Read The Nature of Love Online
Authors: H.E. Bates
She stood apart, waiting, watching him try first one key
and then another, not speaking. He tried five keys that did not fit and then she said:
âSo many keys and not the right one.'
âOne uses it so rarely, that's the trouble â'
He clashed one key after another into the lock. Now his hat had become a nuisance to hold and he put it back on his head. He tried still another key but that too did not fit and he thought that, over his shoulder, she gave a short dry laugh, no louder than a gasp; but she was simply staring, drowsy as ever, when he turned and looked at her.
She began to say again that it did not matter; but he shouted through the gates towards the small gothic-windowed gate-lodge on the other side:
âSmith! Are you there? Smith! Are you there?'
A little knot-haired woman in a grey apron came running out of the house, a minute later, with the key.
âI'm terribly sorry, sir. I'm most terribly sorry. I didn't know. I didn't hear you â'
âJust want to walk through. I've mislaid my key somewhere.'
âWill you take the key, sir?'
âYes, I'll take it,' he said. âGive it me.'
Beyond the small white house, with its edging of wired-in scarlet-yellow wallflowers, began an avenue of white chestnuts, in full fresh blossom. On either side of it deep expanses of park-land, all grass, grazed by clusters of sheep and new lambs, spread out into distances broken by islands of silver birch, an occasional clump of pines and sometimes a single gigantic lime. On the hills beyond were miles of beeches, still flaring green in the evening sun.
âI noticed you at the meeting,' he said. âHave you come to live here?'
âFor a time. With my sister.'
âFor a time?'
âFor the summer,' she said.
He wondered for a moment what there could possibly be here, in a village of thirty houses and one public house and a shop selling nothing but stamps and the paltry rations
of the brave new time, for a girl of her kind. At heart he really detested the village; he detested the little pigsty houses, the dreary shirts on the washing lines, the loafers by the pub-wall, the gossipers, the hat-touchers, the treachery, the southern lack of friendliness. It was nothing more than a gossip shop. And the little crust of society: the milkless wife of the retired naval fellow, commander or something; the dithering lunatic doctor, surgeon or whatever he was; and the horrible people who came to retire: dreary suburban-minded wretched people of no standing who waited for buses with lending-library books tied by little leather straps in their hands. There was a retired schoolmaster too, a real bolshevik, an out-and-outer; and a solicitor fellow, a counsel or something, who came at week-ends and poached such fishing as there was after the herons and others had finished with the trout stocks he put in. They were all divided into factions; they were all like horrible little weevils, feeding and boring away at everything with their trivial, insidious, killing gossip.
âWell, what do you make of our society?' he said.
âI only came last week.'
They were coming to that part of the avenue he disliked so much. There the chestnuts ended. Concrete tank bays, half ruined huts, old army kitchens and brick ovens blackened by fire, all overgrown by thick new nettles: that was all now as far as the big house, once painted so white that it could be seen shining from the hills five miles away.
âThen how is it you know about the footpath?'
âI used to come here as a little girl. My uncle lived here. My sister has his house now.'
âWhat was his name?'
âRussell,' she said. âDid you know him?'
âNo,' he said. âI don't think so. I don't know people. Are you Miss Russell?'
âMy name is Ferguson.'
âWhat else?'
âSara,' she said.
In a gap beyond the chestnuts, where army hovels had
been demolished to earth level, there was a place from which you could look down on the entire green circumference of parkland. It was so vast that it was like a kingdom of virgin grass. A few buildings, his new cowsheds, white concrete with green roofs of an excellent new material he had discovered, could be seen on the far edge: a slightly discordant touch which summer, the great world of leaves, would presently conceal.
He stopped and, leaning on the iron fence, looked down on it. A nightingale was singing somewhere in the direction of the big empty house, but he was so absorbed by that long deep view, the sheep-grazed kingdom, the grass coming to lushness under hot May sun that the singing, the sweetness, seemed only a secondary matter.
