Anne Severn and the Fieldings - May Sinclair
Robert and Colin were down at the Manor Farm. Eliot was in the
schoolroom, reading.
Jerrold and Anne sat together on the grass under the beech trees, alone.
They had got over the shock of the first encounter, when they met at
arms' length, not kissing, but each remembering, shyly, that they used
to kiss. If they had not got over the "difference," the change of Anne
from a child to a big girl, of Jerrold from a big boy to a man's height
and a man's voice, it was because, in some obscure way, that difference
fascinated them. The great thing was that underneath it they were both,
as Anne said, "the same."
"I don't know what I'd have done, Jerrold, if you hadn't been."
"You might have known I would be."
"I did know."
"I say, what a thundering lot of hair you've got. I like it."
"Do you like what Auntie Adeline calls my new nose?"
"Awfully."
She meditated. "Jerrold, do you remember Benjy?"
"Rather."
"Dear Benjy... Do you know, I can hardly believe I'm here. I never
thought I should come again."
"But why shouldn't you?"
"I don't know. Only I think every time something'll happen to prevent
me. I'm afraid of being ill or dying before I can get away. And they
might send me anywhere any day. It's awful to be so uncertain."
"Don't think about it. You're here now."
"Oh Jerrold, supposing it was the last time--"
"It isn't the last time. Don't spoil it by thinking."
"_You'd_ think if you were me."
"I say--you don't mean they're not decent to you?"
"Who, Grandmamma and Grandpapa? They're perfect darlings. So's Aunt
Emily. But they're awfully old and they can't play at anything, except
bridge. And it isn't the same thing at all. Besides, I don't--"
She paused. It wasn't kind to the poor things to say "I don't love them
the same."
"Do you like us so awfully, then?"
"Yes."
"I'm glad you like us."
They were silent.
Up and down the flagged terrace above them Aunt Adeline and Uncle Robert
walked together. The sound of his voice came to them, low and troubled.
Anne listened, "Is anything wrong?" she said. "They've been like that
for ages."
"Daddy's bothered about Eliot."
"Eliot?"
"About his wanting to be a doctor."
"Is Auntie Adeline bothered?"
"No. She would be if she knew. But she doesn't think it'll happen. She
never thinks anything will happen that she doesn't like. But it will.
They can't keep him off it. He's been doing medicine at Cambridge
because they won't let him go and do it at Bart's. It's just come out
that he's been at it all the time. Working like blazes."
"Why shouldn't he be a doctor if he likes?"
"Because he's the eldest son. It wouldn't matter so much if it was only
Colin or me. But Eliot ought to have the estate. And he says he won't
have it. He doesn't want it. He says Daddy's got to leave it to me.
That's what's worrying the dear old thing. He thinks it wouldn't be
fair."
"Who to?"
Jerrold laughed. "Why, to _Eliot_. He's got it into his dear old head
that he _ought_ to have it. He can't see that Eliot knows his own
business best. It _would_ be most awfully in his way... It's pretty
beastly for me, too. I don't like taking it when I know Daddy wants
Eliot to have it. That's to say, he _doesn't_ want; he'd like me to have
it, because I'd take care of it. But that makes him all the more stuck
on Eliot, because he thinks it's the right thing. I don't like having it
in any case."
"Why ever not?"
"Well, I _can_ only have it if Daddy dies, and I'd rather die myself
first."
"That's how I feel about my farm."
"Beastly, isn't it? Still, I'm not worrying. Daddy's frightfully
healthy, thank Heaven. He'll live to be eighty at the very least. Why--I
should be fifty."
"_You're_ all right," said Anne. "But it's awful for me. Grandpapa might
die any day. He's seventy-five _now_. It'll be ages before you're
fifty."
"And I may never be it. India may polish me off long before that." He
laughed his happy laugh. The idea of his own death seemed to Jerrold
irresistibly funny.
"_India_?"
He laughed again at her dismay.
