" The laughter had died out of
his voice--it was savage.

Enraged, Finch cried out: "Shut up! It's a pack of lies!"

"Deny that you ever set out to deceive Renny!"

"What about you? You deceived him when you got married!"

"I wasn't _cheating_ him out of anything!"

Finch rose to his feet, his arms rigid at his side, his hands clenched.
"I'm not cheating Renny! I don't want to cheat anyone. I don't want
the money! I want to give it back! I won't take it! I won't take it--I
won't take it----"

He burst into despairing tears. He walked up and down the room,
wringing his hands, entreating Nicholas--entreating Ernest to take
the money. He stopped before Renny, his face broken into a grotesque
semblance to that of a gargoyle by devastating emotion, and begged him
to take the money. He was so distraught that he did not know what he
was doing, and when Renny pulled him on to the window-seat beside him
he sank down bewildered, dazed by his own clamorous beseechings. His
throat ached as though he had been screaming. Had he been screaming? He
did not know. He saw them looking at him out of white, startled faces.
He saw Pheasant run from the room. He saw Meggie clutching her crying
baby. He heard Renny's voice in his ear, saying: "For Christ's sake,
get hold of yourself! You make me ashamed for you!"

He put his elbows on his knees and hid his face in his hands. Against
his cheek he felt the roughness of Renny's tweed sleeve, and he wanted
to rub against it, to cling to it, to cry his heart out against it like
a frightened little boy.

In a heavy undertone the talk went on and on, but no one addressed him.
They were done with him now. They could not or would not take the money
from him, but they would let him alone, and they would talk and talk,
till from afar off the tidal wave he had been praying for would come
roaring and sweep them all into oblivion. . . .

The tidal wave came, and it was Rags; the oblivion, tea.




XXII

SUNRISE


As he walked swiftly along the country road that led to the lake, the
feel of the thick fine dust through the thin soles of his canvas shoes
gave him an aching sense of pleasure. The balls of his stockingless
feet, his toes, seemed to have acquired a new sensitiveness that
morning. They pressed the earth hungrily as though to imprint on it a
palpable and lasting caress.

His eyes, dark-ringed after a sleepless night, moved constantly, as
though to drink in all possible beauty from the dew-drenched burnished
land. They swept over a field of ripe corn, from which came a dry,
sweet whisper as though all the tiny imprisoned kernels sang together.
They swept hungrily over a swarthy stubble field, from which a great
flock of crows rose into the blueness of the sky. They espied, bluer
than the sky, the clump of chicory by the roadside. Nothing could
escape them. Not the spider's web, red as copper in the red sunrise.
Not the sudden sparkle of dew on a tilting leaf. Not the slender
imprint of a bird's foot on the dust before him.

He loved it so, and he was going to leave it. So often had he traversed
this road, afoot and on his bicycle, and now this was to be the last
time!

He could endure his life no longer. He had thought it all out through
the long night, reviewed its nineteen years of blundering, cowardice,
and terrors, and he had reached the certainty that he could endure
it no longer. If he had had one friend--one person who could have
understood, and pitied his forlornness! There was Alayne, but she was
inaccessible because of the presence of Eden. And, even if he could
have gone to her and poured out his miserable heart, it would not have
sufficed, for there was the family, a solid hostile wall, impervious
to his tears as to his batterings. It was not to be borne! In that wall
of his own flesh and blood there was no relenting crevice through which
he might creep and timidly touch hands with those he loved again. . . . He
had wronged them, and there was only one way to make it right. . . . The
old uncles--wondering all these years about their mother's money--and
it had come to him! And Renny! But he could not think of Renny, and
that look of shame for him on Renny's face!

All night it had been necessary to compel his mind from the remembrance
of that look. There had been moments when he had felt that he must run
down the attic stairs, throw himself on his knees at Renny's bedside,
and beg him to forgive him, to comfort him, as he had comforted him
after childish nightmares. Renny, whom he had wronged most of all!
Well, now he was going to do what lay in his power to set things right.
They would have to take the money now and divide it among them!

This morning it required no effort to keep his mind clear. It was
as clear as crystal, exquisitely empty, as though washed clean by a
hurricane. It was like an empty crystal bowl held up by the hands of
his soul to receive the wine of beauty. From every side that wine ran
into it, from the pine-sweet darkness of the ravine, from the reddening
fields, along the slanting rays from the sun through which God spoke to
him.

He passed the cross-roads. Here once they would have buried him, when
his drenched body had been taken from the lake, with a stake driven
through his heart. A warning to those who contemplated suicide. He did
not think he would have minded that. He would have been no lonelier
buried at the cross-roads than in the churchyard with his kin around
him. What he was about to do seemed so natural that it seemed to him
that all his acts for years had been leading up to this. To obliterate
himself--to dash from his lips the bitter cup of living. He had brought
with him into the world not much but the power of loving beauty. He
would take out with him all that he could absorb of beauty, and perhaps
God would leave that with him, while he slept, as compensation for the
pain.

Oh, the caressing softness of the dust! For this last little way he
would have nothing between his soles and it. He threw off his shoes
and ran barefoot. He threw back his head, drinking in the cleanness of
the breeze from the lake. Now he ran over dry, coarse grass, now over
shingle that cut his feet, now over fine sand, hard as a marble floor.

The sun was hanging, a great lantern, just above the horizon. A red
pathway crossed the lake from it to his very feet. The morning was
as pure, as crystalline, as though it was the first morning that had
broken over the earth. As he ran splashing into the water, fiery drops
were flung up all about him. Translucent ripples disturbed the glassy
surface of the lake. He ran out, his bare head empty and untroubled.
He was not afraid. He sank into the water and swam outward on his
side, following the red pathway. He would swim till he was tired, and
then . . . He embraced the gently heaving water. He flung his arm again
and again across the early morning ruddiness. He closed his eyes and
saw bright panels set in amethyst walls against the lids. . . . There
was no thought in him; he was empty as a crystal bowl moving through
the water; feeling neither pride nor shame, exquisitely unconcerned;
fragile, yet capable of receiving and holding fast the beauty that was
flowing with him. . . . He heard music. . . .

Slowly he relaxed, and surrendered himself. . . .

       *       *       *       *       *

The music became by degrees blurred, resolving itself into an
overpowering humming, as though the arch of the sky were the dome of
a vast beehive. His ears ached with the burden of it. He longed, with
a sad longing, to be free of the fantastic, terrible droning, to hear
the music, pure and clear once more. . . . It was no longer morning, red
sunrise, but night, black night, and all the stars were bees, filling
the universe with their humming. They swarmed in the cold black
heavens, hungry for honey, ceaselessly humming. . . .

He must conceal the fact that he is a flower, full to the brim,
overflowing with honey, for, if they discover this, they will swarm
down upon him and suck the sweet essence out of him, leaving him empty,
bruised and forlorn. . . . He shudders and draws his petals close about
him to conceal the treasure. He is rocked on his stem, and is terrified
that he will be broken from it and fall into the abyss below. . . . His
petals are now white, now red, changing their colour constantly, veined
with violet and gold, drawing and withdrawing above the honey that is
the centre of him. . . .

He is convulsed with agony, for the bees have found him out. Their
humming is becoming deafening, their wings clash like armour; they fly
down, carrying lances to pierce him. . . . There is one golden bee that
has seized him. They struggle. He curls up his petals desperately. He
tries to scream, but knows that flowers have no voice. The abyss yawns
below.

The great golden bee clutches him and will not be thrown off. Another
comes to its aid. They are dragging him away now, helpless, fainting.
No use to struggle. His petals, red and white, are falling into the
abyss. He is torn to pieces.

       *       *       *       *       *

Eden's face was close to his. Eden's face, white and dripping, with
a wet lock plastered over the forehead. Someone else was there too,
someone who had been doing strange things to him, knocking him about.
He felt weak and sick, but he managed to gasp out: "All right . . . all
right . . . pretty well, thanks."

He didn't know why he said that, unless they had been asking him how he
felt, and he knew he must conceal the terrible truth. He had completely
forgotten what the truth was, but he was poignantly conscious of its
terror.

Eden was saying, in a staccato way, as though his teeth were rattling:
"God, what a mercy that you were here! I should never have saved him
alone!"

It was Minny Ware's rich voice that answered.

"I'm afraid you'd both have been drowned."

"And this first-aid business--you're simply wonderful! I've never felt
such a duffer in my life!"

"You were splendid the way you plunged in! He'll be all right now, I
think. It's you I feel worried about. You've been so ill. I must get
help at once!"

Eden's hand was on Finch's heart. "It's beating more regularly. You're
better, old chap? You know who I am?"

"Yes, Eden."

With a great effort he raised his eyelids again and saw Minny Ware
standing straight and flushed, a dripping undergarment clinging to her
rounded body, her breast still heaving from her exertions, her hair,
like Eden's, plastered against her head. When she saw him looking at
her, she smiled and said: "You naughty boy! I hope you're sorry for
what you've done. Giving us such a fright!"

A shiver shook Eden from head to foot. She snatched up her dress and
struggled, dripping as she was, into it. "I shall run to the house and
get Mr. Vaughan as quickly as possible."

"No--no. Get Renny. He'd not like it if we didn't send for him first.
Besides, he'll get here in half the time Maurice would."

She hesitated, disappointed. She had thought to come back with Maurice.
The idea of missing any of the excitement, of losing any of the
savour of being with these two males, half-drowned as they were, was
intolerable to her exuberant femininity. She said: "I think it would be
better to fetch Mr. Vaughan."

"Why?" Eden asked sharply.

"Because--he would take you straight to his house. You'd like that
better, wouldn't you?"

"Telephone Renny--I'll have him take us to the Vaughans'. Please be
quick, Miss Ware. This poor youngster is half-frozen--and I----" He
shivered and smiled.

"What a beast I am!" she cried. "I'll run every bit of the way!"

She did, and felt as though she could never tire, elated by the
strange happenings of the morning. Her life at the Vaughans' was so
quiet! Her mind was fervently preoccupied with the young men at Jalna.
Married or single, their doings filled her thoughts. She discussed
their dispositions, their talents, and their prospects endlessly with
Meg. Meg pushed her always in the direction of Renny. Rich-voiced,
yearning-bosomed, she was willing to be pushed in any direction.

She had risen that morning shortly after dawn, and sat at her open
window, from which she could see the road. Along it she had seen the
figure of Eden sauntering. She was almost sure it was Eden, but not
quite sure. At any rate, it was one of the Whiteoaks. The red sky in
the east, the figure of the young man sauntering, the sudden cry of
a blackbird in the elm-tree near her window, had filled her heart
with loneliness, with longing. She had changed into a prettier dress,
stolen from the house, and followed him to the shore. She had found
him nursing his knees and a pipe. She had made her presence known by
singing softly as she approached along the sand. He had confessed to
her that he had been too restless to sleep--a lyric that struggled
toward birth, and yet was perversely reluctant of delivery. She had sat
down beside him, at his invitation, hugging her knees and the smell of
his tobacco smoke. Together they had rescued Finch.

They had watched him run into the water and swim outward without
suspicion dawning, until Minny had exclaimed over the fact that he
wore trousers and shirt instead of a bathing suit. And there had been
something strange, wild, and exalted about the running young figure. . . .

He lay stretched on the sand now under Eden's coat, his face, of a
deathly pallor, half-hidden in the crook of his arm. Eden crouched
beside him, gripping between shaking jaws a pipe that had long been
out. He patted Finch's shoulder. "Someone will be here, old chap! Do
you feel sick?"

An inarticulate sound came from the prostrate figure. Eden patted him
again. "You'll soon be all right. Those feelings come to us, but they
pass. I've felt like doing it many a time."

"Ugh!" He shuddered from head to foot.

Disgusted at being brought back, poor young devil, thought Eden.
Preferred oblivion out there to that tidy little fortune of Gran's. Ah,
he'd been having a rough time of it--no doubt about that! But he'd get
over it--live to play the fool with the money. . . . Money. What must it
be like to have money! Why the hell didn't Renny come? If only Gran had
left the money to him! He'd have snapped his fingers in the family's
face. There he went--shuddering again! Poor little devil!

The Whiteoak car! Rattling down the stony road as though it would fly
to pieces. Bang! Some rut that! Rattle, jiggle, bump. Ungodly racket,
but how the old car could go! There was Renny at the wheel, his face
set, too weather-bitten to show pallor even though he'd had a fright.
Serve him right! Serve them all right if the kid had been drowned. Eden
guessed at the scene which had brought about this reckless act.

"Hullo!" he shouted. "Here we are!"

The car bumped on to the beach, stopped with a jerk, and the master of
Jalna leaped out.

He came with a long, crunching stride. "What's this?" he asked sharply.

Eden got to his feet. "This boy's been trying to do away with himself."

"Do away with himself! Minny Ware told me that he'd got cramp swimming!"

"She was trying to spare your feelings! I'm not." Eden's face was set
also. His characteristic half-smile was frozen into a queer grin. "He
hasn't been able to tell anything, but I'll venture to say he was
hounded into it!"

Renny bent over Finch. He looked into his eyes, felt his heart. "I must
get him into bed. I've brought brandy with me." He held the cup from a
flask to Finch's mouth, and, when he had gulped the brandy gaspingly,
Renny refilled the cup and handed it to Eden. "This has been enough to
kill you," he said grimly, "after all you've been through!"

Eden shrugged, then looked steadily into Renny's eyes. "I have an
idea," he said, "that I've done the best thing in saving this youngster
that I've done in all my life."

"Minny Ware told me that you'd never have got him if it hadn't been for
her."

Damn Renny! How he took the wind out of one's sails!

"She was there," he admitted, "and I guess she never did a better
thing! He must have had a hell of a time to make him do this!"

"Time to talk of that later." Renny picked up the boy, too light for
his length, and carried him to the car. He supported him against his
shoulder while Eden drove. Meg met them on the steps. The old people
at Jalna must not get a fright. Meg's full, soft lips were ineffably
tender, and behind her stood Minny Ware. Maurice helped to carry Finch
up the stairs.

He was rolled in blankets before a fire, drowsy, perspiring, sensing
already the sweet, sticky smell of petunias that came in on the hot
sunshine through the open window. But he had something to say to Renny,
who stood drawing down his shirt sleeves. He had been rubbing Finch
with alcohol.

"Renny," he said hesitatingly, "you won't tell them what I did . . . you
won't let the others know?"

"All right," returned Renny, looking down on him with brusque
compassion. His mind flew back to other times when Finch had entreated,
in the very same tone: "You won't tell them that you licked me, will
you, Renny? You won't let the others know?" And he had answered then as
now: "All right, I won't."

Meg came in with a step which she tried to make noiseless, but she was
getting heavy, and the things on the bedside table jiggled. She bent
over the sausage-like form on the bed and stroked the damp hair.

"Comfy, now?"

"Uh-huh."

She asked Renny: "How is he, really?"

"Half-lit and as hot as blazes."

"Poor fellow!" She sat down on the side of the bed and tried to see his
face. "Finch, dear, how could you do such a dreadful thing? Frightening
me almost to death! As though _I_ minded you having the money! What
upset _me_ was Gran's giving her ruby ring, that I always understood
_I_ was to get, to Pheasant. You must understand that. Do you?"

He pushed his head against her palm as a dog urgent for caresses.
He felt broken. He tried to drag his mind from the well of
muddle-headedness, exhaustion, and submission, into which it had sunk,
and reply to her, but he could not. He could only feel for her fingers
with his hot lips and kiss them.

"He feels so hot!"

"That's the way he ought to feel. Come along and let him sleep."

She led Renny into the sitting-room, bright with glazed chintz. Eden
was seated before a tray on which were a dish of poached eggs on toast,
a pot of tea, and a jar of quince jelly. The shadow was lifted from her
face. The agitation caused by Finch was eased. He was safe in bed, and
here was a delicious breakfast tray.

She exclaimed: "This is Minny's doing! She has had breakfast brought up
for the three of us. She knew we must be faint for food. What a girl!"

"She carried it in herself," said Eden, "but she wouldn't stay. By
George, she can swim! And to look at her just now you'd never think
she'd been through anything. I admire her awfully." He helped himself
to an egg.

"She's a darling," said his sister. "I shall feel very blue when she
goes."

"Is she going?" Eden looked almost dismayed.

"Of course. A girl like that couldn't stay here for ever. She's getting
unsettled. But I don't know what she'll find to do----"

Renny put an egg on Meg's plate and two on his own. He said, easily:
"She'll find something to do! That sort always fall on their feet."

"What sort?" cried Meg, offended.

