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

Home > Other > The Jalna Saga – Deluxe Edition: All Sixteen Books of the Enduring Classic Series & The Biography of Mazo de la Roche > Page 275
The Jalna Saga – Deluxe Edition: All Sixteen Books of the Enduring Classic Series & The Biography of Mazo de la Roche Page 275

by de la Roche, Mazo


  He looked out of the window as a car drew up outside, and saw Piers alight from it. Since he had got the new car Piers seemed always to have some business that took him on the road. Renny went out and joined him.

  “I’m sorry,” he said rather stiffly, “but you’ll have to wait a bit for the money for that fodder account. Money is awfully tight with me just now, and the mason and carpenter are pressing. Other things too.”

  Piers’s face fell. He had done the decent thing, he thought, in delaying the rendering of his account. “Could you pay me half?” he asked. “I need the money.”

  “No,” returned Renny irritably; “you’ll have to wait till next month.”

  They had walked past the barn to the new piggery for which Finch was paying. The work was proceeding well. It was an up-to-date, solid-looking building. Piers had it in his mind to breed pigs on a large scale.

  “That thing is going to cost a lot of money,” observed Renny, eyeing it disapprovingly.

  “More than young Finch expected, I’m afraid,” answered Piers, grinning.

  “He shingled the barn for you, too, didn’t he?”

  “Yes. It needed it badly.”

  “It appears to me that, if you go on as you are doing, you’ll get more out of Gran’s money than anyone else.”

  Piers’s lips hardened. If his elder were going to throw Finch’s present to him in his face, he could be disagreeable too. He said:

  “When all is said and done, Finch is really doing it for you. The land is yours. The buildings are yours. I only have the use of them. You don’t care what condition the farm buildings are in so long as the stables are kept up. These improvements Finch has made are for Jalna—not for me.”

  “I should never have asked for them.”

  “Of course not. As I said before, you don’t care a damn about the farm buildings.”

  “Well, you’ll have the use of them all your life. You’ll likely outlive me. They don’t mean anything to me.”

  “They mean that you get your rent the day it is due.”

  “I suppose that’s a shot for me because I have to put you off.” Renny’s red face became redder.

  Piers’s eyes were prominent as they always were when his temper rose. But he spoke quietly. “No—but I don’t like your tone about these buildings. You have known what is being done from the first and you’ve never said a word against the improvements until now.”

  “It was none of my business. I don’t care what Finch does with his money.”

  Piers answered hotly—“But you resent his helping me.”

  “No, I don’t. But I don’t like your saying that he isn’t doing it for you but for me.”

  “I didn’t say that! I said he was doing it for Jalna.”

  “I’ll look after Jalna—without anyone’s help.”

  “Good lord! Then you would sooner he had squandered his money? He was bound to do that if he had been let alone.”

  “I don’t want any of it spent on me; that’s all. You will be saying next that he bought the car for me.”

  “Well, I acknowledge that was a present to me.”

  “It would have been better,” said Renny, “if he had helped Eden a bit. He’s not strong. I had to send him a thousand dollars in March.” He had not intended to tell of the loan, least of all to Piers, but he felt himself forced to tell by what he considered Piers’s surly attitude toward his delay in the payment of the account.

  They were standing beside a small grassy enclosure where three sows, soon to farrow, were exposing their matronly forms to the sun. One of them trotted up briskly to the brothers and raised her small quizzical eyes to Piers’s face. She recognised him and, like all animals, liked the looks of him. He carried a smooth, wandlike stick that he had picked up where the carpenters were at work. Wood had a fascination for him, whether in its natural state or polished. He would stop where a pine was being felled, pick up a smooth rosy chip, pass his hand caressingly over it, and hold it to his nose, drawing in its sweetness as though it were a flower. In the same way Renny would sniff when he entered the saddle-room and smelled the polished leather. It was Piers who most appreciated the Chippendale furniture brought out from England by their grandfather. Renny was proud of it, attached to it because it was a part of Jalna. He would have starved sooner than sell a piece of it.