Making signals with his hat, he began explaining things to her: âYou see we have everything under a system. Nothing haphazard. There are five-year leys and three-year leys and one by one we plough them in and then sow again. Grass is the key â' He broke off and looked at her. âBoring you? I'm afraid grass is my pet thing. Sort of bible with me â'
âWhat are the little yellow and white numbers I see on all the gate-posts?'
âThey're the field map-numbers,' he said. âDown at the estate office we have a map. We colour each field a different colour. We give it a number. Like that we can never go wrong â'
She turned her face away from him; her cream soft neck tautened, making a single line from her breast to the tip of her hair as she listened.
âI think there's a nightingale singing up by the house,' she said. âI've been listening â'
âI'm afraid I bore you with my leys and things,' he said. âMy grass.'
âOh! no.'
âNot really?'
âBore me?' She laughed; he saw her eyes sparkle quickly and beautifully and once again he felt his throat run hot as
she held him for another second or two with dark eyes. âYou surely don't think so?'
She laughed again over her shoulder. Then she began walking on and he let her go: purely because now he could look from behind at the long lovely legs, the graceful sliding walk.
âIs the house empty? Don't you live here now?'
âYes, it's empty.'
âIt used to be so beautiful.'
He strode out to catch her up. Where the front lawn of the house had been, between great Lebanon cedars, there was a forest of rising nettles. Snow had broken down the big shining magnolia from the white south wall. Hadn't there been camellias there too at one time? He had a vague idea there had.
âYou ought to live in it,' she said.
âHere? Oh! one can't. It's impossible. The labour alone â'
âIt would be nice.'
âOh! no. It's absolutely dog eat dog. One has servants to feed one and then servants to feed the servants and then servants still to feed â on! no, that's dead, all that. It's gone.'
âI like this house,' she said. âI always have liked it.'
She stood quite still, looking up. The nightingale, unmistakable now, drawing out a long needle-note, almost too exquisite, was singing in the limes beyond the stable tower. The clock on the tower, which he always kept going out of principle, showed half past eight, and it reminded him to ask her something.
âDo you ride?' he said.
âOh! no. Nothing like that.'
âWhat a pity,' he said. âI was going to say that you would be welcome to ride here. Any time.'
âOn the sacred grass?'
She laughed and he did not know, taken slightly unaware by the flash of her tongue in her open mouth and the sprinkle of light in the brown eyes, what to say in answer.
âNo. I'd rather see the house,' she said. âCould we see it? Could we go in?'
âTo-night?'
âOh! no. I mean some time.'
âThere really isn't anything to see,' he said. âThings are boarded up and so on.'
âReally it doesn't matter.'
âOh! please,' he said. âOf course. When would you like to go?'
âWhenever you have time,' she said. âI'm free â quite free.'
âTo-morrow?' he said. Again, hot and sudden, he felt stabs of excitement leap up through his throat. âTo-morrow evening?' She seemed, as he looked at her, suddenly identifiable with all the rising summer, exquisite and young, desirable as sunlight and slightly lush. âWhen could you come?'
âAbout six?'
He nodded and then checked, in the same moment, an impulse to kiss her. He thought instead that all summer lay before him; it would be pleasant to know her all summer. Now it was only May; the leaf was hardly open on the tree.
âAbout six then,' he said. âHere? I shall look forward to it very much.'
With flicks of one hand she swung the scarf; he hoped that to-morrow she would not wear the scarf.
âWhat about the gate?' she said. âThe key?'
âOh! of course. I forgot.'
He held the key out to her; and for a second or two she held it at the same time, watching him with beautiful brown eyes that held him with something between gravity and the gentlest mockery.
âWhat shall I do with it?' she said. âGive it up? Surrender it?'
âNo,' he said. âKeep it. For a time. Then you can let yourself in.'
âThat's nice,' she said.