"Adventurous. Grabbing at life with both hands."

"I'm awfully keen about her," said Eden.

"You'd make up to anything in petticoats," said Renny.

"Petticoats! Listen to the man!"

"She could do with one. She's too----"

"Too _what_, dear?" asked Meg.

"H'm. Provocative. A little hampering might be good for her."

Meg pondered on this remark, not knowing whether or not to be
displeased. She changed the subject. "How lovely to be breakfasting
together!"

"I thought you liked eating alone," observed Renny, taking a third egg.
"Have another, Eden?"

Eden shook his head. "I wonder," he said, "what the upshot of this is
going to be! Brother Finch and the money. I wish the old lady might
have left me a thousand."

"Poor darling!" sighed Meg. "I wonder what you're going to do now that
you're better."

"Fall on my feet, I suppose, like Minny. I suspect I'm that sort,
too--grabbing life with both hands."

Meg said, spreading quince jelly on toast: "Finch has been getting
out of control for a long time. I've seen it, though I haven't said
anything."

"I commend your reticence," said Renny, looking down his nose.

Meg looked pensive. "Finch is really a nice boy--underneath. He's ever
so generous. Don't you think he might do something for Eden?"

"He doesn't come into the money until he's of age. Almost two years. By
that time Eden will probably be famous."

"Oh--his poems! But they pay so badly for them, don't they? Can't
Alayne do something for you, Eden?"

"Good God," exclaimed Renny, irritably, "she's done almost enough for
him, I think! Giving up her work and coming here to nurse him!"

"But why not? He's her husband. I think she'd a perfect right to nurse
him."

"And yet," retorted Renny, "you were angry with her for coming!" And he
added bitterly: "But she could never do anything right in your eyes!"

Eden's eyes, full of mocking laughter, looked from one face to the
other.

"Quarrel over me, do!" he said. "It makes me feel so important. And I
haven't felt very important of late. I'm quite well again, I've no job,
and my wife doesn't care a damn for me. In fact"--his eyes narrowed
with malice--"it's my opinion that she only came back to Jalna to nurse
me so that she could be near Renny!"

Renny sprang up, with lean red face redder with anger. The table was
jarred, a miniature squall slopped the tea from the cups.

"I don't expect anything better of you, Meggie," he said. "But I
thought that you, Eden, might have a little gratitude--a little
decency!" He strode to the door. "I must go. If you want me to drive
you home, come along."

This day seemed set apart for one emotion on top of another. He could
not endure the indoors. Meg followed him to the porch. Before the bed
of purple petunias, whose sweetness had risen to Finch's window, knelt
Minny Ware, her face close to the flowers, absorbing their perfume
drawn out by the sun. She liked the untidy, luxuriant, sticky things.
They hadn't troubled themselves about delicacy, precision of form,
like some flowers, but had given themselves up to sucking in all the
sweetness possible and wastefully exuding it. Though she was conscious
of the two in the porch, she made no sign, keeping her head bent over
the flowers.

Meg clasped Renny's arm in both her hands. "There's someone," she said,
indicating Minny with a glance, "who is deeply disappointed for your
sake."

"I like her nerve! I don't want her sympathy. . . . Meggie!" He turned his
dark eyes reproachfully on her. "Why will you try to shove that girl
down my throat when you know that I love Alayne--and Alayne only--and
always shall?"

Meg said, with a melancholy vibration in her voice: "No good will come
out of this! Why should she have come back? She is full of deceit. It's
just as Eden says--she made his illness an excuse to be near you! I'm
glad he's not grateful to her! I'm not grateful to her. I despise her,
and hate her."

His carved profile showed no sign of emotion. He let his arm remain in
his sister's clasp and his eyes rested composedly on the bright head of
Minny Ware, but Meg was aware of an inexplicable magnetic current from
him which, if she had been more sensitive, she might have interpreted
as a volcanic disturbance in the restrained tenacity of his passion.

Eden appeared in the hall, slid past them, and went to where Minny
crouched above the purple mass of petunias. She was not aware which of
the brothers had approached, and scarcely knew whether to be pleased or
disappointed when it was Eden's voice that said: "I'm afraid you feel
very tired. Heroic exertion, that--saving the lives of two able-bodied
men."

She tilted her head so that he looked down into her eyes, and saw the
sunlight on the satin prominence of her cheek-bones. She denied heroism
emphatically. "I only helped you a bit with Finch. He would struggle.
But--I am tired--I don't sleep well--I'm restless."

He said: "If you should be taking another early stroll to-morrow, we
might meet again by the lake. We could talk."

"I'd like that. . . . Mrs. Vaughan's a darling, but--I'm getting bored.
Oh, I'm a beast! I'm always like that."

He laughed. "So am I. We'll meet and compare our beastliness. It's
going to be fine to-morrow."

In the car the brothers rode in silence, broken at last by Eden's
saying rather fretfully: "Sorry, old chap."

The Whiteoak car was an inauspicious place for an apology to a driver
whose ears were not only assailed by its rattle, but who was trying to
fathom the meaning of a new jerking movement in its anatomy.

"What'd you say?" he demanded, turning his head with a gesture so like
old Adeline's that Eden's apology was marred by mirth. He repeated: "I
say I'm sorry for what I said--about Alayne, and all that."

Renny had caught nothing but the name of Alayne. He stopped the car
with a jerk and gave Eden a look of mingled encouragement and suspicion.

"Yes?"

"If I have to repeat it again," said Eden, sulkily, "I'll take it back.
I was trying to apologize for what I said about Alayne." He continued
with a frown: "The fact is, I'm absolutely fed up with being grateful.
I've spent the summer oozing gratitude to Alayne. It's got on my
nerves. I suppose that's why I said what I did. I'd no right to say it,
but--it's true, and you shouldn't mind that. She'd go through hell--and
being under the same roof with me is a fair imitation of hell for
her--for the sake of setting eyes on your red head once in a while. She
can't help it . . . I can't help it . . . we're caught in a net. . . .
She's not suited to any Whiteoak that ever lived. But neither of you can
ever be happy as things are. I want you to believe I'm sorry--horribly
sorry."

Renny said: "I hope this affair hasn't given you any cold. If you feel
a chill we must have the doctor to you. You mustn't be running risks."

He started the car and concentrated once more on that dubious, jerky
movement in its interior. What could it be? He was afraid the time was
at hand when he would have to buy a new car.

Eden slouched in his corner. What a baffling devil! If only one could
take him apart as one could the car, and find out what was inside! A
queer, fiery, cantankerous interior, he'd be bound!




XXIII

RENNY AND ALAYNE


Renny Whiteoak wandered about that afternoon with a grievous sense of
being cut off from the activities of the life he loved by the flaring
up of a passion he had thought to have under control, the futility of
which was so definite that to brood on it was to hunger for painted
fruit in a picture. He had thought to keep his desire for Alayne under
control, as he controlled a vicious horse by a curb bit, and he was
humiliated to find that Eden's reckless words at the breakfast table
had broken the bit and set his passion galloping. That, and the sting
of Meg's determination to marry him to Minny Ware, her fond hope of
transforming him into a placid husband and father. Now he was conscious
of only one thing--that, close at hand, beyond the orchards heavy with
fruit and thick autumnal sunshine, was Eden's wife whom he loved, who,
as Eden had said, would live in hell for the sake of sometimes setting
eyes on his red head. Had the summer been hell to her, he wondered. But
he was only faintly curious. Her mind was to him, as woman's mind, a
book in a foreign tongue, the pages of which might flutter with subtle
charm before him, but which he knew himself to be incapable of reading.
Hesitatingly he might recognize a word, a phrase, which resembled the
language spoken by himself; indolently he might form its syllables with
his lips, trying to become familiar with its tones, but the language
must ever remain for him a tenuous whisper between girl and girl.

Vehemently he was occupied by the clamour in his own being. At times he
surrendered himself to it, plunging all his senses into its depths, so
that he was unconscious of where he was, what he saw or heard, moving
like a storm-cloud through his stables, fields, and woods. Piers
avoided him, while sympathizing with the evil mood, brought on, as he
thought, by disappointment over the will. The stablemen pronounced
him vicious. As he was passing a field of potatoes he came upon the
bent figure of Binns brooding. The old man straightened himself with
difficulty, and cast a disgruntled look across the brown loam at the
master of Jalna.

"Hi!" he called.

Renny wheeled and stared at him blankly.

"No gettin' away from blight," called Binns. "Taters got it. Tomaters
got it. Corn's got it. It's a terr'ble year for blight." He began to
dig lustily, fearing he would again be told to cease work, for he was
a day labourer. But when the tall figure had moved on without answer
he leaned on his spade and followed him with vindictive little eyes.
"Blight's got him, darn him," he muttered. "It's got the whole fam'ly.
They be crazy, I tell you," he said to the potatoes, "rampagin' over
the country, playin' the organ in pitch dark. They've women on the
brain--that's what. . . . I tell John Chalk to keep his girl in at night.
He just laughs. Serve him right if she's ketched. High or low, it's all
one to that kind. Rips!" His eyes looked sagaciously into the eyes of
the potatoes.

Renny loitered by the paddock, where a two-year-old was being put at a
gate by Wright. He felt more peaceful as he followed the lift of the
splendid, lustrous body, the straight hocks, the strong neck. When the
practice was over, bridle and bit were removed; the two-year-old came
to the paling and nuzzled him. He plucked a handful of short clover and
fed it to her, watching the beam in her liquid eyes become ecstatic,
watching the firm muscles above the eyes swell and contract into
hollows as she munched. He took her head between his hands and kissed
her nose. "Sweet girl," he murmured. "Pet Jenny!"

But he could not rest. He left her, though she whinnied to him.
Restlessly he turned his steps in the direction of the bridle path,
following it into the green well of the pine wood. The damp summer
had produced a rich crop of mushrooms here. They followed the path,
ivory-white, brown, and rust-red, fantastically shaped, pushing through
the grass or half-hidden beneath prickly brambles laden with berries.
By a curve where the sun had access a tall clump of pennyroyal scented
the air with its acrid sweetness. A tiny green snake hesitated for a
moment, with quivering tongue, before it slid under the grass. On the
path were hoofprints of Wake's pony. He had passed that way, and was
returning, Renny judged by the small thunder of an approaching canter.
He pressed his way through the brambles under the pines and watched boy
and pony go by, Wakefield sitting erect, with folded arms, a look of
exaltation on his face. Renny made a grimace of disgust with himself
for hiding from the little boy, yet speech with even Wake was abhorrent
to him. He stood motionless as one of the mastlike trunks, his eyes
fixed on the sombre wasted red of pine needles thick on the ground. He
recalled certain amorous adventures of his past. How lightly forgotten!
But now there was neither fulfilment nor forgetting.

Eden was well now, but unfit for responsibility. He must be sent to
some warm climate for the winter. And Alayne would return to New
York. Unless--but what was the alternative? His mind moved in the old
relentless circle. There was no way out. If only she was gone to-day!
If only he could force himself to go away until this fever subsided and
he could endure her nearness with the same stoicism as before. He made
up his mind to go away--to breathe a different air.

He re-entered the bridle path, and in a sunny space, where the berries
were large and ripe, he found Minny Ware filling a small basket. He
felt a quick annoyance with her for being in his path and, after a nod,
passed on. Then he remembered that he had not thanked her for what she
had done that morning. He reversed his steps hastily and came to her
side.

"I want to thank you--I can't thank you enough for your courage this
morning. God knows what might have happened if you had not been on the
shore!"

The sound of his own words raised suspicion in his mind. "How did you
come to be there," he asked abruptly, "at that hour?"

"Oh, it was just a coincidence. I like the early morning."

But he saw warm colour creep up her cheeks. Why had she been there? Odd
that neither he nor Meg had seen anything strange in the presence of
Eden and her on the shore at sunrise.

She knew that he was suspecting her, but she went on picking berries.
She selected the largest ones and dropped them almost caressingly into
her basket. He noticed that her finger-tips were stained and also her
lip, giving her a look of childlike innocence. The trivial act of her
laying the plucked berries so gently in the basket, the stain on her
fingers and her lip, seemed suddenly of enormous importance to him, as
though she were performing some rite. The harassment of his thoughts
ceased, his mind became concentrated on the ritualistic act.

She said, dreamily: "Do you care for these? Shall I pick you some?" Her
eyes slid toward him speculatively.

"No," he answered, "but I'd like to stay and watch you pick them, if
you don't mind."

"Why should you want to watch me do such a simple thing?" Her eyes
searched his face. She had a great longing for love.

"I don't know," he answered, perplexed. And, seeing that she looked
rebuffed, he took her hand in his and kissed her bare arm on the white
crook of her elbow.

He was not conscious of the approach of a third person, but he felt
her arm quiver and he heard the quick intake of her breath. She was
startled, but not by the caress. She said, "Oh!" in a defensive tone,
and, turning his head, he saw across the bushes the pale set face of
Alayne.

She had come upon what looked to her like a radiant understanding
between the two. She saw Minny's exuberance responding to a calculated
caress for which Renny had led her to this secluded spot.

She drew back and stammered something incoherent. Minny, not much
put out, regained her composure and smiled, not ill-pleased to be
discovered by Alayne in such a situation. Renny retained his grasp on
her wrist.

In the silence that followed Minny's exclamation, a delicate trilling
sound became audible, as though some bizarre but diminutive instrument
were being played beneath a leaf of bracken. The performer seemed to be
so unconscious of the existence of the giant beings towering above him
that his very egotism reduced them to something less than his own size;
his shrill piping rose higher and higher, triumphant over mere bulk,
was taken up by other players just as insistent, just as impressive in
their purpose, till the sound of their trilling became universal. The
locusts were singing of the death of Summer.

An inertia had crept over the three, who had, without their own
volition, become listeners rather than performers in the woodland
drama. Minny held a warm, too soft berry in her hand; Renny looked
entreatingly yet dreamily at Alayne, who stood, as though she had lost
the power of motion, regarding the linked hands of the other two.

The spell was broken by the reappearance of the little green snake,
who, unlike the orchestra of locusts, was conscious of the intruders
from tip to tip, quivering with fear and hatred of them, rearing his
head against their presence, determined to separate them into the three
lonely wanderers they had been when they entered the wood.

Without speaking, Alayne turned and walked swiftly along the path, a
curve of which soon hid her from their sight. Their hands fell apart.
Renny stood irresolute for a short space, feeling a kind of anger
against both girls, as beings of a different texture from himself who
had a secret in common that was in its essence antagonistic to him.
Then, without looking at Minny, he crashed through the underbrush and
strode after Alayne.

Minny's eyes, as she resumed her berry-picking, had in them more of
amusement than chagrin. After all, it was an amusing world. Mrs.
Vaughan's schemes come to nothing. . . . Renny Whiteoak in love with that
cold-blooded Mrs. Eden. . . . Eden, himself--a wayward dimple indented
her round cheek. She began to sing, softly at first, but gaining in
volume, till the locust orchestra was silenced, believing Summer to
have returned in all her strength and beauty.

Alayne was conscious that he was following her and, dreading a meeting
with him, she turned from the path at the first opportunity and took a
short cut through the woods toward a gate that opened on to the road.
He followed the windings of the bridle path, believing her still to
be ahead of him, but when he did not overtake her he suspected that
she was wilfully eluding him, and retraced his way to the short cut.
He overtook her just as she reached the road. She heard the opening
of the gate and turned to him. Here in the public road she felt more
courageous than in the quiet of the wood, less likely to show the
feeling which she fought so desperately to control. He had been the
permanent object of her thoughts all the summer, yet this was the first
time they had been quite close together. She had desired to return to
New York without such a meeting. Now that it had been forced upon her,
she felt her strength drained by the effort of resisting her own love
for him no less than by the bitterness of having discovered him in the
act of kissing Minny Ware.

"Alayne," he said, in a muffled voice, "you are trying to avoid me! I
don't think I deserve it. Upon my word I don't!"

"I would rather be alone. It's nothing more than that." She began to
walk slowly along the road.

"I know----" he exclaimed. "You're angry. But I give you my word----"

She interrupted furiously: "Why should you explain things to me? As
though it mattered to me! Why did you leave her? Why did you follow
me?" Though her lips questioned him her eyes looked fixedly ahead.

He walked beside her in the dust of the road. A jolting waggon loaded
with turnips overtook and passed them.

He said: "You can't refuse to have this much explained, surely. I had
not been two minutes beside Minny when you came up. My kiss on her arm
was no more than her eating a blackberry. A few minutes before that, I
had stopped by the paddock and kissed a two-year-old mare. One kiss was
as important as the other. To me--to the mare--to Minny!"

