THE THINGS WHICH BELONG--




_BY THE SAME AUTHOR_

  CRUMP FOLK GOING HOME
  THE LONELY PLOUGH
  THE OLD ROAD FROM SPAIN
  BEAUTIFUL END
  THE SPLENDID FAIRING
  THE TRUMPET IN THE DUST




  THE THINGS WHICH
  BELONG--

  (“_The things which belong unto thy peace_”)

  BY

  CONSTANCE HOLME

  MILLS & BOON, LIMITED
  49 RUPERT STREET
  LONDON, W.1




  _Published 1925_

  Made and printed in Great Britain at
  _The Mayflower Press, Plymouth_. William Brendon & Son, Ltd.




AUTHOR’S NOTE


The author wishes to say that, in spite of the “local colour” in this
book, the situation between the characters is purely imaginary.




CONTENTS


                        PAGE

  PROLOGUE                 9

  PART I--HIS             19

  PART II--HERS          125

  PART III--THEIRS       229




THE THINGS WHICH BELONG--




PROLOGUE


He dropped the pen.... More strictly speaking, it fell as if weighted
from his fingers. He had an extraordinary feeling that he would never
use a pen again.

A flush came into Mattie’s face, but she said nothing. He had always
expected that, if ever this moment arrived,--impossible as it had
seemed that it ever _should_ arrive,--she would meet it with a flood
of joyful speech; but now she was silent. It was the second time this
evening that she had surprised him by her silence,--this wan and weary
early-spring evening which marked the finish of a bleak and soulless
day. Searching vaguely, however, among recollections which had left
impression without form, he remembered that people often did fall
silent at the late fulfilment of a long desire....

Instead of speaking, she sighed. It was such a sigh, he thought, as the
dying give just before they pass on into new life. In that last breath
there is everything that they see before them, and everything that they
leave behind. Mattie’s sigh was like that.

Not that she looked like dying, as she got to her feet at last,
heavily a little, but pushing her chair from her more quietly than
usual, not in the almost rough way she used sometimes, as if the very
furniture of the house clogged and held her ardent spirit. She stood
beside him a moment, looking down at the letter he had just written,
a splendid woman, growing old,--and older in the evenings than in the
mornings,--but still full of vitality and fire. Again he expected her
to break out into some form of expression, either of satisfaction or
relief, but still she said nothing. Sometimes, as he knew, on occasions
of this kind, relief took the form of a recapitulation of past
miseries, and he would not have been surprised if Mattie had shown hers
in that fashion. But dumbness seemed to have fallen upon her. Even her
face had grown strangely inexpressive. There was no hint in it that she
was thinking either of old sorrow or new joy. It was simply blank, as
if it was no longer able to register the workings of the mind that lay
behind it.

Turning away from him, she moved almost aimlessly across the kitchen.
It was as if she had been switched suddenly on to another plane, and
did not know any longer what to do on this. Stooping, she put out her
hand for the poker, as if meaning to stir the fire, but she put it
out to the wrong side. That seemed to paralyse her more than ever.
She seemed incapable of reaching across to it where it stood in its
accustomed place, but remained stooping, her hand dropped loosely at
her side. It was only after a long pause that she straightened herself
slowly, and, swinging round, stared about the room with eyes which
hardly seemed to recognise it.

He continued to watch her, fascinated. It was all so _different_, he
was saying to himself; not in the least what he had expected. If only
she would speak!... It couldn’t be that she was disappointed?--he found
himself thinking, startled; and suddenly there came into his mind the
absurd fear that, in giving her what she wanted, he had perhaps taken
away from her something that she wanted more....

She moved away from the hearth, and as she did so the firelight shot
up, so that her shadow on the wall shot up, too, and became huge and
menacing in the kitchen. Too big for the room, it pressed itself
against ceiling and walls, as if trying to force a way out of what was
no longer able to contain it. He watched it struggle for a moment, saw
it sink and leap in a still more furious effort, and then the fire
dropped and it dropped with it. He waited for it to shoot up again,
expecting every second to see it beat and battle afresh. But it did
not shoot up again. Instead, there came presently into the stillness
a little tinkling sound which showed that the fire had dropped still
lower.

The window of the cottage had long since gone black, making a dark
velvet background for the gold flower of the lamp at his elbow. The
gardens outside were as blank as Mattie’s face, gone out as completely
as if it was only in the daytime that they had any concrete existence.
The letter on the table looked a white, untouched square, with the
impress of his handwriting barely visible upon it.

There was very little in the letter, but it had taken a long time to
put it down. They had been so long over it, indeed, that already it was
time for bed. The kitchen clock told them that, breaking the silence
almost impertinently, and Mattie started. And then she, too, broke
silence.

“Eh, well! So that’s the end of that!” she said, from the stairfoot,
speaking apparently not so much to him as to a hundred other things
about her; and, turning determinedly towards the stairs without further
comment, mounted them with her strong though heavy step, and vanished.

He sat still for some time after she had gone, feeling a little
defrauded and more than a little exasperated. Even now, when she had
spoken, her voice had told him nothing. It was rather unfair, he said
to himself.... It seemed incredible that the great moment of her
life should have come and gone, and that she should have had so few
words,--and none too comprehensible words, either,--with which to greet
it.

But she was glad,--he did not need telling that; so glad, perhaps,
that only tears could really express her gladness. Probably she was
crying upstairs, even now, weeping the tears which it is better not to
stop. Because it was wiser to let her weep he stayed on where he was,
watching the night deepen over the gardens and droop closer upon his
cottage.

He was glad, too, he said to himself; relieved, too, even though he
did not feel inclined to weep about it. He felt instead that lightness
which comes with choice after a long and difficult approach to a
parting of the ways. He told himself as he waited that he had only
hesitated until now because he knew that the moment had not arrived. He
had hesitated and rebelled, and therefore he had suffered; but he did
not suffer now. On the contrary, in this curious, almost unbelievable
way, he actually felt glad.

He got up, after a while, and on a sudden impulse went and opened the
house-door. He knew that the gardens were there, the moment he did
that. It was only through the window that they seemed to have faded
away. He could feel them stretching about him on either hand; could
see, without knowing how he saw, the actual shapes of bed and tree. But
to-night he felt no thrilling link with the place which had been in
his charge for the last forty years. He had passed on, as Mattie had
long ago passed on. He had written the letter, and he was glad.

Without being conscious that he had done so, he left the door still
open when he went upstairs to bed.




PART I

HIS




I


The letter was still there when he came down....

He had known that it would be there, of course,--had, indeed, lain
awake half the night, thinking about it,--but he was surprised to see
it, nevertheless. More and more, as he thought, it had taken upon
itself the quality of a dream; so that, when he saw it again, a white
shape set upon an expanse of red-clothed kitchen table, it met him with
a shock.

He put it away from him, however, at once. After that first glance,
which was not so much a glance as an actual physical encounter thrust
upon him as he came in, he did not look at it again. But he was aware
of it even while he refused to recognise it. He ignored it, indeed,
with something of the self-conscious effort with which one ignores a
vivid human presence, going about his tasks as if under actual human
eyes. That he was oppressed by it was evident from the way in which he
flung the window wide and the door wider, as if in an attempt to get
rid of something which threatened to take up its permanent abode.

For this morning he was not quite so sure that he was glad....

Lighting the fire, he set the kettle to boil, afterwards going into the
shadowy little larder to look for milk. His wife would be awake before
long, and he would take her up a cup of tea as soon as the kettle
permitted. Both he and Mattie were getting on in years,--he seventy
and she sixty-nine--but they were able to do for themselves yet. It
was a good thing, he said to himself, considering all that lay before
them, that they were able to do for themselves yet.... He said it to
himself more than once as he found a cup and saucer and the sugar that
Mattie loved; passing about the house with the careless precision of
practice, as well as with something more,--the delicate, kindly step of
one accustomed to move in narrow and crowded places, and among fragile
things like flowers.

And never once did he look at the letter.

The kettle was slow in boiling, for the fire burnt lazily, this
morning. Fires were sensitive things, people said, which knew when
those who lighted them were in trouble.... He checked himself guiltily
when he found himself thinking that, because of course there was no
trouble. On the contrary, there was a great deal of happiness ahead,
as well as excitement and adventure and reunion and new life. The last
especially appealed to him, because, as head gardener at Ings Hall, he
was continually bringing new life into existence. It was surely always
a wonderful thing to be about to greet new life!

Mattie would think it wonderful, at all events, in spite of her
wordlessness last night. She had continued to keep silence even when
he had joined her upstairs, and as he had refrained from looking at
her, in his delicate, sensitive way, he would never know now whether
or not she had cried. But while he had lain awake she had slept
peacefully,--peacefully, silently, graciously,--slept as he had hardly
ever known her to sleep, for she was too active a woman, both in body
and mind, to sleep very well. Indeed, for months before the letter came
to be written, she had hardly slept at all.... But last night she had
slept as those sleep who for years have felt themselves to be behind
bars, until the time comes at last when they lie down with relaxed
limbs and smooth brows, knowing themselves free.

It was a great thing, of course, to be free. Mattie had said it so
often that he supposed it must be true. He supposed it, just as he
supposed that he himself was not free, because she had said that so
often, too. He had never been able really to understand what she
meant, because he could not think of a freer life than one spent among
trees and fruit and flowers. But she must know better than he did what
freedom meant, because she had thought about it so much. Talked about
it so much, too, year in and year out.... Yes, it was a great thing to
be free.

The day coming in at the door was going to be a fine one, he saw,
although he had known that, indeed, as soon as he opened his eyes. But
it was a shrouded day as yet, with the mist still high above the river,
and threaded in and out among the woods which surrounded the gardens.
In any case, he could not have seen either the river or the Hall, for
they were a hundred feet below, but even his usual glimpse of the fells
across the valley, beautifully vignetted by the stems of larch and
beech, was hidden from him by the mist.

It was very quiet in his special domain on its steep little hill,--very
quiet and very shut-in. There were the walls round it, first, the big,
mellow, kitchen-garden walls, and then there were the mist and the
trees, and then there was more mist again. The men had not yet come to
work, and there was not even the sound of an approaching footstep. The
sun had not yet broken through, bringing with it that sense of movement
which is largely the play of light and shade. Only the birds were awake
and beginning the day in their usual rushing way; and the river, which
never slept at all, but ran and talked all night.

It was quiet in the house, too, except for the lazy crackle of the idle
fire, and the loud, determined strokes of the tactless clock. Mattie,
he knew, must be still asleep, for if she had stirred he would have
heard the bed creak in the room above. Even if she had not stirred he
would have known if she was awake, for her vitality would have flowed
down through the house and touched him as if with an actual hand.

He loved the quietness. He loved being shut in on the top of his
hill, and would have been only the better pleased if there had been
thirty barriers about him instead of three. This was the time when
the place was wholly his, before his staff stirred in the bothy or
climbed the hill from the park. The men, when they came, had an air of
possession even in their tread, and in the way they handled things and
struck spades into the soil. It was natural, of course, but he felt
that it robbed him a little. He had to share the gardens with them.
His employers had the possessive air, too, although not so much as
the men, both because they knew their place better and because they
did not strike tools into the ground. But he had to share the gardens
with them, all the same. They said: “What are you going to grow just
here, Kirkby?” Or: “Don’t you think we might have so-and-so, this year,
instead of this-and-that?” So they robbed him, too.

Not that he was one of those jealous gardeners who grudge the stuff
they grow even to the people for whom they grow it. He was not foolish
about the gardens, or greedy in any way. He grew things for a purpose,
and he liked them to fulfil that purpose. Only he _was_ the gardens,
so to speak, after all these years, and when anything was taken from
them it was part of him that was taken away.

He was certainly _like_ a garden, as he stood at his house-door,
looking out. When most people open their doors and stare, the things
outside come awake, but they took no notice of Kirkby. The gardens,
as it were, did not even look up. They were no more disturbed by his
appearance than by one of their own shadows lying under the bushes, or
by the long, ghostly lines of the green and crystal hoar-frost.

He was old and gentle, like an English garden, but he was hale, too,
and not by any means run to seed. His clothes, good clothes, now
pleasantly shabby, had a mellow tone which blended softly with their
setting. His fresh complexion and faded but clear eyes had the pale
tints of some of his own blossoms. The very droop of his shoulders was
less like the slow curve which comes with age than the gentle stoop of
a flower.

Especially he loved the quietness because it was at this hour that he
had a vision of the gardens as he planned them for the year. This was
his creative time, these few moments before the men came and broke and
scattered his thoughts. It was then that he saw the long succession
of colours and kinds with which the gardens would sum up their rich
total before the winter came again. He would lose some of it later, of
course, owing to other people’s follies and fancies, and the stolid
frustration of concrete facts. But some of it would persist, even
through worries and contradictions and the hard blows of the northern
weather; so that, by the time the resting-months for the gardens came
round once more, he would always in some measure have fulfilled his
dream.

He was not always able to snatch these god-like moments in which he
controlled the future. Often enough, Mattie was downstairs first, and
he could not call up his pictures while she was working and talking.
Husbands and wives were so near to each other that they got in each
other’s way over things like those,--things that had to have you all to
themselves, or they would not come. But he always took his moments when
he could get them, because he needed them. His days were poorer without
them and the assurance they brought him, as days are poorer without a
prayer.

And just now was the time when the vision was strongest and clearest,
when there was promise of new life all around, and still it was only
promise. Like all artists, he saw his creation best when there was
still nothing but a blank page in front of him. It had then a clarity,
a sweep, a combined passion and restraint which it never achieved again
after he had once begun to work upon it. It altered, no matter how he
tried to preserve it. Alien ideas crept in, upsetting the balance of
his scheme. Beautiful ideas they were, too, sometimes, but they were
alien, nevertheless. Often he had tried to convince himself that the
altered plan was all for the best; but as soon as the springtime both
of the gardens and of his inspiration came round again, he knew that
the thing which he saw then was the finer and purer.

The whole panorama of the seasons passed in colour and shape before
his inward eye, running at the same time through his brain like a
well-known piece of music. Familiar as it was, however, it was also
highly intricate, with its many different parts overlapping and
intertwining. Not only was there the kitchen garden to think of, but
there were the glass-houses as well, fruit grown inside and out,
tomatoes, orchids, carnations, violets. Then down at the Hall there
were the rose-gardens and lawns, tennis-courts and flower-borders, and
the long yew and beech-hedges to be kept trim and close. And besides
all these there was the big rock-garden across the river, full of
plants which, however much you might suppress them, grew as giants grow
in a single night.

He saw the vegetables he would grow with the warm, homely thrill with
which the farmer sees his crops, and the housewife her stores of linen
and jam. The fruit he saw as an artist sees his finished task,--as
gleaming jewels of price which you can hold and weigh in your hand. But
the flowers he saw as the mystic and the dreamer see Heaven,--not in
concrete form, but as sheer colour and light, and an ecstasy of shaded
tones.

He had, too, the knowledge which enabled him to see under the soil,
as the geologist sees the strata under his feet, and the drainer sees
where the streams run under the apparently dry surface. Beneath the
quiet beds and the still grass he saw the forces of life already waking
to work, sending the spring-urge through the seeds which had slept
there during the winter, or conserving their energies for those which
should be given into their charge later.

But for that insight and knowledge there would have seemed little
enough encouragement from the brown waste lying before him, and curving
away behind potting-sheds and glass to come back to him again along
empty borders. The gardens were not actually empty, of course, for
there were evergreen climbers and shrubs, patches of colour made by
the remains of the winter greens, jasmine in flower, and the wing-like
flashes of snowdrops and crocuses. But by comparison with his vision it
was altogether desolate and barren, for in that he saw all the miracle
of each season at once, smiled upon by a cloudless heaven.

First--and this he always saw first, and indeed it was already hard
upon the heels of his vision--he saw the crimson _ribes_ glowing over
the countryside, that precious pink flame which appears so suddenly
and amazingly among the pale yellows of the spring. Then--a quieter
beauty, but equally as thrilling--the infinitely pure green that comes
creeping over the brown thorn. He saw the purples of lilac and iris,
the cool white and green of lily-of-the-valley, the vivid yet delicate
spirit-stains of the azalea. He saw red and white jewels hung by the
thousand on raspberry canes and currant bushes, and the creamy ovals
of new potatoes. He saw roses, not singly, but in arches and flung
handfuls, and a cloud of sweet peas like pinioned butterflies. Backing
it all he saw green again, the young live green of the early spring,
and the deep, sap-running green of the flush of summer. But above all
he saw blue, that colour so precious in a northern county which is
kept short of blue skies. Lupins and forget-me-not and delphiniums and
periwinkle, and the blue that is never quite blue of the hydrangea.
When he looked across the gardens it was chiefly blue that he
saw,--blue against the brown of the soil and the green of the shrubs
and the mist-wrapped sepia of the wet tree-trunks.

Not every other gardener, he found, had the passion for blue to
anything like the extent that he had. All of them grew blue flowers,
of course, filling their borders with them, and flinging them
profusely about their rockeries. But they did not worship them, as
he did,--did not wait and watch for them, feeling, as they looked
at them, that what they looked at was pure spirit. Mostly they
preferred deep-coloured roses and rich carnations, the tawny hues of
chrysanthemums or the flaming shades of rhododendrons and dahlias.
They did not seem to see the wistfulness of blue against a northern
landscape, and how it was answered by the smoke-blue of far-off
mountains and the steel-blue of frozen tarns.

This year, however, they were to have a new blue flower which had
attracted quite a lot of attention at a northern show, last summer. It
had been brought into being by a north-country horticulturist, and so
naturally the northern papers had made a great to-do about it. One of
them had said that the new “dawnbell,” as it was called, had a certain
quality which only a northern mind could have infused into it; and
another said that it seemed to contain all the fundamental blues of the
world, as the rose seemed to contain all the fundamental pinks. Kirkby
had not quite understood what either of the papers was talking about,
but it did not matter. All that he knew, as he paid his homage to the
dawnbell in its airless tent, was that, set against the background of
his fells at home, it would have the exquisiteness and the appeal of a
little child.

But not only did he see the glory of the garden unrolled before him;
he saw the daily work, the infinite pains which led to the production
of it. He saw the trenching, the sowing, the thinning, the potting and
pruning, the staking and tying, the watering and weeding. He saw the
daily fight with the myriad living creatures which strive to share the
results of man’s labours with him. And when he had finished with the
growing, there was still the cropping, the gathering for the Hall,
the London house, the shooting-box, the market. And when the heaviest
work in that way was beginning to get over, there was the layering and
manuring and dividing; and always the continual battle for order with
the leaf-storms flung upon him by the autumn gales.

Not that he saw this side of his vision as mere drudgery, or in any
way secondary to the rest. It was all one to him, indeed, and of equal
interest and beauty, for to the artist the craft is as fascinating as
the dream. _He_ knew, who had done every job in a garden in his time,
the contentment that may wait upon a man when he is working out even
the smallest detail of a great conception. Long ago he had learned
that the whole is implicit in the part; so that, while he broke his
way through stiff soil, or toiled patiently with the knife, he felt
his material quiver with the message of all that was yet to come, and
saw, not the apparently trivial task upon which he was engaged, but the
beauty that should be.

He was so still during the few minutes in which his vision passed
before him that the very bushes and trees, chained and weighted with
heavy drops, seemed by comparison to be full of animation. It was as
if the actual life were being drained out of him in order to supply
vitality to the temporarily vivid picture. The light had brightened a
little, and the mist was lifting. Far below, from the direction of the
park, a sweet-whistled snatch swam up to him through the mist as the
faint chimes of sunk church-bells are said to swim up through the sea.
The men were coming to work. Behind him the kettle boiled over with a
sudden angry hiss, and at the same moment he heard the bed creak in the
room above.

Turning, he saw the letter....




II


Once again, however, he shut it out, firmly refusing to look at it as
he stepped across to the kettle. Yet again his awareness of it was
apparent in his every movement. His hand shook as he made the tea; and
when the bed upstairs creaked again, with that sharp, emphatic creak
which he had come to regard as actually emanating from his wife rather
than as the mere protest of a piece of furniture, he hurried out of the
room as if thankful to get away from it.

Cup in hand, he went upstairs, and entered the low bedroom, with its
window looking out on to the little plot of ground which was private
to the house, separated from the rest of the gardens by a privet hedge
which he had planted forty years ago, and which had now grown thick
and high. He had never ceased to feel surprised when he looked at that
hedge, not because it had done so well, but because it was there at
all. He would never have thought of planting it but for his wife,
because it would never have occurred to him to feel the need of it.
Either the whole place was his, or else none of it was,--that was how
he looked at it. Nevertheless, he had planted the hedge to please her,
because she wanted a spot where she could “get away.” In the same way
she had chosen the bedroom which looked out on that particular side,
because it made her feel that she “wasn’t there.” He had had some
difficulty in understanding either of these rather puzzling statements,
but he had made no bones about them. He himself had never wanted either
to get away or to feel that he wasn’t there; but of course it wasn’t to
be expected that he and Mattie should always feel the same.

