Read The Elderbrook Brothers Online
Authors: Gerald Bullet
âIt's devilish awkward for you,' Matthew said, âbeing told a thing like this. I know that. And you, I mean, a parson. And it's not the worst I could tell you, not by a very long way.'
Felix sat silent for a moment or two, and then said: âWell, Matt, you must please yourself what you tell me. Anything or nothing. As for my being a parson, that
ought
to make me everybody's brother, don't you see?' Their eyes met, smiling. âAnd I was yours to start with, if you remember.'
âSo you were,' said Matthew. âFunny thing though, we didn't know a lot about each other in those days, did we?'
Felix agreed, a little surprised that that should have occurred to Matthew. âBetter make up for lost time,' he said.
âYou people don't go in for confession, do you? Not like the Catholics?'
âAh,' said Felix, âwe do in fact call ourselves Catholics, you know. But not, of course, Romans. It's a bit muddling for the layman. And we do believe in confession too, some of us, though it has its dangers and it's open to abuse.' He found relief in steering the talk into impersonal channels. âCaesarius of Heisterbach, a thirteenth-century writer, tells the story of a monk and a priest who were involved together in some sin, and being afraid to confess to their abbot they hit on the in-genious
idea of confessing to each other and granting each other absolution. Needless to say it didn't work.'
âDidn't work?'
âI mean,' Felix said, âit had no spiritual validity. Obviously. The story goes on to tell how the elder of the two, after his death, came as a ghost to warn his fellow sinner of what was in store for him if he died without proper confession.'
âI see,' said Matthew. He knitted his brows. âExcuse me, old boy, but you don't
believe
in that sort of stuff, do you?'
âI don't suppose the thing happened, if that's what you mean. But ⦠well, never mind: I didn't come down here to talk shop. It's a rum feeling, being here after so long away. That's a word I've picked up from a friend in London. Everything's
rum
to him. ⦠I say, are things going on all right ⦠upstairs?'
Matthew did not hear the question. He was concentrated on the sound of movements in the room above. But after listening awhile and hearing nothing identifiable he relaxed enough to remark, pointing with a jerk of the thumb to the door leading to the back stairway:
âIn the ordinary way she has the back bedroom, the one Faith used to have in Mother's time. But we had to shift her for this business.'
âWho?' Felix asked.
âThe girl. Hilda.'
âHilda?' He just remembered, after a pause, that on his last visit there had been a girl called Hilda working in the house. âYes, of course. Do you mean that sheââ?'
âShe's having the baby, yes.' Matthew met his brother's glance with an embarrassed, deprecating smile, accompanied by a slight shrug. âThat doesn't make it any better, I know. I know what you're thinking, but ⦠well, it can't be helped now. Some day I'll tell you the whole story, and maybe you'll understand.'
Felix got out of his chair and took a box of matches from the
mantelshelf. âYou needn't be too sure I don't understand already.' He lit a cigarette.
âH'm.' Matthew looked dubious. âI don't suppose you've had much to do with women, Felix.'
âNot much, but perhaps enough. And anyway I'm ⦠well, human, you know.'
Silence fell now between the two brothers. A comfortable silence, for they were at ease together; yet an alert one too, for they were both listening, waiting, conscious of crisis. Presently Matthew went over to the door that gave into the small central hall where the main staircase was. He opened the door, and left it open. And as he faced round and moved hesitatingly back to where Felix was, there came the sound of a door opening upstairs, and then another sound, a miracle, the cry of the newborn.
A moment later Ann came downstairs, busy and radiant. The sight of Felix gave her only an instant's pause. She gave him her right hand, and Matthew the other, and stood so, linking them.
âIt's a boy, Matty.' She was alight with the triumph of this birth. âAnd Hilda's going to be all right. They're very pleased with her.' Still gripping their hands she glanced from Matthew to Felix, and back to Matthew again. âYou've told Felix?'
Matthew nodded.
Felix said, smiling on them both: âI've come at a lucky moment.'
âHe's the spitten image of his father,' said Ann. âShall you both come up and look?'