"Rather. I'm going in for the Indian Civil."
"Oh Jerrold--you'll be away years and years, nearly all the time, like
Daddy, and I shan't ever see you."
"I shan't start for ages. Not for five years. Lots of time to see each
other in."
"Lots of time for _not_ seeing each other ever again."
She sat staring mournfully, seeing before her the agony of separation.
"Nonsense," said Jerrold. "Why on earth shouldn't you come out to India
too? I say, that would be a lark, wouldn't it? You would come, wouldn't
you?"
"Like a shot," said Anne.
"Would you give up your farm to come?"
"I'd give up anything."
"_That's_ all right. Let's go and play tennis."
They played for two hours straight on end, laughing and shouting.
Adeline, intensely bored by Eliot and his absurd affairs, came down the
lawn to look at them. She loved their laughter. It was good to have Anne
there. Anne was so happy.
John Severn came to her.
"Did you ever see anything happier than that absurd boy?" she said. "Why
can't Eliot be jolly and contented, too, like Jerrold?"
"Don't you think the chief reason may be that he _isn't_ Jerrold?"
"Jerrold's adorable. He's never given me a day's trouble since he was
born."
"No. It's other women he'll give trouble to," said John, "before he's
done."
iii
Colin was playing. All afternoon he had been practising with fury; first
scales, then exercises. Then a pause; and now, his fingers slipped into
the first movement of the Waldstein Sonata.
Secretly, mysteriously he began; then broke, sharply, impatiently,
crescendo, as the passion of the music mounted up and up. And now as it
settled into its rhythm his hands ran smoothly and joyously along.
The west window of the drawing-room was open to the terrace. Eliot and
Anne sat out there and listened.
"He's wonderful, isn't he?" she said.
Eliot shook his head. "Not so wonderful as he was. Not half so wonderful
as he ought to be. He'll never be good enough for a professional. He
knows he won't."
"What's happened?"
"Nothing. That's just it. Nothing ever will happen. He's stuck. It's the
same with his singing. He'll never be any good if he can't go away and
study somewhere. If it isn't Berlin or Leipzig it ought to be London.
But father can't live there and the mater won't go anywhere without him.
So poor Col-Col's got to stick here doing nothing, with the same rotten
old masters telling him things he knew years ago.... It'll be worse next
term when he goes to Cheltenham. He won't be able to practice, and
nobody'll care a damn.... Not that that would matter if he cared
himself."
Colin was playing the slow movement now, the grave, pure passion,
pressed out from the solemn bass, throbbed, tense with restraint.
"Oh Eliot, he _does_ care."
"In a way. Not enough to keep on at it. You've got to slog like blazes,
if you want to get on."
"Jerrold won't, ever, then."
"Oh yes he will. _He'll_ get on all right, because he _doesn't_ care;
because work comes so jolly easy to him. He hasn't got to break his
heart over it.... The trouble with Colin is that he cares, awfully, for
such a lot of other things. Us, for instance. He'll leave off in the
middle of a movement if he hears Jerrold yelling for him. He ought to be
able to chuck us all; we're all of us in his way. He ought to hate us.
He ought to hate Jerrold worst of all."
Adeline and John Severn came round the corner of the terrace.
"What's all this about hating?" he said.
"What do you mean, Eliot?" said she.
Eliot raised himself wearily. "I mean," he said, "you'll never be any
good at anything if you're not prepared to commit a crime for it."
"I know what I'd commit a crime for," said Anne. "But I shan't tell."
"You needn't. _You'd_ do it for anybody you were gone on."
"Well, I would. I'd tell any old lie to make them happy. I'd steal for
them if they were hungry. I'd kill anybody who hurt them."
"I believe you would," said Eliot.
"We know who Anne would commit her crimes for."
"We don't. We don't know anything she doesn't want us to," said Eliot,
shielding her from his mother's mischief.