He looked down into her pale, firmly modelled face, with its look of
courage, of endurance, its what she called "Dutch" look of stability.
Yet about her mouth was a look of fatigue, as though she were played
out by the isolation and the ingrown emotions of the last months.

He continued: "I wish I could make you believe in my love as I believe
in it myself. There's nothing on earth I could want so much as to have
you for my own. Do you believe that?"

She did not answer.

A motor-car whizzed by them, raising the dust in a cloud. "Come," he
said, "let us get off this road. It's so hot and dusty, it will give
you a headache."

But she trudged doggedly on.

"Alayne," he persisted, "why don't you say something--if it's only to
say that you don't believe me--that you're sick of the sight of me?"

She tried to answer, but her mouth was parched and her lips refused to
move. She felt that she must go on for ever, walking along this road,
with him following her, longing to cry out, yet unable to speak, as in
a nightmare. She would go on till she stumbled and fell.

He did not speak again, but walked beside her, trying once rather
pathetically to suit his stride to hers. At the foot of the steps that
led to the church he stopped.

"Where are you going?" he asked.

"To your grandmother's grave. I haven't seen it yet. Do I hear Finch
playing in the church?"

"No, no. Finch is in bed. He tried to drown himself this morning." Let
her have that. Perhaps it would shock her out of this terrible quiet.

"Yes," she said calmly. "Eden told me. No wonder!"

"God, how you hate us!"

"No--I fear you."

He said, almost irritably: "All this is so unreal! Can't you, or won't
you, talk about our love? You know it exists. Why blink it? We can't
come together, but surely--just before we part we can speak of it. I am
going-away to-night. You needn't be afraid that you'll see me again."

She began to go up the steps toward the churchyard. He caught her dress
and held it. "No. You shall not go up there! I can't follow you there."

She raised her face to his with a sudden piteousness in her eyes.
"Where shall I go, then?"

"Back into the woods."

They turned back, and had to step into the ditch, rank with dusty
goldenrod and Michaelmas daisies, out of the way of a lorry loaded with
calves. She stumbled; he put his hands on her and supported her. She
felt that she must fall.

Again they were in the golden-green well of the woods. The red sun was
low. Overhead the half-moon drifted, a pale feather, along the sky.

They stood for a moment listening to the beating of their own hearts.
Then she raised her heavy eyes to his and whispered: "Kiss me----"

He bent. She drew his head down, closed her eyes, and felt for his
mouth with her lips.

With their kisses they mingled the endearments pent up so long in their
hearts.

"Alayne, my precious one."

"Renny--oh, my darling love."

He drew away a little and cast an oblique glance at her. "Is it
true----?"

"Is what true?"

But he could not go on. He could not ask her if what Eden said to him
were true--that she would be willing to live in hell for the sake of
seeing him now and again--that she had come back to Jalna to be near
him, and not for Eden's sake.

"Is what true?" she whispered again.

"That we must part."

She broke into restrained but bitter crying.

A great flock of crows passed above the treetops, calling to each
other, crying wildly.

"They are mocking us!" she said.

"No, we don't exist for them. We only exist for each other. . . . Alayne,
I can't go away to-night as I said.'

"No, no! We must meet sometimes and talk--while I am still here. Oh,
Renny, hold me close--I want to get strength from you."

"And I want to make you as weak as I am," he murmured, against her
hair. He drew her closer. Some magnetic current from his hands
frightened her. He began to kiss her again. What mad thoughts were born
of his kisses against her eyes, her throat, her breast!

She disengaged herself and began to return along the bridle path. He
followed her, his eyes dark and brilliant the lines about his mouth
patient and stubborn.

It seemed that he could follow her thus across the world, lean,
primitive, untiring.

Where their paths separated, they said a muttered good-bye, not looking
at each other.




XXIV

WEAVING


Finch did not return home for a week. He remained under Meg's
protective care, feeling the not unpleasant languor that follows the
overstrain of hysterical emotion. He spent the first days in bed,
listening indolently to the various noises of the house, the cooing of
Patience, the singing of Minny Ware, the activities of the old Scotch
housekeeper. Over and over again, as he lay there, he reviewed the
events of his life since the New Year. His playing with the orchestra,
his shadowy acquaintance with the other members of it: Burns, from the
abattoir, Meech, the tailor's assistant. Their faces came and went. He
thought oftenest of his friend, George Fennel, with his square hands,
so deft on the banjo strings, his thickset figure, and his eyes beaming
beneath his rumpled hair. He had not seen George since his return
from New York. George had spent his summer as swimming instructor at
a boys' camp, and they had not written to each other. Friendship with
George was such an easeful thing. When you were separated from him
you did not write to him or perhaps often think of him, but once you
were together again the gap of separation was bridged as though it had
never been. Looking back on the cold nights when he and his friend had
slipped from the house of George's aunt, and hastened to some dance
hall to play with the orchestra, Finch thought that this had been the
happiest time of his life. The adventurous freedom of it, the exciting
risk, the playing of dance music for the rhythmically swaying bodies of
bright-eyed boys and girls, the creeping home toward morning with money
in their pockets! As he lay in bed he hummed their favourite dance
tunes.

He reviewed his friendship with Arthur Leigh. How different from his
friendship with George, which had begun in babyhood and continued at
the same temperate level to their school days. He had not seen Arthur
either since his return. Leigh had been in Europe with his mother and
sister. Difficult to bridge a gap of absence with them, Finch feared.
He had an inexplicable dread of meeting Leigh, and, more especially,
his sister Ada again. Now that he had passed his exams, he would be
going to the University in October. Arthur would be there. What would
he think of Finch's having all that money left him? Perhaps it would
not seem so very much to Arthur, for the Leighs were rich. Their
faces rose before him too, Arthur's sensitive, questioning, rather
supercilious; Ada's ivory-pale, heavy-lidded, provocative; and Mrs.
Leigh like a sister rather than a mother, more golden, less bronze
than Ada, her eyes more blue than grey, desiring to please rather than
dubiously offering to be pleased. How little he knew of girls! And yet
they were often in his mind, when, lying awake, he would make fantastic
pictures of the girl who might possibly love him. Sometimes their faces
were mocking variations of the face of Ada Leigh, sometimes they were
impossible faces with disproportionately large, mournful eyes or wide
red mouths like flowers. Sometimes they showed no face at all, only a
flat, white disc borne above heavy breasts that pressed against flowing
garments.

He reviewed his life in New York as costing clerk. His determined
efforts to learn the routine of business, his rides on the Fifth Avenue
buses, his visits to Alayne's apartment, the jolly kindness of Rosamond
Trent. Looking back at this period, he seemed not to have been himself
at all, but a strange translation into a being of another world,
already becoming so shadowy that it was hardly to be grasped at.

He went over the happenings of the summer--his practising, his
playing in the church at night, the walks home by moonlight, the
secret meetings with his grandmother. When his imagination reached
the point of her death, her funeral, the reading of the will, and the
scene afterward, a protective instinct drew a film, like a fine veil,
between the eyes of his spirit and these pictures, so that it might
not be bruised by the cruelty of them.

These various experiences presented themselves as sections of a screen,
which shut him off from what might have been a shrinking contemplation
of his future at Jalna. He lay supine, indolently dreaming of life, not
daring to think how close he had been to death.

Meg's notion of rehabilitating him in his old niche, or something
better, was to feed his body with the best that her kitchen could
provide. Her intuition, and some self-reproach, told her that he
needed tempting food and plenty of it. He was tempted like an invalid
and ate like a field labourer. Renny, coming to visit him and finding
him propped up over half a broiled chicken, thought, and declared
vehemently at Jalna, that Meggie was perfect. Her remarks about Alayne
had faded as breath from a glass. These were women's ways and beyond
his ken. But he could take in the significance of Meggie's plump white
hand stroking Finch's lank hair, or a crisp section of broiled fowl
surrounded by green peas. The family at Jalna were told that Finch
had had a "nervous breakdown" (most convenient of illnesses) just as
he arrived at the Vaughans' house, had been taken in, and was being
nursed back to health by the blameless Meggie, and that it would be a
good thing if they could bring themselves to treat him with indulgence
on his return. It was a relief to all to have him out of the house for
that week. The sight of his angular, drooping form and the knowledge
that here was the heir to old Adeline's fortune might have produced
other nervous breakdowns. As it was, the talk rolled on and on without
even the insignificant let or hindrance of his presence. Augusta was
shortly returning to England. Never again would she endure another
Canadian winter. She had had the good fortune not to have been born
in Canada. She had no intention of dying there of the cold. This she
affirmed with the thermometer at eighty-five degrees in the last fever
of summer. She urged her brothers to return with her for a visit.

Meg thought that a talk from Mr. Fennel would be good for Finch.
She did not tell the rector that he had done anything so desperate
as attempt to take his own life, but she intimated that he had lost
control of himself in a very strange and inexplicable fashion. Mr.
Fennel shrewdly guessed that there had been a disturbance at Jalna over
the will, and that Finch, made ill by the excitement, was being kept at
the Vaughans' till the smell of the fat died away. He came to see him
and talked, not religion or behaviour, but about his own young days in
Shropshire, and how he had wanted to be a stage comedian, and did Finch
so much good by his wit and sagacity that he was able to be out of bed
that evening, and the next morning steadied himself still more by an
hour at the piano.

The next day George Fennel, back from camp, came to see him, and still
further forwarded his recovery. George was beaming over his friend's
good fortune, and blithely indifferent to the disappointment of the
rest of the clan. He sat, solid, rumpled, sunburnt, on the side of the
bed, and discussed the endless possibilities of a hundred thousand
dollars.

"Why, look here," he said, "you can get up a _regular_ orchestra of
your own, if you want. We could take it on a tour across the continent.
Some sort of striking uniform--blue with lots of gilt. I suppose your
family would object. My father would, too. He hasn't much imagination.
Hates anything stagey. But it's the sort of life I'd like." His eyes
shone. He took from his pocket the usual crumpled cigarette-packet
that invariably contained from one to three enervated cigarettes,
and offered Finch one. They puffed together in the sweet renewal of
good-fellowship after absence.

"And look here," he went on, "you should get yourself a concert grand
piano. I'd like to hear you on a concert grand. Playing some of those
things from the _Chauve-Souris_. It would make a tremendous difference
to you, having a piano like that. You might become famous. . . . Of
course, for my part, I like the idea of a swell orchestra. Great Scott,
we had some fun with the old one, didn't we? And we worked for what we
got! My finger-ends used to get so sore that the banjo strings seemed
red-hot. Do you remember the last night, and that girl who tried to
make up to you? They were a pretty tough crowd. Do you remember what a
time we had getting home, and how we bought milk from a milkman and it
was frozen? I should never have got home if it hadn't been for you."

George broke into his peculiar, sputtering laughter, then became
serious. "Last night I had dinner in town with a Mr. Phillips. He's got
absolutely the best radio I've ever heard. It's an expensive one, but
he says it gives perfect satisfaction. We heard wonderful grand-opera
music and some fellow on the piano--just the sort of thing you'd like.
You really ought to have one of those. It would be good for you, too,
because you could hear all the best things and not bother about the
jazzy stuff. . . . Good Lord, do you remember the way we used to pound out
'My Heart Stood Still'?"

He sputtered again and then made an even more significant suggestion.
"Do you know, Finch, up in the North where I was there was a wonderful
bargain in a summer cottage. It was a log-cabin sort of thing built
by some American who finds it too far to come. He's going to sell it
awfully cheap. It would be splendid for you to own such a place to rest
in, in the summer, and take your friends to, and recuperate and all
that. It's got an enormous stone fireplace and raftered ceilings, and
the deer come almost up to the door. Why, one night this American said
a porcupine kept him awake gnawing at the foundation."

"It would be splendid," agreed Finch, his head suddenly very hot with
excitement.

"And there's another thing I've just remembered," pursued George.
"There's a chap up there who has a motor launch for sale. It's the
fastest one I've ever been on. Goes through the water like a knife. If
you had that, with the cottage, you could have no end of fun. I wish
I'd found out more about the launch. However, I think you'll be safe
in risking it. It's quite different with a motor-car. When you buy a
car you should get one of the best English makes. There's nothing like
them for standing the wear and tear."

"The trouble is," said Finch, "that I don't get this money till I'm
twenty-one."

"The time will soon pass," said George, easily. "I dare say these
people would hold the cottage and launch for you. I'll bet that you
could raise money any day on your prospects. That's often done."

Finch lay bewildered, speechless before the vista opening before him.

His meeting with Arthur Leigh was very different and, though less
riotously stirring, had an equally healing effect on his bruised
spirit. He had a note from Arthur that ran:

     "MY DEAR OLD FINCH,

     "What is this dazzling news I hear of you? I met Joan on the
     street and she told me something about a huge bequest. I am
     delighted, and mother and Ada almost as much so. Please come and
     spend a week with us (my womenfolk insist that it shall be no
     less) and we can talk day and night. It will take seven of them
     for all I want to say to you.

     "To think that I have never seen you since your mysterious
     disappearance to New York! And in all this time I have never had
     so much as a line from you!

                                                   "Yours ever,
                                                           "ARTHUR."

Finch's heart was quick with love for his friend when he had read this
note. The plain but heavy notepaper, bearing the Leighs' crest and
Arthur's small black handwriting, symbolized for him the dignity and
elegance of Arthur's life. The fact that he was a Court and a Whiteoak
meant nothing to Finch; this note written by Arthur's small exquisite
hand was truly impressive. He carried it in his pocket as a kind of
charm when he returned to Jalna.

It required great fortitude to return. So tremulous were his nerves
when he entered the house, he feared a wry look or word lest they
should betray him into an hysterical outburst. The very smell of the
house sent a quiver through him. The smell of the thick, heavily-gilded
wallpaper, the shabby tasselled curtains, the faint Eastern odour
that hung near his grandmother's room, where now reigned inviolable
stillness. Did he imagine it, or was there still the odour of coffin
and funeral flowers in the empty drawing-room? He stood in the hall,
not knowing where to go, listening to his own heartbeats. He felt
desolate and afraid in spite of George's visit, of Arthur's letter. For
the first time he realized his grandmother's death, and the loss those
visits to her room would be to him. He realized with a constriction of
the throat how much confidence he had got from those weeks of intimacy
with her fierce and extravagant nature.

Standing in the hall, he saw himself, a tiny boy not more than three,
descending the stairs, a step at a time, on his little seat, lonely
even then, a pathetic infant with a limp, fair lock dangling over his
eyes. It had seemed a tremendous journey down those stairs, and the
smells then had been strange and disturbing as now. He remembered the
long-legged, red-haired big brother who, striding in leather leggings
along the hall, would snatch him up and throw him, screaming with
frightened laughter, across his shoulder. He remembered the smiling,
teasing boy of ten that was Eden, and the ruddy-cheeked one of seven,
whom he worshipped and feared, that was Piers. And the uncles. . . .
Standing there, he meditated a separate penitential apology to each for
the trick he had played them. For, however unwittingly, he felt that
there must have been something tricky in the way he had supplanted the
others. Else they could not have felt toward him as they did. He feared
that among them all there was not one who had not inwardly withdrawn
from him, unless it were perhaps Eden. Eden! What a muddle! Could
he go to them separately, make them understand, and still keep his
self-control?

The very thought of it took the sap out of him. His knees felt weak. He
pictured the interviews as a series of fine-drawn agonies. No--he could
not do it. They must think of him what they would, endure his moneyed
presence as best they could.

He heard a step behind him and turned. Augusta was coming down the
hall. In the dim light cast by the stained-glass window he saw that she
was very pale and looked troubled. He raised his eyes humbly, wondering
how she would greet him. She was beside him before she noticed his
presence. Then she concentrated on him a look of melancholy relief.

"It is you, Finch! I'm very glad you have come. I wish you would come
to my room so that I may discuss something with you. I believe you are
just the one I need to help me."

To be needed! Oh, sweet words! He followed her up the stairs, wishing
that he might lift the hem of her black cashmere dress and bear it as
a train. To be regarded without bitterness! To be taken under Aunt
Augusta's crpe-trimmed wing!

In her room, she said: "It is about my dear canary that I am worried.
I actually made my plans for returning to England without considering
him. Now I cannot turn back. He will die unless he is tenderly cared
for. Finch, dear, can I trust him to you? Will you do this for me?" Her
Queen Alexandra fringe drooped above the gilded cage where the canary,
trig as a daffodil, searched for hempseed in his cup.