She was sitting up in bed when he went in, and leaning forward a
little, as if some eagerness in her had sent her spirit before her
to unburden itself to him. The paralysis which had seemed to afflict
her on the previous night,--the result, perhaps, of over-emotion or
fatigue--had completely dropped from her. This morning, indeed, she
looked alive to her very finger-tips. Her strong, buxom figure looked
hale and wholesome in its good longcloth nightgown. Her plaited hair,
run through with silver, was still silky and thick. Her eyes were
shining and her cheeks flushed. She took the cup from him in a grasp
that was as firm and capable as when he had first known her.

“Eh, but I’ve slept sound!” she announced, yawning and smiling in a
breath, while the vibrant tones of her voice, running through the room,
seemed to stir up the atmosphere of the house, and even to assist at
the awakening of the world outside. “I don’t know that I ever remember
sleeping like that before.”

He nodded, looking at her affectionately as he stood beside the bed
in one of those still attitudes of his which suggested the poise of a
flower on a windless day.

“Yes. You’ve slept grand. You were tired, likely, with all that
settling and such-like.”

She laughed at that, showing teeth that were still fine, and stirring
her tea with a steady hand.

“Nay, not I!” she said in the same voice, the very strength of which
was an added denial. “It’d take a deal more than that to knock me out.”
Then suddenly she sobered, staring thoughtfully at the cup before her.
“I was just sort of--satisfied--I suppose.”

He said: “That’s right! That’ll be it,” in his quiet tones, nodding at
her again, although this time she wasn’t looking at him; the little
action and the repeated phrase seeming to warn off something inside him
that was making him feel guilty.

“I was dreaming a deal, although I was so sound....” She lifted her
eyes to him once more in their shining eagerness. “I dreamt I was
There!”

He grew, if possible, a trifle more still. So far, he had evaded the
letter successfully, but he could not evade this. In another minute,
and in spite of himself, he, too, would be There....

“I saw the whole spot as plain as plain!” Mattie went on rapidly.
“There was Luke’s house, first of all, and then Joe’s, and then
Maggie’s and her husband’s,--all nearabouts together, just as they’ve
always said.”

He murmured, “Yes, yes! Yes, yes!” trying to hold himself back, but
feeling that he was going, all the same.

“Ellen was there, too, though she lives a good bit off....” She
ruminated a little, as if trying to work out in her mind how Ellen had
managed it. “It was all just as they said, only a deal bigger. All of
’em together, just as they used to be, and things as snug as snug!”

“Yes, yes! Yes, yes!”

She paused a moment, contentedly sipping her tea, and staring at the
knitted quilt on the bed as though she saw the whole pattern of her
dream laid out there before her.

“There was another house as well,” she said presently, still
staring,--“a house you and me know of, as isn’t built yet, but will be,
before long....”

“Yes, yes! Yes, yes!”

“And between the houses there was that garden they talk so much
about,--a great big stretch of a place as seemed to go on for ever and
ever.”

He did not say anything to that, for the simple reason that he was
no longer present to say it. He was There now, just as she had been
There, all during those night-hours when he had lain awake and she had
slept so sweetly. The garden had taken him, as he had known it would
take him, if she began to speak of it. He could fight against all the
rest,--the houses and their occupants, even that other house which was
going to be so important, although it was not yet even built; but he
could not fight the garden. The very mention of it was sufficient to
drag him out of the safe place in which he had lived so long, and to
carry him overseas.

“It was all just as we thought,” Mattie was saying again,--“only a deal
bigger.” She had forgotten her tea, for the time being, and her gaze at
the quilt seemed not so much to be seeing pictures upon it as to pierce
through it and beyond. “There was that much room,--more room than I’d
ever thought there was in the whole world! Even the sky seemed bigger
and higher than our sky over here.” She drew a deep breath, as if even
in imagination it was a delight to fill her lungs under that higher and
wider sky.... “The children were there and all,” she went on, after a
pause, her voice softening. “You’ll hardly believe it, but I knew ’em
as well as well, even though I’ve never seen no more of ’em than just
their photos! There was Luke’s Joe, and Joe’s Luke, and little Sally,
and Daisy May; little Eric, too ... and Maggie’s last, as hasn’t done
as well as it should.... I couldn’t have known them better if I’d
brought them up myself! And the queerest thing of all was that they
knew _me_!... Just before I woke up I told ’em I’d got to go, and they
set to and cried fit to break their hearts.”

“It was only a dream,” he tried to console her, speaking with an effort
as if from a great distance.

“Yes, but it wasn’t like dreaming; it was like _being_!” she said
quickly, and suddenly her eyes filled with tears. “It was _that_ real!”

He came back then from his leap across the ocean, and, reaching out his
hand, patted her on the shoulder.

“It’ll be real enough soon,” he reminded her gently. “It’s only a
matter of being patient a few weeks more.”

“Only a few weeks, that’s all,” she repeated after him in a curiously
childlike fashion, heartening herself both with the words and with a
sip of the cooling tea. “But it’s a long while, all the same.... Seems
strange, doesn’t it, you should feel as if you couldn’t wait a few more
weeks, when you’ve waited for years and years?”

“You won’t notice you’re waiting,” he pointed out. “You’ll be too
busy. There’ll be a deal to do.”

She brightened at that, her vitality mounting at the very thought of
the approaching period of activity. “Ay, and I’m keen to be at it!”
she retorted briskly. “I shan’t feel it’s really real until I begin to
pack!”

She was launched now upon a subject of which the possibilities were
endless, and was already deep in its details when the same whistled
snatch reached them which Kirkby had heard earlier from the park. He
moved automatically. “There’s the men. I must be off,” he said, turning
towards the door.

Mattie nodded, her mind still full of delightful problems.

“It’s time we were both moving,” she agreed, though vaguely. “I’m
late this morning.... It’s that dream, I suppose,” she added, passing
her hand over her eyes as if to remove something which still lingered
before them, “but I don’t rightly feel as if I was back!”

“Oh, you’re back, right enough!” he smiled at her from the door; and at
the words the thing which had stayed in front of her eyes fled, and she
looked across at him.

“Ay, I’m back,” she said in a curious tone, and looked away from him
and about her. “Back!”--and her glance went to the privet hedge beyond
the window.... He waited a moment, staring at her uncertainly and
rather uncomfortably, and then slipped quietly from the room. Half-way
down the stairs, he heard her say “Back!” again, and hesitated in his
step as if meaning to return to her; only to hurry on afterwards more
rapidly than ever.




III


As he entered the kitchen he was met by the letter with the now
familiar shock, but this time he did not attempt to evade it. On the
contrary, he went deliberately across to it, and stood by the table,
looking at it. A glance at the clock had shown him that he was earlier
than he had imagined, and he was in no mood to meet his staff before
he was obliged. That whistling first-comer would be Len Machell, a
skilled gardener and his right-hand man. Len was always early, and he
had always liked him for it; but he was not so sure that he liked him
for it, this morning. Deep down in his mind lurked an uncomfortable
suspicion that Len had a reason for coming early to-day....

The letter, addressed in his small but flowing handwriting, was
directed to his employer at the Hall. He was always slightly ashamed of
his pale, delicate script, especially when he happened to see it beside
his wife’s black and sturdy hand. The scant imprint of the one seemed
almost a purposed reproach to the brave intensity of the other. It was
true that Mattie, in helping to draft the letter, had used so much of
the ink, writing and re-writing, and underlining and exclaiming, that
there had been very little of it left by the time he came to it; but of
course that was no excuse. _She_ would have got her effect, he knew,
even with a dried-up bottle and a broken nib!... He felt unhappily
that his effort looked even feebler this morning than it had done last
night, as if it had faded for lack of volition on the part of the
writer.

Yet, after all, he said to himself, straightening himself as he stood,
it was his weak pen which had altered their destinies. Mattie’s
handwriting, superior though it was, could not in this case have had
the weight of his. The ink that was left had been more than sufficient
for the few, colourless words in which, after forty years’ service, he
had sent in his notice.

It had seemed so impossible a thing before it was done, and, now that
it _was_ done, it seemed so easy. Simple and easy, as death seemed,
when you saw it close.... But it was wrong of him to keep on thinking
of the change that was coming in terms of trouble or death. Once
already that morning he had had to remind himself that what it really
stood for was new life.

Yet it was only in terms of death, he said to himself obstinately, that
he could think of the actual break. It seemed absurd that the snapping
of a tie like that could be brought about by the mere scraping of a
rusty pen. It should be accomplished, he thought, in some more dramatic
way, like the call to attention of clean shot, and the lowering of
something into a grave.

Forty years’ service was in that letter, but there was so much more
besides. He had been bred on the estate, like his parents before him,
and he had never left it. All that was in it, too. Old customs and
ways of thought, closer and closer growth to human beings and to the
soil,--links that had loosened and even broken, but had always welded
again,--all these were there. Not in the actual wording of the letter,
of course, but in its very texture; so that it seemed as if one man
alone could never carry its weight of association and memory, and its
long tale of the years.

And more besides.... Not only was there forty years’ service in the
letter, but there was forty years’ struggle ... all that long contest
between himself and his wife, which had begun in the first year of
their marriage and never stopped,--never, that is, until last night
with the writing of the letter, when it had stopped as a clock stops in
a house where somebody dies.

Even this morning he had that same feeling as of a clock stopped
somewhere in the house, followed as it always was by a silence that
could be heard....

Well, it was all over,--the talks, the disputes, the discussions as
to ways and means. She had always wanted to go, and he had never been
able to go; first, because he hadn’t the money and, second, because he
hadn’t the heart. He had grown to believe that the discussions would go
on for ever, and now they were at an end. It almost seemed as if they
would have nothing to talk about any more.

She had never liked the place from the very start; never settled or
learned to look upon it as home. He had waited for the years to work
their magic upon her, and they had never worked it. She had never
settled.... Always she had gone on longing and reaching out for
something that wasn’t there, something that in the very nature of
things couldn’t possibly be there.

It had taken him a long time to understand, and he was not sure that he
understood, even yet. All that he had definitely learned from the clash
of wills was that the heart must face its own way; that one man’s meat
may be another man’s poison, and that the holy, inhabited place wherein
one soul can find its peace may be nothing but an airless vacuum to
another.

Yet it was not, he sometimes argued with himself, as if he had taken
her from such a very different existence. She was a gardener’s
daughter, as he was a gardener’s son, and had been born to the
same tranquil round and lovely isolation. He had thought her happy
enough when he saw her at home, cheerful and busy and making her own
interests; but that, as he knew now, was merely because of her youth.
The soul can lay out its own pleasure-grounds when it is young. Later,
when it ceases to do so, it sees the little ring-fence surrounding it
only too plainly.

Right up to the time of her wedding, indeed, Mattie had been so busy,
one way and another, that she had never realised her own requirements.
Even if she had thought about them, she would have taken it for granted
that marriage would mean a wider life, and instead she had found life
narrow down upon her. Existence in her native place had been narrow,
too, as she was ready to admit, but not _so_ narrow; for in the home of
one’s youth there is always a way of escape through the magic door of
childhood.

It was tragic that she had not known that she needed a wider
scope,--tragic for both of them. But she had not known, and there had
been nobody--apparently--to tell her. It was the gardens which told her
eventually,--his dear, charmed circle of the gardens,--when it was too
late.

He had found her, one evening,--as very soon after their marriage he
had come to look for her,--sitting beside an upstairs window. The
window was open, and by putting out her head she could see between
the trunks of the trees to the coloured canvases of the fells. It was
a circumscribed view at the best, with only a section of the hills
visible when the weather permitted, together with a strip of sky laid
nun-wise across their foreheads; but it was better than nothing. He
had called up to her laughingly to ask her “what she was at,” and she
had told him in reply that she was “shoving the walls away.”

“Shoving what walls? And whatever for?” he had enquired, puzzled, and
she had flung out her hands with a thrusting movement towards the walls
surrounding the gardens.

“_Them_ walls!” she had said vehemently. “They make me feel sort of
choked. There’s times I feel I could hag ’em down with my own hands,
brick by brick!”

He had been so surprised by that that he had stayed under the window,
staring, and wondering whether she wasn’t well, or whether something
had happened to upset her. It seemed incredible to him that people
should think of garden walls as shutting them in, when everybody knew
that what they were really there for was to shut things and people out.

“What, there was walls at home, wasn’t there?” he reminded her, at
last. “Ay, and a deal higher than ours, too, now I come to think of it!”

It had been her turn to stare, then, turning the problem over in her
mind.

“I never thought of ’em as high,” she returned slowly, pondering.
“Anyway, I never felt shut in. Likely it was just because things seem
that much bigger and wider to a child, but I remember thinking the
garden was nearabouts as big as the whole world!”

“Well, I’m not saying this here’s quite as big as that!” he had tried
to laugh her out of her brooding. “But it’s a fairish size. You’ll not
find a better kitchen-spot anywhere in the North.”

“It’s terribly shut-in, all the same,” she persisted obstinately.
“And terribly small. _That_ small,” she added suddenly, with a
characteristic flash which might have stood equally for bitterness or
humour, “I could happen put it inside my wedding-ring!”

It had grown no bigger for her, either, as time went on. She had never
ceased to find it small and shut-in, never ceased to rebel against its
limitations. Many a day she had sat by the upstairs window during the
years that followed, but she had never succeeded in pushing the walls
away. It was he who had done it in the end by writing the letter,
laying them flat with his pen as effectively as with any Jericho
trumpet.

Still, it was her will that ran behind the pen, even though it was his
hand that held it. He knew that well enough, even while his loyalty had
no intention of admitting it. The disputes and discussions had seemed
futile enough at the time, but they had done their work in the end. Her
hours of silent revolt, equally with her passionate clamourings to be
free, had accumulated at last into a dynamic force which seemed able to
move mountains.

Once, before, indeed, she had almost succeeded in getting her way, only
to find, just as she was on the point of turning into it, that it led
to a dead end. The affair was so long ago now that he had practically
forgotten it, but it came back to him, this morning. Contemplating it
to-day, he was struck by one curious fact,--that what he had nearly
done then seemed to him now far more incredible than what he had
actually done, last night. The sudden reassertion of that distant point
of view showed him how much he had altered since that date; how far he
had travelled, although unknowingly, along the road to Mattie’s desire.

It was at a local flower-show that the opportunity had come, tumbled
from Heaven, as it seemed, in answer to Mattie’s pleading. He had been
present at the show in the capacity of judge, and a visiting landowner
had taken a fancy to him. At the end of the afternoon, his new friend,
without actually offering him the post, had yet managed to convey to
him that his own head gardener’s situation, which happened to be vacant
at the moment, could be Kirkby’s for the mere formality of asking.

He had forgotten the incident, as has been said, but at least he had
no difficulty in remembering how his wife had taken the news. It had
acted upon her like a charm, turning her, even at the mere prospect
of escape, into a different creature, so that already she moved and
spoke as if breathing a freer air. All evening they had debated the
question, and had gone up to bed resolved upon accepting the unspoken
invitation. He recalled Mattie’s elation over their luck, her gratitude
to Providence, her almost childlike happiness. Yet it was he who had
slept, that night, even under the sword of impending change; while she,
for all that her prayer was about to be granted, had lain awake.

And in the morning the whole of her evening dream had fallen to
pieces.... She had come downstairs silent and apathetic, dimmed as a
candle is dimmed by the coming of daylight. She ignored any reference
on his part to the decision of the night before, and when he definitely
tried to reopen the subject, she pushed it away. Later, when he
insisted that the matter should be settled, one way or the other, she
told him that she had given up all idea of leaving.

“It’d make no difference, even if we did go,” she had said dully. “I
didn’t see it, first thing, but I do now. It’d be the same thing over
again, that’s all, and happen worse.”

His heart had leaped in spite of him at the unexpected reprieve, but he
had tried to encourage her, nevertheless.

“What, it’ll be a fresh spot, anyhow!” he reminded her bravely.
“That’s something, surely? Fresh folks and a fresh house, as well as a
different sort of air, as’ll likely suit you better.”

She shook her head.

“It’d only look fresh on the outside. It wouldn’t _be_ fresh in any way
as really mattered.”

“If it’s the walls as is still bothering you, they’ve no call to, as
I’ve told you already. The house at the new spot is outside the gardens
altogether. I asked Colonel Brangwyn special.”

But she refused to be heartened.

“It’d be the same thing over again,” was all she would say, repeating
herself endlessly. “Just exactly the same. You and me and the gardens,
and me choking myself to death.”

“What is it you _do_ want, d’you think?” he had asked her at last
patiently, and she had shaken her head again, looking away from him
almost shyly.

“Nay, I don’t know. I’m daft, I suppose. It’s just _room_.... Ay,
well, it’s no use talking about it any more. But you needn’t apply for
Colonel Brangwyn’s.”

Much the same situation had recurred at intervals, later on, but it had
always ended in the same way. Always she had drawn back again at the
last moment. Always it had seemed to her that she had found the right
road at last, only to realise that it led nowhere. Always she had seen
in time that, no matter where she went, to this country-house or that,
she would always have the little ring of an English garden round her.

Things had been better for her after the children began to come, but
they had also been worse. The gardens had grown fuller for her, after
their arrival, but they had grown no larger. Moreover, the increasing
family had put a stop to any chance of retirement as well as to the
occasionally-discussed project of “setting up for ourselves.” Money had
continually grown tighter. With each fresh child that appeared, they
were forced to “plough a furrow nearer the fence.”

Yet if it was the children who in the first instance had closed the
door to escape, it was the children who in the long run had thrown
it open. One by one, as they grew up, they had all of them left the
gardens. They had loved them,--all, perhaps, except Ellen,--just
as they loved their parents; but they had left them, nevertheless.
Something of their mother’s longing for space must have entered into
them at birth, making it impossible for them to remain. And not only
had they found the gardens too small, but England itself, so that they
had allowed Canada to swallow them up, as it swallowed so many.

It was not long, however, before they began to regret this wholesale
snapping of ties. Not only did they get together as soon as possible on
the other side, but, the moment they were on their feet, they wrote,
urging their parents to join them. Sometimes it was Luke who wrote,
and sometimes Joe; Maggie, sometimes, and sometimes Ellen. Later on,
when they were all married, the boys’ wives wrote, too, and the girls’
husbands; and, later still, it was the grandchildren who, with their
first handling of a pen, added their unsteady scrawls to the general
petition.

It was really the grandchildren who had beaten him in the end....




IV


All the same, a long time had elapsed before he had finally given in.
He was middle-aged and over even when the letters first began to come,
and he had not felt able to face the venture. Mattie was all agog for
it, of course, seeing it as the chance for which she had waited all her
life, but he refused to consider it. He had said “no” so often, indeed,
that it had seemed as if he could go on saying it for ever. But he had
not gone on saying it for ever, or anything like it. Quite suddenly he
had blotted out all those accumulated “noes” with a single “yes.”

Yet, perhaps, now that he came to think of it, it had not been as
sudden as he imagined. It seemed to him now, looking back, that the
“noes” had had no significance at all; that, in point of fact, he had
been defeated from the very start. Right from that first occasion upon
which he had found his wife upstairs, pushing the walls away, he had
known that he would go....

Nevertheless, for ten years at least he had successfully resisted
both Mattie’s persuasions and the calls from over the sea. It seemed
extraordinary to him now that he should have been able to hold out so
long. But then it was not he himself that had been able to hold out,
but something outside him,--something that would not break, that never
_could_ have broken, so he had firmly believed, until it had given way
on the previous evening.

Still, it had not been an easy matter, keeping his ears and his heart
shut, all those years. Not only were there Mattie’s arguments to
contend with, and of course the letters, but there was a constant
succession of photographs as well. Snapshots of the party across the
ocean were always arriving,--pictures of his children, of their wives
and husbands, their homes, their families. And besides all these there
were photographs of the nursery garden which they ran among them, and
which they were rapidly turning into a big business. For in this one
thing at least they had remained true to type. Without hesitation they
had turned naturally and successfully to gardening.

At first he had felt little more for their far-off efforts than
the aloof if kindly contempt of the finished workman for the crude
beginner. He was glad, of course, that the children had kept to the
old trade, but conditions were different “out there,” and at first
he found them difficult to follow. As time went on, however, and the
photographs showed the garden to be increasing in size and scope, his
interest began to quicken. He had it fixed in his mind now what they
were planting and when, and what they were growing for the different
markets. Presently he was even trying some of their new-fangled ideas
on his own account, although he was careful not to say very much about
them. Thinking about that distant garden while he worked in his own,
he came at last to that point where the mind passes so easily between
place and place that the body might equally well be in either.

Mattie, of course, had reached that particular state long since. Her
dream of last night had been only a vivid extension of it. Often,
for instance, she would talk of the grandchildren as if they were no
further away than round the corner. “Little Joe’s first day at school
to-day,” she would say, bending over her sewing. “I hope they got him
off in good time.” Or-- “Maggie’s May’s not so grand with that cough
of hers. I must see about getting her a bottle of something from the
chemist’s.”

He had done his best to conceal from her his growing absorption in the
Canadian enterprise, but it was not long before she discovered it.
Dropping her talk of the grandchildren to some extent, she concentrated
upon the business, surprising him, times without number, by her
intimate knowledge of it. She, who had never shown even the faintest
enthusiasm for his particular job, seemed to know every seed that was
sown in that nursery across the Atlantic.

