Books 13-16: Return to Jalna / Renny's Daughter / Variable Winds at Jalna / Centenary at Jalna
Page 99
There, in the library, was his chair by the fireplace, his pipe, rather strong-smelling, and the tin canister where he kept his tobacco. There he had read his newspaper, listened to the radio. There was his place at the dining table, marked by his heavy silver napkin-ring against which reclined the silver figure of a lady in Grecian costume. How many a good meal he had eaten at that table while his voice, which to the last retained its sonorous and vital quality, gave forth his views. He had never been afraid to waste time. He was sure he would have plenty of it. He never had been swept along by the tide.
Above all, there was his own room, filled with his own belongings — his piano, on which always stood a decanter with some Scotch whisky in it and a siphon of soda, and in later years a bottle or two of medicine. It often was the receptacle, too, of books and magazines — the books, old favourites, often reread — Vanity Fair, Esmond, Harry Lorrequer, Somerville and Ross — catalogues of horse shows brought to him by his nephews, copies of Punch and Country Life, a box of cigars. On the walls pictures that had hung there for seventy years and more — a framed photograph of the Oxford Eight when he was one of the oarsmen — a tinted photograph of Lily Langtry carrying a muff and a demure expression. Scattered about were photographs of nieces, nephews, and babies which might be either. It was a room very full of things and a real trial to dust. In the wardrobe were the clothes he had worn so well; in its English leather case his silk hat which he had last worn at his brother’s funeral two years ago. And there was the bed!
Renny stood looking at it, Nicholas’s watch in his hand. He had just wound it, and now it ticked in almost distracted haste, it seemed, as though to make up for the days when it had been silent. Piers had been given Uncle Ernest’s handsome wristwatch. Renny himself carried his father’s watch. Nicholas had, some days before his death, told Renny that he wanted him to have this watch which had belonged to Captain Whiteoak. Renny stood, his eyes fixed on the bed; the watch, its finely chased gold case warmed by his hand. He had an idea which had come to him because of a boy’s merry whistle that rose from the lawn below. He knew the whistling as young Philip’s, and he now went to the window and called him in his peculiarly peremptory way.
“Come up here, Philip,” he said, “to Uncle Nick’s room.”
Philip thought, “Now what the dickens have I done?” Yet he was not really apprehensive, for in these past weeks he had been leading an exemplary life and his relations with his uncle were almost always affectionate. He leaped up the stairs, but when he reached the top he walked decorously to the doorway where Renny now stood, watch in hand.
He said, “Come in here, Philip,” and led him into the room and closed the door behind them. Philip gave a quick look about him, then raised his blue eyes to Renny’s face.
“It all looks so natural,” said Renny, “you’d expect to see him here, wouldn’t you?”
“Yes,” agreed Philip a little uncomfortably.
“This room,” said Renny, “will be kept — just as he left it. You may come in here sometimes and sit down and remember him.”
“Oh — thanks.”
“Uncle Ernest’s room has been given to Fitzturgis,” Renny continued with a frown. “I should like to have kept it as it was, but as he and his sister both are here …”
“Of course,” agreed Philip, then added, “Dad doesn’t think Mait will ever be much help with horses.”
“That’s neither here nor there,” said Runny curtly.
He still held the watch in his hand. “You recognize this watch?” he asked, while the watch lay on his palm, bright, eagerly ticking as though looking for an owner.
“It belonged to your great-grandfather, who left it to his eldest son, Uncle Nicholas.”
“About the first thing I remember when I was a tiny kid,” said Philip, “was Uncle Nicholas showing me his watch — letting me listen to its ticking. I badly wanted to hold it in my own hands, and once, on my birthday, I think it was, he let me.”
“You remember that!” exclaimed Renny, touched. “Well — it is now to be yours. I have a feeling that you more than any of the other boys will appreciate it.” He put the watch into Philip’s hand. “You’re too young yet to carry this sort of watch, but I want you to wind it carefully every night. Never forget.”
“I’ll not forget.” Philip proudly looked down at the watch.