"Tweet, tweet!" said Augusta. "Thank Heaven, he can know nothing of
what is passing in my mind. Tweet, tweet! I tell you, Finch, he knows
more than all the cats and dogs of the family put together. I do not
boast about it, but I take the greatest pleasure in his sagacity. Can
I, _can_ I trust you to care for him?"

"Yes, Aunt, I'll do my very best for him. I suppose he's pretty
delicate."

"His health is perfect. But he needs perfect care. I shall give you
minute directions about his bath, his seeds, his lump sugar, and his
lettuce-leaf."

The canary wiped his bill vehemently on his perch and cocked an eye at
them.

"Tweet, tweet," said Augusta, in a mournful contralto.

"Tweet, tweet," echoed Finch hoarsely.

Poor bird, he was to know some vicissitudes under Finch's care!

Finch kissed his aunt fervently and, with a lightening of the shadow
that hung over him, ran upstairs to his attic room to look over his
clothes. He took them from the closet, examined them near the window,
then laid them on the bed. The more he looked at them, the more certain
he became that he must refuse Arthur Leigh's invitation to spend a
week with him. The new black ready-to-wear suit which had been hastily
bought him for the funeral did not seem to help things out at all.
Most of his underthings and socks had holes in them. His best hat was
no better than his worst. Some ties he had bought in New York were
satisfying, but scarcely enough to make him presentable. His visit to
Leigh's must be short, for, even if he could persuade Renny to buy him
new clothes, they would not be ready at once, and Leigh wanted him at
once.

In the upstairs hall he met Nicholas, the one he dreaded most of all.

"Home again?" Nicholas said, in his brusque way. "Do run down to the
dining-room and fetch me my glasses. I've left them on the table by the
window."

Finch flew for the glasses. Nicholas took them, with a rumble of
thanks, not looking at him, and retired into his room. Finch drew a
deep breath of relief. Nicholas had been aloof, but not austere--not
terrible as on that last day. His home-coming might not be so harrowing
after all.

Ernest came to the door of his room and beckoned to Finch. He looked
delicate and distinguished. His person and his room were exquisitely
neat, as though the disappointment, the hopelessness of ever possessing
greater scope for self-expression, had moved him to perfect, as much as
lay in his power, his restricted field of action.

The water-colours on the walls had been rearranged, the china ornaments
on the mantelpiece. A black glass vase holding a few sprays of the
delicate white blooms of Queen Anne's lace stood on his desk, where
the books and papers relating to his Commentary on Shakespeare had
been recently put in order. Ernest's clothes, his tie, even his studs,
were black. There were dark shadows below his eyes. Their expression,
however, was gentle as they rested on Finch.

He said, rather nervously: "Come in, come in. I'm not going to keep
you." He really meant: "But please don't stay long." He fidgeted to the
window and settled the blind.

Finch tried to smile without grinning, to look sympathetic without
looking lugubrious. His features had never felt so large and so
difficult to control.

"I'm afraid," said his uncle, hesitatingly, "that we--that I--all
of us, indeed, have been too hard on you, I feel sure that there is
nothing underhand in you, Finch. You simply didn't realize the danger
to my mother's health in such late hours. I think I remember saying
that it had killed her. In my excitement I may have said even worse
things. I don't remember. I do remember hearing someone say that you
were no better than a murderer. But I think that was your aunt. I don't
think I said that."

"No. You just said I'd shortened her life."

Ernest flushed. "Yes. That was it. . . . I'm sorry, my dear, that I said
that. It is quite probably not true. She was quite old--very old, in
fact--she might have died in any case."

"Uncle Ernie," burst out Finch, "I had rather any one of you had got
Gran's money than me! I tell you, it's a torture to me!"

Ernest smiled bleakly. "You will get over that feeling. It will be
wonderful for you. Open the world before you very beautifully. It's
an exhilarating thing for a young man to have money, it is indeed. My
father was very generous with me when I was a young man. I had a very
good time, but I was foolish, credulous. It slipped through my fingers.
I want you to take better care of--your money." He pronounced the last
two words with an uncontrollable wryness, as of one who had set his
teeth into bitter fruit.

Finch gulped, then said in a shaky voice: "There's one thing certain.
When I get the money I'm going to--do things for those who have a
better right to it than me. If I can, I want to do something for each
one that he would have liked to do if he had got the money." He looked
beseechingly at Ernest. "I want you to go to England for a trip, and to
consult those books in the British Museum for your Commentary----" He
jerked his head toward the desk.

Ernest was touched. "Oh no. I could not think of doing that."

"Yes, you will! To please me. And Uncle Nick--and the others--something
nice for each one!" His eyes were almost radiant.

"Well, well, we'll see. It's very handsome of you, anyhow." A light was
roused in his eyes, too. Then he looked meditative. He said: "There's
one person for whom I should like you to do something. Someone who, at
present, can't do much for himself. He does need help, and he's so very
brilliant. I don't want to see him forced into some work that will take
away his impulse toward poetry."

"You mean Eden?" Great Scott, he had never thought of Eden! Yet it was
true enough what Uncle Ernest said.

"I wonder what I could do for him?"

Ernest said, almost cheerfully: "You will know when the time comes. I
only wish something could be done now. He's so much stronger, but he
must be taken care of. He could come home if it weren't for Piers."

"Well, I'll see what I can do," and Finch left, feeling an almost
tumultuous sense of responsibility for his family.

He did not see Piers until dinner, when he came in bare-throated,
healthy, bright-eyed, after driving a good bargain for a carload of
apples. He grinned at Finch, with derision rather than malice, and,
after they were seated at table, said: "No wonder you took to your bed!
I'd have done the same if I had got it."

"For God's sake," returned Finch, in a whisper, "shut up!" But even
this meeting was much easier than he had expected. Life was going on at
Jalna, the loom was moving slowly, creakingly, but it was moving, and
Finch, in his new aspect, was drawn into the changed pattern.

He was undressing that first night when he heard soft steps ascending
the stairs. He was startled, for he seldom had a visitor. Wakefield
appeared in the doorway.

He advanced with an ingratiating smile. "I simply couldn't sleep,
Finch. Renny's out for the evening and he didn't tell me where, so I
can't be sure what time he'll come in." He added rather patronizingly:
"I thought you might feel nervous up here all alone after your
breakdown. I thought I'd better come and bear you company."

Finch returned, in the same tone: "Well, I'm afraid you will repent you
of your folly. I'm a beastly bedfellow, and I'm going to have the light
on and read for a bit."

"That will just suit me!" cried Wake gaily, scrambling into the bed and
clutching the sheet defensively. "I really want to talk with you about
your plans, and give you a little advice about looking after all your
money. You see," he proceeded, hugging his knees, "I know more than
you'd guess about money. What I mean is, that I know a lot about making
_a little bit of money_ go a long way. I could make a hundred thousand
dollars seem almost like a million. If you were to make me a little
allowance--I wouldn't ask for more than twenty-five cents a week, just
enough to keep Mrs. Brawn from nagging at me all the time--I'd give
you advice that would be worth a lot to you. I can tell by the looks
of you that you haven't got a good head for business. Piers says you
won't have your money any time until you'll lose it. I say, Finch, how
would you like to divide it equally with me? Then we'd have loads of
fun seeing who could make the most out of his share. Like the Parable
of the Talents."

"Your particular talent," said Finch, sitting on the edge of the bed,
"is nerve. You've got more than anyone I know. I don't know how you've
reached the age you have without someone giving you a bang that would
finish you, you're so darned cheeky. As though I'd trust you with any
of my money!" No doubt about it, there was a thrill in "my money"!

Wake successfully assumed the expression of his aunt when displeased.
"I hope," he reproved, with his upper lip lengthened, "that you're not
going to be close-fisted the moment you get rich."

"For goodness' sake!" shouted Finch, "have a heart! I'm not rich! How
much money do you suppose I've got? Ninety-eight cents--that's what.
And I'm invited to spend a week with Arthur Leigh!"

Wake looked pleased. "That's nice, isn't it? Because when you're
visiting a rich fellow like that you'll not need any money. You might
just as well leave the ninety-eight cents with me. It'd pay my salary
for nearly a month."

"If I was some brothers," declared Finch, "I'd give you a good hiding
and send you downstairs. I suppose you'd tell, though."

Wake shook his head firmly. "No, I shouldn't. I'd bear the pain with
all the fortitude I could muster."

Finch groaned. "Gosh--the language you use! It's awful to hear a small
boy talking like an old gentleman of seventy. That's what comes of
having no other kids to play with."

Wake's luminous eyes darkened; he played his never-failing trump card.
"No--no, Finch, I don't think it's that. . . . I think it's because I'm
pretty sure I'll never live to be seventy--or p'r'aps even grow up. I
want to use all the language I can in the short while I'm here."

"Rot!" But it was too bad to be rough with the poor little fellow. . . .
When he got his money he'd do something nice for Wake!

He got up, undressed, changed his mind about reading, and was just
going to put out the light when Wakefield said, in a cajoling tone: "I
say, Finch, aren't you going to do--you know what?"

"No, I don't."

"Oh yes, you do!" His smile was sly. "Shut the door first."

Finch, about to blow out the candle, growled: "Haven't an earthly idea
what you're babbling about."

"You said--that day--that you--oh, Finch, please do it!" He made a
gesture to express mystery. "That lovely thing you said you did--in
front of the little goddess."

"Oh, that!" He stood motionless above the candle flame, an odd pointed
shadow on his forehead, the hollows of his eyes dark.

"You wouldn't like that. It would frighten you."

"Frighten me! Never! I shan't tell a soul of it."

"Swear!"

"I swear."

"If you breathe a word of this I'm done with you for ever and ever,
remember!"

He went to the cupboard. There was a mysterious rustling, while Wake
sat upright on the bed shivering in ecstasy.

Finch brought forth the figure of Kuan Yin and set it on the desk. He
took from a drawer a packet of small pyramids of incense, and stood
one at her feet. The moon had risen above the treetops and was sending
a shaft of light, clearly defined as the blade of a sword, in at the
window. Finch blew out the candle. The various objects in the room were
reclaimed by darkness; only the delicate porcelain figure of Kuan Yin
held the light like a jewel. He lighted the incense. A blue spiral of
smoke arose from it, and spread like a tremulous veil to the verge of
the moon-shaft. A pungent, exotic scent sought the expectant nostrils
of the boys. They became still as the statue herself; their faces,
drained of colour by the moon, seemed also shaped in porcelain. A
sudden gust had arisen; the oaks began to sigh and then to shake. The
moon, which had seemed clear of the treetops, now was caught in their
upward straining, her light shattered into bright prisms dissolving,
rejoining, dancing across the darkness. The spirits of the boys were
not in their bodies, but were liberated by the incense.

Under the guidance of Kuan Yin, patroness of sailors, they floated
through the casement into moonlit seas of an unearthly beauty.




XXV

A LOAN


"What do you suppose I dreamed?" asked Wake. "You'll never guess."

Inarticulate sounds came from Finch's pillow.

"I dreamed that you were a flower!"

A grunt that weakened into a chuckle. Finch opened an eye. "What sort
of flower?"

"Not a very pretty one, I'm afraid." His voice was gently regretful. "I
don't know the variety. A long, yellowish sad-looking flower. . . ."

"Hmph."

"But"--gaily--"just _crammed_ with honey!"

"The deuce I was!"

"Yes--and I was a _bee_! One of those jazzy little brown bees that go
gathering----"

It was enough. Finch smothered him under a pillow and did not release
him until he admitted that he was a liar, a toady, and an altogether
filthy little reptile.

No mention was made, while Finch dressed and Wake splashed in the
basin, of the ceremony of the night before. In the darkness the figure
of Kuan Yin had disappeared, but Wake's sensitive nose was aware of a
subtle fragrance in the room, a delicate elation of the spirit as from
a lovely half-remembered dream.

It was a morning of swinging white clouds against an ardent blue sky.
The thick yellow sunshine was flung on the grey walls of the attic room
as though with a brush. More gold than gold it seemed; the sky bluer
than blue; the grass and trees more green than ever green had been.
That querulous artist Summer, who had given them during her season so
many blurred and wanly tinted pictures, now seemed intent on splashing
her last colour on the final canvas with furious brilliance.

"What a day," cried Wake, "for going on a visit! How I wish I were!"
He paused in the scrubbing of his face with a washcloth to look
pensive. "Do you know, Finch, I've never been on a visit in my life?
Not one little visit! I wonder if ever I shall!"

"Of course you will. I'll take you somewhere--sometime," promised Finch.

He was excited about his own visit this morning. He recklessly made up
his mind to stay the week with the Leighs, and, before he went down to
breakfast, he put the pick of his wardrobe into a suitcase. Renny must
be approached for money.

He found him on the rustic bridge. At this time of the year the stream
was usually little more than a rivulet pushing its way through a rank
growth of rushes and water weeds. But this year it had the fullness of
spring and, beneath the bridge, had widened into a pool encircled by
a thick new growth of watercress. The rippled, sandy bottom reflected
swarthy sunlight. Renny was not alone. Perched on the rail beside him
was Eden, lazily dropping bits of twig into the pool. They were not
talking, but seemed to have finished a conversation which had left each
absorbed in contemplation of his own position. Finch noticed the great
improvement in Eden's appearance. His face and neck had filled out and
showed a healthy pinkish-brown. Nevertheless, he retained a look of
delicacy in contrast to the sharp vigour of Renny. Finch thought: "Eden
looks indolent and good-humoured, and yet I'm glad it's old Renny I
must ask for money and not Eden."

He approached, feeling self-conscious, and stood beside the elder, from
whose clothes came the smell of pipe tobacco. Finch muttered, out of
the side of his mouth: "I've had a letter from Leigh inviting me to
stay with him for a week. I thought I'd go to-day."

"Oh, all right. It will do you good."

"I suppose--I think--I'll need to have some money." It was difficult to
say the word "money." It had an ominous sound, since its disposal had
lately been the subject of so much wrath.

Renny put his hand in his trousers pocket. His expression was
forbidding, but, after he had scrutinized the silver and the one
crumpled banknote on his palm, he replaced them and produced from the
breast pocket of his coat the worn leather pocket-book upon which the
eyes of his family had so often rested in expectancy. He drew from it,
with his accustomed air of trying to conceal exactly how much he had,
five one-dollar bills, and handed them to Finch. Eden craned his neck
to observe the transfer.

"A couple of years more," he said, "and your positions will be
reversed."

Finch's face grew scarlet. Was he never to have any more peace? Was the
legacy always to be a subject for sportive comment? He pocketed the
money glumly with a muffled "Thanks awfully."

"In the meantime," said Renny, "he has a lot of hard work before him
and I don't want him ragged about his money. I've told Piers so,
too. You're a poet. You ought to know what it is to be sensitive and
melancholy and neurotic, and all that. If he gets too much teasing he
may give you another chance to save his life, eh, Finch?" Reticence was
not a characteristic of the Whiteoaks.

Eden laughed, but his face reddened, too. He said: "Next time you try
it on, brother Finch, choose the stream just here, and I'll fish you
out from the bridge without getting my feet wet."

Finch grinned sheepishly and was about to turn away when Eden said:
"Don't go! Stay and talk to me. Renny is off. Aren't you, Renny?"

"I'm late, now," said Renny, looking at the battered gun-metal wrist
watch that had gone with him through the War. Always hurrying to
mysterious appointments concerning horses was Renny, appointments which
tended to make thinner rather than thicker the worn leather pocket-book.

Finch and Eden were alone. They stared into the darkly flashing pool
in embarrassed silence for a few minutes, then Eden said seriously: "I
told Renny the other morning that I believed I had done the best thing
in my life when I saved yours. Quite apart from brotherly love, I make
a guess that you're the flower of the flock. I'm damned if I know why I
think so. I suppose it's intuition--I being a poet, and sensitive along
with those other attributes ascribed to me by Renny. God, isn't he an
amusing fellow?"

"He's splendid!" said Finch, hotly. "I don't want to hear anything
against him."

"You won't. Not from me. I admire him as much as you do--though in a
different way. I admire and envy the side of him that you don't know at
all. . . . Tell me, Finch, what are you going to do with your life? Do you
mind talking to me? Are we friends?"

"Rather! I hope I have gratitude----"

"Stop! Don't say that word. It's a vile word. Not one
pleasant word will rhyme with it. Try! See what you'll get.
Prude--dude--spewed--lewd----"

Finch added heavily: "There's nude, too."

"Preposterous! It's an unholy company." He looked into the brightness
of the stream in silence for a little, then said, with sudden gravity:
"Why on earth should you be grateful to me? I want your friendship.
Have I got it?"

