Jalna: Books 1-4: The Building of Jalna / Morning at Jalna / Mary Wakefield / Young Renny

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Jalna: Books 1-4: The Building of Jalna / Morning at Jalna / Mary Wakefield / Young Renny Page 92

by de la Roche, Mazo


  “Here!” shouted both men. “Come out of there. Do you want to get locked in?”

  Renny trotted out. It was almost dark. The crimson eye in the west had closed. The men were moving shadows.

  “Good-bye,” he called, over his shoulder, as he ran off.

  “Good-bye,” answered the men.

  He looked in at the inky darkness of the apple-house. He did so much want an apple. A figure stumped toward him from the direction of the kitchen. It was Noah Binns, who had been having a feed of leftovers from the garden party.

  “Hi, Noah!” Renny called.

  “Huh?” grunted Noah, stumping closer.

  “Say, will you wait here while I go into the apple-house?”

  “Afeared, eh?” Noah’s grin was just visible.

  “No. But I thought someone might lock me in.”

  “Go ahead. But don’t be long.”

  Renny ran down the moist stone steps into the darkness. In bunks, like sleepers, lay the apples, Spies, greenings, russets, Tolman sweets, snows, pippins, filling the air with their scent. He put his hand where he knew the snow apples were stored. He took one and hurried up the steps.

  “A notorious big crop of apples this fall,” said Noah. “Eat your fill. There won’t be none next year.”

  “Why?”

  “Tree bugs is at work under the bark, suckin’ the good out of the trees. I seen ’em and heard ’em — suckin’.”

  “We spray the trees.”

  “A lot of good that will do. This bug is a new sort. He likes the spray. He’s up from the States.”

  Renny stood a moment looking after Noah before he ran into the house. He was glad to get in and shut the door behind him. The red apple lay cold in his hand.

  A sudden change had come in the atmosphere. The evening was chilly. A fire of birch logs was blazing in the drawing-room and everyone but Philip was sitting about it talking of the garden party.

  “Well, young man,” said Ernest, “it’s about time you came in.”

  “Are you hungry?” asked Adeline.

  “I just want this apple.”

  “I’m not hungry either,” said Meg. She was sitting on a stool at Augusta’s knee, holding magenta wool on her hands for winding. Her light brown hair shone in the firelight.

  Renny went to Nicholas. “Uncle Nick,” he said, “will you read out of the book to me?”

  “Too late,” growled Nicholas.

  “But, if you don’t read, we’ll not finish the book before you go back to England.”

  “Very well. I’ll read a few pages.”

  Renny brought the shabby leather-bound book. He climbed to Nicholas’ knee and stretched himself comfortably with his head on Nicholas’ shoulder who said:

  “By George, you’re a cold little codger. Where have you been?”

  “Getting an apple. Have a bite?” He held the apple to Nicholas’ mouth. He took a quarter of it in one bite with his strong white teeth. Renny looked at the pink-veined cavity in the apple, then set to nibbling round its edge.

  Nicholas swallowed and read:

  “As the evening approached, she placed on the stone fireplace a pot containing two of the salted bears’ feet to stew for supper, and then we seated ourselves, to wait with anxiety and impatience for the return of our boy hunters. At last we heard the clatter of hoofs approaching at a sharp trot, and distant sounds of joyful cheering. I went to meet the riders.

  “Like military hussars, they slackened rein when they saw me, and sprang from their chargers, took off the saddles, and left the animals free to enjoy the sweet grass and the fresh water from the brook at their own free will. Then they hastened to join their mother at the tent, who received them joyfully.

  “Jack and Frank each carried a young kid slung across his shoulders, and the movement in Fritz’s game-bag gave me the impression that it contained something alive.

  “‘The chase for ever, papa!’ cried Jack, in a loud voice; ‘the chase for ever! And what splendid fellows Storm and Grumbler are to run over level ground! They so tired the little creature we followed for a long distance, that we were able at last to catch it with our hands.’

  “‘Yes, papa!’ exclaimed Frank; ‘and Fritz has two such pretty rabbits in his bag. And we were very nearly bringing you some honey, mamma, only we stopped to hear the cuckoo.’

  “‘Ah, but you forget the best!’ cried Fritz. ‘We met a troop of antelopes, and they were so tame, we might have brought one home easily had we wished.’

  “‘Ah, stay, my boy,’ I said; ‘you have forgotten the best: the goodness of God in bringing you all home safely to the arms of your parents, and preserving you from danger on the way. But presently, you must give us a straightforward account of your journey, from the beginning, after you have rested.’”

  On and on Nicholas read. A sense of well-being pervaded the room. His elders listened with an interest only second to that of the little boy. But it was he who was transported to the foreign land, to the company of the fantastical beasts and birds, the boy hunters. He was both there and in the safe cosy room, lolling on Uncle Nick, idly watching Meg turn her hands in the skein of wool.

  A step interrupted the reading and Philip came in.

  Nicholas shut the book. “Time for you to go to bed, young fellow.” And he tilted Renny to the floor.

  Adeline called him to her. “What did you do with the apple seeds?” she demanded.

  “I swallowed them. I didn’t want to interrupt the reading.”

  “Swallowed them! Ah, you must never do that again. Your grandfather tells me that seeds of all sorts are likely to get into the appendix and kill you. It’s a new disease and you must be careful not to get it. Do you understand?”

  “Yes, Granny.”

  “Now, thank your uncle for the reading and off to bed, both of you.”

  Meg objected. “It’s not fair for me to go when Renny goes. I’m two years older.”

  “Well, you may stay up half an hour longer.”

  The wool was wound into a huge ball. It was for the knitting of a spencer. Meg rose and went to Sir Edwin. She stroked his silky side-whiskers.

  “I love whiskers,” she said.

  “Thank you, my dear.” He beamed at her.

  “I hope,” said Augusta approvingly, “that, when you grow up, you will have the good fortune to marry a gentleman with side-whiskers.”

  “Meggie is determined,” said Nicholas, “to marry a man with a dark moustache like me.”

  “Not a bit of it,” smiled Ernest. “Meggie wants a smooth-shaven man like me.”

  “What sort do you want, Meg?” asked her father.

  “One like you,” she declared, and cast herself on him.

  Renny said, “Thank you for the reading, Uncle Nick.” He put his arms round the neck of each grown-up in the room and gave each a good-night kiss.

  Adeline said to Philip, “I hope Mary wasn’t too tired after the party.”

  “Well, she was a little tired, but just pleasantly so.”

  “She looked pretty as a picture,” said Ernest.

  “Granny,” whispered Renny, in her ear, “will you come up and tuck me in?”

  “I heard you,” said Philip. “Your Granny has been on her feet all day. She doesn’t want to climb two flights of stairs.”

  “Will you, then, Aunty?”

  Adeline interrupted, “I will tuck the children in. Renny, don’t forget your teeth and your prayers.”

  He mounted the long dim stairs. Eliza had lighted the oil lamp in a bracket on the wall. The day stretched behind him, a medley of shapes, sounds, smells, which he did not try to disentangle or even think of. The real things were his bed, the lamp on the wall and the great full moon just swimming above the tree tops. The lamp was cosy but the moon made the drawing-room and the people in it seem a long way off and himself very small.

  He hung over the footboard of the bed, dangling his legs. He pictured the apple seeds travelling through his body, getting ready to gi
ve trouble. Already he thought, he felt a little pain. He stood up quickly as though listening. If he felt it again he would run straight downstairs … But it did not come again.

  He sauntered into Meg’s room. There were the clothes she had taken off when she dressed for the garden party, lying in a little heap in a chair, her stubby shoes in the middle of the floor, toeing in. He walked about, looking at her belongings, handling the things on her dressing-table. He went to Miss Wakefield’s room that was full of moonlight. He wondered if she would sleep there again or go down to one of the bigger better bedrooms below. He hoped she would go to another room. He did not want to meet her the first thing in the morning and say, “Good morning, Mamma.” But he said it now, out loud, “Good morning, Mamma,” several times. It sounded funny …

  He tried to remember his first mother, the one who had died. Though he tried hard he could remember only her arms, lifting him up. She was dead. In Heaven. Somewhere beyond the moon. He wondered if she liked it up there. Grandpapa said she did. He looked out at the moon. Then suddenly he turned and ran back to his own room and began to take off his clothes.

  He had just got into bed when he heard Meg coming up the stairs and, in a moment more, his grandmother. He was glad and shouted out, “I’m in! And covered up!”

  “You’d better be,” said Adeline.

  She picked up the towel he had dropped on the floor and examined the smudges on it.

  “I have a mind,” she said, “to make you get up and wash all over again. Did you brush your teeth?”

  “Yes, I brushed them hard. Look.” He displayed them in a grin, one of the lower ones missing.

  “Say your prayers?”

  “Yes,” he shouted. He leaped up on the bed and threw his arms round her neck.

  She hugged him to her, making a cooing sound. “You’ve got high spirits,” she said. “That’s a good thing in this life. I wonder what life will do to you. I hope it will be kind.”

  “Granny!”

  “Yes?”

  “You promised me that you would come riding with me one morning early! Will you do it tomorrow?”

  “Ah, my riding days are over. I’m getting old.”

  “But you promised!”

  “Well — we’ll see.”

  “Tomorrow!”

  “No. After the wedding. I’ve too much to do now for early riding.”

  “But you will, won’t you?”

  “Yes.” She laid him flat and tucked the blanket round him.

  “Now, not another squeak out of you.” She kissed him, turned down the wick, and went to Meg’s room. Soon he heard her descending the stairs.

  “Meggie!” he called. “Come and kiss me good night!”

  “No. It’s too cold. I’m sleepy.”

  He sprang out of bed and padded to her bedside. His mouth found her cool round cheek. He knew she was smiling in the dark.

  “Good night,” she murmured, “sleep tight. Don’t let the little bugs bite.”

  He ran back to his own room and jumped into bed. His feet were icy. The moon was looking in at him, bigger than ever. It was too big. He pulled the blanket over his head to shut it out and was instantly asleep.

  XXIII

  THE WEDDING AND AFTER

  THE WEDDING DAY dawned bright and chill. There was a new firmness to the soil. The first vehicles on the roads splintered the thin ice that gleamed in the ruts. The carriage, in which Admiral Lacey was to drive Mary to the church, had been washed and polished till it shone. So had the Admiral who was to give Mary away. There was great excitement at The Moorings as Mary and Violet dressed for the ceremony. Violet, in pale blue, carrying pink roses and violets, was to be bridesmaid. With her smiling face and high colour which later on would become florid, she looked very young for her age and quite suitable to attend Mary who was unusually pale and grave. Standing on the verge of her new life she cast a fleeting look backward at the months through which she had just passed. She would be glad, she thought, when tomorrow had come and she was truly Philip’s. Never again would she look back.

  “Girls, girls,” cried Mrs. Lacey, “you must hurry. There isn’t a minute to spare, if you’re to be on time. Violet, you madcap, are you only now putting on your shoes? Ethel, do help her. Mary, have you something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue?”

  “Of course, she has, Mother!” cried Ethel. “She is carrying her mother’s white vellum prayer book which is old. Her dress and veil are new. Her garters are blue. And she has borrowed my best handkerchief.”

  “Speaking of handkerchiefs,” said Mrs. Lacey, “I must be sure to have one handy because I’m bound to cry at a wedding.”

  “For the love of God,” cried her husband, from the next room, “somebody come and find my collar button!”

  It seemed that they never would be ready in time but ready they were at last, when Nicholas drove up to the house in a phaeton to take Mrs. Lacey and her daughters to the church.

  “Upon my word,” said Admiral Lacey, “I believe I’ve put on twenty pounds since I last wore this coat.”

  “You look fine,” said Nicholas.

  “It doesn’t wrinkle across the back?”

  “Not at all,” lied Nicholas.

  “That’s good. Have your party left for the church yet?”

  “My mother and the Buckleys and Renny have. Philip and Ernest and Meggie are to follow. Meg got mislaid somehow. Children are a great pest.”

  “What a blessing that your mother is reconciled to the match.”

  “Yes, and wants everyone to know it. She went early to the church so that she might be seen, smiling her blessing.”

  “She’s a great character.”

  “She has her good points,” smiled Nicholas.

  Eliza, dressed in her best for the wedding, was searching frantically for Meg. She well knew how antagonistic to the marriage the child was. She feared that Meg would not turn up to the ceremony. A shame it was for her to spoil everything by her naughtiness.

  Philip called out, “Eliza, don’t search any more! Hodge and his mother are waiting for you. I must be off this minute.”

  He jumped into the trap beside Ernest whose fair forehead was tied in a knot of worry.

  “My God,” he cried, “there goes the church bell!”

  The bell sounded sweet on the sharp air.

  Philip touched the horse with the whip. “We may comfort ourselves with this,” he said, “they can’t go on without us.”

  “Damned undignified for the groom to arrive at top speed.”

  “Better than with a lagging step. I expect there will be quite a crowd at the church.”

  “Your marriage to the children’s mother was the last wedding from Jalna.”

  “Yes.”

  It was not a happy allusion at this moment. Both fell silent, remembering the day.

  There were indeed many people in the church and about to enter the church. The carriage shed was full of vehicles. The bell was still ringing when Philip, and Ernest who was his groomsman, hurried to the side door that led into the vestry. By the time they were inside it had stopped and the organ was sending forth a soothing strain.

  But Philip was not soothed. His handsome face was flushed. He was excited and nervous. He had run his hand through his hair and stood it on end. Ernest now was calm.

  Meg stuck her head in at the door.

  “Were you looking for me, Papa?” she asked.

  “You have no right to come here,” said Ernest. “You should be in the pew with your grandmother.”

  Her eyes grew large and mournful. “I was sad.”

  “Look at her hair!” exclaimed Ernest.

  She had put on her new dress but her hair was still in the plait in which she wore it at night. Philip hastily pulled the faded ribbon from it and shook out the shining mass. He did not do it gently.

  “You have no reason to feel sad,” he said.

  “Oh, you hurt me!” Her eyes filled with tears.

&nb
sp; He bent and kissed her. “You must go round to the front door,” he said, “and then walk quietly up to our pew. Where is your hat?”

  “Here.” She held it up.

  He put it on her. She smiled up at him. “Your own hair needs tidying,” she said, and ran off.

  He ran his hand over it, smoothing it. Mr. Pink appeared in his surplice.

  “I think the moment has come,” he said. “The bride is alighting from her carriage.”

  Philip stood at the chancel steps, Mary drawing ever nearer to him. At last she was by his side. He glanced at her quickly and saw her face, pale and beautiful beneath the veil. He saw the hand that held her mother’s prayer book tremble. Mr. Pink began:

  “‘Dearly Beloved, we are gathered here together in the sight of God …’”

  The service proceeded. Each had answered, “I will,” Philip in full and confident tone, giving the promise with his whole heart; Mary, in a voice lower, but still firm. Then Mr. Pink guided their two right hands to join, and so they gave their troth.

  They loosed their hands. Then Mary again took Philip’s right hand in hers and her voice now stronger, made her promise. She could hear herself making it, as though she were an outsider, and to her, her voice seemed to ring through the church.

  Again they loosed their hands. Then Philip laid the ring upon the Book, then Mr. Pink delivered the ring again to Philip, and he put it on Mary’s fourth finger, and holding it there, said, in the same full and confident voice:

  “‘With this ring I thee wed, and with my body I thee honour, and with all my worldly goods I thee endow: in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost. Amen.”

  They knelt together.

  “Well, well,” thought Adeline, “it’s done. He’s had his own way, and I hope good comes of it. No one can say that I didn’t smile at this wedding. And no one will ever be able to say I’m not a good mother-in-law.”

  When Philip and Mary had signed their names in the Register, when Lily Pink was tearing the Wedding March out of her soul, and family and friends were crowding about to congratulate the newly married pair, Adeline was the first to kiss the bride. She did it perhaps a little ostentatiously. In truth there were as many eyes on her as on the bride. As she walked down the aisle she was conscious of this, and moved as though her being were a pleasure to her. As friends and the farmers and their wives who had come to see the wedding and whom she had known for many years, came up to speak with her, her smile became almost a grin. She would have liked to put on an Irish accent but thought better of it.

 

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