“Every night,” said Renny, “before I go to bed I wind my father’s watch and my own three.”
“Three!” echoed Philip.
“Yes, three. My stopwatch, my wristwatch, and one I got on a wager.”
“And you wind them all?”
“I do.”
“Well, I certainly will never forget to wind this. Thanks ever so much, Uncle Renny.” Philip, deeply impressed, stretched out his muscular hand to grasp his uncle’s. They looked into each other’s eyes with affection.
Archer put his head in at the door to tell Renny that he was wanted on the telephone.
“I’ll be back,” Renny said to Philip as he followed his son. Archer had a remarkable curiosity toward telephone conversations, usually listening to them from a convenient doorway, ready to drift away when the receiver was hung up.
Now he heard his father say, “Hullo! Hullo, old man…. It’s some time since you’ve been to see me…. What is this I hear about you…? You’re the last man I’d have expected…. Ha! Well — it comes to us all…. Yes, I remember her very well — give her my respects….. Tell her I’m looking forward to having her as a neighbor…. Yes — Bell is a very nice fellow…. You couldn’t do better.”
There was a silence as Renny listened to a lengthy recital at the other end of the line. Archer stood outside the door, his high white forehead laid against the wall.
Upstairs, in Nicholas’s bedroom, Philip passed the time by examining some of the old gentleman’s belongings. He peeped into a papier mâché box where there was a collection of cravat pins, cufflinks and studs, a tiny gold pencil, and a woman’s ring. Philip tried this on his little finger, wondering whose it had been. He then looked into the wardrobe, saw the leather hat-box, opened it and took out the silk hat which he had always admired on the leonine head of his great-uncle. He ran his cuff round it to smooth the silken nap. He then placed it on his own fair head and went and stood in front of the pier glass in an attitude the most elegant he could command. He had seen a walking stick with an ivory handle in the wardrobe and he now added it to his costume.
Now he straightened his shoulders and stood in military fashion. Now he lackadaisically drooped, with the ivory top of the walking stick in his lips. Now he removed the hat and bowed low over the hand of an imaginary lady. Now he put the walking stick under his arm and tilted the hat at a rakish angle. He took a skipping step.
This last was too much for the watcher who had, unnoticed, appeared in the doorway. Renny exclaimed:
“You young rascal! I’ve a mind to take that stick to your back.” But somehow his expression was not so tern as his words. His eyes were bright with amusement. His left eyebrow was cocked — a good sign.
Philip drooped in front of him. “I didn’t mean …” he got out “I mean I didn’t know …”
“You’re trying to tell me you didn’t know you were prancing about with Uncle Nick’s hat on your silly young head?”
“Oh — not prancing, Uncle Renny! Just trying to see how I looked in it.”
“Well, let me tell you that you look a young ass. Put it away — in its box.”
Philip meekly returned the hat to the wardrobe, while glancing guardedly over his shoulder, for he feared punishment from the rear. In the same meek spirit he was about to leave the room, forgetting to take the watch with him.
“So,” exclaimed Renny, “you think so little of the watch that you are leaving it behind!”
Philip wheeled, scarlet-cheeked, to retrieve it. “I don’t know what I’m doing,” he said. “Everything is so confused these days.”
Renny put an arm about him and gave
him a hug. “It’s all right,” he said. “Now get along with you. I’ve a thousand things to do.”
Downstairs Philip displayed the watch to Archer. He showed no envy. “I’m glad,” he said, “that it wasn’t given to me. It’s responsibility without pleasure. You can’t carry the watch, yet you’ve got to wind it. Now if it was an electric clock that wouldn’t need winding …”
“I shall enjoy keeping it going,” said Philip.
Archer sighed. “I’m long past the age,” he said, “when I thought tick-tock had a meaning.”