“Potatoes have done well for them, this year,” she would inform him,
glibly reeling off a list of varieties. “‘Grand Elephant’s’ the best,
though, they say. I’d like to try ’em. That sort we had ourselves
wasn’t worth the planting.”

“Main crop _was_ ‘Grand Elephants,’” he would remind her mildly, but
without arousing her to any excitement.

“Eh, now! Fancy that!” she would answer, in a tone of polite wonder.
“And I never knew!... Likely it’s the soil or something as makes the
difference. Anyhow, all I can say is I thought ’em right poor.”

For some time she had contented herself with merely stimulating his
increasing interest, but after a while she came out into the open with
it as a weapon.

“You’d settle sharp enough, you’d see,” she was saying presently, when
the eternal subject came cropping up again. “It’s the same job, when
all’s said. ’Tisn’t as if you’d be going to something different.”

“It’d _be_ different, though, in lots of ways,” he had replied firmly,
much in the same hopeless but obstinate tone in which she had so often
asserted that “it would be just the same.” “Come to that,” he had
added with spirit, “I wonder you’re so keen on it yourself if it’s not
to be fresh, seeing you’ve always been so set against gardening and
such-like?”

She had laughed without resentment at his mild attack, too enchanted
with her happy project to be stirred to anger.

“It’d be different in _my_ way,” she admitted,--“I give you that--but
I don’t know as it’d be that much different in yours. It’d be
bigger-freer--nay, I can’t explain! But sticking things into the
ground and taking them out again seems to me much the same job all the
world over.”

He had said nothing to that, partly because it did not seem worth
while, but also because his mind instinctively retreated when
she mentioned size. She liked to think of the Canadian garden as
prairie-wide, a great, untrammelled stretch of a place under an arching
sky,--but that view of it repelled him. The photographs, of course, had
shown him something of what it was like, but he chose to ignore them.
Hidden away in his imagination was his own impression of the place, as
a time-mellowed, sheltered circle of anciently-tilled soil....

It was perhaps because he had been dwelling upon the garden in that
particular guise that yesterday he had given in. Also he had had an
annoying day, spoilt by several of those tiresome little incidents able
even to take the glamour out of the work which is nearest to one’s
heart. But it was chiefly the weather which had overset his mind, hard
and clear as it was with that sinister hardness and clearness which
scarifies the soul. It was the only weather that ever made him feel
really old, stripping as it did the veils from his various shrines. He
had gone indoors for his evening meal, feeling that his life, under its
present conditions, had nothing further to offer him.

The mail was in, he found, as he sat down,--it had seemed to him, of
late years, that the mail was always in,--and a letter from Canada was
lying on the table. Mattie had opened it, apparently, and presumably
read it, but she made no attempt to force it upon his notice. She
neither mentioned it, indeed, nor even as much as pushed it towards
him, and perhaps because of this lack of coercion, he found himself
eyeing it longingly. In his momentary state of depression it seemed to
offer him the exact stimulant which he needed, and after resisting the
impulse for a short time, he reached out and drew it towards him.

The atmosphere changed around him almost as soon as he opened the
letter. Canada leaped out of the pages at him as he read,--Canada, live
and free, and with red blood rushing in its veins. It had always seemed
to him a country where everybody was young, and to-day more than ever
it seemed peopled with radiant youth. The letter was full of vitality,
of hope, of healthy happiness and success. He forgot his annoyances as
he read, and his depression vanished. By the time he had finished the
letter he, too, felt young, breathing the air of that land which seemed
to know nothing of growing old....

The garden was in the letter, too, needless to say; in fact, it might
almost be said that it was more garden than letter. It was almost as if
the writer had posted a piece of the actual soil.... Kirkby, holding it
in his earth-sensitive hand, found it an amulet transporting him so far
that he lost all sense of his present surroundings.

He looked up after a time to find his wife’s gaze fixed upon him, and
the teapot suspended in her hand. Apparently she had been about to
speak, and then had been checked by a realisation of the importance
of the moment. He stared at her as if he found some difficulty in
focussing her, and she lowered the teapot slowly to the table.... He
tapped the letter.

“Mattie,” he said. “We’d likely best go....”

It was really the garden which had beaten him in the end.




V


He came back from re-tracing the slow trend which had led to the
writing of the letter to find Machell staring at his open doorway
from across the garden. From that distance, as he knew, the man could
see nothing of what was happening inside; yet he bestirred himself
sharply and moved away from the table. Len’s attitude affected him
unpleasantly, just as his coming early had done; so that, when he went
out at last to join him and give him his orders for the day, he had an
uncomfortable feeling that this morning he was an enemy rather than a
friend.

The feeling passed, however, as soon as he came into contact with him.
Len was apparently his usual genial self, with nothing more sinister
at the back of his mind than the preparations for peas and potatoes.
The rest of the men arrived presently, and the gardens fell into their
usual routine. By the time the sun had broken through, Kirkby was again
beginning to wonder whether the letter and all that it stood for had
been anything more than a dream.

The very weather of yesterday, that soul-troubling weather which had
helped so largely towards his decision, now seemed like a dream,
too. Looking at the fresh yet quiet colouring of to-day, at outlines
diamond-clear and yet soft as human breath, he found it impossible to
re-imagine it. But that was the worst of weather, as he knew, even
although at the same time it was the wonder of it. You were happy on
the good days, feeling that they would go on for ever; but, on the
other hand, the bad days seemed as if they would go on for ever, too.
And the bad days were very dangerous, because they were apt to make
you lose heart. On the bad days, if you were not careful what you were
doing, you might find yourself signing the whole of your life away....

Yesterday had been a destructive day, so bitter and killing that it
seemed as if this morning everything should have been withered; but
instead of being withered things were pulsing with new vigour. Even
where there was no life showing above the soil, life spoke to him from
below. The air, vivifying yet soft, had that baptismal touch which
comes only at one time of the year. And running all through Nature was
the thrill which comes out of nowhere, like the Spirit, so that the
quiet land seemed to heave and thrill like sunlit waves of sea.

It came to him now that, next year, when the thrill was in the air,
he would be in Canada. It would be the same thrill, he told himself
hurriedly, because Nature’s magic was the same everywhere; and yet it
would not be quite the same. On the soil where you had been born and
bred there was always something more. Not only did you feel the thrill
of the spring that was coming, but the thrill of the springs that were
gone; so that, with each fresh spring on your native ground, the thrill
deepened because of the past.

_That_ thrill, at least, if he went to Canada, he would never feel
again....

He had been right about Machell, he discovered later.... He discovered
it after breakfast,--a breakfast which seemed to him more like a
meal in a railway station than anything else. Beyond removing a few
things from the mantelpiece, and routing a few other things out of a
cupboard, Mattie had not actually begun her preparations for packing,
but she managed to give the impression, nevertheless. The ebb and
flow of her talk, rising and falling as she passed between kitchen
and larder, came to him like the signals of approaching or departing
trains.... Finishing his meal more hurriedly than usual, he went out to
find Len again standing staring at the cottage.

This time, however, Machell made no attempt at concealment. Instead, he
came forward to meet his chief awkwardly but eagerly.

“Begging your pardon, sir,” he began hastily, as if unable to contain
himself any longer, “but there’s something I’d like to ask you. It’s
all over the place you’re giving up your job, and I thought happen
you’d put in a word for me if I was to apply for it.”

For a moment or two after he had spoken Kirkby did not know how to
answer. He should have been prepared for the shock, he knew, but the
fact remained that he was not prepared for it. Absurd as it seemed,
it had not yet occurred to him that this sort of thing would follow
naturally upon his “notice.” It would have come to him, of course, with
the actual sending of the letter, but so far he had not progressed
beyond the actual writing of it. His intuition had been trying to warn
him, it was true, but he had not been able to grasp what it wished to
tell him. But it was clear enough to him now why Len had seemed to him
like a stranger who might possibly do him harm....

“What makes you think I’m meaning to give up?” he enquired at last,
evading the question, and shifting his gaze from the man’s face to the
greenhouse behind him.

Len wriggled uncomfortably.

“Nay, I don’t know ...” he began, looking down. “But it’s been all over
the spot for a long while now. They’ve got it down at the village, too.
Mrs. Kirkby’s always talked a deal about leaving, you see,” he added,
rather more confidently, “and lately it’s seemed to me you were leaning
that way yourself.”

“How d’you mean--‘leaning’?” Kirkby questioned him a second time, and
Machell wriggled again.

“Well, sir, you haven’t been like yourself for a bit now, if you’ll
excuse my saying so. Absent-minded and such-like, and not hearing when
folks spoke.... And, begging your pardon again, sir,” he finished,
with a nervous burst, “but you’re getting on. It’s only in reason you
should be thinking of retiring before so long....”

He found himself presently on the further side of the greenhouse,
without quite knowing how he had got there, or what he had said to
Machell before he went. He felt pretty sure, however, that he must have
promised him his support, for he could still see the smile on the man’s
face, though distorted by panes of glass. But he had got away quickly
because he had not felt equal to smiling at him in return. Indeed,
never in his life had he come so near to experiencing the emotion of
positive hate.

He understood now that he had never known how much he had valued his
position until he was on the point of losing it. He had done well at
his job, of course, arriving early, and achieving a horticultural
reputation, not only in his own immediate neighbourhood, but in a
wider district. Visitors to the Hall treated him with deference, and
consulted him as an authority. He was invited to lecture, to judge at
flower-shows, to sit on the committees of various societies. He had
also written pamphlets,--one, upon an Alpine plant which nobody else
in England had been able to grow, but which grew quite simply and
easily for Kirkby, merely, as far as one could make out, because he
wished it to do so.

Successful, however, as he had been in his own little world, he had
never allowed it to upset him. He had never been over-elated about his
doings, or tried to create an impression. Indeed, he had hardly ever
thought about himself at all. He had taken the rewards of life, when
they came, as simply as he took the fact of the pollen in the ripened
flower.

But he had grown used to the situation, all the same. He had grown
to expect the deference and the recognition, without knowing that he
expected them. They had ended by creating a special atmosphere of his
own in which he moved and breathed as naturally as in the air around
him.

That atmosphere would be one of the things which he would have to
leave behind him when he went to Canada. He would be nobody,--out
there. People might be kind to him, of course, might even like him, but
they would know nothing about him. If they thought of him at all, it
would probably be only as somebody’s father, old-fashioned and rather
a nuisance. They would never know that he had done anything or been
anything,--out there.

He felt ashamed of himself at first for caring so much about the loss
of a thing like that, but as he pondered the question further, he
saw deeper. It was not just conceit and vanity that made people want
recognition when they were old. What they were looking for when they
asked for it was a definite confirmation of their personality,--a vital
necessity, without which they were apt to wither away. They were like
cut flowers, he thought, once they had lost their special identity.
That was why so many lingered on in the place where they had lived and
worked, feeling that they would die if they were taken away from it.
Even those who had been neither pleasant nor useful in their lives
received some sort of recognition in the place where they had lived.
The new folks whom you met when you were old often seemed tacitly to
deny that you had ever lived at all. You fought against it, at first,
but you could do nothing about it. Presently, perhaps, you even came to
see yourself through their eyes as a sort of ghost,--a ghost who would
never have any future, and who had never had any past....

And along with your life, of course, they denied your work,--that work
which was part of you and yet was so much bigger than you, and which
you had fondly imagined would still live on in people’s minds, even
after you, who mattered so much less than the work, were dead and
crumbled away....

One of the several garden-cats appeared at that moment around a corner
of the greenhouse, and twined itself lovingly about his legs. He could
see another inside the greenhouse, sitting on one of the stages, and
still another sunning itself happily inside one of the frames. They
were an old breed now, which had been in the gardens for years--so old,
indeed, that he had ceased to distinguish between the generations. For
the same reason, and because of their puzzling likeness to one another,
they had no individual names, but were known collectively as The Cat.

They were an ugly breed, he supposed, although he admitted it
grudgingly,--brindled, with the darker spots of the brindling
appearing invariably in the wrong places,--but he liked to see them
about. It gave him a sense of pleasure to watch the sun bringing out
on their glossy sides the tawny hues which went so well with wood and
soil. He had grown so accustomed to them, indeed, that a cat of any
other description about the place would have offended his artistic eye.

The Cat was another of the things which he would have to leave behind
him when he went to Canada,--the things which already he was beginning
to count over and to weigh before the time came to let them go. He
wondered for a moment or two whether it would be possible to take one
of the breed with him, but came to the conclusion that it wouldn’t do.
Mattie might not like it; the people at the other end might not like
it; and most certainly the cat wouldn’t like it. No, it would never do.

He pulled himself together, after a while, and went off about his
business, but the beauty of the young spring day was largely spoiled
for him. He even shrank from it, now, especially when it called to
him, attracting his attention with scent and sigh in the fashion
peculiar to the spring. Instead of soothing and heartening him, as it
had always done before, it now seemed almost to attack him. He shrank
from The Cat, too, especially from the sight of the sun touching it
as it stalked across the gardens; and, going into his little office
to examine his post which had just arrived, he shrank when he found
catalogues and circulars addressed to “The Head Gardener.”

But most of all he found himself shrinking when he had to approach any
of his men, fearing to find some other of them with Len’s petition
ready upon his lips. As it happened, indeed, not one of them as much as
hinted at his going, let alone applied for his post; but he continued
to shrink from them, nevertheless. Self-conscious with his staff for
almost the only time in his life, he felt that they talked about him
when they saw him coming, and talked again when he went away.

He felt sure, at all events, that they knew what was happening or about
to happen, together with the fact of Machell’s application. Discreet
as they might choose to be on their own account, they must at least be
aware of that. He wondered how long the question of his retirement had
been discussed among them, and how much time they had given him. It
humiliated him to think that the struggle between himself and his wife
should apparently be common knowledge. Perhaps they had even betted
upon the contest, he said to himself, bitterly, backing first one and
then the other? Or, perhaps, he added, with a cynicism which was very
foreign to him, they, too, had known that he would be defeated from the
start?...




VI


The impending change, he found, was already at work upon the house when
he went in to his dinner. The whole place was upset. Cupboards and
doors stood open; shelves had been stripped; while the contents of the
parlour looked as though they had been having a waltzing competition.
There was a large packing-case in the coal-hole, and another in the
larder. Things which were usually upstairs had somehow managed to get
down, while other things, which he had not seen for years, were strewn
about the kitchen. The very atmosphere of the house seemed to have been
shaken and churned,--to have been stirred up as violently as Mattie
stirred her puddings. If he had felt at breakfast as though they were
already at the station, he was now absolutely convinced that they were
actually on the steamer.

Only in one instance, however, did he make any comment upon the
upheaval. Mattie, as far as he could see, had moved almost every piece
of furniture in the house, merely, it would appear, in order to prove
that it was possible to move it. He ventured to point out that some
time would have to elapse before they could even hold their sale, and
she answered him rather curiously as they sat down to their meal.

“Nay, I know it looks rather silly to be moving the stuff so soon, but
I’d a reason for doing it. We’ve got to settle what we’re going to
take, you’ll think on, and what we’re going to sell; and I thought the
sooner I started in at the job, the better. But I found when I came to
think about it that I couldn’t _see_ the things in any spot but this!
In fact, it wasn’t till I’d started pushing and pulling ’em about that
I could do anything with ’em at all!”

“You do get used to seeing things in the same spot,” Kirkby said,
feeling at the sight of the “pushed and pulled” objects surrounding him
much as he would have felt before a bed of uprooted flowers.

“You do that!” Mattie agreed, passing a hand over her heated face.
“That used you forget what they’re like altogether. Why, I found I
didn’t even know the shapes and sizes of things when I came to look at
them!”

“They get part of a place,--that’s what it is,” Kirkby said. “You don’t
see them as if they were by themselves, but as if they were built in.”

“Ours seemed built in right enough, this morning, anyhow,--I know that!
I never remember them taking such a lot of managing before. It was
almost as if they knew what it was all about, and didn’t mean to budge
if they could help it!”

It was warmer this morning, Kirkby said, and likely she was feeling it
a bit,--looking out as he spoke at the thin, young, spring-glow lying
over the gardens, and wondering again how yesterday could have been so
different.

“Nay, it wasn’t that altogether, though I’m not saying it mightn’t have
something to do with it....” Getting up, Mattie set an open tart, light
as an autumn leaf, on the table between them. “But I can tell you I was
real taken aback when I found I didn’t even know my own furniture! I
made sure, for instance, as that dresser of ours would be first-class
for the new house, but now that I’ve had a right good look at it, I
doubt it’s over-big. Then I thought as how that corner-cupboard we
bought would do nicely for our pots, but as soon as I got it down I
saw it was too small. It’s a queer thing, it seems to me, when you’re
so far out with your own stuff! It’s like living with folks that long
you don’t even know their faces.”

“They get part of you,” Kirkby said once more, as he had said about the
house. “Faces or furniture, it’s the same thing. They get that much
part of you, after a while, you don’t rightly seem to notice them.”

Mattie looked about her at the disordered fittings with a mixture
of affection and distaste, much as a mother might look at a host of
unruly children. “Ay, they do get part of you,” she agreed reluctantly.
“I never thought I should mind parting with anything in this house.
I never liked the things, as you don’t need telling, even though we
bought ’em together; nay, nor the house, neither. But I found, when it
came to it, that I wasn’t over-keen on letting any of ’em go. It seemed
sort of cruel, somehow, to go leaving them behind.”

“You’ll not think twice about ’em,” he assured her, “once they’re out
of the road. There’s no need to go fretting yourself over a thing like
that.”

“I’m not fretting myself, not I,--nor likely to be!...” She laughed
across at him, her lips curving and her eyes shining. She had always
been a woman of a fluid temperament, easily up and down, but of late
years it had seemed to him that she had grown a little dry. “Dry”
seemed particularly the right word, he thought, looking at her to-day,
reminding him as she did of a thirsty plant that was lifting its head
in the rain.

“I’d be likely to fret, wouldn’t I, on a day like this?”... She leaned
towards him, laying her arms on the table, and emanating so much sheer
radiance of spirit that it almost seemed as if there were an actual
halo round her. “Why, I’ve been rubbing my eyes half the morning
thinking it couldn’t be true! That was why I was in such a hurry to get
things sorted out. It seemed as if it helped to bring it all that much
nearer.”

“It’s near enough, as it is,” he answered, in perfectly good faith, and
then looked up guiltily, startled by something in his tone which he had
not intended to be there. But she was too busy thinking to notice it.

“You’re right there! In fact, it beats me how we’ll ever be ready
if we’re to get off, this spring. Old folks like us can’t afford to
be kept waiting about.... It won’t be too soon for them Over There,
anyhow,--I know that!” She laughed contentedly, looking past him over
his shoulder as if she saw welcoming hands reaching towards her, and
welcoming eyes turned her way. “They’ll be sending word, like enough,
as we’re to go by flying-machine!”

“You’ve not got word written to them yet we’re meaning to come?” Kirkby
asked. “We ought to let ’em know by the first mail.”

“Well, I’ve not got as far as putting pen to paper, yet, if you mean
that; but the letter’s written all right! What, I had it off as pat as
you like before ever I’d had my breakfast!... Come to that,” she added,
“I’ve written that letter many a time in my head during these last ten
years,--ay, and set it down as well, just to liven myself with the
sight of it!... In fact, I’ve done it that often, it seems almost as if
there’d be no need to do it now.”

“If you go thinking about it like that, you’ll likely never get it done
at all,” he warned her, but she only smiled.

“There’s no fear of that! I’ve never had a bonnier job to do before,
and I’ll likely never have as good again!... Every spring when it came
round I’ve prayed as this might happen, and it’s happened at last. It
was always worse in the spring. You can stand a deal of things in the
winter when you’re comfortable like, and you’ve your own hearth-fire;
but you want to be stirring in the spring.”

He did his best to nod sympathisingly at the wistfulness in her tone,
but he could find no answer to give her. He had never known what it was
to be afflicted by the fever of spring-wandering. He had never wanted
to leave his gardens at any time, but especially not in the spring.
Leaving a garden before the spring-sowing was finished would have
seemed to him like leaving a child before it was able to walk....

It was true, of course, that last night he had signed his gardens
away, and that, too, in the spring. But he had only signed them away
in exchange for another garden, and the work would be well on its way
before he went. It was not restlessness but weariness which had forced
him to a reaching-out towards new life; not the spring-fret but the
overwhelming pressure of years which was driving him overseas.

“I just can’t believe we’re really going!” he discovered Mattie to
be saying, when his mind returned to her. “It don’t seem possible.
To think we’re going to see the lads once more, and hear ’em speak!
They’ll have altered a deal, I reckon, especially Joe. I always said
Joe would make something to look at, if he once got going, and it’s
queer if he hasn’t, out there. They say the air’s that grand, it’s
like fine wine. I don’t know much about wine, but I’ve always hankered
after the sort of air that sounded like it. I’ve sometimes thought I
could breathe a bit of it, after reading the letters.... Then there’s
the girls, too,--I fair ache to set eyes on ’em. Maggie, now,--she was
always a good sort; but I don’t know how I’ll contain myself when I see
Ellen. I thought a deal of ’em all, as you know, and lads is always
lads, but I’ve sometimes thought I kept the softest spot of all for my
little Ellen!”

