The Jalna Saga – Deluxe Edition: All Sixteen Books of the Enduring Classic Series & The Biography of Mazo de la Roche

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The Jalna Saga – Deluxe Edition: All Sixteen Books of the Enduring Classic Series & The Biography of Mazo de la Roche Page 120

by de la Roche, Mazo


  “Yes, they’re quite nice. She sleeps in gloves lined with almond paste.”

  Renny was silent. He was looking at the cluster of jewels on his palm and thinking what they signified to him and Vera, of their future together, how he would care for and protect her.

  Although they had been so quiet they had disturbed Boney. He raised his head, gaped, and spread one wing. His bright eye roved over the room seeking Adeline. It was not right that other people should be there without her. Something in the very attitude of the intruders irritated him. He made noises which were preliminary to an outburst of anger.

  “Pretty Poll,” soothed Meg. “Give him a bit of banana, Renny.”

  Renny drew back the skin from the fruit and proffered it, but Boney turned his beak away. He gave a furious peck at the jewel in Renny’s hand and ejaculated loudly: —

  “Chore! Chore!”

  “Good heavens!” said Meg, struggling with the clasp of the box. “He’ll have the family in here! Offer him the banana.

  “He won’t take it.”

  Boney still glared at the ring, screaming — “Chore! Chore!”

  “It means thief,” said Renny, hoarsely. “Isn’t that appalling?”

  Meg, terribly flustered thrust the box into its place and closed

  the drawer.

  “Chore! Chore!” Boney rocked on his perch. Nothing could induce him to touch the banana. Now, between the open curtains, he saw through the window a pale face peering between the branches of the lilac tree. It was Malahide, risen from his bed, and prowling about the garden in a disturbed, yet exalted state of mind. Seeing a light in Adeline’s room, he had thought, if he found her there, to enter and have a private talk with her. Seeing instead her grandchildren, wearing the air of conspirators, he stood immovable, watching them.

  Boney now burst out with — “Hell! Hell! Hell with Malahide! Malahide! Malahide! Malahide!” He sidled up and down his perch in sinuous spleen.

  Renny blew out the light and they fled into the hall. Like shadows they crept up the stairs and did not stop till they reached Meg’s room. There she sank into a chair, laughing and holding her side.

  “Oh!” she exclaimed, “I’ve such a stitch! Oh, what a bird!”

  “Well,” said Renny, “it was just a little too uncanny. We didn’t escape a moment too soon.”

  He put the ring on his little finger and began to eat the banana.

  XXXI

  THE LAST OF MALAHIDE

  NICHOLAS AND PHILIP left for their shooting trip two mornings later. The combined assistance of servants and family was required to get them off. The tent, the great canvas bag of rugs and blankets, had been taken to the station earlier; also the box of tinned goods, bacon, eggs, and jam. Their small bags, their guns and ammunition, they took with them in the trap. Keno sat between Philip’s knees, beaming content on his forehead, his muzzle reaching now and again to the case which held Philip’s gun. A young pointer, just being trained, was held on a lead by Nicholas.

  A severe frost had crisped the grass the night before. The dahlias hung black and sodden on their stalks. Nasturtiums and asters were quite dead, but here and there a marigold raised its bright face in the border. The air was so clear, so nipping, that it was all Hodge could do to keep the horses in order. Mary, in her thin blue dress, hugged herself to keep warm, as she laughed up at Philip.

  “Don’t fail to send partridges! And quail. I like them both better than duck. And don’t come home with a dreadful yellow beard as you did last year! Be careful of your rheumatism, Nick. Oh, I do wonder if you have everything!”

  “Good Lord!” said Nicholas. “I have forgotten my liniment!”

  “Molly will fetch it,” said Philip. “Run and get it, like a dear, Molly.”

  “I’ll fetch it! I’ll fetch it!” cried Eden, who had carried his toast from the breakfast table and was feeding bits of it to the pointer.

  “What’s forgotten, men?” asked Adeline, who, wrapped in a Scotch plaid, stood in the porch.

  “My Minard’s Liniment,” growled Nicholas. “In the under part of my washing stand.”

  “Eden will fetch it.”

