Chapter 11
"Didn't come out to meet me," Banks put in. "We did meet all right, but it was the first time we'd ever seen each other."
We all four looked at Jervaise, awaiting his next piece of evidence with the expectant air of children watching a conjurer.
He began to lose his temper. "I can't see that this has got anything to do with what we're discussing..." he said, but I had no intention of letting him off too easily. He had saved me the trouble of making tedious explanations, and my character had been cleared before Anne and Brenda, which two things were all that I really cared about in this connection; but I wanted, for other reasons, to make Jervaise appear foolish. So I interrupted him by saying,--
"Hadn't you better tell them about Miss Tattersall?"
He turned on me, quite savagely. "What the devil has this affair of ours got to do with you, Melhuish?" he asked.
"Nothing whatever," I said. "You dragged me into it in the first instance by bringing me up here last night, but since then I haven't interfered one way or the other. What does affect me, however, is that you and your family have--well--insulted me, and for that you do owe me, at least, an explanation."
"What made you come up here, now?" he asked with that glowering legal air of his; thrusting the question at me as if I must, now, be finally confuted.
"After you ran away from me in the avenue," I said promptly, "it seemed that the only thing left for me to do was to walk to Hurley Junction; but a quarter of a mile from the Park gate I found your car drawn up by the side of the road. And as I had no sort of inclination to walk fourteen miles on a broiling afternoon, I decided to wait by the car until some one came to fetch it. And when presently Banks came, I tried my best to persuade him to take me to the station in it. He refused on the grounds that he wanted to take the car back at once to the garage; but when I explained my difficulty to him, his hospitable mind prompted him to offer me temporary refuge at the Home Farm. He brought me back to introduce me, and we found you here. Simple, isn't it?"
Jervaise scowled at the hearth-rug. "All been a cursed misunderstanding from first to last," he growled.
"But what was that about Grace Tattersall?" Brenda asked. "If you'd accused _her_ of spying, I could have understood it. She was trying to pump me for all she was worth yesterday afternoon."
"I've admitted that there must have been some misunderstanding," Jervaise said. "For goodness' sake, let's drop this question of Melhuish's interference and settle the more important one of what we're going to do about--you."
"I resent that word 'interference,'" I put in.
"Oh! resent it, then," Jervaise snarled.
"Really, I think Mr. Melhuish is perfectly justified," Brenda said. "I feel horribly ashamed of the way you've been treating him at home. I should never have thought that the mater..."
"Can't you understand that she's nearly off her head with worrying about you?" Jervaise interrupted.
"No, I can't," Brenda returned. "If it had been Olive, I could. But I should have thought they would all have been jolly glad to see the last of me. They've always given me that impression, anyhow."
"Not in this way," her brother grumbled.
"What do you mean by that exactly?" Anne asked with a great seriousness.
I think Jervaise was beginning to lose his nerve. He was balanced so dangerously between the anxiety to maintain the respectability of the Jervaises and his passion, or whatever it was, for Anne. Such, at least, was my inference; although how he could possibly reconcile his two devotions I could not imagine, unless his intentions with regard to Anne were frankly shameful. And Jervaise must, indeed, be an even grosser fool than I supposed him to be if he could believe for one instant that Anne was the sort of woman who would stoop to a common intrigue with him. For it could be nothing more than that. If they loved each other, they could do no less than follow the shining example of Brenda and Anne's brother. I could see Anne doing that, and with a still more daring spirit than the other couple had so far displayed. I could not see her as Frank Jervaise's mistress. Moreover, I could not believe now, even after that morning's scene in the wood, that she really cared for him. If she did, she must have been an actress of genius, since, so far as I had been able to observe, her attitude towards him during the last half-hour had most nearly approached one of slightly amused contempt.
Jervaise's evident perplexity was notably aggravated by Anne's question.
"Well, naturally, my father and mother don't want an open scandal," he said irritably.