He heard the words at first as one hears a familiar tune played from
afar off, familiar but unmeaning; but presently the intensity of her
feeling got home to him, and his outlook brightened. He had been
troubled when he first came into the house, jarred both by its chaotic
state and by the events of the morning, but as the meal proceeded he
found himself calming gradually. It was impossible, in any case, not to
find something infectious in Mattie’s attitude; to feel, if only as a
pale reflection, something of her ecstasy. With a deliberate effort he
adjusted his angle of mind, setting aside his preoccupation with the
things that he must lose, and forcing himself to turn his attention to
the things that he would gain.

“They’ll be taken aback, Over There, when they hear we’re coming!” he
contributed presently, more cheerfully. “I doubt they won’t credit it,
at first, we’ve been so long about it!”

“Nay, they’ll credit it all right!” Mattie laughed contentedly. “Many’s
the time Maggie’s told me she’s dreamt we were on the road. All the
same, they’ll be on pins till we’ve actually arrived. They’ll be
thinking every day as we might go and change our minds.”

He shook his head without looking at her.

“Nay, we’ll not do that. It’s too big a thing, is this, to go playing
about with.”

“Too big a thing, and too short of time. It’s got to be yes or no with
folks when they get to our time of life. Just yes or no.... Anyway,
they’ll know it won’t be _me_ as’ll be likely to change,” she added,
with a touch of defiance. “It’s you they’ll be afraid of, if it’s
anybody.”

“They’ve no call to be afraid, nor you, neither. I’ve passed my word,
and I’m going to keep it. I shouldn’t have written that letter if I
hadn’t meant it.”

“There’s many a letter gets written as is never sent,” Mattie said,
half-mischievously, dallying, as human nature loves to do, on the very
threshold of happiness. “I was saying something of the sort only just
now.”

“This here’ll get sent right enough, don’t you fear....” He
straightened himself a little, and his mouth set firmly. “Where’s
it got to, by the way? I’ll be making the round of the place, this
afternoon, and I could leave it as I pass.”

She nodded a trifle vaguely in the direction of one of the cupboards.

“I sided it away, so it wouldn’t get lost.... I could likely run down
with it for you if you’re busy?”

He said “no” to that, however, speaking with the same air of
determination which sat so strangely upon him. It might be Mattie who,
in the long run, had brought about the present position, but dignity
demanded that at least he should hand in his own notice.

“I’d best see to it myself,” he told her, getting up from the table.
“Mind and give it me before I go.”

“Likely I’d forget to give it you, isn’t it?” she laughed; and then,
still laughing, shivered.... “It fair gives me the creeps to think how,
if that letter never went, things’d be just the same as before!”

“They wouldn’t be quite the same, no matter what happened. Folks pass
on, somehow. Even _trying_ to do things makes a difference.”

“A deal o’ difference it’d make to me, I’m sure,” Mattie answered him
cynically, “if I found myself still landed in this one-eyed spot!...
Ay, well, I won’t go fretting about things, just when they’re shaping
so nicely,” she corrected herself quickly. “Anyway, I’m glad you’ve
seen your way to facing the job at last.”

There was a hint of interrogation in her tone as to how he had arrived
at his decision, together with another and fainter one as to how he
was taking it. Standing, he looked away from her through the window
while he answered her unspoken questions.

“It just came over me, as it were, that I might never see the lads
again if I didn’t do something about it. You go on thinking there’s
time enough and to spare, and then all of a sudden there comes a day
when you think there’s no time. That was how it was, yesterday. I just
sort of felt I’d be rare and glad to see ’em all again.”

The tears came into Mattie’s eyes.

“You’ll never know _how_ glad till you _do_ see ’em!” she said, with
a break in her voice. “There’s nothing like your own flesh and blood,
when all’s said and done. And there’s the grandchildren an’ all.”

“Ay, and the garden....” He turned to her then, smiling a little shyly,
a little shamefacedly. “I’ve never let on to you about it, Mattie, but
I’ve been fair wild to see that garden!”

She laughed back at him and his hesitation, triumph and good-humoured
affection mingled on her countenance.

“You’d no need to let on.... It was plain enough, I’m sure! I’ve known
for a long while now you were thinking a deal about it.”

“Ay, well, it’d be queer if you hadn’t, I suppose,--you’re that sharp!
But I’ve often thought I’d like to take a look in and see how the lads
were framing.”

“You’ll be seeing how all right before you’re a couple of months
older!...” She got to her feet, too, and began sweeping the pots
together in a series of joyous movements. “Eh, but I hardly know how to
hold myself in about it! I was fair tongue-tied, last night, when you
said as we’d best go, but I’m that full of it all to-day, I can’t keep
it from wagging! What, I’ve been clacking to the furniture all morning
for want of anything better,--telling it all about it as if it was
human beings! You’d have laughed fit to crack if you’d seen the way I
went on. Len Machell popped in for a word and catched me doing it, and
he looked scared out of his life!”

He stiffened a little at Machell’s name, feeling a cold wind blow in
upon him and his manufactured enthusiasm. As before, the situation had
remained more or less in the air until Len touched it; but as soon as
he laid a finger upon it, it became concrete.... He said “Machell?”
after her, not as a question, but as if weighing a sound which, in the
space of a morning, had grown sinister and threatening. But she took no
notice.

“I was making pretence this house was Over There, and the furniture
was the lasses and lads. ‘Eh, Ellen, my girl,’ says I, hugging the
grandfather clock, ‘I’m that glad to see you I could cry!’... ‘And is
this little Sally?’ I says, kissing yon little stool. ‘She’s grown
rarely since her last photo!’ Right daft I must have looked, and no
mistake, but I couldn’t help it. I was that chock with it all I had to
get shot of it, one way or another.”

She was laughing and crying as she talked, busy living over again the
absurd scene which had yet been so vivid and poignant, but for once she
did not receive the kindly smile with which he usually rewarded her
attempts at humour. Instead, he turned away from her again, almost as
if he had been wounded and wished to hide it.

“What was Len doing, hanging about the place?” he enquired, surprising
her both by his words and by his faintly-sharp tone, for he was a
lenient master with his men.

“Nay, what, he was only in the house half a minute or so! You’ve no
call to be vexed with him, I’m sure. He just looked in to say you’d
told him we were leaving, and to ask if there was anything he could do.
He said his missis would be glad to come up any time to lend a hand
with the packing, so I said the sooner we set about it, the better.”

“I never told him we were going,” Kirkby said, in the same almost angry
tone, making her stare again. “It was him as said it.... He said it was
all over the spot, and had been for long; and he wanted to know if it
was true.”

She answered him soothingly as she carried off the pots to be washed in
the back kitchen.

“Ay, well, it doesn’t matter, does it, one way or t’other? He’d have
had to know, anyway, before so long. I must say I was a bit surprised
to find you’d been so glib about it, but it makes no odds. He didn’t
tell _me_ it was all over the spot, but I might have guessed it. Folks
always seem to know what you’re meaning to do a deal sooner than you do
yourself!”

He picked up his hat from a side table, and moved towards the door.
The impulse was strong in him to tell her of Machell’s application, but
he restrained it, being uncertain of her attitude. He was longing for
sympathy on the subject, despising himself as he did for the bitterness
in his heart, and knowing that sympathy would assuage it. But she had
never seemed to value his position as head gardener,--had, indeed,
constantly made him feel that it was something to be ashamed of,--and
he dared not risk the reference. Yet he lingered before going out,
still playing about the question, as if hoping that something or other
might occur to ease the trouble in his mind.

“I can’t say I’m best pleased to think Len’s been settling our business
for us,” he said, as she came back into the kitchen. “He’s paid to
attend to his own job, and not to go prying into ours.”

“He hasn’t settled it for us,--not he! We’ve settled it ourselves. And
as for a bit of gossip and such-like, I don’t see how you’re going to
keep folks from taking an interest in those about them.”

“I don’t look for Machell and the rest of the staff to go taking an
interest in my private affairs.” He lifted his voice a little, and
felt a flame rise in him as she laughed. This was the second time
to-day that he had felt that sudden spurt of hate, and in his horror at
its recurrence his bitterness deepened. He hastened to get outside the
door in case the hate should suddenly decide to vent itself in angry
words.

Mattie followed him to the threshold.

“It’d be queer if the whole place didn’t know I’d wanted to go!” she
said briskly. “There’s been times, I’m sure, when I’ve felt like
telling it all round England. It isn’t a crime, anyway,--not as far
as I know. We’d a right to go if we liked. As for Machell, he’s a
decent-enough lad. I don’t see why you’re so mad with him. Mrs.
Machell’s a good little soul, too, though she hasn’t much about her.
Let ’em talk if it pleases ’em! A deal o’ difference it’ll make to us
what they’re saying and doing here, once you and me are a thousand
miles away!”

She stopped to draw breath both for fresh laughter and fresh speech,
and in the pause he managed to break away from her. He went slowly, it
is true, still longing for the consolation which he had been denied,
and bowed by her last words as though she had set a weight upon him.
The thousand miles of which she had spoken were laid like lead about
his neck. But he went, all the same.... By the time she was speaking
again he had rounded the corner of the greenhouse and was lost to
her. He heard her voice continuing for a moment, as if not even the
consciousness of his departure could force it into silence, and then
break as if something had snapped it. He walked on blindly, not heeding
where he was going.

And neither of them had remembered the letter.




VII


He had intended to set off on his round as soon as he had finished his
dinner, but in the end it was half-past two and after before he finally
started out. Something seemed to detain him, whispering in his ear
that this was the last time, and he could not bear that it should be
the last time. It was not true, of course, since he would be certain
to make the round of the gardens many times yet before he left, but he
felt as if it was true. It _was_ true, in point of fact, in so far as
it was the last round of his period of settled service. In any case,
he shrank and lingered a little before setting out, as a man shrinks
and lingers a little before starting upon a world-circling journey from
which he may never return.

Yet all the time he was longing to be gone, and to be able to ease the
strain upon his nerves by fresh scenes and steady movement. He was
still nervous of the men; the kitchen garden still irked him; the sight
of The Cat stealing softly across the soil still foolishly made him
ache. But it was not until the gilded freshness of the short spring
day began to dim a little that he roused himself to action, hurrying
now where he had loitered and fretted, as if in a sudden panic lest he
should be too late.

Passing the last of the greenhouses, he crossed between borders of
box to an arch in the high wall, where there were cherry-trees nailed
flat to left and right like the sticks of so many fans. There was a
little wicket-gate beneath the arch, and as he laid his hand upon it he
turned. Even from that distance he could discern the figure of Machell
in one of the houses, and by the stillness of his attitude he could
tell that he was watching him. Watching to see the last of him, he said
to himself, bitterly!... Watching as he would watch him on that last
day, when he saw him leave the home of his youth for ever.

Even when he had passed along to the right, so that the wall came
between him and Len, he could still feel his eyes fixed upon him,
following him. They troubled him, making him nervous and uncertain
in his movements, conscious that his back was bent and his step
not altogether steady. He became so obsessed by them, at last, that
suddenly he swung round, certain that Len had followed him across the
garden, and was watching from the gate. There was no one under the
arch, however, and he moved on again, feeling hot and foolish; yet
nevertheless the intolerable sensation of being spied upon remained.

Down the steep rush of the hill he went beneath tall, splendidly-spaced
trees, the smooth grass between which would presently be coloured and
starred by daffodils and wild white hyacinths. Under the leafless
boughs of beech he could see the hills,--the mountain-land and moorland
which ring in all this part of the country, except where, on the one
side, it runs rolling to the sea. In the natural arches to his right
were framed the long slopes of the park, and almost beneath his feet as
he came down were the massed roofs of the Hall.

He had never thought very much about the Hall before, even though
the greater part of his life had been spent in its vicinity. He had
accepted it, of course, as the central fact of the situation, the
reason for which he and his work existed at all; but he had not thought
much about it. The gardens were his world, especially the kitchen
garden, and once outside their limits things were apt to seem a little
blurred. There were many days when the Hall, empty and still, and
wrapped in rain or mist, seemed almost as far away from him as his lads
in Canada.

But to-day he looked at it as he came down, trying to see it, to take
it in, so that, once safely photographed on his memory, it should never
afterwards escape him. And at once he found, as Mattie had found with
the furniture, that he could not see it. Instantly association was
upon him, refusing to allow his mind to focus on shape or size. He
could not decide whether the house were beautiful or ugly, dignified
or insignificant, of this period or that. As he had said to Mattie of
her household gear, it was no more possible to judge it than it was to
judge a familiar face.

He had, it is true, an impression of fine stone, of moulded windows
and doors, a wide courtyard, pillars, steps, and soft-coloured, slated
roofs. But always he found it impossible to see it as it would have
looked unclad and without its background. Always his eye went to the
creepers which he had tended upon it, to the shelter of the woods
behind it, the run of the park before it, to the long lawns and the
gravel sweep and the curving boundary of the river. And even those he
could not see as another person would have seen them, for he had looked
at them so long that it was only the spirit he saw, and never the
bodily forms which contained and expressed that spirit....

Yet this place, grown so impalpable to him that he could not even focus
it, had him closely welded to it. He knew vaguely that you could not
separate him from it without hurting him, any more than you could strip
the creepers from the walls without leaving a scar. House and land had
grown impalpable to him because between him and them moved the pictures
of his past, so that you could not sever him from them without damaging
him, because what you would really be separating him from was his own
life.

There was a centralising power about the mansion of a big estate
of which those who had never been connected with one could have no
knowledge. It was like a huge buoy to which you were attached,--so
safely attached that, no matter what came or went on the ocean
outside, you, at least, could never slip away. Those outside must often
feel a little lost, he had sometimes thought, shrinking from that
possible isolation even in his mind. But, anchored to a place like the
Hall, you had no fear of getting lost. Although you could not see it
because you knew it so well, it was at all events a background against
which you could see yourself,--as small, indeed, and comparatively
unimportant, but still more or less plainly. Once broken away from that
background, however, and out in the open,--in Canada, for instance,--it
seemed highly probable that you would not be able to see yourself at
all.

He spoke to one or two of his men who were busy about the grounds,
rolling the gravel or trimming the turf, but always with the same
anxiety and suspicion which had afflicted him all the morning. They
were not Machell, it was true, but each one of them seemed to him to
represent Machell, and, when he left them, he felt that they followed
him with Machell’s searching eyes.... It seemed an incredible thing
that he, who had always taken his fellow-beings so simply and so
kindly, should now be unable to meet them with an open mind. It made
him ashamed and angry, so that his glance refused to meet theirs, and
his voice sharpened when he spoke to them, as it had done with Mattie
during the scene in the cottage. Even the Hall servants he would have
regarded doubtfully if he had chanced to come across them, feeling sure
that they, too, knew what was about to happen to him, and would spring
their knowledge upon him before he was ready to meet it.

But he saw nobody as he passed in front of the house, walking with
what he felt to be a furtive step which he was yet unable to alter,
and pausing only to inspect the rose-bushes fronting the long line of
the low terrace. Nobody opened the door and came to him, or hailed
him from the stone verandah. He glanced nervously at the windows over
his shoulder, but nobody looked out. The whole place, indeed, had a
strangely hushed appearance, almost as if it had veiled its eyes while
this its servant went on his last round.

Hurrying in the same almost slinking fashion along the central walk,
he came to the cliff-side, and stood looking across the beautiful,
dangerous stream to the mountain-wall beyond. He could scarcely
remember a time when, passing through the grounds, he had not paused
just there, with the great trees around and above him, and the rocky
river below. The wide view, passing over the wooded cliff across, and
rising by green and russet slopes to that last long line of loveliness
above, sometimes many-coloured and strong, and sometimes faint and
phantasmal as a cloud, had been all that he had ever wanted by way of
“escape.” It seemed impossible now that, yesterday, when he had needed
it so much, he should never even have thought of it. One look at the
open fells, at the swift river running black between its carved banks,
at the endless crossing and re-crossing of fine bough-traceries against
the colourless sky, and his sudden revolt against his environment would
have been as suddenly stilled. Just that one look, and things would
have found their proper balance again; one look, and he would never
have dreamed of writing the letter....

He swung round on his heel when he remembered the letter, and stood
staring towards the Hall as if through its solid structure he could
see Mattie waving to him from the hill beyond. Mattie would think that
he had forgotten the letter on purpose, and he did not want her to
think that. He could hardly believe that, having spoken of it just as
he was on the point of leaving the house, he could yet have managed
to come away without it. He even searched his pockets, as if feeling
that, by sheer determination, he could persuade it to materialise;
stared at his hands, as if thinking that they might contain it without
his knowledge. But it was obvious that he had not got it, and with
a curious inconsistency he felt furious and frustrated. He said to
himself that he wanted the matter over and done with,--that he could
not bear to have it hanging on like this. He even retraced his steps
for a short distance, as if meaning to climb the hill again in order
to fetch the letter. If he had discovered it in his possession at that
particular moment, he would have thrust it in at the Hall not only with
relief but with actual triumph.

But almost at once he turned again as though somebody had tugged at his
jacket. He was tired, this afternoon, and knew that he would regret the
extra effort before he was half-way up the hill. Time was getting on,
too, and if he lingered much longer it would be dusk before he was back
from across the river. And Machell could take the letter.... He smiled
a wry little smile as he reflected with what keen delight Machell would
take the letter!...

He cast another glance at his view as he came back, remembering how
often he had tried to persuade Mattie to find in it the release which
he found in it himself, and how dismally he had failed. Mattie had had
no use for it either as a view or as an outlet. She had liked the space
and the height, but she had disliked the hills. For her they had merely
been other and greater walls, which she could not push away. And she
had hated the river.... Besides, nearly the whole of the view was to
the north and east, and Mattie had spent the greater part of her life
with her heart turned towards the west....

Also she had not cared much for being seen about the Hall grounds,
even at those times when the owners happened to be away. It was only
with difficulty that he had induced her to attend any of the Hall
functions,--the cottage-garden show, the tenants’ garden-party, or
the servants’ ball,--and then she had only appeared under protest.
His employers had sensed the protest, he felt sure. In as close and
delicately-dovetailed a corporation as that of an estate, it was always
easy to detect the person who deliberately stood outside.

Nor had she ever attempted to make intimate friends of any of the
people in the district. They would have accepted her all right, for
she was both amusing and clever, as well as a hard worker. But right
from the first she had either rejected her neighbours’ overtures,
or accepted them against her will, and gradually they had come to
acknowledge the situation, and to realise that they could get no
further.

He had spoken to her quite early upon the subject, seeing where she was
drifting, but he had not succeeded in changing her mind.

“What’s to do you won’t take tea with Mrs. Grisedale?” he had enquired
one afternoon, as he came in. “I met her just now when I was down at
station after some weed-killer as hasn’t turned up, and she was right
grieved about it. They’re having a few friends in, she says, for that
christening-party of theirs, and she’s keen for you to be there.”

“I just didn’t fancy it, that’s all,” Mattie had said, although taking
care not to meet his eye. “It’s a bit of a trial, I always think,
talking to folks as you don’t know.”

“Well, that’s easy mended, isn’t it, and the sooner you start in at it
the better? Mrs. Grisedale, for one, ’ll not take you long. She seems a
decent little soul.”

“Oh, ay, she’ll do.”

“There’s Mrs. Ellwood an’ all,--she’s asked you time and again. She
told me she’d never taken to anybody as she’s taken to you.”

“And she’ll do, too.”

“Well, then, what’s to do you can’t make friends with the pair of
them?” Kirkby had blundered on. “You couldn’t have a nicer couple of
folks than them two, and you’ll be wanting somebody.”

But he had had to probe for some time before she would give him the
explanation.

“It’s like this,” she had said at last, half-ashamed, as he could see,
and yet determined upon her line of action. “It just isn’t worth while.
Making friends takes a deal of time and a deal of patience, and once
you’ve got ’em made, it takes a deal of getting over if you’ve got to
leave them. Well, it isn’t worth it. I’m set on getting away from this
spot, as you don’t need telling, and if I take up with any of the folk,
it’ll all be wasted.”

“Nay, what, friendship and such-like is never wasted, surely!” he had
affirmed stoutly. “I don’t hold with gardeners getting too thick with
folks, nor their wives, neither. There’s some as’ll seek you out just
for the sake of what’s behind you. But it isn’t good, all the same,
to be always by yourself, and a few nice friends’d likely help you to
settle down.”

But, unfortunately for his cause, he had hit on the one plea that was
least likely to weigh with her.

“Nay, but that’s just what I don’t want to do,” she had said, looking
past him, with the effect, which he was later to know so well, of
seeing beyond him into great distances. “I don’t know how to put it,
but it would be wrong for me, would that. It’d be losing something as
is right down necessary to me. If making friends with folks is going to
mean settling down, then I’m best without it.”