  “No. He’ll get the bottle buttery.”

  “Let Meg bring it,” said Philip. “Meggie, run and get Uncle Nick’s liniment.”

  Meg had just come out, carrying the baby in her arms. She pouted a little. “And carry Peep? He’ll not let me put him down. Will you, sister’s little angel?” She buried her face against his soft body and he buried his hands in the depths of her pompadour.

  “I’ll go!” cried Mary.

  “No, no,” said Philip. “Let Eden go.”

  “No!” shouted Nicholas. “Look at his hands!”

  Adeline thumped her stick on the porch. “Will no one get my son’s liniment? Where are the maids?”

  Eliza appeared with Philip’s pipe in her hand. She said severely, as she handed it to him: —

  “I found this, sir, full of hot ash, on the piano.”

  Philip took it from her meekly. “Well, now, that’s pretty bad, Eliza. But, never mind, you’ll have the house very tidy while I’m away.”

  Renny, hands deep in pockets, lounged round the corner of the house. His father and uncle ordered him simultaneously to bring the liniment. He dashed into the house and up the stairs.

  “Look at him,” said Nicholas. “Did you ever see a strained ankle get well so fast?”

  “It was swollen. I saw it,” said Philip. He looked affectionately at Renny as he approached, followed by Eden, begging to be allowed to carry the bottle of liniment. Philip had felt that he should have a serious talk with the boy before leaving. He would not see him again before he returned to college. But he could not bring himself to do it. He had simply said: —

  “Better luck next time, old man. And — hang on to your temper. Don’t go knocking the masters about.”

  With jocular adjurations from Adeline, cries of goodbye from the children, thrown kisses from Molly and Meg, the bays dashed away, sending up a shower of gravel. The dogs lifted up their voices in glad barks.

  But Renny made a trumpet of his hands and shouted — “Dad! Dad! Did you get the whiskey?”

  Philip shouted to Hodge. Hodge shouted “Whoa” to the horses and drew them in sharply. The young pointer, strangling himself in his lead, was cuffed by Nicholas.

  “Bring it! Bring it!” ordered Philip. “My God, Nick, we might have gone without it!”

  Again Renny dashed into the house with Eden after him. Adeline was so excited that she turned around in bewildered fashion in the porch. “When will they be gone!” she muttered. “This is too much!”

  Renny, bearing the heavy box of assorted spirits, hastened down the drive. It was difficult to find a place for it. Philip patted him on the shoulder, saying — “Good man!” and they were off again.

  It was several hours before Malahide appeared. A breakfast tray had been brought to him and, when the tumult of departure had subsided, he had turned again on his side and slept.

  It was nearly noon when he strolled along the road toward Admiral Lacey’s house. He found the old man basking in the sun, which was now warm, on a south verandah overlooking his frost-blighted garden. The Admiral was not particularly pleased to see Malahide, for he never quite knew what to say to him, but any company was agreeable, as his family were entirely occupied by preparations for the departure of Violet and Vera.

  After a little desultory talk Malahide said, stroking his bluish chin: —

  “It is a great pleasure to me to be able to travel with your daughter and Vera. I hope I shall find the opportunity of being of service to them.”

  “Well, well, I’m very glad they are to have a man with them. I don’t think much of ladies travelling alone, even in these days.”

  “Vera is a charming girl,” said Malahide.

  “She’s a nice child,” agreed the Admiral. “But I shan’t be sorry to see her go. She’s been a responsibility. My son spoils her. It’s not
the way I brought up my daughters. The child resents being chaperoned, let me tell you. She’s determined, and very artful in getting her own way.”

  Malahide turned a melancholy face on him. He said: —

  “Admiral, I can’t pretend to think Vera’s engagement to young Renny anything other than lamentable.”

  Admiral Lacey stared at him in astonishment. “Engagement! What d’ye mean engagement? There’s no engagement that I know of.”

  “Is it without your consent, then?”

  “Consent? I’ve never been asked. You are quite mistaken. There is no engagement.”

  Malahide moved forward and whispered — “They are engaged, sir. She has his ring.”

  Admiral Lacey turned a deep red. “I’ll send for her,” he said, “and see what she has to say for herself. As though I should allow an engagement! When she was sent over here to avoid one.” Then he added, more coolly — “Not that I have anything against the boy. He is a fine lad. But he’s not twenty yet. When he is a little older we may consider it.”

  “A marriage between them,” said Malahide, “would be nothing short of lamentable. I repeat the word, lamentable. He is not fit to touch an innocent girl — let alone marry her!”

  Admiral Lacy eyed him with distrust. “I wish you would explain yourself,” he said stiffly.

  There was a conscious lubricity in Malahide’s tone as he returned — “It is easy to explain. Renny has been intimate with a woman — old enough to be his mother — a relative of the girl young Vaughan got into trouble.”

  “Does Philip know of this?”

  “Yes, he knows of it.”

  “Then, by the Lord Harry, he did wrong to let his young wastrel come over here to visit my granddaughter. I don’t thank him for that. As for an engagement — do you say she wears his ring?”

  “Doubtless — in secret. The very way he got the ring was perfidious. He stole it from his grandmother!”

  The Admiral’s slow moving blood gathered yet more strongly in his head. He turned purple. “Let me — let me —” he began incoherently.

  Malahide laid a quieting hand on his arm. “If you speak to Vera, excited as you are now, it may do more harm than good.”

  “My dear man,” answered Admiral Lacey, “I do not have to wait the opportune moment for addressing my granddaughter!”

  “Of course not. But if you wish to be impressive, choose the opportune moment. Choose the moment when they are in the room together. He comes here every day, doesn’t he?”

  Although delay was against Admiral Lacey’s inclination, he did wait till afternoon before descending on Vera and Renny. Renny came, as Malahide said he would, but not alone. Meg was with him, wearing one of the new enormous hats perched high on her head. Admiral Lacey hung about the hall, feeling strangely like the culprit himself, till the three young people were in the drawing room. He wished Meg were not with them. To tackle them alone would have been easier, he thought.

  Presently the strains of the “Merry Widow Waltz” came to him through the closed door. The three had been to see the opera only the week before. Sleeping or waking, it was difficult for them to get the melody of this waltz out of their heads. The Admiral softly opened the door and peeped in.

  The long, narrow room with its slanting floor and small-paned windows, its water colours and Dresden china, its banner fire screen and crocheted antimacassars, was filled with the golden sunshine of late afternoon. At the draped square piano Meg sat, her face like a round enraptured flower under the enormous hat. She played the waltz as though she had, in that moment, composed it. She raised her hands high above the keyboard, letting the sweet seductive notes fall from them. If they were inaccurate, no one guessed it, for the two who danced were lost in a world of supple movement and youthful love.

  As well as they could they were imitating the dancing of the two stars they had seen the week before. Renny, in long agile steps, glided down the room, turning, turning, with Vera in his arms. She, resting in his embrace, bent backward as far as she could endure, gazing up into his face. On the white hand against his shoulder gleamed the pearl and diamond ring.

  The Admiral stood gazing open-mouthed for a space. In spite of himself he liked the looks of the waltz. And they way they performed it!

  “Bless my soul!” he exclaimed. “You might be professionals.”

  The dancers stopped short, though the piano strayed on through another dreamy bar. Vera hid the hand that wore the ring.

  “Now, Renny,” said Admiral Lacey. “I should like an explanation.”

  “Of what?” asked Renny boldly.

  His tone had a hardening effect on the Admiral.

  “Of your manner of dancing with my granddaughter. It’s not seemly.”

  “It’s the newest thing,” said Vera.

  “All the worse for it — and for you! Why, you looked like foreigners!”

  “It is foreign,” said Meg, from the piano stool. “It’s a beautiful thing. The scene is in a country rather like Ruritania.”

  “It is lovely to do,” said Vera.

  “It is improper,” replied her grandfather. “And what about the ring you are wearing? Show it to me.”

  Vera was frightened. She looked at Renny for help, but he gave her none.

  “Show me that ring,” repeated Admiral Lacey.

  Vera approached him, holding out her hand.

  “Hmph! It is not the first time I have seen it. I have seen it on Mrs. Whiteoak. You must explain to me how you came by it.”