"But why a scandal?" asked Anne. "If Arthur and Brenda were married and went to Canada?"
"I don't say that _I_ think it would be a scandal," he said. "I'm only telling you the way that _they'd_ certainly see it. It might have been different if your brother had never been in our service. You must see that. _We_ know, of course, but other people don't, and we shall never be able to explain to them. People like the Turnbulls and the Atkinsons and all that lot will say that Brenda eloped with the chauffeur. It's no good beating about the bush--that's the plain fact we've got to face."
"Then, hadn't we better face it?" Anne returned with a flash of indignation. "Or do you think you can persuade Arthur to go back to Canada, alone?"
Jervaise grunted uneasily.
"You know it's no earthly, Frank," Brenda said. "Why can't you be a sport and go back and tell them that they might as well give in at once?"
"Oh! my dear girl, you must know perfectly well that they'll _never_ give in," her brother replied.
"Mr. Jervaise might," Banks put in.
Frank turned to him sharply. "What do you mean by that?" he asked.
"He'd have given in this morning, if it hadn't been for you," Banks said, staring with his most dogged expression at Jervaise.
"What makes you think so?" Jervaise retaliated.
"What he said, and the way he behaved," Banks asserted, the English yeoman stock in him still very apparent.
"You're mistaken," Jervaise snapped.
"Give me a chance to prove it, then," was Banks's counter.
"How?"
"I've got to take that car back. Give me a chance for another talk with Mr. Jervaise; alone this time."
I looked at Banks with a sudden feeling of anxiety. I was afraid that he meant at last to use that "pull" he had hinted at on the hill; and I had an intuitive shrinking from the idea of his doing that. This open defiance was fine and upright. The other attitude suggested to my mind the conception of something cowardly, a little base and underhand. He looked, I admit, the picture of sturdy virtue as he stood there challenging his late master to permit this test of old Jervaise's attitude, but the prize at stake was so inestimably precious to Banks, that it must have altered all his values. He would, I am sure, have committed murder for Brenda--any sort of murder.
Frank Jervaise did not respond at once to the gage that had been offered. He appeared to be moodily weighing the probabilities before he decided his policy. And Brenda impatiently prompted him by saying,--
"Well, I don't see what possible objection you can have to that."
"Only want to save the pater any worry I can," Jervaise said. "He has been more cut up than any one over this business."
"The pater has?" queried Brenda on a note of amazement. "I shouldn't have expected him to be half as bad as the mater and Olive."
"Well, he is. He's worse--much worse," Jervaise asserted.
I was listening to the others, but I was watching Banks, and I saw him sneer when that assertion was made. The expression seemed to have been forced out of him against his will; just a quick jerk downwards of the corners of his mouth that portrayed a supreme contempt for old Jervaise's distress. But that sneer revealed Banks's opinion to me better than anything he had said or done. I knew then that he was aware of something concerning the master of the Hall that was probably unknown either to Brenda or Frank, something that Banks had loyally hidden even from his sister. He covered his sneer so quickly that I believe no one else noticed it.
"But, surely, it would be better for the pater to see Arthur and have done with it," Brenda was saying.
"Oh! I dare say," Jervaise agreed with his usual air of grudging the least concession. "Are you ready to go now?" he asked, addressing Banks.
Banks nodded. "I'll pick up the car on the way," he said.
"I'll come with you--as far as the car," Brenda said, and the pair of them went out together.
Jervaise stretched himself with a self-conscious air. "It will take him the best part of an hour getting the car into the garage and all that," he remarked, looking at me.
I could see, of course, that he wanted me to go; his hint had been, indeed, almost indecently pointed; and I had no wish to intrude myself upon them, if Anne's desire coincided with his. I got to my feet and stood like an awkward dummy trying to frame some excuse for leaving the room. I could think of nothing that was not absurdly obvious. I was on the point of trying to save the last remnant of my dignity by walking out, when Anne relieved my embarrassment. I knew that she had been watching me, but I was afraid to look at her. I cannot say why, exactly, but I felt that if I looked at her just then I should give myself away before Jervaise.