That part of the explanation he had been quite unable to understand, so
he had concentrated upon the other.

“I don’t see there’ll be that much wasted just by you going to Mrs.
Grisedale’s christening-party!” he had said humorously. “It seems a
real pity you shouldn’t have a pill-gill now and then. I’ve always
thought you were just cut out for going amongst folks and keeping ’em
all lively.”

At all events he had succeeded in making her laugh at that, changing
her, to his relief, from the far-gazing woman who chilled him with her
strangeness to the brisk, cheerful girl whom he had sought in marriage.

“Ay, I generally manage to make a stir, wherever I am!” she had said
gaily. “I’m not one for sitting mum in corners, and never was. If I’d
had luck to hit on a spot I liked, I’d have done as much as anybody to
keep things going; but it’s no use thinking about it here.”

And she had never swerved from her determination during the years which
followed,--never swerved at heart, that is, for she had not been hard
and fast about it. She had got to know both Mrs. Grisedale and Mrs.
Ellwood in the end, as well as the usual run of people in the district.
She had gone to parties in her time. She was never behindhand, either,
when help of any sort was required, for she was a kind enough woman, in
spite of her discontent. But she had never got to the point of making
intimate friends. Always she had looked beyond her neighbours to that
distant thing in which they had neither lot nor part.

Descending the steep steps which led to the water’s edge, he came
to the catamaran moored in its pool between the wooded sides of the
worn gorge. Going aboard, he began to wind himself from bank to bank,
the light, wooden raft moving easily on its steel pulleys. The water
was quiet enough here, black and almost still, but on either hand he
could see the fretted rush of one of the fastest streams in England.
A beautiful river, winding and sweeping and leaping.... A river which
could rise in a few hours and become a broad, flying torrent, with
crisp, curling waves like those of the neighbouring sea.

And at once, almost the very moment, it seemed, that he pushed off, the
ache at his heart left him, succumbing to that curious influence which
water has upon the human mind. The detachment it breeds worked upon him
even in that black pool which could for no more than a moment give
pause to the sea-going mountain stream. The smooth rush out across the
unrippled surface was a steady rush into peace. His nerves eased in
the gliding movement of the raft, held to earth though it was by that
velvet pull on its under side. He drew deep breaths as he worked at the
creaking handle. His released mind took to itself wings.

For he had been a boy on this river, and nothing that life had so
far attempted to give him had ever equalled that. He had been a boy,
climbing among its rocks, swimming in its pools, watching its hidden
life and learning its hidden lore. He had known it empty almost as a
sand-channel is empty when the water alters its course; seen it foaming
and full, a swirling engine of destruction. It had been the playground
of his youth, and at the same time it had been his friend, for to his
young mind it had had all the personality and importance of a dominant
human being.

He was a boy again now, as he grounded the raft softly, and softly
stepped off on the other side, as if stepping into a church. Here,
where he had spent so many hours with other lads, or alone, there
lingered for him still the holy touch of youth. It was in the water
and in the air, in the colour and shape of things, and in the peculiar
values of the light. Above all, it was in that atmosphere of childhood
which never changes, and which is so distinct from any other that it
can be recognised even in the dark.

He stood for a moment or two after he had landed, surrendering himself
joyfully to the ancient thrill, and seeking from point to point for
reminders which should serve to accentuate it. Here, where a low
bough, along which he had often walked, still thrust out its bold and
crooked arm over the racing water.... There, where the salmon rose in
the summer ... where the bathing-strand lay firm and dry ... where the
long curve of the rose-gardens against the river even at this time of
the year showed a velvet line. It seemed to him as he stood, quivering
to the thrill, that never until now had he grasped the meaning of its
peculiar comfort. Its virtue lay in that easy leap back to childhood,
which made of life such a little thing, and at the same time held such
a vivid assurance of a life that should be eternal.

But you could never hope to receive that comfort except in the home of
your youth. No other place would do; not Canada, nor another.... In any
other place you would have to grow old patiently without that blessed
assurance, and to bolster up your faith in a future existence as best
you might.

He had planned to get face to face with the Canadian problem as soon
as he was safely across the river, out of reach of the staring eyes
of his staff and of Mattie’s exultation. He had meant to set forth to
himself the advantages of the change, to conjure up the presence of
his children and to dwell happily upon the interest of their garden.
He had meant to meet, once for all, the call of the things he would
have to leave, so that, no matter what else might lie before him, he
could never suffer as much again. He had intended to return from his
round already passed over in spirit to the new life in the new country,
having said good-bye once and for all to the life he had lived in the
old.

But he found that he could not think of either his lasses or his lads
as he climbed the shallow steps which guided him up the rock-garden,
strive as he might to picture them in their far homes under that high
sky of which Mattie had spoken so often and so fondly. They were not
real to him on this ground where, the instant he set foot on it, he
relinquished his own manhood. Always they slipped away from him as
ghosts might slip away. He had, indeed, one rather frightening moment
when he found that he could not even remember their names.

He wandered for a long time in his country of the past, including
both past and present in his gesture of farewell. At point after
point along the paths he stopped to dream and stare, seeing the long,
plant-carpeted terraces which he had planned, and could not have
told whether they were the old or the new things that he saw. But in
any case it did not matter. The old and the new were fused for the
time being to make a greater loveliness, a finer air; that special
atmosphere in which he lived again his own enchanted youth, and was
permeated, as he looked, by the happiness which is a foretaste of the
happiness of eternity.

Some inward monitor brought him back again at last to the raft, set
his fingers to the stiff handle, and pushed him off across the quiet
water. The mist was high above the river by now, so that, as he
passed into it, he was lost to sight from either bank, with only the
melancholy creaking of the machinery to locate his whereabouts. But he
did not feel lost, because of the coloured picture of youth which still
glowed and moved upon the vaporous canvas before him. He was still at
peace, still sure both of this world and the next, when he met the
further bank with a sudden shock.

There came back to him with the shock the realisation not only of his
physical but of his mental position. Climbing up the wood-edged steps,
he rose both out of the mist and out of the boyhood dream which had so
contentedly ensnared him. He looked back for a moment before turning
resolutely towards the Hall, and saw the mist lying like a shroud, not
only upon the river, but upon the precious things of his own past.

He had lingered and dallied during the last hours as if time had
suddenly ceased to be, so that he was forced to hurry now in order to
make up for it. All day, he thought, he had been behaving like that,
alternately dawdling and hurrying, and then forgetting and dawdling
again.... The men had disappeared who had been working in the grounds,
and were no doubt up at the kitchen garden, waiting for him. It was
pay-day, too, he remembered suddenly, with quick dismay, and they
would not be best pleased at being kept waiting for their money. They
would say it was time he went, he told himself, as he skirted the
still-silent house, and came again to the steep path which mounted his
own hill. They would echo the words which Machell had all but spoken,
that morning,--that it was patent to all and sundry that he was getting
too old for his job.

He had no difficulty now in thinking of his children over the sea,
less than no difficulty in remembering their names. The whole Canadian
project came back to him, with all that it entailed, together with
the memory of yesterday’s fatal promise. He could no longer hide from
himself that, for him, at least, that promise had been fatal, whatever
it might mean for Mattie. It was a knife set at his own throat, a pair
of shears at his own roots. Even if he had not known the truth before
he started on his round, he could not have helped but know it after
those hours across the river.

The men were waiting for him, as he expected, and he paid them
hurriedly, taking care not to look at them, and without any of the
little kindly enquiries and comments which he often had for them. He
had hoped that Machell, being the first paid, would be the first to go,
but instead he lingered behind the others. Coming out of his office, he
found him waiting for him outside, looking rather unhappy.

“If you could spare me a minute, sir ...” he began, looking more
abashed than ever by Kirkby’s movement of recoil. “I just wanted to say
I hope I didn’t put you about by what I mentioned to you this morning.”

“Why should it put me about?” Kirkby asked, looking, not at him, but at
The Cat, which, moving tawnily between the white purity of the evening
light and the warm brown of the soil, had developed an unearthly beauty
of its own.

“No reason at all, I’m sure, if you’re really meaning going. But
it struck me afterwards, thinking about it, that perhaps I’d been
over-smart.”

“You’ve got to put in early, these days, if there’s a job going
begging,” Kirkby said, wishing so earnestly that the man would go that
he felt as if he were pushing him.

“Yes, sir, I know. And there’s others to think of, too.... But I should
be sorry if I’d put you about. It’s seemed to me all day as you were a
bit down----”

But to be told that he looked “down” was more than Kirkby could
bear,--more than he could bear to know that he carried the mark of his
defeat.... Waving both Machell and his consolation away, he turned on
his heel.

“You’ve no call to worry yourself, my lad,” he found himself saying,
both his sense of justice and his native politeness forcing him to the
speech. “You get off home. If I do send in my notice, you’ll be more
than welcome to the job.”

He heard Machell begin to speak again as he walked away,--broken but
grateful phrases, ending bravely with: “If you’re stopping on, there’ll
be nobody better pleased than me ...” followed presently by the sound
of the man’s footsteps receding along the path. He turned then, and
watched him walk across the gardens, noticing, as he thought, the
already-possessive glance which he cast on either hand. At the gate
Len stopped and looked back towards the elder man, and even at that
distance their glances seemed to meet and mingle as over some prone
and coveted body. When finally he had closed the gate and disappeared,
there came from Kirkby’s lips a little sound that was like a cry....

It occurred to him presently that Mattie would be waiting for him, as
other people had already waited, that day, and he turned mechanically
towards the house. He shrank, however, as he remembered the state of
the place as he had found it, earlier on, as well as from the fresh
transports which Mattie would have in store for him. He felt, as he
had felt about Machell’s rough attempts at sympathy, that he could not
bear them just now.... Swerving away to the right before he reached his
home, he took a path which led him beyond the walls into the healing
quiet of empty spaces.

The spring evening was very still, so still that, as he stood, he could
hear the faint cry of new-born lambs from across the river. All over
the land was that cool silver light which is so much more mystic,
and at the same time more intimate, than any other. An incredible
gentleness had come upon the earth under its touch. Bathed in that
heavenly light it became suddenly more human. Beneath it, the brown
plough lay warm and rich, while the grassland looked springy and deep,
a comfort to eye and foot. The woods to the west showed silver palings
between their trunks, while down on the flat the plantations looked
like clumps of sepia feathers. In the soft yet clear air everything
seemed to draw together, the white-faced farm-houses, the woods, the
hills, the gentle, coloured earth ... gathered to hear the happy
message with which the whole world seemed to thrill.

High on a bough above him a blackbird began to sing, and again there
came from Kirkby’s lips that sound that was like a cry....

In the drawn dusk he wandered about the gardens, seeing the
glass-houses, which were so brisk and coloured in the day, ghostly as
water is ghostly under the first finger of the dark. Mattie had made
no attempt to look for him, so that he was alone, as he had been in
the early hours, but without the solace of his vision. The procession
of the year no longer marched in strength before him, sounding its
coloured trumpets as it passed. When he came to the place where the
dawnbell was to stand, he could no longer picture it blue and exquisite
against the soil.

For the third time that day rage seized him as he stood looking down at
the dark ground which had blossomed so easily for him in the morning,
but from which he could now conjure nothing but despair and gloom. He
knew definitely now that he had been trapped by fate, and felt none
the less bitter because he had sprung the trap with his own hand. He
thought of his children with love, but knew that for such as himself
there were things which were more than children. Closer to him than
breathing, and nearer than hands and feet.... His children had grown
away from him and made a life for themselves; but he, if he was to
follow them, could do nothing but pine and die.

He made up his mind as he stood that he would go back on his word, and
that after to-day he would shut his ears to Mattie’s pleadings for
ever. If she must go, she must go alone, and he must manage as best
he might. The letter had not been delivered yet, as far as he knew,
and, even if it had, he could always withdraw his notice. They would
not be hard on him at the Hall, knowing well enough as they did what
had brought him to this pass. For in writing that letter he had been
trapped ... trapped! The rage in him was so great that he shook with
it as he stood, clenching and unclenching his hands and grinding his
teeth. This time he actually cried aloud, and it seemed to him that the
cry rushed out and over the walls, so that even down at the Hall they
could hear him shouting that he was trapped....

And then suddenly Mattie’s face came to him as he had seen it, that
morning, fresh and sweet and glad after her dream-tryst of the night.
He saw the light in her eyes, and heard the break in her voice. He
thought of her years of beating against the bars, and of how for
her the trap he had sprung for himself meant the opening of her
prison-gate. Remembering these things, he knew that he could not break
his promise.... Slowly his rage subsided and his hands unclenched.
He stood, an indistinct figure in the dusk, with drooped shoulders
and bowed head. He had promised Mattie, and he could not fail her.
Perhaps, once safely Over There, he might be allowed to find peace, and
forget.

       *       *       *       *       *

Turning towards the house, he saw Mattie running and stumbling towards
him across the gardens.




PART II

HERS




I


Mattie never forgot what she had felt when she awoke on that
miracle-morning,--never forgot, and never allowed herself to
remember.... She came back to consciousness still swathed and steeped
in the sweetness of her dream, arriving presently, with a little shock
of joy, at the thought of the sweeter fulfilment which was to follow.
At the moment, however, she found it difficult to believe that the
latter could possibly be more concrete than the former. So real, so
intense had been that experience of the spirit, that the senses also
seemed to have been satisfied by it for the time being.

She lay on for some time after she had told Kirkby of the beautiful
journey which she had taken in the night, living it over again to fresh
thrills of delight which were like little inward cries of pleasure.
(_So_ they had looked and spoken, and held, and kissed....) It was not
often, except in the case of illness, that she had allowed herself the
luxury of staying in bed. Very occasionally she had yielded to it when
life was pressing too hardly upon her, watching the hours drift by with
a hopelessness which was in itself a sort of hope, knowing as she did
that, when that phase was over, she would be able to take up existence
again a little more cheerfully. But she had never yet stayed in bed
because the moments in front of her were so rich and wonderful that
she could afford to waste them.... A sort of radiance seemed to her to
pervade the room, in which the earthly day had not yet quite prevailed,
so that she felt that, if anybody should look in upon her, just then,
they would see her through a wall of light.

She had said to Kirkby that she was “back,”--back in her prison, she
had meant,--speaking the word with a bitterness which had first driven
him out, and then almost brought him back to comfort her; but he was
barely out of the room before she was gone Canada-wards again. She
had forgotten so much about Them, she said to herself, half-ashamed
to have forgotten, and wholly enchanted by the reminder. She had
forgotten Luke’s habit of cocking his head on one side as he talked,
and Joe’s love of humming a tuneless tune, while he drummed out the
beat of it on his knee. Maggie’s shrug of the shoulders, and Ellen’s
trick of half-closing her eyes when she laughed, together with that
little way she had of touching you affectionately when she sat beside
you.... Joe’s eldest boy hummed, too, and Ellen’s baby shut its eyes
in the same fascinating fashion. It put out its hands to you in the
same way,--little, round, baby hands groping half-consciously for the
comfort of human touch.

It was astonishing, she thought, that people who cared for their
children should forget so much about them. Not, of course, that you
forgot _them_. You had only to think of them,--sometimes it happened
without your thinking,--and their faces came up before you, in a sort
of halo of light. But the little tricks and ways which held so much of
their character seemed to fade if you were parted from them for years.
Perhaps it was as well that they should fade, seeing how much they
could hurt you to remember.

It had not occurred to her that she might be going to dream about the
children when she went upstairs to bed. Indeed, to be perfectly frank,
she had hardly thought about them at all. A great exhaustion had fallen
upon her as soon as she realised that her forty years’ struggle against
circumstances was over. It had been hard to realise it, too. Even while
Kirkby was writing the letter, she had found it difficult to believe
that he was really doing it. Each moment, also, she had expected that
he would break off and refuse to finish, and had found it incredible
that he should continue calmly to the end. Indeed, he had puzzled her,
last night, as much as she had puzzled him. To her, too, as to him, it
had seemed impossible that the mere writing of a letter could bring so
much to a close.

Even when it lay before her, addressed and sealed, and Kirkby, without
any sign of repentance, had let it lie, she had felt no sensation
either of joy or triumph. Instead, she had felt that great weariness,
as after a heavy burden at last laid down, together with a curious
impression of being out in a great space, without any sense of
direction. She had seen herself, during those few moments in which she
groped aimlessly about the kitchen, as a coloured balloon, broken
suddenly from its tether, and drifting out across the world at the
light mercy of the winds.

Nor, when she was alone upstairs, had she felt any glow of happiness
over her victory. She had not cried, as Kirkby, sitting and waiting
below, had imagined her to be crying. She had simply undressed as
rapidly as possible, still feeling that curious unsteadiness as she
moved about the room; and, once in bed, had seemed to pass instantly to
that far-off place which was still more real to her perceptions than
anything that she saw around her.

She had not visualised herself as going, nor could she remember
anything about her actual arrival. She had merely found herself There,
already a settled member of the little community. But she had known
well enough when the time came for coming away; perhaps because, after
all those years of longing, it was easier to get There than to leave.

She had seen herself passing between the houses, moving from one to
the other with the assurance of long custom, and never once feeling
that anything was strange. She had known which paths to take, which
windows to look through, which rooms to enter. She had known that you
always had trouble with Maggie’s doors, and that Ellen’s water-supply
wasn’t as good as it might be. She had known that Luke had a piano,
and that Joe (who hadn’t risen to one yet, in spite of his fondness
for humming), sent his children to Luke’s to practise. She had known
the hours they kept, the clothes they wore, their furniture and their
meals, their neighbours and their hired men. And they had known that
she knew. She had fitted into their midst as a glove fits a hand which
has never taken it off.

And other things, too,--the sort which nobody told, and which couldn’t
by any chance have got into their letters. Just when Maggie’s husband
was a bit tiresome with Maggie, and where Joe’s missis failed in being
just what he had hoped she would be.... Those queer sisters-in-law of
Ellen’s; and Luke’s father-in-law, who was the sort you could quite
well do without.... The trouble about the bit of money which Joe had
lent Maggie’s husband.... The trouble about the bit of money which
Ellen had lent Joe....

It surprised her to remember how much at home she had felt, how
completely in tune with conditions which she had never experienced in
the flesh. Why, she had even felt at home in the house which she had
seen as already built for herself and Kirkby, although in point of fact
it was not yet in existence! Just by closing her eyes she could see
herself in, it again, could feel, as she had felt in the night, her
pleasure in her environment. It was a small house, of course, with no
more than four rooms in it, at the most, but it was a smallness which
made for comfort and not constriction. She had felt so happy in it, so
snug, that she laughed contentedly at the very remembrance. It was a
queer thing, when you came to think of it, and rather uncanny, that you
could feel at home in a house which hadn’t even been built!

There were more than four rooms in the cottage in which she had lived
so long, but she had always felt pressed in upon by it, and as if she
could hardly breathe. It was a good place, of course, and a big one, as
cottages went,--almost too big, indeed, when it came to single-handed
work. But she had never yet felt at home in it, or known the intimate
joy of the home-lover and the home-maker. She had done her duty by
it, that was all. She had lived and worked in it merely as a caretaker
might have lived and worked, and on the few occasions when she had gone
away from it she had felt as if it had ceased to exist....

There was only one thing which had troubled her in the dream, and
she had not said anything to Kirkby about it. Indeed, she had almost
forgotten it when she awoke, safe in her hopes as she was, as if
ringed by shields; but now it set her mind wondering and her brow
wrinkling.... She had been troubled and puzzled because of the
questions which They had asked her.

Maggie, for instance, had wanted to know all about the people at
home,--who lived in this place and that, and a lot of other things
which she had been put to it to answer.

“Who’s got Beck Edge, nowadays, Mother, and Field Howe? Beck Edge
belonged to the father, didn’t it, and t’other to the son? I remember
hearing they wanted to change about, but I don’t know if they ever did.”

Her mother, however, had been quite unable to clear up the mystery,--if
mystery there was,--about Beck Edge and Field Howe. She had never
been interested in the matter, and she cared nothing about it now.
But Maggie was so interested that she couldn’t stop talking about it.
Her colour rose and her eyes shone. Digging up vague details from a
quite improbable past, she proceeded to shape them into an unreliable
present. You might almost have thought that she had a personal bias in
the affair; whereas the truth was that she had never been nearer either
of the houses than a crow’s flight on a fine day.

Luke’s questions had been chiefly about the staff,--who was working for
his father, these days, and what had happened to the rest. “I always
thought Nicholson wouldn’t last so long,” he had said. “He was a bad
egg,--sure! Tommy Rigg’ll be getting an old man now, and likely past
his work. What? D’you mean to say he’s been gone five year back and
more? Gosh! How time does scoot!”

He had said another thing after that which had annoyed her sorely in
the dream, and which even in remembrance made her fume a little.

“Len Machell’s still hanging on, isn’t he?” he had asked. “Father
thought a lot of Len. I never let on to you about it, Mother, but he
once applied to me for a job. When we were on our feet, it was, and he
knew we’d something to offer; but of course I told him that I shouldn’t
think of sniping him like that from the old dad.”