  “Oh, Granddaddy, I can’t! I — oh, please, don’t insist!”

  “I do insist.”

  Vera began to cry.

  Meg spoke from the piano stool. “I lent it to Vera. It once belonged to my grandmother.”

  The Admiral raised his voice. “You dare tell me that, young woman! No — I say it is an engagement ring, and I say that your brother stole it from his grandmother!”

  “That’s a lie!” shouted Renny. “Gran gave me the ring for my fiancée. And I gave it to Vera. We are going to be married.”

  The old man and the youth faced each other. The one short, thickset, redoubtable. The other tall, wiry, passionately alive. They were like a battleship and a seaplane.

  “You dare!” thundered the Admiral. “You dare tell me I lie!”

  “No — I don’t say you lie. I don’t know who told you, but I do say it is a lie. My grandmother did give me that ring.”

  “You were seen to take it!”

  Renny and Meg looked at each other. She said: —

  “We did take it. But we didn’t steal it.”

  Admiral Lacey turned to her. “Why did you tell me, miss, that you lent the ring to Vera?”

  “I was just trying to conceal their engagement. But since Renny has told you that Vera and he are to be married —”

  “Married!” interrupted the Admiral. “It’s ridiculous! They are foolish children.”

  “I am twenty,” said Vera.

  “And I soon shall be,” said Renny.

  “What have you to marry on, I’d like to know?”

  “My father must help me.”

  “Must help you! Must, eh? I like that! I do like that, indeed! There’s the young man of today speaking. His father must help him! Oh, you couldn’t have said a worse thing to me! Now, I tell you what we’ll do! We’ll go find your father and tell him that he must help you!”

  Renny answered — “We can’t. He’s off on a hunting trip.”

  “So he is! I forgot. Very well, we will go to your grandmother. She shall hear all about it.”

  “Oh, no, no, don’t do that!” said Meg. She burst into tears. It was natural for Meg to weep on a man’s shoulder. So she came and laid her face on the Admiral’s.

  His florid face softened. He put an arm about her. Vera, seeing this, came at once to his other shoulder and wept there. Between their two heads his face glared out at Renny like a fine old bulldog’s between two dew-drenched flowers.

  “I must see Mr
s. Whiteoak about this affair,” he declared. “You two must come with me, but Vera shall stay here with her aunts. She shall not go out of this house again until she sails for home.”

  “If you think you can prevent our marriage,” said Renny hotly, “you are mistaken. We love each other and we are going to get married.”

  “Oh, Grandfather,” said Vera, “if you only knew how we love each other!”

  “If you knew all, my child,” said the Admiral, “you would not be so fond of this young man.”

  “Who says anything against my brother?” cried Meg.

  “I do! I say he is not a fit husband for my granddaughter.”

  Renny said bitterly — “Malahide Court has been here, poisoning your mind against me.”

  “Is truth poison?” said Admiral Lacey.

  “Oh, yes, often,” said Meg. “But I don’t see what Malahide could have told you that would turn you against Renny, Admiral! You have always been so fond of him.”

  The Admiral returned stiffly — “I cannot talk about this in front of young girls.”

  “Listen, Granddaddy,” said Vera. “Renny asked me once what I should feel if I found out anything about him like Meg and Maurice, and I said if it was all past and he still loved me it would make no difference. So surely that settles it!”

  “Nothing of the sort! You don’t know what you’re talking about! Now, my dear, you go straight to your grandmother. Your friends and I will go to Jalna.”

  He took Vera with him to Mrs. Lacey, and ordered the old man who acted as gardener and groom to bring round the carriage. Soon he and Meg and Renny were on their way to Jalna, while Vera poured out the whole story into the not unsympathetic ears of her aunts and grandmother.

  They found Adeline, Mary, and Malahide having tea together in the dining room. Adeline was pleased to see her old friend and made room for him beside her. But Malahide, after a swift glance into his face and another and more furtive glance into the faces of Renny and Meg, sank deep into his chair.

  “You are just in time,” said Adeline, “to share a section of new honey and a nice bit of news about our rector. He’s engaged to be married. He brought me the news himself, this morning.” She deposited a golden square of honey on the Admiral’s plate and beamed into his face.

 

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