"I must go and see about Mr. Melhuish's room," she said.
She was half-way to the door when Jervaise stopped her.
"I should rather like to speak to you for a minute first," he remarked, and scowled again at me.
"There's nothing more to be said until Arthur has seen Mr. Jervaise," Anne replied, as though any subject other than the affair Brenda, could not conceivably be of interest to her.
"It wasn't about them," Jervaise said awkwardly.
"What was it, then?" Anne asked. I dared to look at her, now, and her face was perfectly serious as she added, "Was it about the milk, or eggs, or anything?"
Without doubt there was a delicious strain of minx in her!
Jervaise lost his temper. I believe that if I had offered to fight him, then, he would have welcomed the opportunity.
"Oh! you know what I want to say," he snorted.
"Then why not say it?" Anne replied.
He turned savagely upon me. "Haven't you got the common sense..." he began, but Anne cut him short.
"Oh! we don't suspect _our_ guests of spying," she said.
I was nearly sorry for Jervaise at that moment. He could not have looked any more vindictive than he looked already, but he positively trembled with anger. He could not endure to be thwarted. Nevertheless, he displayed a certain measure of self-control.
"Very well," he said as calmly as he could. "If you're going to take that tone..."
"Yes?" Anne prompted him. She showed no sign of being in any way disconcerted.
"It will hardly help your brother," he concluded.
"I made a mistake in trying to help him this morning," she said. "I shan't make the same mistake twice in one day."
He evidently knew what she meant, although I did not. His heavy eyebrows twitched, and then, with a half-contemptuous shrug of his shoulders he strode out of the room with an air of leaving us to the doom we so justly deserved.
"The worst of it is that the second mistake doesn't cancel the first," Anne remarked thoughtfully.
XI
THE STORY
She still stood by the great oak table, her hands resting lightly on its dark polished surface. I could see the vague reflection of her fingers reaching up through the deep solidity of the oak to join hands with her. She produced, I thought, an impressive effect of fragility and power in her contrast with that massive table. The material of her flesh was so delicate compared to the inert, formidable mass before her. She could not have lifted or moved it by her own effort. And yet it seemed that she had absolute command over that ponderous obstacle, that in some way the mobility of her spirit must give her control of it, that she might, if she wished, plunge those relatively fragile hands of hers deep into the lake of that dark and adamant surface.
She had not looked at me since Jervaise left the room, and when she spoke again she gazed with a kind of concentrated abstraction out of the window at the quiet glory of the calm August evening. Nevertheless her speech showed that all her attention was being given to the human interests that had just been absorbing us.
"Are you really a friend of ours?" she asked, "or did you just come here faute de mieux?" The little French phrase came like an unexpected jewel, as if she had relapsed unconsciously into a more familiar language.
I was strangely confused by the fact of our being alone together. I had an entirely unwarranted feeling that we were about to make up a quarrel. And I wanted to do my utmost to produce the best possible impression upon her.
"I hope I may call myself your brother's friend," I began lamely. "All my sympathies are with him."
"You don't know the Jervaises particularly well?" she inquired. For one moment she glanced down at her poised hands, but almost instantly returned to her rather absent-minded gazing through the open window.
"Except for Frank and his brother, I never met one of them until last night," I explained. "I was at school and Cambridge with Frank."
"But they are your sort, your class," she said. "Don't you agree with them that it's a dreadful thing for Arthur, their chauffeur--and he was in the stables once, years ago--to try to run away with their daughter?"
"All my sympathies are with Arthur," I repeated.
"Not because the Jervaises were so rude to you?" she asked.
"I liked him before that; when we met on the hill, very early this morning," I said. "But, perhaps, he didn't tell you."
"Yes, he told me," she said. "And was that the beginning of all the trouble between you and the Jervaises?"