  Piers scratched the sow’s back with his stick, rubbing it along the pink corrugated skin of her back on which white bristles stood up like a bleached forest. Her moist muzzle twitched. She put one huge ear forward as though listening to the rasping of the stick on her back. Her white eyelashes blinked rapidly, half-concealing her roguish eyes. The men stood silent as the spell was worked on her, then as, with a grunt, she rolled on to her side, Renny gave a short laugh, half amusement, half embarrassment. He wondered why Piers had made no reply to his confession of the loan to Eden. He repeated then:

  “I had to send him a thousand. I couldn’t refuse him.”

  Piers returned, still scratching the sow:

  “Well, all I can say is that you were a fool to do it.”

  It was the second time within an hour that he had been called a fool, but he felt more hurt than angered.

  “What would you expect me to do?” he asked. “Let him starve?”

  “That’s what he deserves.” Piers turned away, as though he could not trust himself to speak on the subject of Eden.

  The sow was unconscious that he had desisted from his attentions. She lay with closed eyes; her great side, under which dozed eleven little pigs, gently heaving, her small hooved feet sticking straight out.

  Renny stood, with arms folded on the gate, looking down on her, old Ben sat close beside, pressing his hairy body against his legs. Renny thought—“Why, even when I tried to kiss Alayne at breakfast, she pulled herself away. Whatever is the matter with the girl?”

  Piers went to the orchard to speak to the men who were giving the trees a final spray. He watched the misty fall of spray, glancing green in the sunlight, shroud the trees in its protective vapour. He examined the blossom from which the petals had now fallen, and reckoned that the crop would be a good one. He saw Pheasant walking among the strawberry beds with Mooey by the hand, and he could not resist a word of gossip with her, even though it was a busy time for him.

  “Hello, Piers! We’re hunting for ripe strawberries. Mooey has found three. Isn’t he clever? There’s a tremendous crop.”

  “You never can be sure of strawberries,” he said, looking at the plants critically. Certainly the greenish-white berries were plentiful and looked large for early June. Here and there a pink one twinkled against the moist leaves, and Pheasant held to his mouth one that was actually ripe. His eyes smiled at her as he ate it.

  “What do you suppose,” she said breathlessly. “Renny and Alayne have been having a quarrel! They’ve been married a year now, and it’s the first time I’ve heard them having words. And, Mooey, tell Daddy what Auntie Alayne did to you.”

  Mooey advanced between rows of strawberry plants, his cheeks berry-stained. He said gravely:

  “Auntie Alayne f’owed me out of her room.”

  “What?” His father looked at him sternly.

  “She f’owed me,” he repeated, “out of the door. And I ran to Mummy, and I wasn’t f’ightened.”

  “He is so brave,” cried Pheasant. “He pretends he wasn’t frightened, but he simply howled. I was in my room and I was positively terrified. He came running to me with his mouth wide open and his eyes tight shut and talcum powder all over his head. I was so annoyed.”

  Piers stared at her dazed. “But what had happened? Had she put the talcum on him?”

  “No, silly! He had got into her room and sprinkled it on himself. She found him there and put him into the passage. Ben was in there too, and you should have heard her shout at him. One moment Mooey says that she hit him, and the next that she just pushed him. I think the poor darling was so terrified that he wasn’t conscious of what was going on.�
��

  Piers looked down at his small son. “Did she hit you?” he asked, speaking very distinctly.

  Mooey was filled with a sudden self-pity. His eyes swam with tears. “She f’owed a slipper at me,” he said.

  “I’ll speak to her about this,” said Piers. “I won’t stand it.”

  “Oh, I don’t believe I’d say anything,” advised Pheasant. “It will only make a bad feeling. The more I see of life, the more I find that you must make allowances for people’s complexes and frustrations and all that sort of thing. I think if all three of us are just a little cool to her for the next day or two it will make just as much impression as having words.”

  “Did you say that she and Renny were quarrelling?”