A complex of emotions wrought havoc in Felix. It was manifest to him that Ann was a saint; he was not at all sure in what degree Matthew was a sinner; and he was lacerated with sympathy for both of them, vicariously suffering the conflict between pain and relief, grief and forgiveness, which he imagined they must be feeling, even though they showed no sign of it to his quick perceptiveness. In fact, neither Ann nor Matthew,
at this moment, had a thought to spare for the unusualness of their situation. That the event they now rejoiced in implied a relationship between Matthew and the child's mother was something which during these latter months had all but lost meaning for them.
IT had not, however, lost meaning for Hilda. Ann's care of her during the latter months of pregnancy had provoked astonished gratitude in the girl, but a gratitude not unmixed with misgiving and with other feelings which she vaguely felt to be âwicked'. Her sense of Ann's having taken possession, both of her and of her unborn child, sometimes frightened as well as supported her. There were moments when bodily discomfort and spiritual forlornness combined to make her resent having to be grateful to her lover's wife, now that he was her lover no longer, and never would be again. In such moments she fancied she would sooner have suffered reproaches and cold looks than this extraordinary, this âunnatural' kindness, by means of which Ann had acquired a control of the situation against which there was no possibility of appeal or rebellion. Her grievance was one which at first she could not, for very shame, admit even to herself; but when her labour was accomplished, and exhaustion gave place to returning strength, the claim on Matthew which she had never allowed herself to formulate became explicit in her mind.
For there, too, Ann was so plainly in possession. Since the day of his wife's homecoming Matthew had never so much as kissed the mother of his child. Hilda believed, and with some reason, though she misconceived his motives, that her presence in the house was as much an embarrassment to him as it apparently was not to Ann. Resenting the distance that now divided him from her, she was ready to resent even his concern for her health. As a mother she had value for him: as a woman, it seemed, she no longer existed. For all he cared
she might have been one of the farm animals, she told herself: a brood mare or a pedigree cow whose calf was likely to be a choice specimen of the breed. She did not, though she wanted it, expect the impossible; but guessing nothing of the restraint he put on himself she felt humiliated by his gentle aloofness.
Matthew did indeed wish Hilda gone, because now that the worst of his dangers seemed to be over he could no longer disguise from himself that in spite of the terror that had followed their coming together, in spite of the ugly work in which they had taken part, or perhaps with an added sharpness because of that very thing, he still at moments desired her. A man tormented by irreconcilable desires must in the end come to terms with them, or let their conflict destroy him. He must choose among them or be torn to pieces. Matthew wanted above all things never to hurt his wife again; he wanted also to secure unchallenged possession of his son. To make Hilda the object of a third wish would have been (he told himself) idle, monstrous, absurd; and if his thoughts could, even now, burst into flame at memory of her embracesâwell, that was a nuisance he must put up with, so long as she remained in his house.
How to get rid of Hilda was a problem which neither Matthew nor Ann had squarely faced. What the village might be saying about them they were careful not to inquire. They had outfaced the threat of scandal so far and were ready to defy public opinion still further by harbouring and in due course adopting Hilda's child. But what of Hilda herself? She could not stay with them indefinitely, even had they wished it. That would have set tongues wagging with too lively a malice, for there were limits to what they could endure. But equally they could not send her away without making themselves responsible for her reception elsewhere. Where was she to go? Who would employ her? And what sort of inducement would persuade her to part with her child? These questions were much in the minds of Ann and Matthew, who did not doubt, however, that sooner or later a way would be found. They
waited, weakly hoping that time itself would somehow unravel the knot.
Meanwhile, inevitably, Hilda decided to take a hand in her own disposal.