"In a way, it was," I agreed. "But it's an involved story and very silly. I admit that they had grounds for suspecting that I had interfered."
"Mrs. Jervaise and Olive are always suspecting people," she volunteered. "I've often wondered why?"
"Like that, by nature," I suggested.
"Perhaps," she said carelessly as if she did not care to pursue that speculation. "You know that my mother was governess to Olive and Frank before she married my father?" she continued, still with that same air of discussing some remote, detached topic.
"I heard that she had been a governess. I didn't know that she had ever been with the Jervaises," I said.
"She was there for over two years," pursued Anne. "She is French, you know, though you'd probably never guess it, now, except for an occasional word here and there. She left years before Brenda was born. Brenda is so much younger than the others. There's eight years between her and Robert, the next one. Olive's the eldest, of course, and then Frank."
I made some conventional acknowledgment for this information. I was wondering if she were merely talking to save the embarrassment of silence. We had drifted, apparently, a long way from any matter of personal interest and I was hesitating as to whether I should not attempt a new opening, when she began again with the least little frown of determination.
"I'm talking about them, because if you are to be Arthur's friend you ought to know more or less how things are between us and the Jervaises, and I might just as well say right out at once that we don't like them; we've never liked them. Mother, more particularly. She has got something against them that she has never told us, but it isn't that." Her frown was more pronounced as she went on, "They aren't nice people, any of them, except Brenda, and she's so absolutely different from the rest of them, and doesn't like them either--in a way."
"You don't even except Frank?" I mumbled. I could not resist the opportunity she had offered to ask that too pointed question; but I looked down at the floor as I spoke; I wanted her to understand that I was not cross-examining her.
"I knew you saw us," she returned in the same even tone that she had used all through this conversation of ours. She had not once raised or lowered her voice. She might have been speaking a part, just to test her memory.
"Yes, I did," I said. "Quite by accident, of course. I had no idea that he had come up here. I hadn't seen him since breakfast."
"It was a mistake," she said simply.
I looked up at her, hoping with no shadow of reason that I might have played some part in her discovery that that caress in the wood had been a mistake. But she had not changed colour nor moved her attitude, and her voice was still free from any emotion as she said,--
"We thought, Brenda and I thought, that we might trick him. It was a piece of chicane. She and I were rather silly this morning. We excite each other. In a sort of way she dared me. But I was sorry afterwards and so was Brenda, although she thought it might be better as I'd gone so far to keep it up until Arthur had got a promise or something out of Mr. Jervaise. I had meant to do that. I don't know why I didn't."
"But do you think that Frank Jervaise realises that you were only playing with him for your own ends, this morning?" I asked.
"Oh! yes," she said with perfect assurance. "As a matter of fact, he was very suspicious this morning. He's like his mother and sister in suspecting everybody."
"Do you think he'll make trouble?" I said. "Now? Up at the Hall?"
"Yes, I do. He's vindictive," she replied. "That's one reason why I'm glad you are with us, now. It might help--though I don't quite see how. Perhaps it's just the feeling of having some one else on our side. Because I'm afraid that there's going to be a lot of trouble when my father and mother come home. With my father, more particularly. He'll be afraid of being turned out. It will be very difficult to make him take up a new idea. He'll hate the thought of leaving here and starting all over again in Canada. He loves this place so."
"And I suppose he likes, or at least respects, the Jervaises?" I said.
"Not much," she replied. "They've made it very difficult for us in many ways."
"Deliberately?" I suggested.
"They don't care," she said, warming a little for the first time. "They simply don't think of any one but themselves. For instance, it mayn't seem much to you, but it's part of our agreement with Mr. Jervaise to provide the Hall with dairy when they're at home--at market prices, of course. And then they'll go to town for two or three months in the summer and take a lot of the servants with them, and we're left to find a market for our dairy as best we can, just when milk is most plentiful." She lifted her hands for a moment in a graceful French gesture as she added, "Often it means just giving milk away."