"That's right, Eliot, stick up for her," said John. He knew what she was
thinking of. "Would Jerrold commit a crime?" he said.
"Sooner than any of us. But not for the Indian Civil. He'd rob, butcher,
lie himself black in the face for anything he really cared for."
"He would for Colin," said Anne.
"Rob? Butcher and lie?" Her father meditated.
"It sounds like Jerrold, doesn't it?" said Adeline. "Absurd children.
Thank goodness they don't any of them know what they're talking
about.... And here's tea."
Indoors the music stopped suddenly and Colin came out, ready.
"What's Jerrold doing?" he said.
It was, as Eliot remarked, a positive obsession.
iv
Tea was over. Adeline and Anne sat out together on the terrace. The
others had gone. Adeline looked at her watch.
"What time is it?" said Anne.
"Twenty past five."
Anne started up. "And I'm going to ride with Jerrold at half-past."
"Are you? I thought you were going to stay with me."
Anne turned. "Do you want me to, Auntie?"
"What do you think?"
"If you really want me to, of _course_ I'll stay. Jerry won't mind."
"You darling... And I used to think you were never going to like me. Do
you remember?"
"I remember I was a perfect little beast to you."
"You were. But you do love me a bit now, don't you?"
"What do you _think_?"
Anne leaned over her, covering her, supporting herself by the arms of
the garden chair. She brought her face close down, not kissing her, but
looking into her eyes and smiling, teasing in her turn.
"You love me," said Adeline; "but you'd cut me into little bits if it
would please Jerrold."
Anne drew back suddenly, straightened herself and turned away.
"Run off, you monkey, or you'll keep him waiting. I don't want you ...
Wait ... Where's Uncle Robert?"
"Down at the farm."
"Bother his old farm. Well--you might ask that father of yours to come
and amuse me."
"I'll go and get him now. Are you sure you don't want me?"
"Quite sure, you funny thing."
Anne ran, to make up for lost time.
v
The sun had come round on to the terrace. Adeline rose from her chair.
John Severn rose, stiffly.
She had made him go with her to the goldfish pond, made him walk round
the garden, listening to him and not listening, detaching herself
wilfully at every turn, to gather more and more of her blue flowers;
made him come into the drawing-room and look on while she arranged them
exquisitely in the tall Chinese jars. She had brought him out again to
sit on the terrace in the sun; and now, in her restlessness, she was up
again and calling to him to follow.
"It's baking here. Shall we go into the library?"
"If you like." He sighed as he said it.
As long as they stayed out of doors he felt safe and peaceful; but he
was afraid of the library. Once there, shut in with her in that room
which she was consecrating to their communion, heaven only knew what
sort of fool he might make of himself. Last time it was only the sudden
entrance of Robert that had prevented some such manifestation. And
to-day, her smile and her attentive attitude told him that she expected
him to be a fool, that she looked to his folly for her entertainment.
He had followed her like a dog; and as if he had been a dog her hand
patted a place on the couch beside her. And because he was a fool and
foredoomed he took it.
There was a silence. Then suddenly he made up his mind.
"Adeline, I'm very sorry, but I find I've got to go to-morrow."
"Go? Up to town?"
"Yes."
"But--you're coming back again."
"I'm--afraid--not."
"My dear John, you haven't been here a week. I thought you were going to
stay with us till your leave was up."
"So did I. But I find I can't."
"Whyever not?"
"Oh--there are all sorts of things to be seen to."
"Nonsense, what do you suppose Robert will say to you, running off like
this?"
"Robert will understand."
"It's more than I do."
"You can see, can't you, that I'm going because I must, not because I
want to."
"Well, I think it's horrid of you. I shall miss you frightfully."
"Yes, you were good enough to say I amused you."
"You're not amusing me now, my dear ... Are you going to take Anne away
from me too?"
"Not if you'd like to keep her."
"Of course I'd like to keep her."
He paused, brooding, wrenching one of his lean hands with the other.