With high thrilling needle-notes the nightingale
continued to sing in the quietness about the house as she walked away down the drive between the ruins of tank bays and army huts; the evening flowered about him with an exquisite after-light that left on the limes, the candled chestnuts, the oak-tassels, the curdling boughs of hawthorn, and above all on miles of grass a tender lucid glow.
To the yellow scarf swinging away down the chestnut avenue he raised his black homburg hat for the last time, smiling as he did so. There would be all the time in the world to-morrow, he thought. The summer had hardly begun.
When he got to the small converted farmhouse on the north side of the park the door was open to the warm evening and he called inside:
âYou there? Anybody there?'
His wife did not answer. It was not often that she did answer. But the woman who did the cooking appeared from the kitchen in her evening apron and said:
âGood evening, sir. Mrs Fitzgerald is out for the day, sir.'
There was never a day, he thought, when she was not out for the day.
âThe day's getting old,' he said.
âWill you have dinner, sir? It can be ready when you like.'
âI'll have a drink first,' he said. âCall me when you're ready.'
He poured himself half a tumbler of whisky and took it into the garden. Scarlet beans, budded low down with sprays of flower, were already curling far up a row of hazel sticks beyond the flower beds. He could see a great difference in them, as in everything else, since yesterday. Swallows were flying high in the warm air above the house, crying thinly, and on the single-storeyed wall beyond the dining-room, where there had once been only pigsties and a filthy little copper-house for boiling potatoes one day and
washing the next, the new
Gloire de Dijon
rose was already in bloom, its fat flowers like stirred cream in the evening sun.
He had converted the pigsties into a sort of loggia and summer-house. Everything had been done very tastefully; and now it was not possible to believe that there, where the rose flowered and where big pots of blue agapanthus lily would bloom all summer, the hideous pigsties had ever existed or that a family of half-gipsies had lived in care-free squalor in the rest of the house. It showed what could be done.
Walking about the garden, looking at the climbing beans, the roses that had rushed into bloom in a day, the blue and orange steeples of lupins, he felt once again that summer was overflowing too fast, rising like a warm and delicious torrent. He felt he wanted to hold it up, to make it permanent where it rose, before all the tender and dark and fiery greenness deepened into solid June.
He wondered, without real thought, where his wife was. It did not matter very much; he simply wondered. If speculation had not bored him long since he would have guessed with the doctor's wife, or with Mrs Naval Commander, or somewhere in the smug outposts of the local metropolis, the railway junction, playing bridge. She seemed to spend most days playing cards of some sort with the wives of local doctors, local solicitors, local sheep-breeders, local cattle auctioneers. Somewhere in that bleak society there must be someone, he often thought, who would not bore or chill or depress him but he had, so far, never discovered them. In winter he arranged excellent shooting parties; but he and his wife had for a long time quarrelled with great unpleasantness as to whom they should invite to them, The solution could only be, as he once put it, that they should shoot each other's friends.
Part of the trouble with that simple and perhaps admirable arrangement was that he had very few friends for her to shoot. He wandered about in the garden, drinking as he walked. A breath of new perfume, from the edges of the rock path, arrested him under a big gum-stained plum tree
he had left to shade the path, and underneath it he saw that already there were white pinks in bloom. He picked one of the flowers and smelled it, threading it into his button-hole. He saw too that already there were hundreds of small plums, like beautiful pale green grapes, all over the tree.
At this moment a voice called from the house:
âDinner is ready if you are.'
He could not believe for some moments that it was not the voice of the cook who called. But with amazement he turned and saw, across the garden, that his wife had come home.
He felt at once moody and thwarted and did not answer. She stood in the small brick courtyard by the front door, wearing over her head, as always, the pale blue and white scarf with its scrawled views of Paris and tags of French quotations that he so hated.
She was thirty-nine, three years younger than himself; but her voice, cutting across the warm luxuriance of garden, was husky, almost rough, and it seemed no longer young: