A God and His Gifts (16 page)

Read A God and His Gifts Online

Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett

“I am a wronged wife,” said Ada, almost musingly. “It is a strange thought. And that I accept it is stranger. I wonder how I shall feel to Hereward, how I shall manage our life together. It will be a test.”

“Ah, you will be equal to it,” said Sir Michael. “I have no doubt of you, my dear. I am as proud of my son's wife as I am of my son. She is as much above him in one way, as he may be above her in another. And her way may be the better. To me I admit it is. This is a grief to me. I can't deny it.”

“Grandpa feels it more than anyone,” said Reuben, resuming his usual tone. “He must be a very good man.”

“Grandma has always known,” said Salomon. “And she has not felt it at all. What a good thing she is not a very good woman!”

“I admire goodness,” said Sir Michael. “I can't say I do not. I don't mean I am good myself. I admire it wherever I meet it. Hereward has been a good son to me. He has not failed his father. It is not for me to judge.”

“It is for us all to judge this,” said Reuben. “There must be some moral standard in human life.”

“Standards seem to be based on the likelihood of their being violated,” said Joanna. “I suppose my son is a man
like other men. Though I am not sure that so many men are. You see your grandfather is not. I don't think there is such a thing as a woman like other women. Perhaps there are no other women. Or not enough of them to count.”

“There is a child who may be like other children,” said Merton. “But in this house it would not be believed.”

“Let us go and look at him,” said Trissie. “Children are so pretty when they are asleep. And he will grow into a boy and be different.”

“And boys are so often awake,” said Reuben. “And we have noticed the difference.”

“I will go home,” said Hetty. “Merton can follow me later.”

“As you will,” said her husband. “I shall not be very long.”

“Hetty lives up to herself,” said Joanna to Sir Michael. “She will not stand with Merton by Henry's bedside in Hereward's house.”

“Ah, it was a natural feeling. It was a sensitive thought. I sympathise with it.”

“So do I. How nice it is that we both have wide sympathies!”

When they reached Henry's room, a figure was in their path. Hereward was bending over the cot, his eyes on its occupant's face.

“Hush; he is asleep,” he said.

“That is why we are here,” said Salomon. “It is our object to view him in that state.”

“Do not wake him, sir,” said Nurse, whose instinct had brought her to the spot. “He is disturbed by any sound.”

“What of the deep sleep of childhood?” said Reuben. “Is it another of the illusions about it.”

It seemed that it might be, as Henry stirred and murmured.

“Henry. Not Maud. Just Henry.”

“I might come to say it in the opposite way,” said Ada to her husband. “Do I begin to feel it?”

Henry's eyes wavered over her face, and he made an effort to speak.

“Yes, yes, always just Henry,” said Hereward.

“Oh, no, poor Maud I” said Henry, in a reproachful tone, and succumbed to the kind of sleep expected of him.

“He has held us together, Hereward,” said Ada. “Will he now come between us?”

“No, you are yourself, and he is helpless. I will trust you, as I know I can. It is you who are proved worthy of trust.”

Nurse moved away, as though as unconscious of their presence as they were of hers.

“Well, we have the hours before us,” said Salomon, as they left the room. “We can't take refuge in sleep like Henry. And even then Father might come to look at us.”

“Not at me,” said Reuben. “It could only be at you. For Merton he must have the awkward feeling we have towards someone we have wronged. What has Merton to say to me? I meant to be silent to the grave. I was driven beyond myself.”

“The truth was there,” said his brother. “It has lain between my wife and me. The change is in my feeling to my father.”

“What an hour he has lived!” said Salomon. “Could anyone have deserved it? His guilt exposed and discussed before him! And judgement and mercy meted out! To him, the head of the family, and destined to remain so! The way he did remain so showed the man he was.”

“He had already shown us that,” said Reuben. “I don't regret that I betrayed him. Why should I control myself? I am his son.”

“Not wholly,” said Hereward's voice behind them. “I may not always be master of myself. But I have never betrayed another man. Any other man's secret is safe with me. If you would not have my actions on your
conscience, I would not have yours on mine. You may come to the first, as your life goes by. I shall not come to yours. That is my word on the matter. I shall say no more.”

“But I shall,” said Reuben. “Your secret was safe. It would have been safe to the end. But it was leading to another. That is my word. I too shall say no more. It is enough.”

Hereward passed them in silence, and Salomon spoke in a low tone.

“It seems I can never be married. My wife would be in the house. I should live under a dangling sword.”

“You would not,” said Hereward, glancing back. “Your talking in that way shows you know it.”

The brothers were silent until their father's door closed, and then went down to their mother.

“Well, you know it all, my sons. You knew when I did not In knowing your father's life you know your mother's. You see her wrongs and her forgiveness of them. And you do not see her exalted by either. I can put myself in your place. You feel she is humbled by both.”

“Well, I did feel reluctant to take similar risks,” said Reuben.

“You are not cast for a heroic part,” said Salomon. “It is Mother who is.”

“I did not know that anything could happen in a family,” said Joanna. “I thought it was always outside them. And wild oats used to be sown in youth. Now it seems to be different.”

“And they ought to be,” said Sir Michael. “It is the right time for them. I mean, if they must be, it should be at that time. At the natural, excusable one. Or at any rate more excusable.”

“You must not excuse it, Grandpa,” said Reuben. “You must live up to yourself.”

“Where is Trissie?” said Zillah. “I hope she is not still in trouble. She should be with us.”

“She is in her room,” said Reuben. “She will go tomorrow, and will not come again before our marriage. And I daresay not often after it. This must leave its trace. Father will never forgive me. And I am hardly inclined to set him the example.”

“How you are meeting life!” said Joanna. “If I have not lived, I am glad I have not. I don't even like to see other people living. And they don't seem to like it very much.”

“Ah, Joanna, you have a simple old husband,” said Sir Michael. “He did not see what you did. He saw nothing. He took things to be what they seemed.”

“It is what they generally are. It is conceited to say they are not. And it is really what they were.”

“Well, the truth has come out,” said Salomon. “And few of us are wiser, and no one better for it. Shall we have to treat Father in the same way? We should not dare not to. But is it a moral duty?”

“Yes, it is,” said Sir Michael. “He is your father, and you owe him everything. You take from him more than you return. Nothing else can be said.”

“Many men have secrets in their lives,” said Zillah. “It is by chance that this one has escaped.”

“It was its destiny,” said Salomon. “Henry could only be its betrayal. And he will be the reminder of it. I wonder Father was not prepared. He knew the risk he took.”

He paused, as Hereward stood on the threshold, upright and calm and in possession of himself.

“Yes, I knew the risk and faced it. I knew what I owed, and to whom I owed it. That debt will not soon be paid.

“You have all given your account of me. I will give you my account of myself. I am not afraid of it, and you need not be. I do not speak to hurt.

“I am a man of great powers, swift passions and a generous heart. You have met them all, benefited by
most, suffered from some. You will not cease to benefit. You will not suffer again. I am an ageing man. My vigour fails. This last approach was a light thing.

“But I still have a word to say. I am a man, as not all men are. If I have lived a man's life, what other life should I have led? I have carried a man's burdens, given up a man's gains, done the work of men. It is my nature that enables me to do it. It is the force in me that carries me on. All force may at times go astray.

“I have cheered the homes of thousands. I have served our family home. I have judged easily, pardoned much, helped others to fulfil their lives. I will help them still. I will still understand and give. Would some men ask a return?

“I will ask nothing. I have never asked. I find no fault with what has been. But am I not too simply judged? Should a stumble be so hardly forgiven? I will leave it to you. My word is said. I shall not say it again.”

The door closed on a silence.

“Suppose he did say it again!” said Reuben. “How would things be then?”