"There's one thing I must ask you--"
"Ask, ask, then."
"I told you Anne would care for you if you gave her time. She does care
for you."
"Yes. Odd as it may seem, I really believe she does."
"Well--don't let her be hurt by it."
"Hurt? Who's going to hurt her?"
"You, if you let her throw herself away on you when you don't want her."
"Have I behaved as if I didn't want her?"
"You've behaved like an angel. All the same, you frighten me a little.
You've a terrible fascination for the child. Don't use it too much. Let
her feelings alone. Don't work on them for the fun of seeing what she'll
do next. If she tries to break away don't bring her back. Don't jerk her
on the chain. Don't--amuse yourself with Anne."
"So that's how you think of me?"
"Oh, you know how I think."
"Do I? Have I ever known? You say the cruellest things. Is there
anything else I'm not to do to her?"
"Yes. For God's sake don't tease her about Jerrold."
"My dear John, you talk as if it was serious. I assure you Jerrold isn't
thinking about Anne."
"And Anne isn't 'thinking' about Jerrold. They don't think, poor dears.
They don't know what's happening to them. None of us know what's
happening to us till it happens. Then it's too late."
"Well, I'll promise not to do any of these awful things if you'll tell
me, honestly, why you're going."
He stared at her.
"Tell you? You know why. I am going for _the same reason_ that I came.
How can you possibly ask me to stay?"
"Of course, if you feel like that about it--"
"You'll say I'd no business to come if I feel like that. But I knew I
wasn't hurting anybody but myself. I knew _you_ were safe. There's never
been anybody but Robert."
"Never. Never for a minute."
"I tell you I know that. I always have known it. And I understand it.
What I can't understand is why, when that's that, you make it so hard
for me."
"Do I make it hard for you?"
"Damnably."
"You poor thing. But you'll get over it."
"I'm not young enough to get over it. Does it look like getting over it?
It's been going on for twenty-two years."
"Oh come, not all the time, John."
"Pretty nearly. On and off."
"More off than on, I think."
"What does that matter when it's 'on' now? Anyhow I've got to go."
"Go, if you must. Do the best for yourself, my dear. Only don't say I
made you."
"I'm not saying anything."
"Well--I'm sorry."
All the same her smile declared her profound and triumphant satisfaction
with herself. It remained with her after he had gone. She would rather
he had stayed, following her about, waiting for her, ready to her call,
amusing her; but his going was the finer tribute to her power: the
finest, perhaps, that he could have well paid. She hadn't been prepared
for such a complete surrender.
vi
Something had happened to Eliot. He sulked. Indoors and out, working and
playing, at meal-times and bed-time he sulked. Jerrold said of him that
he sulked in his sleep.
Two things made his behaviour inexplicable. To begin with, it was
uncalled for. Robert Fielding, urged by John Severn in a last interview,
had given in all along the line. Not only had Eliot leave to stick to
his medicine (which he would have done in any case), but he was to go to
Bart's to work for his doctor's degree when his three years at Cambridge
were ended. His father had made a new will, leaving the estate to
Jerrold and securing to the eldest son an income almost large enough to
make up for the loss. Eliot, whose ultimate aim was research work, now
saw all the ways before him cleared. He had no longer anything to sulk
for.
Still more mysteriously, his sulking appeared to be related to Anne. He
had left off going for walks alone with her in the fields and woods; he
didn't show her things under his microscope any more. If she leaned over
his shoulder he writhed himself away; if his hand blundered against hers
he drew it back as if her touch burnt him. More often than not he would
go out of the room if she came into it. Yet as long as she was there he
couldn't keep his eyes off her. She would be sitting still, reading,
when she would be aware, again and again, of Eliot's eyes, lifted from
his book to fasten on her. She could feel them following her when she
walked away.
One wet day in August they were alone together in the schoolroom,
reading. Suddenly Anne felt his eyes on her. Their look was intent,
penetrating, disturbing; it burned at her under his jutting, sombre
eyebrows.