She had been pretty short with him, she remembered now,--had implied,
whilst busy commenting upon Machell’s “cheek,” that there had been
“cheek” on Luke’s part as well. He had only laughed in his cheerful
way, and the dream had melted and changed, but the flame of her
indignation was still at work within her. She had not known that she
could care so much about a thing like that, or that she could resent so
bitterly a slight on Kirkby. And not only Kirkby himself, but Kirkby’s
job, which she had always imagined that she despised and hated!... She
was surprised by her own attitude, and lay for some time brooding over
it. It was only with difficulty that she reminded herself that it was
“only a dream,” and that in all probability Machell had never applied
at all.

Joe’s questions had been much the same as Luke’s, with now and then a
family resemblance to some of Maggie’s. He, too, had wanted to know
about the staff, and who was now at the Home Farm. But he had also
wanted information about some of his old-time sweethearts, and that
with his wife sitting by and not looking over-suited!

“Where’s Bessie Dale, these days, Mother, and Carrie Sharpe? Married
long since, both of them, I’ll be bound,--nay, don’t tell me you’ve
never heard! Carrie was a school-teacher, you’ll think on, and Bessie
in Morton’s office. There was Dolly Dale, as well, but, of course,
_she_ married Len Machell....” It was queer how the Machells kept
coming into the dream!

She had done her best to suppress Joe, both because of his wife’s
crab-apple look, and because of the hot little ache at the heart which
mothers feel at the mention of girls who have wanted their sons. But he
had refused to be silenced, at first, and had gone on chattering about
Dolly. “Dolly was the best of the bunch,” he had said, laughing, “and
more than a bit fond of yours truly. Len would never have got her, I
know that, if I’d stopped at home instead of hitting the trail!”

But They had got tired at last of asking her about England,--even
Joe, who saw it sunned by the bright smiles of his lost lasses. They
had understood that she did not want to talk about it, and had stopped
teasing her, realising also that she had very little to tell them. But
it had been impossible to explain that it had ceased to be real to her
as soon as she had left it,--that she had clean forgotten such things
as that Machell had married Dolly!

It was Ellen, amazingly, who had been the worst of all, because it
was Ellen who had asked about the house and gardens. This was the
more surprising because she had been the one child who had seemed to
share her mother’s dislike of them. Many a pleasant chat they had
had together, abusing the dull, shut-in place, and feeling greatly
enlivened. And now it was Ellen who was bringing it back to mind, tying
her down to it again when at last she was safely shot of it!

“Have you got that extra window put in, Mother, you were always so keen
on? Does the kitchen fire still smoke in a west wind? Privet hedge’ll
have grown to a grand size, nowadays, I expect? Does the dad still grow
‘Creeping Jenny’ over the front door?”

She had tried hard to find answers for Ellen, sitting on a stool at
her knee, and fondly fingering her skirt. There had been a distant
look in her eyes as she put her questions, as if her mind had jumped
to her mother’s side of the ocean, as her mother’s had jumped to hers.
Mattie had felt it a trifle disloyal of Ellen to have gone away, so to
speak, the moment she arrived. It was almost as if they had been nearer
together when those heaving miles of Atlantic had lain between them....

But those were the only shadows which had blurred the exquisiteness
of the dream, and the effect of them, after all, had been to make it
even more real. For, as she had to admit, those were the very questions
that They _would_ ask, Over There, until their excitement over their
parents’ arrival had sobered down a little. Later on, too, they would
ask, at intervals, again, for even in the busiest lives there are hours
when, the body quiet, the mind insists upon travelling. But she would
not mind it so much, then.... It was only Ellen who had given her
something of a shock,--whose questions, now that she came to think of
them, did not seem quite real.

The rest of the experience, however, had been pure joy, so full of
laughter and sweet looks and tender touches that it seemed as if the
sensation of them must last for ever. There were the grandchildren,
too,--but she must give an hour or two, later, to thinking about them.
They were too many, and too dear, to be hurried over when she ought to
be getting up and seeing to Kirkby’s breakfast.

But the biggest thing in the dream had been the feeling of
escape,--together with that exhilarating sense of space after which
she had always hankered, without rhyme or reason. Other places, no
doubt, could have given her that same sense, but it was Canada that
had captured her imagination. Canada as a whole seemed to have got
into the dream, with its strong air, its mountains and lakes, and its
long stretches of land reaching to the great line of its horizon.
She thought of prairies and woods, and great rivers, and ice-bound
harbours. She saw the glint of gold, and dog-sledges racing over frozen
country. She saw the soft colours of ripened orchards, and a fresh wind
running for miles over the stooping heads of wheat.... All that she
had heard and read about the Dominion seemed to have merged into one
single setting for that keen adventure of her spirit.

It had all been wonderful beyond imagining, joyful beyond ecstasy;
perfect,--no, not quite perfect. There had been just one thing
lacking,--one person who had not been present. Kirkby was not in the
dream....




II


She was still wondering why Kirkby was not in the dream when she had
got herself out of bed and was beginning to dress quickly, although
not so quickly as she was in the habit of dressing, for her limbs felt
heavy, this morning, as if her body also had travelled in the night.
Her mind, too, was still inclined to wander, so that at intervals she
found herself losing touch with what she was doing. In the very act of
fastening button or tape, sewn on with that efficient sureness which
was her distinguishing characteristic, she would pause to answer some
question put by a voice which could not be less than three thousand
miles away.

She felt disconcerted by the fact that Kirkby had apparently had
neither lot nor part in last night’s expedition. She was also rather
glad, with a queer, jealous gladness which she did not understand, and
which made her slightly ashamed. But his absence not only detracted
from the reality of the dream; it rather frightened her. The
superstition always dormant at the back of the country mind rose up to
persuade her that Kirkby would never live to cross the ocean with her.

But the shadow soon passed, as the other shadows had passed, and the
rush of excitement returned more headily than ever. She even sang as
she dressed, and then stopped with a laugh, feeling that even the walls
of the house must come alive to hear her. She was the type of woman
who sings naturally as she moves about, but the number of times she
had sung in that house she could count on her ten fingers.... Not only
had she not had the heart to sing in a place so hostile to her, but it
would have seemed to her rather false, implying to all who might hear
it that she was beginning to “settle down.”

She had not known that she was going to dislike the place when she
first came to it; indeed, she had never even thought about it. She
had taken it for granted that she would “settle,” as everybody else,
apparently, settled. She had been too young, at that time, to know much
about wives who wanted to “move on,” although she had come across more
than one (and thought nothing of them) in later life. And she had
certainly not known that the place you lived in could be either your
enemy or your friend.

Yet she might have guessed that it would not do for her to be dumped
down just anywhere; that, like so many of Kirkby’s precious plants, she
needed a special soil on which to thrive. And at least she might have
guessed that she needed room.... Quite early on her mother had noticed
the fact, and commented upon it.

“Look at her now,” Mattie could vaguely recall her saying, pointing her
out to some on-looker as she sat at table, “pushing and shoving at t’
pots till she’s got ’em away from her! She did the same as a babby, and
a sight o’ mugs she broke an’ all! She can’t abide to be cluttered up,
or to have folks pressing on her, can’t our Mattie.”

She had said the same to the school-teacher, when, calling indignantly
to demand the meaning of some trifling punishment, she was told that
Mattie had insisted upon annexing more of the school-bench than she was
entitled to.

“She’ll never do as she’s meant if you don’t allow for it,” was her
parting advice. “Best give her two folks’ room, and then you’ll have
done with it. She’s a big child, to begin with,--as fine a one as
you’ll see anywhere, though I says it as shouldn’t,--but it isn’t only
that. It’s just she can’t do with feeling she hasn’t room to breathe
and spread about in.”

Later on, of course, she had learned to adapt herself better to the
conditions in which she lived, so that pots were no longer broken, or
schoolfellows thrust aside. But her love of space continued to grow
with her, although more or less unconsciously, showing itself mainly in
a liking for long walks, and for open windows and doors. It was during
a dispute with her mother over the latter that for once she had caught
a faint glimpse of the life for which she was really intended. An aunt
of hers had been staying with them, who knew a little of the world, and
she had taken a hand in the family quarrel.

“Folks can’t all think the same,” she had said, in reply to the
mother’s statement that, “if our Mattie had her way, roof would be off
afore you could say Jack Robinson!” “They’re different, all the world
over. Your Mattie’d likely do rarely in one o’ them new countries
they’re talking of opening up.”

Mattie’s mother had been altogether vague upon the subject of “new
countries,” having, indeed, sufficient difficulty, as it was, in
realising that there was more of England beyond the one little spot
in which she lived and moved and had her being.... “Eh, now! What
countries?” she had enquired incredulously, rather as if she suspected
the visitor of inventing them on the spur of the moment.

“Colonies, they call ’em,” the other had said firmly, although almost
equally vaguely, and speaking the word as people spoke it in those
days, before such names as Canada and New Zealand had become living
realities to the public mind. “Fine big spots wanting big strong
folk as like fresh air and a bit o’ work. Your Mattie’d do grand for
Colonies, from what they tell me.”

“They’re big, d’you say?” Mattie herself had asked, fixing upon the one
point which had intrigued her imagination, and in that one word, had
she but known it, assessing the whole of her life’s trouble.

The visitor nodded.

“Big, every way, so I understand. Mountains and rivers, and great
pieces as they call--nay, I can’t think on, except that I know it made
me think o’ church. Trouble is, though, they’re such a sight of a long
way off,--t’other side of the ocean, though I’m sure I can’t say which.”

Mattie’s mother had laughed when the ocean was mentioned, as though
the very sound of that awe-inspiring word had put a full stop to the
conversation.

“Nay, now, it’s no use your talking Colonies to the lass, if there’s
oceans and such-like mixed up in it! She can’t abide the sea, can’t our
Mattie, and never could. I don’t know where she gets it from, I’m sure,
unless it’s my mother, as was once right near drowned, falling off a
pier at Morecambe. She had a terble down on the sea, after that, and I
reckon our Mattie’s the same. What, she can’t even abide a picture of
it in the room,--says it puts her off her meat! Nay, if Colonies means
crossing the ocean and such-like, I reckon they’ll have to do without
our Mattie.”

Remembering this speech of her mother, ominously clear as speeches
seem which have been long forgotten and then are suddenly recalled,
she felt disconcerted for the second time, that morning. It was true,
of course, that she had always dreaded the sea. Every kind of evil of
which it was capable had seemed at one time or another to fasten upon
her imagination. Accounts of shipwrecks held her as no other literature
had power to hold her,--tidal waves, broken embankments, water-spouts
moving like monstrous spectres.... The sea was the only thing in life
which had so far been able to intimidate her, and she had not yet
mastered her fear of it. Not easily would she forget those bad days
after her children had sailed, or the unbelievable relief with which
she had heard that the ground was firm again under their feet.

And now she was definitely committed to cross that very ocean which had
driven the Colonies out of a cottage talk all those years ago! Even in
the midst of her luminous satisfaction she shivered as she remembered
it. The sea frightened you, made you sick, heaved you about, and then
finally drowned you.... Not, of course, that she anticipated being
drowned,--the dream alone seemed surety enough for that--but she knew
that she would suffer it a hundred times in her mind before she was
safely landed.

Yet it had to be faced if ever she was to know the happiness that
was waiting for her, Over There.... She felt a pang of impatience
because she could not make the journey as she had just made it in the
night,--as she had made it many and many a time over her cooking or her
needle. Yet what were a few days of misery, after all, compared with
the long heart-breaking years through which she had struggled already?

The picture called up by her aunt had faded as soon as it was painted,
not only blotted out by the terrors of the sea, but dwindling from
sheer vagueness. She had had that one hint of a door wider than any
of those which she opened daily, and then it was closed again before
she could see beyond it. One glimpse, followed by a single pang of
recognition and disappointment ... and presently she had forgotten it.
In any case, she would have had little use for the Colonies, just then,
for already she was aware that she meant to marry Kirkby.

Looking back, she could see him coming into her life as softly as the
river mists which lay so often upon the gardens, and which she so much
dreaded and hated. She could not remember either the day she had first
met him, or the still more important day when he had asked her to marry
him. All that she knew was that he had not been in her life, and then
suddenly he was all of it. She could no more trace the moment when that
had happened than she had ever been able to catch a tulip closing for
the night.

She had neither hated nor dreaded Kirkby, in spite of his home mists,
and even now the memory of their courtship had the power to thrill
her with its sweetness. But he had been the wrong mate for her,
nevertheless. He and all that he represented had muffled her spirit as
the mists had muffled her body. The bold driving-force that was in her
had been irritated by his reserved and delicate ways. It was amazing
that they had pulled together as well as they had,--she always reaching
outward, and he always holding back. Many a couple as badly suited
would have parted company before now.

She winced a little in her new happiness, remembering how often
she had felt bitterly towards him. She was ashamed, now, of their
many quarrels.... In the great peace that had come to her it seemed
impossible that there could ever have been anything but peace. Even
when they were not disputing, she had raged against him in her heart.
She flushed as she recalled that she had actually sunk so low as to try
to set the children against him....

She flushed and she was ashamed, but these troubles out of the past had
already vanished so far that they could not really hurt the present.
Already they were gone as the wrinkles in a cloth were gone as soon as
a hot iron was passed upon them. With the new peace had come to her
also a new vision. She had not meant to hurt Kirkby any more than he
had meant to hurt her. She would do her best to make up to him for it
in the little time that was left to them Over There.

It seemed strange to her now that her mother, who had read her so
plainly when she was small, had yet not seen fit to warn her when she
most required it. Perhaps she was one of those people who could see
things clearly in a child, but never thought about them again directly
they grew up. Even if she had thought, she would only have said that
a good husband like Kirkby was not to be sneezed at. Mattie herself
would have said it if a child of her own had asked her. He was a
decent, steady young man in a job to which she was accustomed. You did
not sneeze at a man like that if you had any sense of values.

She had not sneezed at him, and she was not sneezing now, though she
had sneezed often enough at what he had had to offer. It was a better
position, of course, than might well have fallen to her lot; a better
one, for instance, than had fallen to her sisters. It was not Kirkby’s
fault that the longing with which she had been born had finally got on
her mind; and it was certainly her fault, if it was anybody’s, that the
children had been born with it, too!

She opened the window before going downstairs, her glance falling, as
she did so, on the privet hedge, and she was amazed by the sudden rush
of affection which took her as she looked at it. The shadows were still
on the little lawn which it sheltered, giving it that air of seclusion
for which it had been planned. A flower-bed ran all round the lawn
under the hedge, and in the middle of the grass was another bed with a
standard rose. At one end of the little plot was a rustic seat, set
with its back to the rest of the gardens and its face towards the west.

The Mattie looking out of the window saw many Matties walking in that
little plot, and making it, by dint of years of dreaming, into an
orchard of escape. She saw a young Mattie, first of all, and a little
hedge, too thin and too small to fend off the curious glances of the
men working close at hand. But the years fled before her mind little
faster than they had fled in actual truth. Almost before you could turn
round there was an older Mattie and an older hedge, with flowers in the
trim border and a green closeness about the lawn. And presently both
Mattie and the hedge were growing old and stout, and the turf had grown
thick and soft, and there was a snug richness about the soil....

The little place, where, as she had told Kirkby, she was able to “get
away,” had very soon become the real centre of her married life. To
it she had taken both her early discontent and her later bitterness
of frustration. Many a hard speech, which otherwise might have been
Kirkby’s portion, had been tossed off at the privet hedge; many a salt
tear had been wept into that lawn! Sitting and sewing in it, she had
been a girl again, in her home towards the west. Walking in it, with
her Canadian letters in her hand, the tiny spot had resolved itself
into that broad country where her soul went free.

Going to Canada would, of course, mean leaving that little home of
memories behind her. Somebody else would have the right to walk in it,
to sit and sew and dream.... She felt a jealousy that was almost fierce
as she thought of that somebody, and her throat contracted a little.
If it had been possible, she would have gathered up the lawn and the
privet hedge, and taken them away with her.

She continued to feel amazed by her sudden feeling for the place; or,
rather, by the sudden revelation that it meant so much to her. She
had thought of it only as a refuge, a makeshift for want of anything
better, and now it had become something that actually belonged to her.
She tested herself, looking away from it and then back to it again, and
felt always the same rush of affection and the same jealous ache. She
had always thought that she hated every inch of the ground on which
her married life had been spent; but in spite of herself these few
square yards of it had stolen into her heart.

Perhaps it was only, she thought, that the place looked different
because she was leaving it. It was a well-known fact that people often
regretted even the worst of things when the time came for them to part
with them. (Why, she had had a cousin of her own with a broken leg, who
had cried when her crutches had been taken away from her!) Or else it
was just because she had not been free that she had not been able to
see things properly. It was her mind, even more than her body, that had
been in chains, and now she had shaken the chains from her. Perhaps she
was seeing things now as she would see them in Canada, when at last she
had got away from them....

She went downstairs, still thinking about the privet hedge, and feeling
her first ecstasy a little tarnished. She knew now, what she had not
realised before, that, in spite of the joy that was coming, there were
things that would make her suffer. She had fondly imagined that she
had paid for the joy long since, but apparently she had been wrong.
Life was piling its debts against you all the time.... Already there
had been the questions and the thought of the sea; and now had come the
shock of the privet hedge. They would plant another hedge for her, if
she wanted it, Over There, but they could not ensure her another forty
years in which to watch it growing. They could not make each leaf and
twig speak to the memories of a whole life. They could not give her
back the English soil which she had salted and watered with her tears.


III

But even before she set foot in the kitchen her mind had recovered its
tone. The mere fact of rapid movement, of swift passage from one room
to another, had, as always, the power to cheer her. As for the letter,
the presence of which had so intimidated Kirkby that it had taken him
at least half an hour to look at it, she found it little less than a
magic spell. To see it lying there on the table was almost to hear her
children’s voices bidding her good morning, to meet their faces turned
towards her as she entered, and to feel the warm reality of their hands.

So far, at least, Kirkby had not repented of his decision, she thought,
relieved, finding a fresh resting-place for the precious object. He had
let the letter lie.... It was true, of course, that he had seemed to
have no regrets when he came to her upstairs, but you could not always
tell. There was time, as she had just proved, for a whole change of
heart between the first stair and the last. And he had never really
wanted to go, in spite of his hankering after that distant garden and a
fresh sight of his lads.

He had never yet broken a promise to her that she could remember; yet
she knew that she would feel a good deal happier when the letter had
really gone. For a moment she thought of stamping it and giving it
to the postman if he should happen to call, but abandoned the idea
instantly. Kirkby, as she knew, would prefer to give it in by hand.
In these out-of-the-way places it was still considered insulting to
persons of high degree to send them a letter of that sort through the
post.

There would be other letters for the post, anyhow, she thought
gleefully, as she prepared breakfast. Letters to her sisters, telling
them that she was leaving England ... to one or two old friends still
surviving in the neighbourhood of her home. Letters about passages and
passports ... about her single tiny investment.... Above all, the great
letter to Them, Over There, announcing their speedy coming.

She would write to Luke, she supposed, he being not only the eldest
of the family, but the head of the firm. It was to his house that they
would probably go, until their own could be got ready for them. But she
had it at the back of her mind that she would write to Ellen, as well.
Ellen was the one who would be the most pleased about it, she thought
fondly, if it was fair to say that any one of them would be more
pleased than the others.

The phrasing of the letter, some of it new, but most of it so old as
to have become almost mechanical, raced and hammered through her brain
to a triumphant close, only to begin again the moment it was finished.
Always she saw it written, not in ink, but in scrolled and burnished
gold; with certain extracts, such as “see you again,” “really coming,”
and “hoping to find you as this leaves me,” rising above the rest like
rocks in a golden sea.

She had had moments when she had thought that a quieter method would be
more appropriate to the occasion,--a few, quiet, colourless sentences,
easily filled in by those to whom they were sent. She had waited so
long and so bitterly that it seemed almost indecent to make a song
about it.... But now that the time had actually arrived she was too
happy to be restrained and tasteful. The only letter that would satisfy
her would be vivid and underlined, with exclamation-marks scattered
here and there like little shouts of joy.

The quieter method, however, would do excellently for her sisters and
the few old friends. Too great a show of excitement would seem out of
place to them. They would sympathise, of course, with her desire to see
her children, but otherwise they would be sure to think that she was
making a mistake. Folks who never moved more than a yard from their own
spots all their lives always did think that others who moved a yard or
two further were making a mistake.

In any case, they had always been inclined to think her “a bit wild,”
although why it should be considered “wild” to want to live in one
country rather than another it was difficult to see. Anyhow, it was
lucky for the Empire that somebody had been wild enough to do it
sometimes! Occasionally she had tried to point this out both to the
sisters and the friends, but she had never convinced them that it
applied to her personally. Perhaps the folks among whom you were
brought up never did understand that things might apply to you just as
much as to the people outside.

No doubt the neighbours here had thought her “a bit wild,” too, and
discussed her disapprovingly over their tea-cups. The village was a
small one, little more than a hamlet set on the edge of the park,
and no member of the limited community would be likely to escape
its gossip. The thought of their shaken heads did not distress her,
however, for she had found them a kindly enough lot, on the whole. More
than one of them would have a good word for her, she knew, when the
message got round to them that she was leaving them for ever.