“Well, I suppose it is true,” said Sir Michael. “There is truth in it, of course. But I can't go the whole length. I feel we should keep our human laws. I am carried away at the moment. But I can't alter myself.”

“I am really carried away,” said Joanna. “So I must alter myself. I am going to try to be worthy of Hereward. You see I am already trying. And I think you must feel I am succeeding.”

“I may disturb you, my lady?” said Galleon at the door. “It is already later than usual.”

This was true, as Galleon and Nurse had met and talked in the hall.

“Well, when something should be safe with me, Nurse, that is what it is.”

“Silence is my watchword, Galleon. It is natural to me, my tendency being to reticence.”

“I am myself a man of few words,” said Galleon, sighing in remembrance of large numbers.

“And this might befall any gentleman. It is not a loss of dignity.”

“When he addressed the family, Nurse, dignity was the word. I shivered as I heard.”

“I should have done the same. A gentleman justifying himself! It is not a thing that should be.”

“Well, he did not lower himself. It marks him as what he is. And the writing cannot alter it.”

“No, he keeps above it. It is a call for quality. Few would be equal to it. And I cast no stone. As regards me he has not failed.”

“Ah, well, you know your time of life, and so does he.”

“You can hardly be aware of it, Galleon. You go beyond yourself. And you are light in your talk of those above you. To fall is not to condescend. And you should not broach the subjects. It does not sit well on you.”

Chapter XIII

“I am resolved, Aunt Penelope,” said Ada. “I have made up my mind. I will not let my heart be troubled. I will not let it be afraid. Whatever happens, I shall have my sister. We shall bridge the gulf of years and re-live youth. It will be as if the parting had not been. The reason for it is dead. And if it is not, I will not see it. I will keep above what is beneath me. I will pay the price that must be paid. Who should have learned that lesson, if not I? I look forward with an easy heart.”

“There should be no danger,” said Alfred. “The memory will be a safeguard. And time has passed.”

“It is true, Father. I will feel it is. We turn to you for truth. I will take full joy in the reunion, in the future that must hold so much of the past. My sister will be with me. My sister who has lived in my thought, who returns as a widow to my care. I envy you, Aunt Penelope. I grudge you the task of preparing for her. For her and the adopted daughter we are to see as her own. I long to be making ready for them. But I respect your prior claim. We shall all be with you to welcome her. My sons know her only as a name. So much has been forbidden to us, and to Hereward is still forbidden. To him it is a matter for silence. But I can forget it and go forward. This my sister was dead and is alive again, and was lost and is found. I feel I could break into song.”

“You have not fallen so far short,” said Alfred, smiling.

“Oh, Father, think what it is to me. Even more perhaps than to you. I have watched her growth as I have watched that of my sons. And now the years of our parting fade away. They will never mean nothing. We shall not atone
for the loss. But I shall have something of what I might have had.”

“Watching my growth has achieved as much as watching anything else,” said Reuben.

“You should be grateful,” said Salomon. “Only a mother would have done it. Most people express surprise when growth attracts their notice.”

“Even my father forgot about mine,” said Trissie. “Of course there wasn't much to remind him.”

“Oh, forget yourselves and your growth,” said Ada. “It is someone else who is in our minds to-day. Our growth can take care of itself. We can all see how much of it there was. In my case there was a good deal. But I have no thought to spare for it.”

“You have words to spare, as we had,” said Merton.

“Oh, I make no claim to be consistent. My mind is too full for me to watch my words. I shall not be in command of myself until the moment comes. If only the days would pass!”

The days did not fail, and the family gathered in Alfred's house to await the arrival. The meeting seemed to come and pass before they knew. It seemed there was something wanting, to which they hardly gave a name.

Emmeline greeted them without emotion, and with an ease that was more in accord with their memory than their mood. She was heavier and soberer, and her charm revealed itself at once as more intermittent and ordinary. Her eyes went often to her adopted daughter, and her thought seemed to be on her more than on herself.

“My sister!” said Ada. “After the years of thought and memory. How I have lived in this moment!”

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