"Does your father complain about that?" I asked.
She turned and looked at me with a complete change of expression. Her abstraction had vanished, giving place to an air that confessed a deliberate caprice.
"To _us_," she said with a laugh that delightfully indulged her father's weakness.
I needed nothing more to illuminate the relations of the Banks family. With that single gesture she had portrayed her father's character, and her own and her mother's smiling consideration for him. Nevertheless I was still interested in his attitude towards the Hall--with Anne as interpreter. I knew that I should get a version noticeably different from the one her brother had given me on the hill that morning.
"But you said that your father hadn't much _respect_ for the Jervaises?" I stipulated.
"Not for the Jervaises as individuals," she amended, "but he has for the Family. And they aren't so much a family to him as an Idea, an Institution, a sort of Religion. Nothing would break him of that, nothing the Jervaises themselves ever could do. He'd be much more likely to lose his faith in God than in the Rights of the Hall. That's one of his sayings. He says they have rights, as if there was no getting over that. It's just like people used to believe in the divine right of kings."
I do not know whether I was more fascinated by her theme or by her exposition of it. "Then, how is it that the rest of you...?" I began, but she had not the patience to wait while I finished the question. She was suddenly eager, vivid, astonishingly alive; a different woman from the Anne who had spoken as if in her sleep, while plunged in some immense, engrossing meditation.
"My mother," she broke in. "The Jervaises mean nothing to her, nothing of that sort. She wasn't brought up on it. It isn't in her blood. In a way she's as good as they are. Her grandfather was an emigré from the Revolution--not titled except just for the 'de', you know--they had an estate near Rouen ... but all this doesn't interest you."
"It does, profoundly," I said.
She looked at me with a spice of mischief in her eyes. "Why?" she asked.
It was a tempting opening for a flirtation, but I could not flirt with her. When I had first heard the clear, soft tones of her voice at the window, I must have known that my meeting with her was a new and decisive experience. I had always idealised a certain type of woman, and perhaps for that reason I had always held back from the possible disillusions of an exploring intimacy. But my recognition of Anne had nothing in common with all my old deliberately romantic searchings for a theoretical affinity. If I had been asked at any time before two o'clock that morning to define my ideal, the definition would not have described Anne. Indeed, I could never have imagined her. She was altogether too individual, too positive, too independently real, to fit the mawkish vapourings of a man's imaginary woman. There was something about her that conquered me. Already I was blushingly ashamed of my jealous suspicion that she could sell herself by a marriage with Jervaise. In all her moods, she appeared to me with an effect that I can only describe as "convincing."
She was a perpetual revelation, and each new phase of her thrilled me with admiration, and a sense of long-sought satisfaction. I could be content to watch and to listen to her. The revelations of her personality were to me as a continual and glorious adventure. To flirt with her would be a confession on my part of a kind of superiority that I could never feel; a suggestion of the ridiculous assumption that I could afford to dally with and in certain circumstances flout her. I could sooner have dallied with and flouted a supreme work of art. Wherefore when she challenged me with her daring "Why?" I met her eyes with a look that if it in any way represented what I was feeling, must have expressed a grave and sincere humility.
"I can hardly tell you why," I said. "I can only assure you that I am profoundly interested."
She accepted that statement with a readiness that gave me another thrill of satisfaction. She understood my desire and gave way to it, instantly fulfilling my present need of her.
"My great-grandfather went back to Paris after things had settled down," she went on, as if there had been no break in her narrative; "just as a common workman. He was about thirty-five, then, I believe; his first wife and his two children had died of small-pox in Holland, and he didn't marry again until he was sixty. He had only one child afterwards; that was my grandmother. But I can't tell you the story properly. You must get my mother to do that. She makes such a lovely romance out of it. And it _is_ rather romantic, too, isn't it? I like to feel that I've got that behind me rather than all the stodgy old ancestors the Jervaises have got. Wouldn't you?"
"Rather," I agreed warmly.