That same day, in the afternoon, Nicholas’s will was read. Meg, Renny and Alayne, Piers and Pheasant, Finch and Wakefield gathered in the library. Mr. Patton, the family lawyer, had read old Mrs. Whiteoak’s will to the assembled family twenty-three years ago. By it she had bequeathed her fortune to the boy Finch. During those years Mr. Patton had changed surprisingly little. He had looked tall, spare and middle-aged then. He still looked spare and middle-aged, though perhaps not quite so tall.
This was a very different affair, for the bulk of what had supplied Nicholas with his income came from the estate of his sister, Lady Buckley, who had died in Devon in 1931. She had left the income from all she possessed to her two brothers, the principal to be divided at their death equally among her nephews and her niece. This principal had been firmly invested, and now, after all the vicissitudes of the years, gave a legacy of somewhat over sixteen thousand dollars to each of the five heirs.
But Nicholas had lived economically in his later years, a contrast to the extravagances of his earlier. From his income he had saved a quite substantial sum, enough for several bequests which it had pleased him to reflect on, in his quiet hours, bequests which he hoped would come as pleasant surprises, as indeed they did. To the Wragges, man and wife, he had left five hundred dollars each, “In appreciation of their years of faithful service.” To his nieces by marriage, Alayne and Pheasant, two thousand dollars each. To Patience and Adeline an equal amount. To Roma, who had not benefited by Lady Buckley’s will, since at the time of Lady Buckley’s death she had not known of Roma’s existence, he had bequeathed five thousand dollars. Nicholas knew how tenderly his sister had loved Eden and that she would have desired that Eden’s daughter should inherit something from her estate. The remainder of what Nicholas had saved was to go to Renny. This amounted to more than ten thousand dollars.
No one of the family grudged him this. All knew of his devotion to Nicholas and of his generosity to his uncles. Meg was honestly glad of it and of the bequest to Roma, but she saw no reason why Nicholas should have remembered Alayne and Pheasant. She remarked this to Piers.
“Alayne and Pheasant,” she said, “naturally will benefit by the legacies to Renny and you. Besides, Alayne must still have some of the money left her by her aunt, and Pheasant has a rich young son who adores her.”
“Maurice’s money will do Pheasant no good,” he returned.
“Do her no good!” she repeated. “why, only the other day he bought her that perfectly charming black dress for the funeral.”
Piers looked at her huffily. “If Maurice,” he said, “wishes to buy a new dress for his mother, that is nobody’s business but theirs.”
Meg looked pensively into space. She continued, as though Piers had not spoken, “Uncle Nicholas would have thought it very strange, could he have known, that his niece by marriage should have a lovely new dress for his funeral, while his very own niece should have worn that faded old mauve dress which has been laundered time and again.”
“Uncle Nick has other things to worry about beside your clothes.”
“Are you suggesting,” Meg cried, aghast, “that our dear good uncle, who never harmed anyone, is in some awful place like Purgatory?”
“I am not.”
“Then what have you in mind?”
“Well — I suppose a man appears before his Maker.”
“Not till the Judgment Day … In the meantime, Piers, it would be much better for you to refrain from theosophical discussions.”
“Theosophical?” he questioned.
“Very well — theoretical,” she corrected herself.
“Mercy!” exclaimed Archer, who had just joined them.
“Your aunt,” Piers said, “means theological.”
“when you are grown up,” Meg said to Archer, “never let yourself be drawn into an argument with your Uncle Piers.”
“Listening to you,” said Archer, “I feel terribly old.”
Renny now joined them. He put an arm about Meg and said, “Could you imagine a kinder will than Uncle Nick’s? He thought of everyone. As for his legacy to me — it was magnificent.” There was a moisture on his thick dark lashes.
“You deserve all he left you,” said Piers heartily.
“Yes, indeed,” cried Meg, not to be outdone. Then she asked, “Is Alayne pleased by his bequest to her? But probably she will scarcely notice it. She already has such ample means.”
“Alayne ample means! why, my dear girl, Alayne has not very much left of her aunt’s money.”
“Really! Well, that does seem strange.”
“There is nothing strange about it. She has spent a good deal on this house at various times. And on her children.”
“Me?” put in Archer. “I don’t remember anything spent on me.”