  “Yes. I couldn’t hear what it was about; but their voices were raised, and she followed him to the door and simply hissed after him—‘You talk like a fool!’ Isn’t it terrible? Well—she’s a brave woman. There’s nothing on earth would tempt me to call Renny Whiteoak a fool.”

  “What did he say?”

  “He said she was the worst-tempered woman he’d ever known.”

  Piers grinned. Then his face darkened and he said sombrely:

  “I never had any hope of that marriage turning out well. I wish to God he’d never cared for her!”

  Pheasant cried—“Oh, I like Alayne! She’s really quite a sweet thing. But I won’t have her doing things to my baby.” And she snatched up Mooey and kissed his berry-stained mouth.

  “Well, I have my bit of news, too,” said Piers. “I put my account for feed on his lordship’s desk this morning. He tells me he can’t pay it for another month. Where he is going to get money in the next month I can’t imagine.”

  “What a shame!”

  Piers lifted a soft lock from Mooey’s forehead. “There’s a mark there! A bruise. Do you think she did that!”

  “No. That’s where he fell down the steps yesterday.” She kissed the bruise.

  “Anyway,” said Mooey, “she f’owed her slipper at me.”

  Pheasant shook her head at him. “Don’t let your mind dwell on unpleasant things, my child! I must teach you that poem of Longfellow’s about the world being full of such a number of things, I’m sure we should all be as happy as kings. Smile, Mooey! Smile itty bitty at oo mummy!”

  Mooey smiled waveringly, his eyes full of tears.

  “Don’t talk baby talk to him,” said Piers.

  “Oh, Piers, you don’t realise what a delightful thing it is for a young mother to talk baby talk to her tiny boy in a strawberry bed on a June day. Only smell the air! Isn’t it sweet? Excepting, of course, when one smells the Bordeaux mixture. And even it looks lovely over the treetops. And those big white clouds flying. And that oriole singing. And the sound of the carpenter’s hammer! And Mooey’s hair all fluffy on his temples!”

  Piers looked at her with a little twisted smile. How funny she was... how long her lashes were... How he loved her!

  He said—“Well, Renny will never get anyone else to take the interest in the farmlands that I do. Ever since I’ve taken them over I’ve improved them. Even when I managed them on a salary, when we were first married, I was improving them. Of course, this way is better for me, even though I pay a good rent.”

  “We get our living as well, don’t we? Three of us, and Bessie does quite a lot for Mooey.”

  “Why, yes, we do.” The thought that their living cost them nothing came as a mild surprise to Piers. He had always taken that for granted. Two or three extra people meant nothing to Jalna.

  “Renny wouldn’t have it otherwise,” he said. “He gets nervy when the house isn’t full of people. Look what he was like at the breakfast table. Wanting this fellow brought down. Be sure you fetch him to dinner, Pheasant. We’ll see what Mrs. Alayne has to say to that!”

  XVIII

  THE FOX FARM

  RENNY drew in the restive young horse he had been exercising and looked over the white gate into the fox farm. He was undecided whether or no he should go in. Before the death of Antoine Lebraux he had been in the house every day. The sick man had become more and more dependent on him. When Lebraux’s periods of drinking had rendered him violent it was to Renny that his wife had come for assistance. After his death Renny had gone to the house constantly, trying to create order out of the disorder of affairs they discovered. He had helped Mrs. Lebraux through the cubbing season. He had got Piers to buy some purebred Leghorns for her with which to stock the poultry house. He had sent old Noah Binns to dig the garden for her. He himself had gone about the house putting the rollers of window shades into order, tacking up sagging wallpaper, tinkering at the kitchen tap that dripped. He had interviewed the retired farmer who held a mortgage on the property and persuaded him to give her more time. It was the same man from whom Finch had taken over the mortgage on Vaughanlands.

  In return for these kindnesses Clara Lebraux had insisted that he make use of her stable, for his own were overcrowded. It was all she could do. The horses were company, she said. She gave them their evening meal and bedded them down herself. Between her and Renny had arisen the peculiar intimacy that is created between a man and a woman when he has seen her through distressing times, seen her looking her worst, red-eyed and unattractive or engaged in rough work, has done things about the house for her that a husband or a male relative ordinarily would do. They were as natural in the company of each other as two labourers on Piers’s farm.