"Is there anything funny about me?" she said.
"Funny? No. Why?"
"Because you keep on looking at me."
"I didn't know I was looking at you."
"Well, you were. You're always doing it. And I can't think why."
"It isn't because I want to."
He held his book up so that it hid his face.
"Then don't do it," she said. "You needn't."
"I shan't," he snarled, savagely, behind his screen.
But he did it again and again, as if for the life of him he couldn't
help it. There was something about it mysterious and exciting. It made
Anne want to look at Eliot when he wasn't looking at her.
She liked his blunt, clever face, the half-ugly likeness of his father's
with its jutting eyebrows and jutting chin, its fine grave mouth and
greenish-brown eyes; mouth and eyes that had once been so kind and were
now so queer. Eliot's face made her keep on wondering what it was doing.
She _had_ to look at it.
One day, when she was looking, their eyes met. She had just time to see
that his mouth had softened as if he were pleased to find her looking at
him. And his eyes were different; not cross, but dark now and unhappy;
they made her feel as if she had hurt him.
They were in the library. Uncle Robert was there, sitting in his chair
behind them, at the other end of the long room. She had forgotten Uncle
Robert.
"Oh, Eliot," she said, "have I done anything?"
"Not that I know of." His face stiffened.
"You look as if I had. Have I?"
"Don't talk such putrid rot. As if I cared what you did. Can't you leave
me alone?"
And he jumped up and left the room.
And there was Uncle Robert in his chair, watching her, looking kind and
sorry.
"What's the matter with him?" she said. "Why is he so cross?"
"You mustn't mind. He doesn't mean it."
"No, but it's so funny of him. He's only cross with me; and I haven't
done anything."
"It isn't that."
"What is it, then? I believe he hates me."
"No. He doesn't hate you, Anne. He's going through a bad time, that's
all. He can't help being cross."
"Why can't he? He's got everything he wants."
"Has he?"
Uncle Robert was smiling. And this time his smile was for himself. She
didn't understand it.
vii
Anne was going away. She said she supposed now that Eliot would be
happy.
Grandmamma Severn thought she had been long enough running loose with
those Fielding boys. Grandpapa Everitt agreed with her and they decided
that in September Anne should go to the big girls' college in
Cheltenham. Grandmamma and Aunt Emily had left London and taken a house
in Cheltenham and Anne was to live with them there.
Colin and she were going in the same week, Colin to his college and Anne
to hers.
They were discussing this prospect. Colin and Jerrold and Anne in
Colin's room. It was a chilly day in September and Colin was in bed
surrounded by hot water bottles. He had tried to follow Jerrold in his
big jump across the river and had fallen in. He was not ill, but he
hoped he would be, for then he couldn't go back to Cheltenham next week.
"If it wasn't for the hot water bottles," he said, "I _might_ get a
chill."
"I wish I could get one," said Anne. "But I can't get anything. I'm so
beastly strong."
"It isn't so bad for you. You haven't got to live with the girls. It'll
be perfectly putrid in my house now that Jerrold isn't there."
"Haven't you _any_ friends, Col-Col?"
"Yes. There's little Rogers. But even he's pretty rotten after Jerry."
"He would be."
"And that old ass Rawly says I'll be better this term without Jerrold.
He kept on gassing about fighting your own battles and standing on your
own feet. You never heard such stinking rot."
"You're lucky it's Cheltenham," Jerrold said, "and not some other rotten
hole. Dad and I'll go over on half-holidays and take you out. You and
Anne."
"You'll be at Cambridge."
"Not till next year. And it isn't as if Anne wasn't there."
"Grannie and Aunt Emily'll ask you every week. I've made them. It'll be
a bit slow, but they're rather darlings."
"Have they a piano?" Colin asked.
"Yes. And they'll let you play on it all the time."
Colin looked happier. But he didn't get his chill, and when the day came
he had to go.