“Your mother,” said Renny, “intends paying for your university education and for several years abroad.”
“I shall take scholarships,” said the boy without gratitude. Roma could be seen pirouetting up and down the hall.
“Tickled pink, isn’t she?” remarked Archer.
Renny called her.
She came into the drawing-room bright-eyed.
“I hope you understand, dear,” said Meg, “that this lovely legacy comes to you because of your dear father.”
“It’s the first thing he ever did for you, isn’t it, Roma?” said Piers.
“Piers, how can you say such things!” exclaimed Meg. “Eden died too young to have time for doing all he would have liked to do.”
“A new edition of his poems is to be published,” said Roma with pride.
“I know,” said Renny. “Naturally, as I am his executor and your guardian.”
“Executor,” repeated Piers thoughtfully.
Roma wanted to hear the good news again. She was stirred and exhilarated by the double good-fortune, but her face remained almost expressionless.
Renny fixed his eyes on Piers, as though to command his appreciation. “Eden’s publishers,” he said, “wrote to me from New York, saying they would like to bring out a volume containing all of Eden’s poems. You remember he had three thin little books published. This will be a quite respectable size.”
Meg continued, with tears in her eyes, “The publishers asked if he left any unpublished poems that they might include. So I gathered up all his papers and took them to Finch. He will know.”
Piers said jocularly to Renny and Roma, “She didn’t trust you, eh?”
“I wouldn’t know,” said Roma.
“I might lend Finch a hand with choosing some poems,” said Renny.
“As though you could!” Meg exclaimed, not with scorn but as one affectionately aware of his limitations.
“I may understand poetry better than you think.”
“Well,” said Piers, “it’s to be hoped the book sells — for Roma’s sake.”
“You’re quite an important little person, aren’t you, dear?” Meg put an affectionate arm about the girl.
Roma drew away — but she was pleased. She went out on to the lawn, where she saw Adeline and Fitzturgis sitting on the hammock beneath the mulberry tree. There was an air of unrest everywhere at Jalna. Even among the labourers on the farm and the men who worked in the stables there was a stirring of change in the fortunes of all. Even those who had inherited nothing felt that more money would be in circulation. Among them the amounts left by Nicholas were greatly exaggerated. They wanted to feel that the family
had inherited great wealth, and they reflected its glory. The Wragges were mysterious concerning the bequests to them, but they talked largely of a future of leisure. On the whole estate work was at a standstill. The days were just pleasantly warm, and at night the genial harvest moon enfolded all on which it shone in gold, and enriched the shadows to a benign mystery.
Adeline greeted Roma with “Congratulations on a wonderful wedding present.”
Roma dropped to the grass beside the hammock. “After all,” she said, “it was my right.”
“So that’s the way you look at it.”
“I’m grateful to Uncle Nick — if that’s what you’re thinking of — but, after all, my father’s share is coming to me.” She picked up a mulberry from the grass and sniffed it, her eyes on Fitzturgis.
He returned her look, rather as an opponent might measure his strength against hers. He remarked in an impersonal tone to Adeline, “Your cousin is a young lady who takes things as they come, without fuss or flurry.”
“Oh, she’ll take things,” said Adeline, laughing.
“You sit on the hammock,” Fitzturgis said to Roma. “Those berries will stain your frock.”
“Frock!”she scoffed. “You do sound Victorian.”
“what should you call it?” he asked, considering the faded blue dress.
“An old rag,” she answered. But she accepted the seat he offered beside Adeline and he now sat on the grass. The two girls looked down on his closely curling hair as though they would like to do something to it.
“Roma and I,” said Adeline, after a pause, “have all our good clothes put away in our trousseaux.”
“If we go on the way we’re going,” said Roma, “we can use them on our golden-wedding anniversary.”
“The anniversary of what might have been,” said Fitzturgis. He was contemplating the feet of the two girls — Adeline’s, long, narrow, shapely, in white canvas sandals — Roma’s, shorter, wider, bare in her sandals, the toenails enamelled red.