  Things were going a little better with her now. She did not need his help so often, and a casual word from Piers had made Renny feel that there was some gossip in the neighbourhood about his frequent visits there. It was characteristic of him that he should dislike being gossiped about. He was overbearing. He could taciturnly ignore criticism. But he did not like to think that the Miss Laceys, Miss Pink, and Mrs. Fennel were giving sly hints over their teacups. He did not like to think that the grooms and stablemen nudged each other when he turned his horse in the direction of the fox farm. It was not fair to Mrs. Lebraux that he and she should create even harmless gossip. Before his marriage he had conducted his casual affairs of the heart with capable secrecy. Since his marriage he had given no thought to any woman save Alayne. His former amorous proclivities had been consumed in the generous fire of his love for her.

  But in Clara Lebraux he had found what he had never known before—friendship with a woman. He could spend hours in her company without remembering her sex except as an intangible something that enriched their intimacy. He never forgot Alayne’s sex. It hung about her as a cloak, clouding his vision of her. It lay about her feet as a magic circle beyond which he had neither the power nor the will to press. His nature was intermittently sensual. At times when Alayne was talking, giving her opinion on some matter with the somewhat elaborate detail natural to her, he would watch her with a look that was both admiring and baffled, and that had in it, as well, something hostile. He was aware that his impregnable masculinity was often irritating to her.

  As he hesitated before the gate the front door of the house opened and Pauline Lebraux appeared. She ran toward him between the dingy white stones on either side of the path, her legs in their black stockings looking excessively long and agile. She threw back her head as she reached the gate to free her face from the uncared-for dark hair that hung like a mane about it.

  “Aren’t you coming in? Oh, please do!” she entreated, gaspingly, as though in excitement.

  He noticed her low white forehead with its pencilled brows, the foreign-looking eyes, the wide, rather thin-lipped mouth with an upward curve at the corners. He said:

  “No. I don’t think I shall go in. Just tell me how you are getting along.”

  “The very same. There’s nothing new. But you haven’t come for three whole days! We’re so lonely. We think you are annoyed with us.”

  “Open the gate, then.”

  She threw it open with a grand gesture.

  “Noah Binns is here,” she said, as though she had searched in h
er mind for news.

  “Is he? I’ll stir him up a bit then before I go into the house.” He alighted and tied his horse to the fence, and it began eagerly to crop the uncut grass of the yard, taking swift mouthfuls with impatient jerks of the head.

  Pauline Lebraux passed her long thin hands over its smooth sides. She ran to where the grass was mixed with moist Dutch clover beneath an apple tree, and, grasping all she could, carried it to him. She watched him solicitously as he munched, repeating to him endearments in French. Renny went to where he saw old Binns digging. “Hello, Noah,” he said, “how much have you got done today?”

  The old man leant on his spade and turned his dim eyes on Renny. Like Pauline’s, his mind sought for news, but, instead of swooping on it and tossing it to the newcomer as a morsel to excite his appetite, he let his eyes travel the length of the garden, taking in every lump of earth, every weed and every vegetable growth, then, painfully wrenching his morsel of information from the soil, he threw it half-indignantly as a sop to this tyrannical being whose presence was an urge to activity. As his eyes reached Renny’s face he said:

  “Carrots be up!”

  “So I see. And pretty thick too. Not so bad—but you’ve left a lot of thistles along the far end!”

  Noah slowly turned his head so that at last his gaze was focussed on the weeds.

  “Thistles be always up,” he observed.

  Mrs. Lebraux appeared at the side door of the house. She did not speak, but stood there waiting. Renny at once went over to her and they entered the house. They went into the sitting-room that had become so familiar to him. He was used to high ceilings at Jalna. Here he always felt inclined to stoop for fear he should strike his head in the doorways. He looked about the room, which had changed somewhat since he was last there, and said:

  “It looks nice here. What have you been doing?”

 

‹ Prev