FELIX'S life at Stanton was strangely like, and strangely unlike, what it had been ten years before. He lived with the Williamses, sleeping in his old bedroom, and at breakfast-time seeing the same faces, except that Tom Williams was elsewhere, having found his true life-vocation in the Army, and in Tom's place, and that of his own former self, were two young assistant masters who were new to him. Faith had mellowed; Dan had become a pink old gentleman, with snow-white curls fringing his baldness; Mifanwy and Claribel were secretive, talkative, giggling, agreeable schoolgirls; and the collie dog about the place looked and smelt precisely like its predecessor. The terraced lawns of the garden were as sleek as ever, the trees as benign, the visiting birds as confident of their welcome. Here at Stanton House was something that even the war seemed not to have changed, and because its associations were less poignant than those of Upmarden Felix was here less conscious of the flight of years. In himself, too, there was a new vitality that belied his pensive leanness; the agitation of his young twenties had come under a mature control; he had put on moral weight, had acquired some assurance of manner by which to disguise his incurable diffidence, and in his professional dealings with men and women he realized the importance of steering between the pitfalls of sententiousness on the one hand and breezy tonic-talk on the other. He refrained from trying to inject sentimental ardour into the church services. His parishioners found him friendly and helpful, but, said some, a little too reserved. Mr Mullion, his paymaster, took almost no notice of him; for Mr Mullion was sunk deep in the enjoyment of a peevish old age.
In spite of all changes in himself and others Felix felt he had really come home at last, and Mrs Meldreth and Kate's being still close at hand reinforced the feeling. Gradually, against his better judgment, he fell back into his old habit of treating their house as a second home. A strong resolution would have been required to keep him away from it, and, capable though he was of so ruling himself, for he had had plenty of practice, his sense of danger was too indefinite to make the effort seem worth while. He had lost all conscious fear of Kate's beauty, now that Johnny Turnbull had formally pegged out his claim to her and had it duly acknowledged. This betrothal of Kate's was the only thing about her which Felix found it difficult to square with her general character. In his mind he shied away from the subject, telling himself that it was no concern of his, and forcing himself to suppose, if only for civility's sake, that Johnny must be less shallow than he seemed. He knew, none better, how deceptive mere appearances could be. A casual observer, seeing her for the first time, might well be misled into supposing that good looks, good nature, and a sanguine temper made up the full sum of Kate's own qualities, and be unaware of the gleaming mystery behind and beyond these charms. So, too, it might be with Johnny Turnbull: who could tell? Who could tell except Kate herself, with whom the thing was obviously undiscussable?
Mrs Meldreth needed no encouragement to talk of the match, so suitable in every way, she said with plump satisfaction. But her discourse threw no light on Felix's problem. Johnny was no longer very young, and that was in his favour. He was a man of forty and a man of means and he was distantly related to the peerage; what could be nicer? He rode to hounds, he did a little gentlemanly farming, he was a fine cheerful upstanding fellow in his riding-boots, and he was just the husband for dear Kate. Mrs Meldreth, with frank relish, looked forward to being a grandmother. She deplored the dilatoriness (if no worse) of Florrie and Ned, and made sure that the Turnbulls would do better. In her idea any marriage was better
than no marriage, and any marriage that produced children was good. Indeed she could not at heart disapprove of any fruitful union, even an irregular one, though in deference to the conventional code she would shake her head over it and say, dimpling: âDear me! How naughty of them!' For a woman was only half a woman until she became a mother; and sex, whatever men might think about it, poor things, was only a meansâand, as it happened, the only meansâto that infinitely desirable end. Dame Nature, with her mania for multiplication, had never a stauncher ally than the eminently respectable Mrs Meldreth.
In earlier years Felix would have been surprised to find himself exchanging this kind of talk with Mrs Meldreth, but nowadays he saw nothing odd in it. He was far more than ten years older than in what he blithely thought of as his Ellen period, though only ten years had passed. Firmly settled in his life of single strictness, he could scarcely recognize himself in the callow young man he remembered. And, while he was older, Mrs Meldreth was somehow much the same age as she had always been in his eyes. They could now talk on equal terms. He took pleasure in teasing her, and she in being teased. He enjoyed her company as he enjoyed Kate's, and with a more perfect equanimity, since she was serenely maternal and mature and Kate a dazzling young woman chosen by destiny to be the mother of innumerable little Turnbulls, all with red faces and bright yellow riding-boots.