Jerrold saw Anne off at Wyck station.
"You'll look after Col-Col, won't you?" he said. "Write and tell me how
he gets on."
"I'll write every week."
Jerrold was thoughtful.
"After all, there's something in that idea of old Rawlings', that I'm
bad for him. He's got to do without me."
"So have I."
"You're different. You'll stand it, if you've got to. Colin won't. And
he doesn't chum up with the other chaps."
"No. But think of me and all those awful girls--after you and Eliot"
(she had forgotten Eliot's sulkiness) "and Uncle Robert. And Grannie and
Aunt Emily after Auntie Adeline."
"Well, I'm glad Col-Col'll have you sometimes."
"So'm I... Oh, Jerrold, here's the beastly train."
It drew up along the platform.
Anne stood in her carriage, leaning out of the window to him.
His hand was on the ledge. They looked at each other without speaking.
The guard whistled. Carriage doors slammed one after another. The train
moved forward.
Jerrold ran alongside. "I say, you'll let Col-Col play on that piano?"
Anne was gone.
III
ANNE AND JERROLD
i
"'Where have you been all the day, Rendal, my son?
Where have you been all the day, my pretty one?...'"
Five years had passed. It was August, nineteen ten.
Anne had come again. She sat out on the terrace with Adeline, while
Colin's song drifted out to them through the open window.
It was her first day, the first time for three years. Anne's calendar
was blank from nineteen seven to nineteen ten. When she was seventeen
she had left Cheltenham and gone to live with Grandpapa Everitt at the
Essex farm. Grandpapa Everitt wanted her more than Grandmamma Severn,
who had Aunt Emily; so Anne had stayed with him all that time. She had
spent it learning to farm and looking after Grandpapa on his bad days.
For the last year of his life all his days had been bad. Now he was
dead, dead three months ago, and Anne had the farm. She was going to
train for five years under the man who had worked it for Grandpapa;
after that she meant to manage it herself.
She had been trying to tell Aunt Adeline all about it, but you could see
she wasn't interested. She kept on saying "Yes" and "Oh" and "Really"?
in the wrong places. She never could listen to you for long together,
and this afternoon she was evidently thinking of something else, perhaps
of John Severn, who had been home on leave and gone again without coming
to the Fieldings.
"'I've been to my sweetheart, mother, make my bed soon,
For I'm sick to my heart and I fain would lie down...'"
Mournful, and beautiful, Colin's song came through the windows, and Anne
thought of Jerrold who was not there. He was staying in Yorkshire with
some friends of his, the Durhams. He would be back to-morrow. He would
have got away from the Durhams.
..."'make my bed soon...'"
To-morrow. To-morrow.
"Who are the Durhams, Auntie?"
"He's Sir Charles Durham. Something important in the Punjaub. Some high
government official. He'll be useful to Jerrold if he gets a job out
there. They're going back in October. I suppose I shall have to ask.
Maisie Durham before they sail."
Maisie Durham. Maisie Durham. But to-morrow he would have got away.
"'What will you leave your lover, Rendal, my son?
What will you leave your lover, my pretty one?
A rope to hang her, mother,
A rope to hang her, mother, make my bed soon,
For I'm sick to my heart and I fain would lie down.'"
"Sing something cheerful, Colin, for Goodness sake," said his mother.
But Colin sang it again.
"'A rope to hang her'"
"Bless him, you'd think he'd known all the wicked women that ever were.
My little Col-Col."
"You like him the best, don't you?"
"No. Indeed I do not. I like my laughing boy best. You wouldn't catch
Jerry singing a dismal song like that."
"Darling, you used to say Colin was your favourite."
"No, my dear. Never. Never. It was always Jerrold. Ever since he was
born. He never cried when he was a baby. Colin was always crying."
"Poor Col-Col."
"There you are. Nobody'll ever say, 'Poor Jerrold'. I like happy people,
Anne. In this tiresome world it's people's duty to be happy."