She had known some of them now for nearly forty years, and yet there
was not one among them she could really call a friend. They were
on good enough terms, of course,--such terms as other people would
undoubtedly call friendship; but in this, as in other things, she
had asked more of life than it had so far seen fit to give her. A
friend was a person you settled down with, side by side, and whose
life dovetailed into yours as board dovetailed into board. She had
never been able to have a friend like that because she had never been
able to settle down. Always she had lived like someone starting on a
journey, for whom at any moment the signal may be dropped.

It was not only that, in her first years of homesickness and revolt,
she had not cared to know the people in the place; or that, having
come from a village which was the hereditary enemy of this, she was
naturally disposed to dislike its inhabitants. There was jealousy
between villages as bitter and lasting as there ever was between
individuals. Nobody knew what started it, as a rule, or why it
persisted from generation to generation. But the moment the people
from these two places happened to get together, there was bound to
be trouble. Before you could turn round, they were at work belauding
themselves and belittling each other, whether it was about football
or the quality of the land or the amount of money in the Sunday
collection-bag.

Kirkby had been not only too gentle but too much in love to make
trouble of that kind, although she herself had made it unashamedly in
their quarrels. But that particular feeling of animosity had died in
her to some extent as time went on. The real bar to friendship had
been the fear of being tied down,--the necessity for keeping herself
free against the hour when she should go.

Well, she had not tied herself down, and for all those years of keeping
herself aloof from people she would find herself repaid. There would be
no tears on either side when the time came to say good-bye. She would
be able to slip away without bitterness or regret, without a single
pull at her heart, or a hand snatching at her own.

She would be sorry to part with some of them, all the same, even though
there would be no sharpness about the sorrow. Things came back to
her now which had long since dropped away, but which had touched her
nearly, at the time. Kindnesses, which, for the time being at least,
had seemed to make life brighter.... Gifts with the kind of thought
behind them that was better than any gift.... Jokes which had stayed
persistently in her mind, and made a sort of laughter there, even if it
could not reach her lips.

And other things, infinitely more poignant, which, impossible as it
seemed, she was beginning to forget.... That year when Ellen had
nearly died, and Mrs. Grisedale had come unasked to help her with the
nursing.... She could still see her face as she bent over the sick
child, could hear the note in her voice to which, as to an actual
arm, both she and Ellen had clung. She had done her best to repay the
kindness, although she had not maintained the intimacy, and she had
thought the matter cleared. But she knew now that, when the time came
for saying good-bye to Mrs. Grisedale, she would also have to say
good-bye to the bitter-sweet memory of which she was a part.

The things which you did for others were even worse in rising up
against you at farewell moments.... It was she herself to whom Mrs.
Ellwood had clung, during those first bad weeks after the poor thing
had lost her husband. Ignoring her own people, she had asked firmly
for Mattie, and Mattie had gone to her, as one always did go, in these
cases. They had drifted apart long since, but they would remember
when she said good-bye.... She felt absurdly that she was in some way
forsaking Mrs. Ellwood, even though for twenty years at least they had
been nothing more to each other than just ordinary good neighbours.

No doubt she would have other if lesser pangs to bear before she was
finished with her acquaintance. Of course, it was open to her to go
without saying good-bye at all, but she was not willing to slink off as
if ashamed of what she was doing. The pangs would be lost soon enough
in the happiness ahead of her. But she saw once again that, no matter
what you paid, there was always something to pay. No matter how you
kept yourself free of life, life would never leave you free....


IV

She passed with a sigh of relief to the thought of all that would have
to be done before she could get away. Her heart rose to the task as
she remembered it. Work,--and especially organising work,--had always
been a pleasure to her, and this would mean more than pleasure. In the
rush of planning and packing, of solving the many problems which would
undoubtedly arise, she would easily lose sight of the few burdens that
were weighing on her spirit.

At the moment, however, she had no intention of beginning to pull the
house to pieces, or even of starting upon such minor operations as
going through drawers and cupboards. There would be no sense in making
the place uncomfortable before she was obliged. The day would be full
enough, as it was, what with the ordinary routine and the letters which
had to be written; not to speak of the long hours of dreaming and
gloating to which she would certainly fall captive.

There would be plenty to do, of course, when the moment arrived, but it
would be done all right, and done like so much clockwork. In any case,
her house, always in order and always clean, was not the sort that had
almost to be built over again before it was fit to leave. It was not
overcrowded, either, with those things which accumulate as the years go
on, so unconsciously, sometimes, that they seem to have grown out of
the very stuff of life itself. Broadly speaking, she was almost as free
of unnecessary belongings as a seabird poised for flight on the edge of
a naked cliff.

Yet almost without knowing what she was doing she was setting her hand
to the lever which Fate had so tardily thrust into it. Even while she
was making the breakfast she was moving a few things here and there,
rejecting this and accepting that, and hunting for paper and string
with which to pack them. It was more than likely that they would have
to be unpacked again, later on, even if, in a future scheme of things,
they were not left behind altogether. But the excitement of putting the
work in train was impossible to resist. With each parcel she packed
her heart rose a little higher. Every change in the standing order of
things was an added assurance that that order was at an end.

The desire to alter it even further grew upon her when breakfast was
over and Kirkby had returned to his duties. A great restlessness
possessed her. It was almost as if the long strain of waiting for what
she wanted had sapped her power to believe in it when it came; as if
she feared that, unless she instantly took advantage of it, it might
still manage to evade her....

It was this fear that drove her to shifting the furniture, to dragging
out hidden treasures, and reducing the house generally to a chaotic
state worse even than in the yearly whirlpool of spring-cleaning.
Pushing and tugging, she performed feats of strength which she had
thought beyond her, even in youth, and which sent her gasping to a
chair for a few moments’ relaxation. She raced up and down stairs
fetching and carrying, and then did not know what to do with things,
and had to take them back again. The tide of life within her rose to
its fullest height in the necessity for proving to herself that at last
the longed-for miracle had been accomplished.

She was standing on a chair by the dresser, measuring the pot-rail
with a tape, and in constant danger of losing her balance in her
efforts, when the postman’s whistle came shrilling up to her as he
climbed towards the gardens. In the sudden start that it gave her she
lost count of what she was doing, and, getting down rather stiffly, she
went to the door to wait for him.

For how many years now, she said to herself, still flushed and panting,
had she listened, morning by morning, for Dick Nelson’s whistle! For
how many years now had it had power to thrill her, carrying with it, as
it so often did, the possibility of a Canadian letter! Even when there
was no chance of such a thing it could set her heart leaping and her
eyes shining. The single, climbing note of it had always been for her a
call straight from the Great Beyond.

So many mornings she had longed and listened, and now she could
almost count on her fingers the mornings that were left! She wondered
whether she would still find herself listening when she was over the
water,--going to the door, perhaps, to stand waiting and watching.
It would be some time, no doubt, before she would get used to doing
without those constant letters. She had lived for them so long that
the loss of them at first would be almost like the loss of meat and
drink.

She would not need them, of course, when she had the children,--so
much nearer and dearer than any letter could make them!--but she would
miss them, all the same. There were things people told you in letters
which they never told in the flesh; things they felt for you when they
wrote which they did not think of when you were by. And, once written,
you had them to turn to, even if they never said them again. The very
handwriting of those who loved you was in itself a loving speech....

The postman was getting nearer now, she could tell, and he had not
whistled again. He had known for many a year now that he did not need
to whistle more than once when it came to Mrs. Kirkby!... Like a wise
man, he was saving his breath for the last steep little pull that led
to the gardens. She could hear him wheezing and puffing, as it was, and
the shuffle of his step which betrayed the slow lifting of his feet.
Dick Nelson was getting old, she thought idly, and then remembered
with a start that he was the same age as herself. She knew that was
so because he had told her his age on his last birthday, and, looking
at his wrinkles and his bowed back, she had been startled, even then.
To-day, listening to his puffing and pausing as he climbed the gardens
path, she was more than startled. To-day, faced as she was with new
conditions which would make such trial of her strength, Dick’s loss of
vigour seemed an actual menace.

She tried to console herself with the thought that age was purely a
personal matter, and that people did not necessarily grow old at the
same rate because they were born on the same day. Dick, as she knew,
had been a weakling in his youth, whereas she had never known ache or
pain. A walking-post’s job was a trying one, too, especially in this
northern climate.... Nevertheless, she found it an effort to look at
him as he came in at the little gate.

He was still wheezing as he stopped in front of her, and, diving into
his bag, produced a flat packet, which she saw to be addressed to her
in Ellen’s writing. He fumbled a little with it before he handed it
over, and for the moment, curiously enough, she felt no impulse to take
it from him.

“Another letter from your folks, Missis,” Dick said, with the
familiarity of the old country postman, which pays for itself by a
genuine sympathy in either joy or sorrow. “It should ha’ been here
yesterday, but I took it to Mrs. Crosby’s, by mistake.”

Mattie looked rather vexed at that, both because she did not like
Mrs. Crosby, and because she was unaccountably troubled by the sudden
appearance of the packet.

“I should think it _was_ a mistake!” she answered him rather sharply,
though at the same time trying to tone down her reproof for the sake of
old acquaintance. “There’s not much likeness between Kirkby and Crosby
that I can see!”

“Nay, nor between the folks, neither!” Dick chuckled, setting her
flushing again, though now it was from flattered vanity instead of
anger. Mrs. Crosby was a thin little rat of a woman, with a red head
and a blue nose,--about as different a person from Mattie as you could
find in a day’s march.... Dick might be stupid and short of breath,
she reflected, softening, but he still knew a fine woman when he came
across one.

“It’s my eyes, d’ye see?” he was saying, when she attended to him
again, and emphasising his remarks with sharp flaps of the Canadian
packet. “I’ll have to be seeing about getting glasses. Anyhow, the
letter’s here all right, and none the worse for a bit of extra
travelling.... It’ll be a likeness, I reckon, from the look of it,” he
finished, handing it to her at last with an air of making a concession.

It probably _was_ a likeness, Mattie told him, holding it in her hands
with the same curious sense of reluctance in her fingers. She might
have told him more but for that remark of his about his eyes, reminding
her as it did of the increasing disadvantages of age. Dick had seen
many a snapshot of her family in his time, and had not thought twice
about giving his own opinion of them, either.... “My folks Over There
are always sending me something to look at.”

“They’ll not be sending much longer, if all tales is true!” Dick’s eyes
seemed keen enough now, as they lifted themselves, twinkling. “There’s
barely a house I call at but somebody asks me when Mrs. Kirkby’s off to
Canada!”

Mattie laughed in return, but with a slight nervousness that surprised
her. She had only to mention the “notice,” and the whole place would
be agog, making it, with every reference to the subject, more certain
and more “real.” But something, which she took to be loyalty to Kirkby,
held her back from speaking. “Ay, well, and what d’you say to that?”
she compromised, by way of answer.

Dick shifted his bag and shuffled his feet, finally clearing his throat
like one preparing for an oration.

“Well, if you want to know, ten year ago I said you’d be off as sharp
as a dog to its kennel. Five year ago, I said--‘Ay, well, less likely
things has happened.’ But to-day, when they ax me, I say I wouldn’t
believe it even if I was to see it.”

The colour rose higher yet in Mattie’s face, but the thing that lay
close in her heart was too warm for a show of temper.

“Whatever makes you say that?” she queried innocently.

For the first time Dick showed signs of discomfort, turning about a
little, and looking away from her. “Nay, it’s just that you’re not so
young, these days,” he returned at last, bravely. “Same age as myself,
I’ve heard my old mother say, and you’d not catch _me_ crossing t’
ocean if you give me Canada!”

“Folks are as young as they feel,” Mattie said, trying to repress the
pang which had seized her when he mentioned the ocean. “The sea’s
nothing to me! As for age and such-like, there’s folks go abroad when
they’re a deal older than us. What, I remember Mrs. Dugdale going off
to New Zealand when she was nigh on ninety!”

“Ay, but they go sudden-like,” Dick said, wrinkling his brow as if to
help the working of his brain. “They don’t sit planning a sight o’
years. Things is sudden-like when they’re meant.”

“Things always seem sudden when they come,” Mattie retorted briskly.
“Planning makes no difference. Look how folks know they’re going to die
from the very minute they’re born, and yet they’re mighty surprised
about it when it happens!”

“Folks don’t plan to die.... Leastways, them as does seldom brings it
off. And that brings me back like to what I was trying to say. If you
stop over long on the edge of a jump you take root afore you think.”

“I shan’t have much root to bother about if I go to Canada!” Mattie
laughed. “Saving your presence, Mr. Nelson, there’s precious little I’d
mind leaving behind.”

The old postman shook his head.

“You strike roots afore you know. Everything as you do each day is a
root o’ some sort. Even folks as has been in prison knows what it is to
strike roots.”

The privet hedge came into Mattie’s mind, together with that past look
on Mrs. Grisedale’s face, and the clinging touch of Mrs. Ellwood’s
hand.... But she laughed again.

“They’re roots as is easy pulled up, I should say!” she said
cheerfully. “Folks in prison, I mean.... As for me, I’ve always been on
the go, so to speak. I’ve never settled down.”

“You can’t _not_ settle!” Dick said suddenly, in a loud voice that was
almost threatening. “Don’t you make any mistake, Mrs. Kirkby. Life
settles you. Time settles you. You can’t _not_ settle!”

The annoyance she had been keeping in check rose at that to a strong
head, but it was succeeded almost at once by a feeling of pity. Dick
looked so old, standing there, weighed down by his heavy bag, and with
the fine spring sunlight showing up his wrinkles. He was jealous, she
said to herself, because he felt old, and because, perhaps, he, too,
had wanted to go to Canada. She could have laughed now at the thought
that they were the same age. In the pride of her new joy she felt like
a girl beside him,--a girl with her strength to draw at, and the whole
wide world before her.

“Ay, well, I don’t see as we need quarrel about it,” she said amiably.
“Likely what you say’s right most of the time, if it isn’t always.
Anyway, Canada or no Canada, it’s a bonny morning!”

But Dick was already shambling away towards the office, wheezing as he
went, and grumbling to himself as an old dog grumbles when he meets a
young one. She smiled as she saw him stumble over a stone, and stop in
a rage to kick it from him. Thrusting the letters in at the office with
a shaky hand, he swung about crossly and disappeared round a corner of
the building.


V

With the smile still on her lips, Mattie turned herself round and
went back into the kitchen. Dick was a grumpy old thing, she thought
cheerfully, and, like many other old people, firmly convinced that his
dismal view of life was the only possible one. But she could not help
feeling sorry that he had gone away in a rage. On a day that should
have been joy from dawn to set, she did not like to think that she had
had even the shadow of a dispute with such an old acquaintance.

She would miss Dick’s constant visits when she had got to the other
side, his grumpiness and his whistle, and his rough, outspoken
comments. It would be a bit of a nuisance, too, to have to get used to
dealing with new tradespeople. Shopfolk took a lot of getting to know,
wherever you happened to be, but she had long since got the better of
hers. The grocer would never dream, nowadays, of sending her any but
the right bacon, the right sugar, the right tea. As for the butcher,
he had long ago given up trying to palm off on her any piece of meat
except the one that she happened to ask for. It was a triumph to have
got as far as that with a butcher, as anybody could tell you, and one
that could hardly be achieved twice within the limits of a lifetime.
She had a distinct feeling of dismay when she thought of having to
start again with a fresh butcher.

Ellen’s packet was still in her hand, and she stood looking down at
it without attempting to open it. For the first time in her life she
had not been altogether pleased to see Ellen’s handwriting, and she
could not understand it. At sight of it she had had a sensation of
interference affecting her almost to physical recoil. She had been
so near to her children during the night that a message arriving so
soon afterwards seemed bound to break the spell. Nor was the position
bettered by the fact that the packet should have reached her the day
before. There was something casual yet calculated about its coming this
morning which seemed to jar the serene procession of ordained events.
Ellen ought to have known, she found herself saying senselessly, that
after last night there was no need to keep sending packets any more.

It was a photograph that she held, she felt sure of that, and one for
which she had long been waiting. Among the many snapshots arriving year
by year there had never been one of Ellen, arm in arm with a husband,
or half hidden behind a baby. She had never “taken” well, even in her
youth, and, once over the water, had firmly refused to be “taken”
at all. Always she had resisted her mother’s demands in that light,
laughing way of hers which seemed to bring her so closely to you. No
photograph, so Mattie had often felt, could possibly seem more real
than the Ellen who came to you with her letters.

She had continued to ask for one, nevertheless, and at long last had
come the news that it would shortly be forthcoming. Ellen had written
an amusing account of her visit to the photographer’s and of her
sufferings during the proceedings. The result, however, it seemed, had
been an unexpected success, and should presently be forwarded to her
mother. Mattie had watched for that precious packet as a hen waits and
watches for a hatching chicken. She could not have been more thrilled,
she sometimes thought, if it had been Ellen herself who was coming
through the post!

That excitement had paled now beside the vividness of the dream, as
well as the greater interest of the new position. She looked at the
parcel with indifference, almost with dislike ... certainly with
impatience, as at a thing come at the wrong time. She would open it
later on, she said to herself, as she laid it down, and returned with a
lightened heart to her measuring of the dresser.

Passing from that to other even more entrancing speculations, she
was soon wrapped again in the atmosphere which Dick and the packet
between them had temporarily dispelled. She forgot them both as she
toiled and planned, stopping every now and then to remember Kirkby’s
dinner. Strung up though she was, and therefore sensitive to the least
touch of trouble, she was still too high on the wave of success to be
disheartened for long together.

Even when she had begun her absurd game with the furniture, that
childish but charming pretence in the midst of which Machell had come
upon her, she had not remembered the photograph. Moving again in the
dream, she was able to turn even blocks of wood into the dear ones who
had peopled it, so that they could scarcely have been more real to her
if they had been present in the flesh. The little stool in her arms had
held the warmth of a living child; the grandfather’s clock had been
more surely Ellen than the packet she had put away.

The sight of Machell smiling in at the door had no power to disillusion
her. Machell did not annoy her, as Dick had done, by over-cocksure
assertions that it was now too late to change. On the contrary, he
was full of encouragement and congratulation, and anxious to know her
plans. You would almost have thought, she said to herself, chuckling,
that he was as glad of the move to Canada as she was herself!

Her spirits mounted still further as the sun mounted, and the day grew
in clarity and beauty. Like all country-bred folk, she was susceptible
to the influence of the weather, even when she was not consciously
aware of it. Even when she was most withdrawn in mind from the
atmosphere around her, she was still swayed by its many changes. The
coming-out of the sun was a trumpet-call to her vitality, even if the
note that it sounded was one of clamorous rebellion. A grey day had the
power to chill her passion almost to fainting, even if neither it nor
any other-coloured day was able to slay it altogether.

In her state of heightened sensibility she could not have failed to
notice the conditions about her, but there was a good deal more to it
than that. The miraculous way in which the barriers between herself
and the place seemed to have broken down continued to surprise her.
Now, when she looked out, she had a distinct sensation of pleasure, as
well as that warmth of recognition which comes from loved association.
It seemed impossible to her now that she could ever have regarded her
home with horror and dislike. The garden walls and the paths gave her
a sense of satisfaction which seemed to have the satisfaction of many
years behind it. The tree-tops against the sky produced a thrill of joy
suggesting a long chain of similarly sweet moments.

It was the same with the house, which she had so long thought of as
a prison, and which had suddenly become a place of pleasantness and
peace. For the first time in forty years she realised it as peculiarly
and joyfully her own. She felt an impulse to sing as she saw the
sunlight lying across the kitchen floor. Up in her bedroom the flowered
wallpaper was printed with memories, like a book.

She did not know whether to be glad or sorry about the change, but it
continued to amaze her. She tested it, as she had tested her sudden
view of the privet hedge, and found that it stood it, as the privet
hedge had stood it. Room after room she found rich and filled with
the actual makings of her life. Each time that she went to window or
house-door, she saw the view before her shine and smile.

It was while she was standing at the door during one of these pauses
for mingled puzzle and rest that she saw Mrs. Machell coming across
the gardens. Mrs. Machell was a plump little woman, full of bustle
and talk, but there was a lilt about her to-day which she had never
hitherto noticed. Also she looked from side to side of her as she came,
as if the place interested her more than usual. The spring must have
got into Mrs. Machell’s blood, Mattie thought, adding the head-turning
and the lilt to the rest of her new puzzle.

It was some time, however, before the visitor actually reached the
house. Coming upon Len at work among the raspberry canes, she stopped
to talk to him, and they stood laughing and chatting together for
several minutes. Mattie frowned a little as she watched them, seeing
the fine spring day going and Kirkby’s best workman idling. But she was
still too happy to be annoyed by a thing which, after all, was hardly
within her province, and she had nothing but smiles for Len’s wife when
she finally approached her.

“It was good of you to come,” she began blithely, as she led the way
into the kitchen. “I didn’t look for you so soon. There’s not that much
doing, yet awhile, of course, but I’m fair aching for someone to talk
to!”