"Yes. . . . I mean I like you, Eden, but it will be strange being friends
with you. Something quite new."

"But you'll try? Good. Have a cigarette." He offered a silver case
filled with an expensive brand. Finch recalled the figure on the bench
in Madison Square Gardens--shabby, despairing, ill. How thoroughly Eden
had recovered, acquired a look of well-being! If he himself had been
in such a plight, he doubted whether he could have recovered, and here
was Eden, amused, contemptuous of sentiment, ready for another fling at
life.

He accepted the cigarette and a light.

Eden said: "I believe we are more alike than you'd ever guess. I think
we both got a good deal from our--what was it Gran called her?--our
'poor flibbertigibbet mother.'"

"Don't!" interrupted Finch harshly.

"I don't mean anything disrespectful. I mean that we inherited from
her the qualities that are 'flibbertigibbet' to the Whiteoaks--love of
poetry, love of music, love of beauty. Don't you agree?"

"I think she must have been awfully different."

"Of course she was. So are we. . . . Acknowledge, now, you could say
things to me that you couldn't say to any of the others without getting
laughed at."

"Yes, I guess I could. Still----"

"Well?"

"Renny's been awfully good to me about my music."

"Certainly. But why? Because he understands your feeling for it?
No! Because he looks on you as a weakling, and is afraid you'd go
dotty without it! He has an equal contempt for me as a poet. He only
tolerates me because of the blood tie. He'd be loyal to Satan himself
if he was his half-brother!"

"I wish I were like him," muttered Finch.

"No, you don't! You can't make me believe that you would exchange your
love of music for love of horses and dogs."

"And women," added Finch.

"Ah, we all love women! But you must be like me--love and forget.
Uncle Nick was like that as a young man, too. He told me once that
he's forgotten the names of the women he once cared for--excepting, of
course, the one he unhappily married."

Finch said: "Eden, do you mind telling me something? Don't you care for
Alayne any longer?"

"I don't love her as a woman, if that's what you mean. Perhaps I should
have forgotten her name, too, if we hadn't married."

"Strange--when she is so--lovely, and so good."

"She loved my poetry first. Then me, as the author of it. And I suspect
that I loved her for loving my poetry. It's all over."

"But she loves your poetry still, doesn't she?"

"I believe she does. But she loves it as disembodied art. It's Renny
she loves now."

Finch turned away and crossed to the other side of the bridge. Here
the stream lay in shadow. He rested his eyes on the cool shallow of it
for a moment of silence, and then asked: "Are you writing anything now,
Eden?"

"A good many things in the last month."

"I should like to see them."

"I'll bring them here some afternoon, and read them to you. I'll bring
the first things I wrote after I came home. I don't believe they're of
much value, but I'd like you to hear them because the theme of nearly
all is the sweetness of life. I've never questioned that. No matter
how despondent I may have seemed when you found me in New York, I had
never once thought of taking my life. Good God, I'd sooner have spent
the rest of my days and nights on that park bench where I could look
up at the clouds and the stars than to have done away with myself." He
crossed to Finch's side and put his arm about his shoulders. "You've
read _Lavengro_, of course?"

"Part of it. I didn't care much for it."

"Well, Borrow said one thing--it doesn't matter how often it's quoted,
it's always just as splendid. 'There's night and day, brother, both
sweet things: sun, moon, and stars, brother, all sweet things: there's
likewise a wind on the heath. Life is very sweet, brother.'" He
squeezed Finch's shoulder. "Keep that in mind, brother Finch, the next
time the family concentrates on making you miserable."

"I'll try," said Finch, in a muffled voice. Eden glanced at him
shrewdly, then, as though fearing he had been too solemn, said: "I was
rather glad to hear that the family could stage such a thoroughgoing
row without Gran. I was afraid they might degenerate into futile
wrangling. She had such gusto for life. You should try to be like her.
Get the most out of it."

Finch, sprawling against the railing, said: "I was watching that frog
diving about under that big mound of honeysuckle--thinking what a good
time he has."

"Yes. Amusing little devil. I wonder how often he's gone a-wooing this
summer."

Finch grinned. It was Eden, he thought, who was amusing. Inquisitive.
He couldn't watch even a frog without speculating about its private
life.

They watched the frog sit goggle-eyed on the mossy rim of the pool,
his fingers spread, his full wet throat pulsing. They watched him
galvanize, without apparent reason, into the green arc of a leap. When
the surface of the pool had cleared, they saw him sitting under water,
his fingers spread on the yellow sand, goggle-eyed, hallucinated as
ever.

"If you don't mind," said Eden slowly, "I'm going to tell you
something. Something I have not told anyone else."

Finch was immensely flattered. He turned his long face receptively
toward his brother.

"I have it in my mind to write a narrative poem of the early history
of French Canada. There's tremendous scope in it: Jacques Cartier. The
perilous voyages in sailing vessels. The French Governors, and their
mistresses. Crafty Intendants. Heroic Jesuits. The first Seigneurs.
Voyageurs. The Canadien chansons. Those poor devils of Indians who were
captured and taken to France, and put to work in the galleys. Think of
the song of homesickness I could put into their mouths! Think of the
gently-bred French women who came over as nuns! Think of their chant
of homesickness for France--and ecstasy of love for Christ! If only I
can do it as it should be done, Finch!" His face shone. He made a wide
gesture expressing fervour and half-tremulous hope. Finch saw that the
cuff of the grey tweed sleeve was frayed, that the wrist, in spite of
its roundness, still looked delicate. His heart went out to meet Eden.

It was the first time that he had been treated as an equal by one of
his brothers. And now, not only treated as an equal, but made the
recipient of confidence! His face reflected the glow from Eden's. He
felt a passionate desire to be his friend.

"It will be splendid," he said. "I'm sure you can do it. It is awfully
good of you to tell me."

"Whom else could I tell? You are the only one who can understand."

"Alayne could."

Eden said irritably: "I tell you, there's nothing--less than
nothing--between Alayne and me now! When you're older you'll find out
that there is no one so difficult to confide in as someone you have
ceased to love--no matter how much you may have in common. We're always
on our guard now that I am better."

"I don't see how you can live in the Hut together--if things are like
that."

"We can't! She's going back to her work. I'm going away. Drummond says
I must be in the open air all winter. That's the trouble." His fair
face was shadowed by some disturbing thought. "Renny wants to send me
to California. But I've made up my mind that I shan't go there. I must
go to France. It will not only be a thousand times more congenial to
me, but I'll be able to search out the beginnings of French Canadian
history. I want to get at the roots. In fact, I must, or I'll never do
this thing as I want to do it. I want to spend a year in France--stay
till I've finished the poem--but how am I to do it? Renny can never
afford money enough for that." The shadow on his face deepened to an
expression of melancholy. "I'm helpless. I suppose I'll have to go just
where I'm sent. There is no one to lend me an extra two thousand. I'd
need that much."

"If only," cried Finch, "I had my money! I'd help you like a shot."

Eden gave him a warm look. "You would! I believe you. You're a trump,
Finch! I'd take it, too, but--not as a gift. I'd pay it back with
interest, once I'd got on my feet. But what's the use? Your money's
tied up for ages."

Finch was tremendously stirred. If only he could help Eden! This
new Eden who had talked to him about his poetry--while it was still
seething in his poet's mind. A passionate desire to help him surged
through all his being. Why, it was only right that he should help him,
give him all the money he needed! Hadn't he risked his life to safe
Finch's? He took excited turns on the narrow space of the bridge.

"If only I could get at it!"

"I hope," said Eden, "that you're not being stirred by any ridiculous
sentiment--gratitude. You know how I hate the idea of that."

"But how can I help it?"

"Just don't let yourself. As Gran used to say, 'I won't have it!'"

Finch burst into loud laughter. He was almost beside himself with
excitement. He had got an idea. A marvellous, a gorgeous idea! He
stopped in front of Eden and grinned hilariously into his face.

"I have it! I can get the money for you! I'm sure I can."

Eden was regarding him with his odd, veiled gaze. "How could you
possibly?" His tone was weary, but his heart was beating quickly. Was
it possible that he was going to be able to save his face? Not going to
be forced to suggest ways and means to the youngster?

"Why, it's like this," jerked out Finch, breathlessly. "There's my
friend, Arthur Leigh! He's got any amount of money. He's of age and
he's in control of a fair-sized fortune already. He'd lend it to me.
I'd give him my note--with good interest, you know--then I'd be able to
fix you up with just what you want!" Finch's face was scarlet; he had
run his hands through his hair, standing it on end; his tie was gone
askew; he had never looked wilder, less like a philanthropist.

Eden's eyes lighted, but he shook his head almost gloomily. "It sounds
feasible enough, but I can't do it."

"Why?" Finch was thunderstruck.

"What would they say--the others? Renny'd never stand for it. He's
putting up the money for California, and he thinks there's nothing more
to be said."

"He need never know. No one need know, but ourselves--and Leigh. And
I'll not let Leigh know what I want the money for. Oh, he's the most
casual fellow you ever saw! He'd never ask a question. Just say, 'All
right, Finch, here's your money!' and stuff my note in his pocket. He
doesn't know what it is to higgle over money as we do. Eden, you must
let me do this! I've hated like the devil having this money. It's hung
over me like a curse. If I could do something splendid with it--like
helping you--making it possible for you to write your books--it would
seem quite different." His eyes filled with tears.

"What put the idea of borrowing from Leigh into your head?"

"It just came. A sort of inspiration, I guess." He must not admit that
George Fennel had made the suggestion.

"If I took the money," said Eden, frowning, "I should insist on paying
it back with a higher interest than you would pay your friend."

"The hell you would!" said Finch, grandly. "You'll pay the money back
just when you can--without any interest. I tell you, I've made up my
mind to do something for each one of the family out of this money.
Then I shan't feel such a--such a sort of pariah! It just happens that
you're the first one I'm tackling, and it's got to be kept an absolute
secret."

Eden's face broke into a smile that was almost tender. He caught
Finch's hand and squeezed it. "My poor wretch," he said, "how quickly
you're going to be rid of your money!"




XXVI

LIES AND LYRICS


"You are a most amazing person," said Ada Leigh.

"I don't see why," answered Finch. "Arthur doesn't think so, do you,
Arthur?"

"I'm not sure that I don't."

"But why?" Finch, who so hated being under discussion at home, yearned
for the analytical interest of the Leighs. "I think I'm a chap who will
never be noticed."

"Don't deceive yourself," said Leigh. "People are always going to stare
at you."

"I know I'm ill-favoured, but please don't rub it in." For the first
time in his life he was feeling conceited. It was delicious.

Ada said: "When we heard that your grandmother had left you her money,
we said at once: 'How natural! He's bound to have spectacular things
happen to him!'"

"You're ragging me!"

"I never could do that. I should be afraid. You're so sensitive."

"It's a pity my people don't feel that way about me."

"I suppose it came rather as a surprise to them--your getting all the
money," said Leigh.

"A tremendous surprise."

"I hope they took it well." Leigh tried to keep curiosity out of his
voice. That family! He could imagine their being pretty formidable,
especially the peppery fox-faced fellow from whom he had bought a horse
he didn't want.

"Oh, they were very decent about it!" How easy to lie--to picture Jalna
as running on oiled wheels--in this rose-and-ivory drawing-room! He
expanded more and more in the warmth of their interest. They drew him
on to talk of his music, what he had been practising that summer, his
experiences in New York, plans for his future. Arthur's interest in
Finch was generous and affectionate, but Ada's was mingled with chagrin
at the feeling which his presence aroused in her. His awkwardness
repelled her to the point of dislike, yet the sadness of his face in
repose, the lank fair lock on his forehead, his shapely hands, in
contrast to his bony wrists, had a disturbing fascination for her.
She knew that he was mystified and attracted by her. It amused her to
think that she could play on his sensibilities, yet she had a subtle
suspicion that to do so was to risk her own detachment.

Mrs. Leigh joined them, still more like a sister to Ada than a mother,
after the exhilaration of their European trip. With her desire to
please, she had almost the effect of being younger, or, at any rate,
more ingenuous. They talked of Europe. Arthur said: "As soon as you
come into your money, Finch, we'll go to Europe together!"

"I shall go, too," said Ada.

"Never! This is to be a vagabond journey. Little girls"--he included
his mother in his glance--"will be safer at home. Finch, do you
remember, when I talked of our going to Europe last spring, you scoffed
at the idea? You said you'd never have the money to go abroad. Now look
at you!"

"Yes," agreed Finch serenely, "there's quite a difference."

Mrs. Leigh said: "We didn't know of your grandmother's death until we
heard of the legacy. I'm afraid that when Arthur wrote to you he was
excited and perhaps forgot to say how sorry we are to hear of your
loss."

"I'm afraid I did forget," said Leigh.

"You must miss her. She was extraordinarily vigorous for her age,
wasn't she?"

"Yes." . . . The strong old face came before him--blotted out the pretty
room, the pretty women. He saw the rust-red eyebrows raised in humorous
disdain of such. He saw the toothy grin with which she would have
dismissed them. His face lost the animation that had made it attractive
and became blank.

"I wish I might have seen her. We must get to know your family, Finch."

"Y-yes. Thanks. I'm sure they'd like it."

"Do you really? Then I shall motor out to Jalna one day and call on
your aunt, Lady Buckley!"

Finch hastened to say: "She's going home to England. She is just here
on a visit."

"Does she like England better?"

"Oh yes, she hates the Colonies."

Leigh exclaimed: "Colony! I like that! We're an independent part of the
Empire."

"Of course. But I'm used to hearing us called a colony at home."

"I should think you younger ones would object," demurred Leigh.

"I don't see why. If you're a part of anything, how can it matter what
you're called?"

Mrs. Leigh said: "It doesn't matter. We all love England; that is what
matters."

"I don't," said Ada. "I love Russia. I have a Russian soul."

"But how can you tell?" asked Finch, wondering if possibly he had one.

"Because it's never satisfied."

He sighed. "In that case, I'm afraid it's my stomach that's Russian!"

Mrs. Leigh noticed that he looked as though he had been ill and asked
him about his health.

"I'm awfully fit," he insisted. "I've never been better. I'm just
naturally cadaverous."

"Perhaps. But more probably you have been growing very fast." Her mind
flew back to his family. "You have sisters-in-law at home, haven't you?
And one of them--the wife of a poet brother--is an American?"

"Yes . . . that is--they live in another house--just a little place. He's
been ill."

"We were _so_ intrigued when we were crossing! A young man from
Philadelphia was enthusiastic over both books of your brother's poems.
The lyrics, and----" She could not recall the other.

"_The Golden Sturgeon._ It's a narrative poem. I'll tell Eden. He'd
like that."

Mrs. Leigh said eagerly: "Let me tell him myself! I shall go out and
call on him and his wife."

"They are leaving, too," said Finch, desperately. "I'm sorry. . . . You
see, he has recovered, but he has to go to a warm climate."

Her pretty face fell. "I'm doomed not to meet your family!
Still--there's another sister-in-law."

"Young Pheasant. She is scarcely grown up. My uncles would be
frightfully pleased if you were to call on them. There's nothing they
like better than calls. It would be better to let them know which day
you're coming. They'd make you very welcome." But his tone was a little
anxious.

She leaned forward, smiling, her lips drawn back from her teeth. "Do
you think I might just _rush_ out for a very few minutes and entreat
your brother to autograph his books for me? I bought them both
yesterday. Do you think that would be too much to ask him?"

Leigh intervened. "I'll take them out for you, if Finch thinks he would
do it."

Finch wished that Mrs. Leigh were not so interested. He began to feel
that a somewhat ruthless interest was the keynote of her character. He
assured her rather glumly that Eden would sign as many of his books
as she desired. It was probably the first time he had been asked to
autograph his poems, he added, and instantly wished he had not given
his brother away.

When he had been two days at the Leighs' he reached the point of moral
courage when he could ask Leigh for a loan. It was not so easy to frame
the words as he had thought. He was hot all over, and Leigh was not so
casual as he had expected.

His bright glance dived into the turbid pool of Finch's soul.

He asked: "Are you sure that you want this for yourself, old fellow?
It's quite a lot of money, you know."

Finch nodded.

Leigh smiled. "I'm afraid you're lying, and I love you for it. But it
makes me sick to think that someone has perhaps been working on your
sympathies. Perhaps trying to get money out of you that he'll never pay
back. Upon my soul, I'm afraid to lend it to you for fear you've got
some quixotic idea in your head about helping someone who isn't worth
it."

"But he is!" burst out Finch.

"There, you admit it! It is for someone else."

"I'm borrowing it to please myself, but I admit I'm going to help
someone--with some of it."

"Not all of it?"

Finch said hotly: "Very well, don't lend it to me!"

"Finch, you're angry with me. But I'm not going to get angry with you.
It would be too unreal." Leigh's voice shook. "I'll lend you the money.
For heaven's sake get some security, if you can, from this friend of
yours!"

"I can't take it when you feel like this about it, Arthur."

"But you must. You know that all that's troubling me is the fear that
you'll lose it."

"You don't give me credit for any common sense, then!"

"I know that your generosity is greater than your common sense. I'm
terribly afraid that if you start off like this--lending your money
before you're in possession of it--you're going to be an easy mark for
unscrupulous people."

It was easy to lie in the rose-and-ivory drawing-room, but how
difficult up in Leigh's study, among his intimate things, and with his
clear eyes full of trouble for one's sake.

"Arthur," he said, "I can't take it without telling you who it's for,
now that you've put things as you have. It's for Eden."

"Aha, one of the family!"

"Yes, but he didn't ask me for it! I offered it. He's been ill, you
know, and he wants to go to the South of France for the winter for
his health. And it isn't only that. He has it in his mind to write
something perfectly splendid. He's got to have a year for it. It's
not like the other things he's written--it will be a tremendous piece
of work. I wish I could tell you all about it. Renny's willing to send
him to California for the winter, but that won't do at all. There's a
special reason why he must go to France and not be bothered by a job or
anything for at least a year. Look here, Arthur, you know that Eden's
poetry is good. He's had splendid reviews. Alayne gave up her job to
come and nurse him because she's so keen about his poetry. She's not
very keen about him now, you know. They'd been separated. I think it
would be beastly selfish of me if I wouldn't put out my hand to help my
own brother when he's so clever, and his wife did, and there's no one
else!"

Leigh sprang up and came and took him by the shoulder.

"Of course I see it! But why didn't you tell me all this at first? It's
splendid of you. And look here, I won't take a cent of interest. I
want to help, too. Darling Finch, I want everything to be as clear as
crystal between us!"

Even while Finch's soul drew strength and happiness from Arthur's love,
it shrank within him at the thought of what Renny and Piers would have
said if they could have heard that "darling Finch." But it was all
right. Arthur was exquisite, and could use exquisite words; Renny and
Piers were vigorous, and used vigorous words. And somewhere in between
he floundered.

A note went to Eden that day:

     "DEAR EDEN,

     "Everything is arranged, so don't worry. Shall be home Wednesday
     and will bring a cheque for the amount mentioned. My friend Leigh
     is coming out with me. He's anxious to meet you. He knows a
     great deal more about poetry than I do, so I thought perhaps you
     wouldn't mind reading some of your new poems to us both. We'd be
     pretty safe from interruption on the bridge. Leigh is bringing out
     your books for you to autograph. They belong to his mother, so
     perhaps you might think up something clever to write in them as
     well as your name. I guess you'll be pleased about the money. Some
     financier, eh?

                                                           "Yours,
                                                               "FINCH."

Now that the strain of borrowing the money was over, his promissory
note carefully made out and handed to Leigh, Finch began to be almost
happy. He began to realize the new amplitude which the possession
of money would give to his life. He not only realized, but greatly
magnified its possibilities. He had seen so little money; he had seen
Renny and Piers jubilant over a small unexpected gain. Piers would be
in a gale of good spirits if he got more than he had hoped for from
a consignment of apples, or if one of his Jerseys had healthy twin
calves. Renny would raise his voice and shout his winnings at the
races. From the time Finch had been in sailor suits he had known that
his grandmother's money was the subject of jealous conjecture. He had
seen the rivalry for first place in her affections from the point of
view of an outsider, never in any flight of fancy picturing himself
as her heir. Her decision to leave all her money to one person had
always seemed to him cruel and unjust. He secretly believed that she
had expressed such an intention with the direct purpose of keeping the
family interest in her always at high tide, their nerves at concert
pitch. She had succeeded. But now tide had ebbed into darkness,
suspense no longer tightened the nerves, and Finch, looking about him,
inexperienced and hungry-eyed, believed there was no limit to his power.

It was sweet to help Eden. They were travellers in a region which the
rest of the family did not enter, and even though neither could fully
understand the experiences of the other in that mysterious region, they
knew each other as palmers to the shrine of beauty.

Finch found himself able to play the piano in front of the Leighs.
His paralyzing shyness under Ada's eyes was gone. Sitting before the
keyboard, more erect than at any other time, with motionless head
and flying hands, he looked and felt sure of himself. He seemed, to
Leigh's ardent eyes, capable of glorious things.

As Ada sat curled in the corner of a sofa while he played, Finch
exulted in the fact that in these moments he was fascinating to her. He
could tell that by the look in her eyes as they gazed at him through a
veil of cigarette smoke. Yet no matter how balanced, how firm he felt,
he could not recapture the amorous energy that had made it possible for
him to embrace and kiss her on the evening of the play.

It was not until the night before he left that he had the courage again
to approach such intimacy. They had been at a dance. She had been kind
to him, dancing with him repeatedly because he was shy of other girls,
and now and then throwing him an encouraging look from the arms of
another partner while he stood glumly in a doorway. It was a night of
sudden, intense chill; the white fur collar of Ada's cloak was turned
up against her cheeks during the ride home. Seeing her thus muffled,
with only her hair, her white forehead and eyes, exposed, made Finch
feel suddenly inexpressibly tender toward her. She seemed like some
flower-bud wrapped in a protective sheath from which he longed tenderly
to disengage her.

Arthur took the car to the garage, and as the two ran up the steps
Finch put his arm about her and pressed her to his side. He put his
face against her hair and murmured: "Darling Ada! You were so good to
me to-night."

"It isn't hard for me to be good to you, Finch."

"And I used to think you didn't like me!"

"I like you far too well."

"Ada, will you kiss me?"

She shook her head.

"Then will you let me kiss you?"

"No."

"But you let me kiss you once."

"I'm afraid."

"Of me?"

"No, of myself."

"You said something like that once before--about being afraid. Are you
afraid of life?"

"Not a bit. I'm just afraid of my own feelings."

To hear that she was afraid made Finch afraid, too. A shiver of
sympathy, ecstatic yet terrified, ran through him. There seemed a
menace in the bitter nip of the night air, in the large glittering
stars. His arm relaxed and dropped to his side. He took off his hat and
passed his hand over his hair, looking down at her pathetically.

"It's frightful to be afraid," he said. "I'm afraid of myself, too,
often. And of my feelings. It takes the strength right out of me."

She gave him a scornful little smile.

"I don't think I understand your kind of fear."

"I think I understand the difference," he said. "I think yours is a hot
fear, and mine is a cold. Yours makes you want to fly away and mine
paralyzes me." His eyes sought hers, eager for understanding.

She was searching for her key in a brilliant-studded handbag. He saw
the shadow of her lashes on her cheek.

"If only you would let me kiss you," he breathed, "I think we could
understand each other."

"Too well," she answered, with a catch in her voice. She fumbled with
the key against the lock.

He took it gently from her and opened the door.

The next morning he and Leigh left early for Jalna. Finch would have
liked to linger in the hope that he might have a few minutes alone
with Ada, but Leigh was impatient to be off. Having it in his mind to
meet Eden and hear him read his poetry, he could tolerate no delay in
reaching the appointed spot, even though Finch declared that Eden would
scarcely be there so early. Leigh left his car near the gate, and,
descending into the ravine, they made straight for the rustic bridge
across the stream. Eden was not there. Still, Leigh's desire for haste
was gratified. He perched on the railing of the bridge and extolled now
the beauty of the sky, now that of his own reflection in the pool below.

"If I were as charming a fellow," he said, "in my actual person as I am
in that shadowy reflection, I'd have the world at my feet! Lean over
and look at yourself, Finch."

Finch peered into the pool, as he had done a thousand times. "Mostly
nose," he grumbled.

Leigh chattered on for a while, but soon the coolness of the ravine
penetrated him. There had been a dew almost as heavy as a rain. Even
now moisture fell from the tips of leaves in clear drops like the first
scatter of a shower. While Finch was absent the Michaelmas daisies had
come into bloom. Their starry flowers, varying from the deepest purple
to the blue of the September sky, hung like an amethyst mist above the
banks of the stream. The leaves of fern and bracken showed a chill
sheen, as though they had been cut from fine metal. The clear delicate
sunlight had not yet dispelled the heavy night odours of the ravine.

"I wonder," said Leigh, "whether your brother should come here this
morning. It doesn't seem quite the right spot for anyone with lung
trouble."

"He's over that. At any rate, he looks pretty fit. Our doctor says that
he needed rest and good food more than anything. Still," he looked
dubiously at the wet boards of the bridge, "it does seem rather damp
for him."

"Perhaps we had better go to him." Leigh would have liked to tell his
mother that he had sought the poet in his retreat, perhaps glimpsed the
wife about whom an atmosphere of mystery seemed to have gathered.

"I think I hear him coming."

"Hullo, what's that?"

"An English pheasant. Renny is stocking the woods with them."

She whirred heavily out of sight, young ones fluttering after her. A
rabbit hopped down the path, but, seeing the two on the bridge, turned,
showed a snowy stern in three successive leaps, and disappeared into a
thicket.

Eden's legs appeared, descending the path; then his body became
visible, and last his head, touched by the flicker of sunlight between
leaves. He was carrying some rolled-up papers. "A poet, and beautiful!"
thought Leigh. "How I wish the girls were here!"

"Hullo," grinned Finch, "we thought you had got stage fright."

Eden stood at the end of the bridge, his eyes on Leigh. Leigh thought:
"He's smiling at me, looking at me, and yet he doesn't really seem to
see me. I don't think I like him."

Finch said: "This is Arthur Leigh, Eden. . . . He has been wondering if
it's too damp for you here."

"I'm as seasoned to damp as an oyster," answered Eden, shaking hands
with Leigh so warmly that he obliterated the first impression of
inviolable detachment.

Leigh said: "I hope you are not going to be as reticent as one. I'm
very keen to hear some of your poems, if I may. Did Finch tell you?"

"Yes." The eyes of the brothers met. Understanding flashed between
them. Finch thought: "I've made him happy. It's glorious, this doing
things for others. I can't imagine why other rich people don't try it!"

Eden talked freely to Leigh of his coming trip to France, unconscious
that Leigh knew Finch's motive for borrowing the money. Leigh thought:
"Doesn't he think me capable of putting two and two together? Perhaps
he doesn't care. He knows he can make three or five of them whenever he
wants."

The sun rose high, pouring warmth into the ravine, which appeared to
stretch itself, languorous and supine, under that delayed caress.

They sat down on the bridge, which was now dry, while Eden, in his
deep mellow voice, read poem after poem. Some had been read before, to
Alayne, but not all. They were the essence he had drawn from the past
summer, what he had formed into strength and brightness from those
shadowed months. As he listened to his own words, and saw the rapt
faces of the two boys, he wondered whether the solution of his life
might not lie in such moments. Might not the suffering he knew he had
caused in the lives nearest him be justified, even be necessary to the
creation of his poetry? The evil in him was inseparable from the good,
like the gods, whose energies were directed first into one channel,
then another. So he seemed to himself, and so less coherently he
seemed to Finch, who never dared to hope that anything he might create
would justify his own clumsiness in life.

There was a third listener to the reading, of whom the others were
unaware. This was Minny, who, wandering into the ravine from the
direction of Vaughanlands and hearing voices, had stolen from trunk to
trunk of the trees till she was within sight as well as hearing. It
chanced that this morning she wore a dark dress instead of the usual
gay colours, so she was able to conceal herself behind a great clump
of honeysuckle within a few yards of the bridge. She crouched there,
her feet pressing into the moist earth, the succulent growth all about
her exhaling a sweet, sticky odour, and, almost touching her face,
a large and meticulously woven spider's-web in which two jewel-like
flies were caught. She felt no discomfort in her situation, but rather
an increased sense of adventure. As a doe might have crept close to
watch the browsing of three stags, she observed with ardent interest
every detail of their faces, their attitudes and gestures. She absorbed
the beauty of Eden's voice, but the words he uttered made no more
impression on her than the words of the songs she sang. Though her body
ached from its crouching position, she did not grow tired or impatient,
remaining after the reading was over to listen to the discussion of the
poems which followed. She heard their titles without hearing them--"The
Dove; Thoughts of You and Me; Resurgam; Thoughts on Death; The New
Day"--yet so sympathetic was she that when Leigh's bright face broke
into merriment she smiled, too, and when the voice of Eden took on
a tragic note her lips reflected this in a mournful curve. When the
smoke of their cigarettes drifted about her she pitied herself that she
could not share this pleasure. When Eden, dropping his voice, related
something that produced a gust of hilarity, she would have given all
she possessed to have known what he said.

She hoped, and tried to will it so, that the two boys would depart
first, leaving Eden on the bridge. Contrary to the usual vanity of such
hopes, this was what happened. All three got to their feet, but Eden
did not accompany the boys when they ascended the path. Instead, he
stood motionless, looking in her direction, and, after a few moments in
which she was wondering whether or not to reveal herself, he called:
"Come along, come along, Minny! Don't you think you've been hiding long
enough?"

She stood up, straightening her dress. She was not at all ashamed, but
advanced toward him, laughing.

"How long have you known I was here?"

"All the time. I saw you playing at Indian, creeping from one tree to
another. You're a little hussy."

She liked that. Her laughter became teasing.

"I heard every word you said!"

"No, you didn't!"

"Yes, I did!"

"What was it I told them that made them laugh?"

"Shan't repeat it!"

"Because you did not hear."

"I don't care! I heard all your poetry."

"It isn't becoming in a young girl to spy on men."

"_Men!_ Listen to the child!"

"Well, the others are boys, but I suppose you'll admit that I'm a man."

"_You!_ You're the greatest baby of all!"

"Me! I'm a disillusioned profligate."

"Then you're a profligate baby! Your wife has made a baby of you.
Coming all this way to nurse you when she doesn't really care a damn
for you."

"I suppose you wouldn't have done that?"

"Of course I should."

His laughter joined hers. They sat down on the bridge together.

As he held a match to a cigarette for her, he looked deep into her
narrowed, mirthful eyes. "I wish I understood you!"

"It's a good thing for your peace of mind that you don't."

An obscure pity moved him to change the subject.

"How did you like my poems?"

"Ever so. Two of them sounded awfully like two songs I sing."

"It's a wise poem," he replied gravely, "that knows its own creator."

"I suppose they'll make you famous one day."

"I hope so."

"What a pity you didn't get any of the money!"

"Ah, my nave young brother saw to that!"

"I should think you'd hate him for it."

"I don't hate anyone. I only wish people were as tolerant of me as I of
them."

"I hate someone."

"Not me, I hope."

"You'd never guess."

"Tell me, then."

"Your wife."

"Do you really? My sister has done that."

"Not at all. I hate her on my own."

His gaze slid toward her swiftly, but he made no comment on this.
They puffed in silence, each acutely aware of the other. He heard her
suck in her breath once as though putting some sudden restraint on
herself. Now the sun beat down on them hotly, inducing a mood of dreamy
acquiescence.

After an interval, she said: "I've been to the shore on the last three
mornings. It seemed lonely there without you."

He was astonished.

"Have you really? What a shame! And you didn't let me know!"

"I thought you'd expect me. I wouldn't disappoint you."

"My dear child!" He took her hand in his.

At his touch her eyes filled with tears, but she laughed through them.
She said: "What a silly I am to care so much!"




XXVII

THE FLITTING


There followed a succession of perfect September days, so alike in
their unclouded sunshine--a sunshine which was without the energy, for
all its warmth, to produce additional growth--that it seemed possible
they might continue for ever without visibly changing the landscape.
Michaelmas daisies, loosestrife, with here and there a clump of fringed
gentian, continued to cast a bluish veil beside the paths and stream.
In the garden nasturtiums, dahlias, campanula, phlox, and snapdragons
continued to put forth flowers. The heavy bumblebee agitating these
blossoms might well think: "I shall suck honey here for ever." The cow
in the pasture, which this year had never turned brown, might well
think: "There will be no end to this moist grass." The old people at
Jalna might well think: "We shall not grow older and die, but shall
live on for ever." Even Alayne, collecting her belongings in Fiddler's
Hut, did so as in a dream. It seemed impossible that she should be
going away, that life held the potentialities of change for her.

The action of the life to which she was returning seemed desirable to
her. She could picture the things which she would do on her return with
perfect precision, yet when she pictured herself as doing them it was
not herself she saw, but a mere shadow. She thought: "There is no real
place for me on earth. I was not made for happiness. I am as unreal to
myself as a person in a play--less real, for I could laugh at them or
weep for them, but I can only stare stupidly at myself and think how
unreal I am."

She wondered whether the things with which the Hut had been so
overfurnished would be left there. She had grown used to them, and
they no longer seemed grotesque in the low-ceilinged rooms. She went
about collecting the few things she wished to take away with her, and
wondered what were Eden's thoughts as he lay on the sofa reading, now
and then giving her a swift look across the page.

An odd embarrassment had arisen between them. He no longer had need
of her care; their relationship was meaningless. They were like
two travellers, forced by the exigencies of the journey into a
juxtaposition from which each would be glad to escape. If he came in
tired, he no longer demanded her sympathy, but sought to conceal his
weariness. She no longer tried to prevent his doing things which she
thought would be bad for his health. His restlessness was a source
of irritation to her, while her reserve, and what he thought her
stolidity, made her presence weigh upon him.

Yet on this, the second day before her departure, a mood of pensiveness
had come upon Eden. He felt a somewhat sentimental desire to leave a
memory, not too troubled, of himself with her. He would have liked to
justify by some simple, yet how impossible, act their presence together
in these last weeks. They avoided each other's eyes.

Eden, to override his embarrassment, began to read aloud scraps from
his book:

"'My idiot guide was on his way back to Aldea Gallega. . . . And I mounted
a sorry mule, without bridle or stirrups, which I guided by a species
of halter. I spurred down the hill of Elvas to the plain . . . but I
soon found that I had no need to quicken the beast which bore me, for,
though covered with sores, wall-eyed, and with a kind of halt in its
gait, it cantered along like the wind.'"

Alayne was about to empty a vase holding some faded late roses. She
stopped before him, drew out one of them, and slid it down the page on
to his hand.

He took it up and held it to his face.

"Still sweet," he murmured. "A queer kind of stifling sweetness. But
it's beautiful. Why are dying roses the most beautiful? For they
are--I'm sure they are."

She did not answer, but carried the flowers to the doorstep and threw
them out on the grass. When she returned he was reading sonorously:

"'We soon took a turn to the left, toward a bridge of many arches
across the Guadiana. . . . Its banks were white with linen which the
washerwomen had spread out to dry in the sun, which was shining
brightly; I heard their singing at a great distance, and the theme
seemed to be the praises of the river where they were toiling, for as I
approached I could distinguish "Guadiana, Guadiana," which reverberated
far and wide, pronounced by the clear and strong voices in chorus of
many a dark-cheeked maid and matron.'"

She went into his room and reappeared carrying his laundry bag. She
took it to the kitchen, and he heard her talking to the Scotch maid.
She returned and put a slip of paper into his hand.

"Your laundry list," she said. "You had better look it over when it
comes back. They're very careless."

He crushed the neatly written list in his hand.

"Why, oh, why," he said, "can't _my_ washing be done on the bank of a
river by a singing dark-cheeked maid or matron? Why was I pitchforked
into this prosaic life?"

"I dare say it can," she returned absently, "if you go far enough. . . . I
don't know why, I am sure."

She began to take things from the desk. From her writing folio she
turned out some Canadian stamps.

"Here are stamps I shan't need. On the blotter."

"Oh, all right. Thanks."

He looked at her half-quizzically, half-reproachfully, then impulsively
got up and went to the desk. He smoothed out the laundry list, then,
licking the stamps one by one, he stuck them in a fantastic border
round the edge. He discovered a drawing-pin and pinned the paper to the
wall.

"A memorial," he said, tragically.

She did not hear him. She was gone into her room.

He followed her to the door and stood looking in. She had changed into
a thinner dress; her cheeks were flushed.

"Do you know," he said, "you are the most matter-of-fact being I have
ever known?"

She turned toward him with raised brows. "Am I? I suppose so, compared
to you."

"No other woman living," he returned, "could keep such orderly habits
with such a disturbed mind." And his eyes added: "For your mind is
horribly disturbed, you can't deny it!"

"I guess it was my training. If you could have known my parents and
our way of living! Everything in such perfect order. Even our ideas
pigeonholed."

"It's deeper than that. It's in your New England blood. It's a
protective spirit guarding you, eh?"

"Possibly. Otherwise I might have gone mad among you."

"Never! Nothing would send you off your head. In spite of your
scholastic forebears, I seem to see in you the spirit of some
grim-lipped sea captain. His hands on the wheel, consulting the
barometer, making entries in the log, while the blooming tempest raged
and the bally mast broke and the blinking timbers shivered and the
perishing rudder got out of commission. I can hear him saying to the
mate: 'Have you made out the laundry list?'--while the heavens split!
And taking time to stick a stamp on the brow of the cabin-boy so that
his body might be identified when it was washed ashore."

Alayne began to laugh.

"How ridiculous you are!" she said.

"Tell me the truth, don't you feel that old fellow's chill blood in
your veins?"

"I feel it boiling sometimes. My great-great-grandfather was a Dutch
sea captain."

"Splendid! I knew you had something like that somewhere. Now if only he
had been a Spanish sea captain, how we might have got on together!"

She made no response, but began to take things from a bureau drawer and
lay them carefully in the tray of her trunk.

"I wish I could help you," he said, almost plaintively. "Do something
for you."

"There's nothing you can do." She checked an impulse to say: "Except to
leave me alone."

"I wonder if you will be angry with me if I ask you something."

She gave an unhappy little laugh. "I don't think so. I feel too tired
for temper."

"Oh, I say!" His tone was contrite. "I've bothered you all the time
you've been packing."

"It's not that. It always upsets me to go journeys. What did you want
to ask?"

"Turn round and face me."

Alayne turned round. "Well?"

"Would you have come here to nurse me if Renny had not been here?"

The flush on her cheeks spread to her forehead. But she was not angry.
The shock of what he had asked was too deep for that.

"Certainly, I should."

A look, antagonistic but shrewdly understanding, passed between them.

He said: "I believe you, though I'd rather not. I'd like to think that
it was your love for him that dragged you here, against your reason.
I hate to think that you did such a tremendous thing for me alone.
Yet, in spite of what you say, you can't quite make me believe that
you would have come back here if you had never loved Renny. The place
itself must have had a fascination for you. I believe places keep some
essence of the emotions that have been experienced in them, don't you?
Do you think the Hut will ever be the same again after this summer?
Alayne, I honestly believe that Jalna drew you back, whether you
realize it or not."

She muttered: "How can you be sure that Renny and I care for each
other? You talk as though we had had an affair!"

"When we came to Jalna after we were married, I saw that Renny had made
a disturbing impression on you. Before many months had passed, I saw
that you were trying desperately to beat down your love for him, and
that he was trying just as hard to control his feeling for you."

Under his scrutiny she lost her air of reticence. She pressed her hand
to her throat. She had woefully failed, then, in her first effort to
conceal her love for Renny. Eden had watched this smouldering passion
with an appraising eye from the beginning!

She asked brokenly: "Did that make a difference to you? Knowing so
long ago that I loved Renny? I thought you had only guessed it,
later--believed that I had turned to him when I found you didn't care
any more----"

He answered mercilessly: "Yes, it did make a difference. I felt an
outsider."

"Then," she gasped, "I am to blame for everything! For Pheasant----"

"No, no. It would have come, sooner or later. It's not in me to be
faithful to any woman."

She persisted doggedly: "I am to blame for everything."

He came into the room and touched her with an almost childlike gesture.

"Alayne, don't look like that. You're so--it's stupid of you. You
can't help what you are. Any more than I can help what I am. My dear,
I suspect that we are much more alike than you would let yourself
believe. The great difference between us is that you analyze yourself
while I analyze others. It's better fun. . . . Alayne, look up----"

She looked at him sombrely.

"The whole trouble has been," he said, "that you were a thousand times
too good for me!"

She turned away from him and returned blindly to the arranging of her
trunk.

He said: "I told old Renny one day that you'd go through hell for a
sight of his red head."

"Oh! and what did he say?" Her voice was without expression. Eden
should not bait her again.

"I forget. But of course he liked it."

She turned and faced him. "Eden, will you please leave me to pack in
peace? You know that I have promised to spend the evening with your
aunt and uncles. I have no time to waste. Are you coming?"

"No, you will be happier without me. Give them my love. Will Renny be
there?"

"I don't know." How cruel he was! Why could he not let her be? How she
would rejoice to be far away from all this in another twenty-four hours!

When he had returned to the living-room, he hung about miserably. He
hated himself for having upset her. If he had! Perhaps it was the
thought of going away that made her look like that. And he had meant
to say something beautiful to her at the last! The whole situation was
ludicrous. The sooner this impossible atmosphere was dispelled the
better. . . . Did he hear a sob from the other room? Lord, he hoped not!
That would be horrible. He stood and listened. No, it was all right.
She was only clearing her throat. He fidgeted about till she came out,
ready to go. She looked pale, calm, her hair beautifully cared for, as
always. She had a pathetic air of serenity, as though the final word
had been said, as though she were now beyond the reach of emotion. He
saw that she had indeed been crying.

The sun had sunk below the treetops and had left them almost instantly
in a well of greenish shadow. There was no afterglow, scarcely any
twilight. After the rich radiance of the sun came shadow and chill. It
was like the passing of their love, he thought, and mocked at himself
for being sentimental.

"Alayne----" he said.

"Yes?"

"Oh, nothing--I forgot what I was going to say." He followed her to the
door. "You must have someone bring you home. It will be very dark."

She hesitated on the flat stone before the door. She turned suddenly to
him, smiling.

"Home!" she repeated. "It was rather nice of you to say that."

He came out, took her hand and raised it to his lips. "Good-bye,
Alayne!"

The crows were returning to their nests from some distant field. She
heard their approach beyond the orchards, first as the humming of a
vast hive of bees which, as it drew nearer, swelled into a metallic
volume that drowned all other sound. The air rocked with their shouts.
Separate cries of those in advance became audible, raucous commands,
wild shouts, vehement assertions, shrill denials--every brazen,
black-feathered throat gave forth an urgent cry. They passed above the
orchard, against the yellowish sky, hundreds of them, seeking the pine
wood. Some battled with the air to overtake those ahead; some swam
steadily with forceful movements of the wings, while others drifted
with a kind of rowdy grace.

As Alayne followed the orchard path beneath them she wondered if it
were possible that in a few hours she would have left all this behind
and returned to a life so alien.

There was no mistake about the welcome from those at Jalna. Piers and
Pheasant were in Montreal. Renny, although the old people said they
expected him, did not appear at supper. The summer had gone like a
dream, Nicholas said. A strange, sad dream, Ernest added. Augusta tried
to persuade Alayne to go to England with her instead of returning to
New York. Augusta dreaded travelling alone, she dreaded returning to
her lonely house, and Alayne had never seen England! Why could she not
come? Alayne felt a momentary impulse to accept the invitation. Why not
go across the ocean and see if she could find forgetfulness there? But
how could she forget with one of that family beside her, with constant
references being made to the others? No, she could not do it. Better
cut loose from them entirely, and for ever. Finch played for her during
the evening and she was filled with delight by the improvement in him,
pride that it had been she who had persuaded Renny to have him taught.
The air in the drawing-room, though subdued, was genial. It was full
of a melancholy gentleness. Wakefield was allowed to take the jade and
ivory curios from their cabinet to show them to Alayne, and afterward
arrange them on the floor to his own satisfaction.

Alayne had never spent such an evening at Jalna. Something in it hurt
her, made her feel more acutely the impending parting. And yet the old
people were cheerful. They had been pleased by a call from Mrs. Leigh.
"A pretty woman, egad!" from Nicholas. "Very modern and yet so sweet,
so eager to please!" from Ernest. "She was for going to hunt you out at
the Hut--you and Eden--but I told her you were out. I thought it best,"
from Augusta.

Wakefield curled up beside Alayne on the sofa. He took off her rings
and adorned his own small fingers with them. But when he went to
replace them she shut her hand against the wedding ring.

"I am not going to wear it any more," she said, in a low tone.

"But what shall I do with it?"

"I don't know. Ask Aunt Augusta."

"What shall I do with this, Aunt?" He twirled the ring on his finger.

Augusta replied, with dignity: "Put it in the cabinet with the curios."

"The very thing!" He flew to the cabinet. "Look, everybody! I've put it
on the neck of the tiny white elephant. It's a jolly little collar for
him."

Alayne watched him, with a smile half-humorous, half-bitter. So that
was the end of that! A jolly little collar for a white elephant. And
the glad thrill that she had felt when it had been placed on her
finger. She fidgeted on the sofa. She had waited past her time in the
hope that Renny would return. Why was he avoiding her? Was he afraid?
But why should he be, when it was her last night at Jalna? All day she
had hugged the anticipation of the walk back to the Hut at night. For
surely he would take her back through the darkness! What he might say
to her on the way had been the subject of fevered speculation all day.
She had dressed herself, done her hair, with the thought that as he saw
her that night, so would she remain in his memory. And he had taken
himself away somewhere, rather than spend the evening in the room with
her!

Augusta was murmuring something about a horse--Renny--he had been so
sorry--his apologies.

"Yes? Oh, it is too bad, of course. Say good-bye to him for me."

"Oh, he will see you again," said Ernest. "He's driving you into town
himself to-morrow."

No peace for her. The feverish speculations, the aching thoughts, would
begin all over again.

She said: "Tell him not to trouble. Finch will drive me in, won't you,
Finch?"

"I'd like it awfully."

"What do you suppose, Alayne?" cried Wake. "I've never been on a visit."

"What a shame! Will you visit me some time? I'd love to have you." She
pressed him to her, on the sofa, and whispered: "Tell me, where is
Renny?"

He whispered back: "In the stables, I know, because he sent Wright to
the kitchen for something, and I was there."

Finch was to see her back to the Hut. He ran upstairs for his electric
torch.

Alayne was enfolded in the arms of Augusta, Nicholas, and Ernest.

Ernest said: "How shall we ever repay you for what you have done for
Eden?"

Nicholas growled: "How shall we ever make up to her for what he has
done? Turned her life topsy-turvy."

Augusta said, holding her close: "If you change your mind about coming
to England with me, just let me know. I'll make you very welcome."

"I advise you not to," said Nicholas. "She'll freeze you in that house
of hers."

"Indeed I shan't! I know how to make people comfortable if anyone does.
It was I who arranged the cottage for her, though Mama took all the
credit." From her was exhaled a subdued odour of the black clothes she
wore, and of a hair pomade with the perfume of a bygone day.

Finch and Alayne were out in the darkness, the beam from the electric
torch thrown before her. Cold, sweet scents rose from the flower-beds.
The grass was dripping with dew.

"Let us go through the pine wood," she said. She had thought to return
that way with Renny.

They spoke little as they went along the bridle path beneath the pines.
Her mind was engaged with its own unhappy thoughts. Finch's was filled
with the sadness of life, its reaching out, its gropings in the dark,
its partings. It was cold under the trees. From a cluster of hazels
came the troubled talking of small birds passing the night there on
their migration to the South.

Finch flashed the light among the branches, hoping to discover the
small things perching. His attention was diverted to a more distant
sound, as of footsteps moving among the pines.

"What are you listening to?" whispered Alayne.

"I thought I heard a twig break. Someone in there. Wait a second." He
left her and ran softly padding toward the sound.

She strained her ears to listen, her eyes following the moving beam
of the electric torch. The sound of Finch's padding steps ceased.
The light was blotted out. She was in black silence except for the
infinitesimally delicate song of a single locust on a leaf near her.
She was frightened.

She called sharply: "Finch! What are you doing?"

"Here! It was nothing."

The torch flashed again; he trotted back to her. "One of the men
hanging about." He thought: "Why was Renny hiding in the wood? Why
didn't he turn up at the house? If looks could kill, I'd be a dead man!
Gosh, he looked like Gran!"

The Hut lay in darkness, save for starlight sifting among the trees.
A tenuous mist hung among their trunks, weighted with chill autumnal
odours, dying leaves, fungus growths such as wood mushroom and Indian
pipe, and the exhalations of deep virgin soil.

Alayne opened the door. Dark and cold inside. Eden had gone to bed
early. He might have left the lamp burning and put wood on the fire!
Finch flashed the light into the interior. She found a match and
lighted two candles on the table. Her face in the candlelight looked
white and drawn. A great pity for her welled up in the boy's heart. She
seemed to him the loneliest being he knew. He glanced at the closed
door of Eden's room. Was Eden awake, he wondered.

Alayne said: "Wait a minute, Finch. I must get that book I want you to
read." She went into her room. "Goodness, what a muddle I have here!"

"Oh, thanks! But don't trouble now." The laundry list decorated with
postage stamps caught his eye. What the dickens? He peered at it,
puzzled. Some of Eden's foolery, he'd bet. The stamps not used ones
either. If they went away and left that pinned to the wall, he'd come
and get the stamps.

When she returned, after what seemed a long while to Finch, what little
colour she had had in her face had been drained from it. She laid the
book on the table.

"There," she said in a strained voice, "I hope you will like it." She
went on, with an odd contraction of her mouth, "I have just had a note
from Eden." He saw then that she had crumpled a piece of paper in her
hand.

"Oh," he said, stupidly, his jaw dropping, "what's he writing a note
about?"

She pushed it into his hand. "Read it."

He read:

     "DEAR ALAYNE,

     "After all your preparations it is I who am to flit first! And not
     to flit alone! Minny Ware is coming with me. Are you surprised, or
     have you suspected something between us? At any rate, it will be a
     surprise for poor old Meggie. I'm afraid I am never to have done
     taking favours from your sex. There is only one thing for you to
     do now, and that is divorce me. I am giving you good grounds--and
     not so impossibly scandalous as the first time. My dear child,
     this is the first really good turn I've ever done you. My withers
     are wrung when I think what you must have gone through this
     summer!

     "If you and Renny don't come together, I'll feel that I have
     sinned in vain.

     "We are not going to California, but to France. I shall be writing
     to Finch from there, so he will be able to inform your lawyer of
     my exact whereabouts.

     "Thank you, Alayne, for your magnanimity toward me. I can say
     thanks on paper.

                                                             "Yours,
                                                                "EDEN."

Finch read the letter through with so distraught an expression that
Alayne burst into hysterical laughter.

"Oh, Finch, don't!" she gasped. "You look so funny, I can't bear it!"

"I don't see anything funny about it," he said. "I think it's terrible."

"Of course it's terrible. That's what makes it so funny. That, and your
expression!" She leaned against the wall, her hand pressed to her side,
half laughing, half crying.

He strode toward Eden's room and flung open the door. It was in a state
of disorder such as Eden alone could achieve. Alayne came and stood
beside Finch, looking into the room. He could feel that she was shaking
from head to foot. He put his arm about her.

"Dear Alayne, don't tremble so! I'm afraid you'll be ill."

"I'm all right. Only I'm very tired, and Eden's way of doing things is
so unexpected!"

"I'll say it is! I'm the one that ought to know. He didn't tell me he
was going to take a girl with him when he borrowed the money."

She was bewildered. "Borrowed the money? What money?"

"The money for the year in France. I raised it for him. But for
heaven's sake don't tell Renny of it or I'll get into a frightful row!"

She ceased trembling, her face set. "He borrowed money from _you_--to
go to _France_?"

He assented, not without self-importance.

"But, Finch, Renny was paying for a winter in California!"

"I know. But Eden didn't want to go to California. He wanted a year in
France. He must have it because of something he's going to write. I
can't explain. You understand how it is. You left your work and came
here to nurse him because of his poetry. It makes you feel that what he
is doesn't really matter. You and I feel the same about art, I think. I
hope you don't think I'm a fool." He was very red in the face.

She must not hurt his feelings by deprecating his act. Ah, but Eden
would never pay him the money back! She put a hand on each of his
cheeks, and kissed him.

"It was a beautiful thing to do, Finch! I'll not tell a soul. . . .
Strange how he uses us, and then leaves us standing staring at the spot
where he has been."

She took the letter from Finch and read it again. The colour returned
to her face in a flood.

"I wish I hadn't let you read it. Because of--things he said. You must
forget them. He's so--ruthless."

Finch grunted acquiescence. Of course. That about Renny and her. Still
. . . he stared into the deserted nest from whence the singer had flown.
How desolate! How lonely it was here! No place for a woman.

He broke out: "You can't stop here to-night! You must come back with
me."

"I am not afraid."

"It's not that. It's the gruesomeness. I couldn't stick it myself. I'll
not leave you."

"I would rather be here."

"No. It won't do! Please come. Aunt will like to have you. There's your
old room waiting."

She consented. They returned.

There were lights upstairs now, but a light still burned in the
drawing-room, and from it came the sound of the piano. Nicholas was
playing.

From the hall they could see his grey leonine head and heavy shoulders
bent above the keyboard. Alayne remembered with a pang that she had not
asked him to play that evening, though she had urged Finch.

He was playing Mendelssohn's "Consolation." When had one heard
Mendelssohn! His terrier sat drooping before the fire waiting for him
to come to bed.

Finch whispered: "Shall you tell him?"

"Yes. Wait till he has finished."

They stood motionless together. When the last notes had died, Alayne
went to his side. He remained looking at his hands for a little, then
slowly raised his eyes to her face.

Startled by her reappearance, he exclaimed: "Alayne, my dear! What is
wrong?"

"Don't be alarmed," she said. "It's nothing serious. It's only that
Eden has gone away a little sooner than I expected. He left a note at
the Hut for me. Finch wouldn't let me stay there alone--so I'm back,
you see." Her head drooped; she twisted her fingers together. Her voice
was scarcely audible as she added: "He took Minny Ware with him."

Nicholas's large eyes glared up at her. "The deuce he did! The
scoundrel! He ought to be flogged. My poor little girl----" He heaved
himself around on the piano seat and put his arm about her waist. "This
is the return he makes you for all your kindness! He's nothing but a
young wastrel! Does Renny know of this?"

"I haven't seen Renny." She was filled with shame at the thought of
Renny. Now she did not want to see him. She would leave this house and
never return to it again.

Augusta was calling from upstairs: "Did I hear Alayne's voice? What is
wrong, Nicholas?"

Full of excitement, he limped vigorously to the foot of the stairs.

"Gussie!" He had not given her this diminutive for years. "Come along
down, Gussie! Here's a pretty kettle of fish. Young Eden has run off
with that hussy Minny!"

He turned to Alayne and Finch, who had followed him into the hall. "Do
you know where they've gone?"

Finch was getting excited, too. "To France!" he shouted, as though his
uncle were deaf.

Augusta began to descend the stairs, dressed in petticoat and
camisole, a tail of hair down her back. If ever she had looked
offended, she looked offended now.

"Nick, you don't mean to tell me!"

Ernest appeared at the top of the stairs in nightshirt and
dressing-gown, the cat Sasha rubbing herself against his legs.

"What's this new trouble?" he demanded.

Augusta on the stairs, midway between the brothers, answered: "Some
scrape of Eden's. I'm afraid that Ware girl has been leading him into
mischief. Nicholas does get so excited."

Just as they drew together at the bottom of the stairs, and Nicholas
was demanding to see Eden's letter, and Augusta was declaring that she
had always expected something like this, and Ernest was saying what a
blessing it was that Mama had not lived to see this night, and Nicholas
was retorting that no one enjoyed a to-do better than Mama, quick steps
were heard in the porch and the door was opened by Renny.

Before he had seen her, Alayne fled down the hall. She could not face
him there before the others. She would escape to her room and not see
him before morning.

She heard his question: "What's up?" She heard Nicholas put the
situation pithily before him. He made no audible comment, but she could
picture his expression, how the rust-red eyebrows would fly up, the
brown eyes blaze. Then she heard Augusta's voice.

"Alayne is here, poor girl. She is staying the night. Why, where has
she gone? Alayne, dear, Renny is here!"

She did not answer. The door of Grandmother's room stood open; she
stepped inside and drew it to after her. She was startled to find the
night-light burning. By its faint radiance the room was revealed to her
in an atmosphere of sombre melancholy; the tarnished gilt flourishes on
the wallpaper, the deep wing chair before the empty grate, the heavy
curtains with their fringe and tassels, the old painted bedstead,
on the headboard of which perched, above the fantastically pictured
flowers and fruit, Boney, his head under his wing.

The room seemed conscious of this intrusion. It had absorbed, during
the years of old Adeline's occupancy, enough of human emotions to give
it food for brooding while its walls stood. Every article there bore
the imprint of that trenchant personality. Now, dimly revealed by the
night-light, these inanimate objects had the power to recreate her
presence. The bed was no longer smooth and cold, but rumpled and warm
from the weight of that heavy, vigorous old body. Alayne thought: "If I
had come into her room like this, how she would have held out her arms,
and grasped me, and begged, 'Kiss me. . . . Kiss me, quick!'"

Alayne stood by the bed, listening. Had they gone upstairs again, or
into the drawing-room to talk? She could hear voices, but Renny's
voice, which carried so distinctly, was not audible. The impetus given
to her passion for him by her surroundings, by his sudden appearance,
made her heart beat painfully. She steadied herself by her hand on the
footboard.

He was coming.

Involuntarily she moved toward the door, as though to bar it against
him. But he was there before her. He pushed it open and came inside. In
the clouded radiance of the night-light, against the background of a
heavy maroon curtain, she saw the face she loved. The face she called
up in the night, the face that haunted her by day. There he stood--she
could put out her hand and touch him. He lived in her, and the urge
toward him would not be denied. But what did she really know of him?
What was really his conception of love and happiness? She did not know.
He was an enigma to her to which the only answer was the cry of her
heart.

He said, scanning her face: "Shall you divorce him, now?"

She breathed: "Yes."

"And marry me?"

"Yes."

Her eyes fell; she was afraid of their nearness. Against it she raised
the barrier of a question.

"Why did you not come to-night?"

"I couldn't," he answered, "because I knew they had gone."

"You knew Eden and Minny had gone?"

"Yes." He gave a short, strained laugh. "I was riding. The gates at the
crossing dropped as I got there. It was just light enough for me to
make out their two figures on the platform. They were carrying bags.
And when the train passed I saw him again at a window." His grimness
was dispersed by the sudden arch grin so amazingly like old Adeline's.
"He saw me and waved his hand!"

"And that is why you didn't come in to supper?"

He nodded.

"But why?"

"I can't tell. I simply couldn't--knowing that."

In sudden pain, she asked: "And you weren't going to tell me? You were
going to let me go back to the Hut and find out for myself?"

"I suppose."

"But how cruel of you!"

He did not answer; his eyes were on the little pearl-white hollow of
her throat.

Now her eyes searched the dark depths of his. Was he really cruel,
or only shy as a wild animal is shy, afraid of things he does not
understand? She remembered the sound of someone moving in the pine
wood, of Finch's odd look when he returned from searching.

"Were you in the woods? Was it you Finch and I heard, then?"

Again he did not answer, but this time he came and put his head against
hers, and whispered: "Don't ask me questions. Love me."

She felt the fire of his kiss on her neck. She clung to him, her
forehead pressed against his shoulder. They could find no words, but
their hearts, pressed close, talked together in the language of the
surging tides, the winds that bend the branches to their will, the rain
that penetrates the deep warmth of the earth.




XXVIII

WILD DUCKS


A month later a party was setting out one morning from Jalna for
the wild-duck shooting. They were going by motor to the lakes and
marshlands haunted by canvas-back, mallard, and snipe. With Maurice
Vaughan were to ride two friends of his, Mr. Vale from Mistwell, and
Mr. Antoine Lebraux from Quebec. Piers and Renny were to take the dogs,
which, filled with gladness by the sight of the guns, trotted without
rest from point to point of interest--the dunnage bag, the provisions,
the weapons, and their masters' legs, clad in thick woollen stockings
or leather leggings. The sky was grey, broken by small patches of cold
blue, while the scattered sunshine seemed deliberately to seek out the
burning red of the maple-trees. A strong wind was blowing from the
south-east, bringing with it the smell of the lake and the sound of its
thunder on the beach.

Wright came from the house, carrying a heavy canvas-covered hamper, and
stowed it in the back of Renny's car.

"The bacon's in this one, sir," he observed, "and the small tinned
stuff. The bag of dog-biscuits is in this corner. And this here's the
sperrits."

"Good." Renny stuck his head into the car. "We can start directly. . . .
All set, Maurice?"

"Yes, it's time we were off."

Nicholas, Ernest, Finch, Wakefield, Pheasant, and Mooey were
out bare-headed to see the party off. Nicholas wore a heavy
red-and-green-plaid dressing-gown; his iron-grey mane had not yet been
combed, and rose in a crest above his strong features. Ernest stood
chatting to the strangers, hands in pockets, looking slender, feeling
young again, exhilarated by the bustle. Pheasant, her short brown hair
fluttering, was everywhere in pursuit of her son, who, on his feet
now, wrapped in a muffler of Piers's, his small nose blue, was in
imminent danger from cars, dogs, men, and the excited racings of Wake.

How Finch wished he were going!

He stood curved like the new moon, hands in his pockets, shoulders
hunched against the wind, watching with a wistful grin the fascinating
activities of the hunters.

Piers was passing him with a pointer on a lead, when he stopped
abruptly and stared at him. The grin faded from Finch's face. He
stiffened, expecting a sneer. Piers said: "Why don't you come along?"

Finch returned pleasantly: "Yes, I see myself!"

"I'm in earnest. It'd do those fool nerves of yours good. Set you up
for the winter." He called to Renny, who was peering suspiciously into
the engine of his motor. "Why don't you let young Finch come? He might
be of some use."

"He'd be more likely to put a shot into one of us! He's never been. Why
take him?"

"Why not?" persisted Piers. "Look at him! He'll never live to enjoy his
money if he goes on like this. He's all legs and nose."

The two surveyed him. Finch giggled distraughtly, feeling himself to be
dangling in mid-air.

"Very well," agreed Renny, laconically. "But don't waste any time
getting ready."

Finch flew toward the house.

"Why, he's as keen as mustard," said Piers, approvingly.

"Me, too!" clamoured Wake. "I want to go!"

Piers tried to quiet him by standing him on his head, but the moment he
was released he got into the car and established himself on the dunnage
bag, whence he had to be forcibly ejected.

"Do you know," he said, tears in his eyes, looking up into Renny's
face, "that I have never been anywhere in my life?"

"You can't come." Renny took out some silver and put two fifty-cent
pieces into the little boy's hand. "Try to have a good time on this."

Wake had never had such a magnificent sum given to him before. He was
effectually quieted, even made solemn by the responsibility.

In his room Finch was throwing clothes and boots into a suitcase. In
a fury of haste he dragged a bottle-green sweater over the dark red
one he wore. He surveyed himself in the glass. He remembered Wake's
dream of his being a "long, yellowish, rather sad-looking flower." He
burst out laughing. "Gosh," he exclaimed, "this is fierce!" What he
designated as "fierce" can only be guessed, but probably referred to
the furious speed with which life was moving. There were Eden and Minny
Ware mysteriously disappeared, there were Aunt Augusta and Alayne in
England, and here was he off hunting with the other men.

He tore down the stairs, the suitcase bumping against his legs, and
appeared wild-eyed before the others. He sprang, bag in hand, into his
brother-in-law's car.

"Here," objected Vaughan, "you can't ride in this car! You'll have to
go in the other."

"Get in here with the dogs," said Renny.

He put his suitcase on top of the mound of luggage, and wedged
himself in with the two spaniels and the pointer. They were trembling
with excitement. They licked his hands and face and cried with glad
eagerness to be off.

They were off! Maurice's car was turning into the drive, its three
occupants waving and calling out to the group who were left. It was
impossible to believe that he was in the car behind Renny and Piers.
He put his head out of the window and shouted: "Good-bye, Uncle Nick!
Good-bye, Uncle Ernest! Good-bye, kids!"

They shouted back. Wake was dancing up and down with excitement. Uncle
Ernest had Mooey in his arms. Pheasant and Mooey were throwing kisses.
The joy, the abandon, of it pained him. He could bear unhappiness, but
he had no defences against joy.

On either side of the road the oaks and the maples stood up showing
their scarlet and mahogany-coloured leaves, a few of which, with every
gust, were swept from them and flew a short way like bright birds
before they sank to the roadside. As they neared the church the cedars
of the graveyard rose in a dark green cluster against the sky. Renny
touched Piers's hand on the wheel. "Go slow here," he said.

The car crept past the graveyard. The brothers looked up the steep
path, remembering how only a short while ago they had carried a coffin
up there. Renny took off his cap. He shot a quick glance at the
others, and they too pulled off theirs. Piers held his in his brown
hand, glancing out of the corner of his eye at Renny for the signal to
replace it. But Renny looked over his shoulder and said to Finch:

"Finch, do you remember what her last word was?"

"'Gammon!'" answered Finch.


                              THE END




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[End of Whiteoaks, by Mazo de la Roche]