Mrs. Machell laughed as she looked about her at the chaotic state of
things which had so disgusted Kirkby. She was a fine, bright little
thing, Mattie thought, and Joe might have done worse than marry her.
Her cheeks were still fresh, and the gold of her hair shone as she took
off her hat in a business-like manner. She was the same age as Joe,
too, which meant a couple of years older than Ellen.... Mattie joined
in the laugh with the heartiness of the excellent housewife who for
once in a lifetime is found wanting.

“Ay, it looks like it, I’m sure,” she agreed, in reply to Mrs.
Machell’s remark that at all events there seemed plenty to be going on
with. “I’ll be right grateful if you’ll help me to put things straight.
Kirkby was that sick about ’em at dinner, it fair went to your heart
to see him! A man minds a house being pulled about a deal more than a
woman.”

“They do that!” Dolly Machell nodded wisely. “They make as much noise
about it as a dog being skifted from its kennel. I daren’t so much as
move a chair in our spot but Len’s as uneasy as an earthquake!”

Mattie felt a prick in her pride that an under-gardener should presume
to indulge in the same idiosyncrasies as distinguished Kirkby, but she
covered it hastily. “Ay, well, men must be men,” she returned kindly,
generously admitting Len into at least that one category.

“I’d a feeling I must be doing something right off,” she went on,
conscious that the general upset needed some explanation. “Of course,
I know it’s over early yet to be arranging about the sale, but it won’t
be trouble wasted. I know a deal better where I am than when I started
in at things, this morning.”

Mrs. Machell stole a glance at her in the chair into which she had sunk
after taking her visitor into the kitchen. Mattie was hardly conscious
that she had sat down, or that she was beginning to feel the effects of
the work and excitement of the morning. But to Mrs. Machell weariness
was written plain in the lines of her flushed face and the droop of her
broad shoulders. Loose strands of her hair were straying wildly across
her forehead. Her hands, resting heavily in her lap, looked older than
the rest of her.

“Then you’re really thinking of leaving, Mrs. Kirkby?” Dolly asked,
with a casualness assumed to hide an inward tremor. “Len said it was as
certain as rent-day, but I said I didn’t believe it.”

There came over Mattie the same reluctance to commit herself to a
definite statement as she had felt when Dick’s hinting had put a
similar question. Indeed, now that she came to think of it, she had not
been definite even with Len. He had assumed certain things, that was
all, and she had allowed him to assume them. It was only to herself and
to Kirkby that she had so far put into straight words the great fact of
their going.

“Well, it looks like it, I’ll give you that!” she answered
good-temperedly, though with a touch of discomfort. “I’ll admit it
looks like it.... But I don’t know that it does to go shouting things
out over soon. There’s some think you’ll likely spoil your luck that
way if you’re not careful.”

Dolly looked a little disconcerted for a moment, and then laughed
brightly.

“Ay, well, we’ll pretend it’s true, shall we?” she said cheerfully.
“Just make a game of it? _That_ can’t spoil your luck! We’ll pretend
you’re off to Canada, though you’re stopping on just as usual.”

“That’s it!” Mattie said, in a tone of obvious relief. “We’ll just
pretend.... Well, then, my lass, if you want to know, we’re thinking of
getting away by nigh on the first boat that can take us.”

“Eh, now, if that isn’t news!” Dolly played up promptly, for all the
world as if she had never heard a suggestion of such a thing until
that moment. Her face glowed as she spoke, and a faint astonishment
took Mattie, as it had taken her with Len, that anybody else should
care so much about the project....

“But you can’t get away that soon, can you?” the younger woman went on.
“There’s your notice to give in, and folks to tell on the other side.
You’ll be having a sale, you said; there’ll be that to settle. And
likely there’ll be a thing or two you’ll be wanting for the journey.”

Mattie felt a fresh twinge of surprise at this smart summary of
her private business, together with a twinge of uneasiness as she
remembered the Hall letter. Kirkby must be reminded about it, she
thought, the moment he came in.... But she forgot it again instantly as
she began a recital of her plans, her hot face growing hotter, and her
hands moving restlessly. The future became more and more real to her
as she talked, just as it had been made more real by the mere moving
of the furniture. She found herself telling Dolly not only about the
measuring and the packing, but about the conditions and people awaiting
her over the water. She was not always quite certain whether what she
was relating existed in point of fact or only in last night’s dream,
but it did not matter. Such discrepancies as there might be counted for
nothing in the main immensity of her statement.

Dolly made the most satisfying listener that anybody could desire, her
own hands twitching and her own eyes shining. “It’s like a fairy-story,
I’m sure!” she declared, when at last the other, short of further facts
for the time being, was beginning to repeat herself. “I’ve heard a deal
about Canada, one way and another. My cousin, Jessie Bowness married,
this last year, and went out to the same part as your Ellen.”

“Oh, ay?” Mattie replied indifferently, getting somewhat heavily to
her feet. “Help me shove this cupboard back again where it come from,
there’s a good lass.”

“She lives near Ellen an’ all,” Dolly went on, setting her sturdy
little shoulder to the cupboard. “She’s moved there just lately. She
doesn’t see much of her, she says, as they’re both so throng, but she
sends me news of her every now and then.”

Mattie said, “Oh, ay?” again, as some answer seemed to be needed, but
every letter of the little phrase bristled defensively. She had the
same impression of interference as at the sight of Ellen’s packet, the
same sensitive fear of being twisted from her path.... “Lend me a hand
with this table now,” she continued quickly, hoping that Dolly’s cousin
Jessie might drop out of the conversation.

But Dolly had no intention of parting with such an asset until she had
added her utmost to the interest of the occasion. She was too much
absorbed by her own prospects to be greatly aware of another person’s
reactions, as well as too highly excited to refrain from talking.
Moreover, she thought in all innocence that Mrs. Kirkby would be only
too glad to listen to anything that she could tell her about Canada.
Her cousin Jessie, therefore, was so much present with them during the
afternoon, that it seemed to Mattie sometimes she had only to turn
herself about in order to see her.

“Jessie isn’t best suited with Canada,” Dolly said, when the table had
been restored to its place, and the articles which usually reposed upon
it had returned to grace it. “She says it’s so different.”

“Different to what?” Mattie enquired, affecting obtuseness from a
growing sense of annoyance. “I don’t rightly follow.”

“Different to England, she means, and the things she’s been used to,
over here. She says there’s times she feels she might as well be in the
moon, it’s all so strange.”

“Well, and why shouldn’t it be?” Mattie returned, slapping down a book
with unnecessary vehemence, and then discovering it to be Kirkby’s
mother’s Bible. “It’s like to be different, isn’t it, seeing it started
a deal later?”

“Ay, I told her that when she was complaining about folks being
scattered about like except when you got to the big cities. But Jessie
was always the sort that liked a crowd, even if it meant sitting on
other folks’ knees or sleeping three in a bed.... But it isn’t only
that,” she continued, when she and Mattie between them had removed the
packing-case from the larder. “There’s the climate as well. She says
it’s that cold in the winter you could get yourself frozen stiff before
you’d know anything about it.”

“I reckon _I’d_ know all right, anyhow,” Mattie retorted grimly,
although not without an inward qualm. Her particular brand of
rheumatism, acquired by a lifetime spent in damp gardens, was
peculiarly if incongruously susceptible to frost. “Ay, and if I was
getting melted, either, come to that!”

“Then there’s the houses,” Dolly said, her plump hands busy all the
time clearing and straightening. “You should just hear her about
the houses! Them sort, you know, made of bits of wood, as you build
yourself? Hen-hulls, Jessie says they are,--hen-hulls and nothing else!”

The elder woman felt a cold wrath take possession of her as she heard
the precious house of her dream described in this derogatory manner. If
Dolly’s cousin Jessie had indeed been present at that moment, it would
doubtless have gone hard with her. As she was not, Mattie was forced to
content herself with glaring across the kitchen at Dolly, who, however,
was busy putting a drawer in the dresser to rights, and could not see
her.

“No place to swing a cat, Jessie says, and that ugly an’ all! She says
she’d give the eyes out of her head for a nice bit of mortared stone.
‘Something like that grand cottage of Mrs. Kirkby’s,’ she says, ‘up at
the gardens at the Hall.’ I once brought her up here on a message or
something, if you remember, and she was that taken with this spot there
was no holding her.”

Mattie did not remember, as it happened, and was, at that moment, as
far as it was possible to be from wishing to remember. Her exasperation
at the onslaughts of Dolly’s cousin Jessie was only to be measured by
her growing sense of helplessness in face of them. She had, however,
just discovered something to say that might possibly put her out of
court for good and all, when Dolly, passing to another drawer, flowed
steadily onward.

“As for the folks out there, she hasn’t a good word to say for them,
home or foreign! A lot of bounders, she says,--barring always your
folks, you’ll understand, Mrs. Kirkby. The shop-folk, Jessie says, are
that impudent she can bare bring herself to speak to them. Talk to you
like as if they’d known you all your life, and call you ‘my dear’ as
soon as look at you!”

“I’d like to hear anybody calling me ‘my dear’ before I had asked
’em for it!” Mattie said furiously, fingering a tea-cup with such
fierceness that she broke the handle. The retainers connected with a
big house have always a curious sense of being a species apart, and in
spite of her rebellion she was not immune from it.

“Likely Jessie did ask for it,” Dolly said soothingly, though without
turning to look at her. “I always thought her a bit free.... But the
things she says about the folks as belong are nothing to what she
says about the folks out from England. They fair ruin the place, she
says--barring always your belongings, Mrs. Kirkby, as I said before.
They’re that stuck up, she says, each of ’em trying to best the rest,
that you’d fair bust out laughing if you didn’t feel that mad at ’em. I
reckon Jessie’s done her bit of sticking up as well, and it didn’t come
off, and that’s what makes her so wild.”

“I don’t know why any of them should be stuck up, I’m sure,” Mattie
burst out before she had time to think,--“folks as didn’t make good
over here, and thought another country’d likely do the job!”

“Why, that’s what Jessie says, Mrs. Kirkby!” Dolly said, looking at
her now, and with definite surprise. “Leaving their country for their
country’s good, is how _she_ puts it. But I didn’t look to hear you
saying the same, and with your folks doing so well an’ all!

“Some on ’em,” she continued, before Mattie could find breath to speak
again, “make out they were that swell at home you’d likely think as
they’d have brought their coronets with them! There’s some Madisons,
she says, from over Witham way, as is that full of themselves they can
hardly walk. They tell folks they had a big farm over here, with a
pedigree herd of the best; whereas everybody knows they had nothing but
a milk-round as was more like a water-round, by a deal!”

But Mattie had had more than she could bear for the time being of
Jessie’s depressing reflections. A fresh picture of Canada was forming
before her eyes, blotting out the fine-hued image which she had made
for her own enchantment. Already its glamour was blurred beneath
Jessie’s touch, as frost-traceries are blurred by the rub of a rough
finger. She was appalled, too, by her sudden, contemptuous speech, with
its astonishing infidelity to her past beliefs. She had always thought
of the Canadian adventurers by the brave title of pioneers, and would
have been proud to have made one of their gallant company. It seemed
the last treachery of all that she should have nursed that subtle
contempt, so that in a moment of idle annoyance it might set a sneer
upon her lips.

With a brusque movement she put an end both to Mrs. Machell’s monologue
and to her final dealings with the dresser.

“Let’s get at t’ parlour now, if you don’t mind,” she said, bustling
before her into the dismantled room. She was now just as anxious to get
the house put back to rights as she had wanted, earlier on, to pull it
all to pieces. Subconsciously she was thinking that, when the place was
tidy again, the trouble that was growing in her mind might possibly
smooth out, too....

The two women had a pleasant hour together arranging the little-used
furniture, over which they spent more time than was necessary out of
sheer enjoyment. Mattie found Mrs. Machell an entranced auditor as she
dwelt upon its merits, pointing out its beauty of shape or gloss or
the elegance of its handles. Pictures and vases had their histories
related at full length, succeeded by records of clocks and epics
of antimacassars. Dolly fingered and valued, praised and exclaimed,
wondering to herself all the time how many of the precious objects
would come her way at the sale.

“I’ll have a bad time, I doubt, before I’ve settled what we’re to
take!” Mattie laughed, handling her treasures more and more fondly
under Dolly’s appreciation. “I thought I’d hardened my heart to part
with some of them, this morning, but now that I’m looking at ’em again,
I’m not so sure! There’s no sense, though, in taking a chair-leg more
than we’re obliged. It’ll cost enough, as it is. I doubt, anyhow, I’ll
have to make up my mind to leave pictures and knick-knacks behind.”

Dolly’s heart leaped as she looked at a pair of bright pink vases,
trimmed with an excellent imitation of sugar icing, seeing them already
as her very own.

“Photo-frames and such-like won’t pay for the taking, either,” Mattie
was saying hesitatingly, “though wild horses ’emselves wouldn’t make
me part with the photos. I’ve a regular stack of ’em as They’ve sent
me, year in and year out, especially of the children. Some folks’d say
it was nonsense taking photos along when you’re going to see the folks
themselves, but I’ve grown that used to them I’ve got to have them.”

She remembered now that she had not yet spent the hour with the
grandchildren which she had promised herself earlier, and proceeded
to take it, setting them forth to Dolly with that sense of proud
showmanship which the first generation almost invariably seems to feel
towards the third. It was impossible to believe, listening to her vivid
description of its looks and ways, that she had never yet set eyes upon
a single member of it. Smiling and happy, she had found for herself
again that first ecstasy which she had felt upon awakening from her
dream. Canada was again what she had thought it to be, as she laughed
and talked, wearing always that inward look of those who ponder upon
hidden treasure.

“Luke’s youngest, they say, is as like me as a couple of peas, and
Joe’s second takes after Kirkby. He’s a bit darker, perhaps, and he’s
brown eyes instead of blue, but there’s no mistaking where he comes
from, either in looks or manners. Little Eric, they call him, after
his mother’s father, though I don’t know why they need go out of the
family when there’s so many good names shouting. I’m right set upon
little Eric.... Maggie’s May frames something grand at the piano, and
Ellen’s Sally shapes to have a voice.... Luke’s eldest’s getting on for
twelve, and can manage a motor-mower ... leastways, they say he can,
though I doubt they’re putting it on.”

“Jessie can’t abide Canadian children,” Dolly cut in, introducing that
unpleasant person for the first time into the parlour. “Real nasty
about ’em, she is. She couldn’t abide English children, either, if it
comes to that, judging from what parents and such-like used to say
about her when she taught school. But Canadian children, she says,
are that uppish and wild there’s no doing anything with them. Like
savages, you’d think they were, if you swallowed everything you heard
from Jessie. Fine children to look at, she says, and healthy and all
that; but that noisy and full of beans they fair make an English person
tired.”

Mattie had a horrid vision of a narrow and crowded house, with Kirkby
and herself hemmed in by leaping, shouting children. She herself had
once rather rejoiced in noise, though Kirkby had always hated it; but
she was not so sure now that, after all these years of silence, she
would not hate it, too. Luke had two other boys besides young Joe of
the motor-mower, as well as a little girl just over a year old. He
was fond of company, too, and was never so happy as when extending
hospitality. Also he had that piano, she remembered with dismay, upon
which both relatives and friends came eagerly to practise....

The homes of the younger children had nothing better to offer, for
they, too, had growing families, and in even smaller houses. It was
true that she and Kirkby would have their own home before so long, but
she could not think of it now with her early happy passion. It seemed
vulnerable to her now, and no longer a haven of contentment. For the
first time in her life she saw the good stone walls of her English
cottage as a frame for privacy and peace.

“Jessie says Canadian children _aren’t_ children as we know ’em,” Dolly
was saying blandly. “She says they grow up that fast it’s hard to
remember they’ve ever even been babies. They’re grown folks, she says,
before you can hardly turn round, same as that fine lad of Luke’s you
said could manage a motor. I reckon you’ll be surprised, Mrs. Kirkby,
by the time you get there, to find how they’ve all come on.”

Mattie turned to the door with the same sharp movement with which she
had endeavoured to rid herself of Jessie in the kitchen. That last
stroke of hers, dealt through Dolly’s innocent tongue, had gone a great
deal nearer home than she cared to realise. Like most grandmothers, she
had thought of the children as children only, hardly believing that
in the future they would be grown-up people. And especially she had
thought of little Eric as remaining always little Eric.... Yet already,
as she remembered, a year had passed since they had sent her his last
picture. By the time she got out to him, she reflected grimly, he, too,
might have risen to the dignity of the motor-mower!

“Time we were having tea,” she said firmly, waving Dolly before her
through the door. “You’ll be wanting it, I’m sure. As for me, I’m that
worn out with all that shoving and siding, I could do with a dozen
teas instead of one!”

Back in the kitchen, however, she was diverted by still another matter,
which kept the tea waiting a little longer. Going to a cupboard in the
wall, she opened the door and stood looking at its contents.

“I can’t make up my mind what to do about my jam,” she said, as Dolly
joined her. “It fair goes to my heart to leave it. Yet it seems silly,
doesn’t it, to go hugging jam-pots and such-like across the ocean? I
doubt it’ll have to be put in the sale.”

“Folks’ll be fighting like cats for it, if it is!” Dolly laughed,
peering admiringly round her shoulder. Even at this time of the year
the shelves were still half-filled with rows of glistening jars,
making, with their white caps topping their coloured bodies, a smart
and polished regiment. “It’s a long while back since I first heard tell
there was nothing to beat your jam.”

Mattie looked pleased, and her voice lost the rather dull tone which
had suddenly come into it since her late depression in the parlour.

“Well, I’ve always prided myself on getting it just so,” she said,
eyeing the glories of the cupboard proudly. “It’s been my hobby, as you
might say. Getting the best of everything, that’s the secret,--the best
fruit and the best sugar, and making sure of the boiling. Not but what
like enough there’s a knack to it as well, same as there is for making
butter and setting hens.”

She ran her hand fondly over the white paper carpet above which the
jams glowed like so many jewels, the raspberries looking like pressed
garnets against the prison of their glass, and the red currant and
apple jellies gleaming like ruby and yellow topaz.

“There’s plenty to go at yet, as you can see, even though we’re well
past the turn of the year. I always make a fairish amount, in case we
get a bad year after a good one. ’Tisn’t as if my jam wouldn’t keep; in
a good season, I reckon, it’d keep till the Day of Judgment!... This
shelf’s near all rasps, and that’s apricot and a bit of marrow. There’s
some blackberry jelly behind, and a taste of wineberry. We haven’t a
deal of gooseberry and rhubarb, but there’s a lot of plum. That pot or
two of black currant is just for when Kirkby gets a cough; and here’s
where I keep my Best Strawberry.”

The red had come into Dolly’s face as she looked, gloating over the
housewife’s riches with honest pleasure. Catching her breath a little
as Mattie stopped, she broke into quick speech.

“Likely you’ll know, Mrs. Kirkby, what we’re hoping’ll come to Len? Mr.
Kirkby was right kind when he spoke about it, this morning. It’s early
days to be talking, perhaps, but I thought you wouldn’t mind....”

Mattie took her hand away from the shining pot which she was stroking
as a man strokes the glossy coat of a horse, and looked round slowly.
“Talking about what?” she enquired, looking at the colour in Dolly’s
face, and then away again.

“About Len applying for head place, if Mr. Kirkby gives up,” Dolly
said, growing more and more nervous with every second. “I shouldn’t
have said anything, perhaps, but I thought you’d be sure to know.”

For quite a long time Mattie was silent from sheer surprise, not so
much at Dolly’s announcement as at her own reception of it. No more
than to Kirkby had it occurred to her to speculate as to his probable
successor, but if ever she had arrived at speculation, she would have
been certain that it would not trouble her. Yet here she was filled
with anger and scorn, not only on Kirkby’s account, but actually on
her own! Len’s reaching out for the gardens which she had always hated
should have been nothing to her, by rights; yet the very suggestion had
set her seething with injured pride and pain.

“Nay, I’ve heard nothing about it, not I,” she managed to get out
presently, trying to keep out of her voice her conviction that Len was
an impudent monkey and a robber. “But he’ll be as likely as anybody, I
should say, if it comes to choosing.”

Dolly’s face glowed at this grudging praise, and she went forward with
fresh confidence.

“That’s right good of you, Mrs. Kirkby, seeing it’s your own business
we’re after. I shouldn’t have mentioned it but for the jam. But I’d be
glad, if you’re selling, to take some of it over before the sale----”

She stopped as Mattie put out her arms again towards the shelves in
a gesture which she could not interpret, but which was, as a matter
of fact, a gesture of protection. Now it was Dolly as well as Len who
seemed a thief, stretching out greedy hands to her own most precious
belongings. She saw her moving about her home, sitting in her chairs,
walking in the cool of the evening in her sacred garden. Her heart rose
against her in a rage of distress which almost threatened to choke her.
At that moment she could have driven the other woman from the house
with blows....

With agitated movements she began to push the jars as far back on their
shelves as they would go, thrusting them out of sight and danger like
a hen protecting her chickens. She closed the door with a bang, and
snapped the lock with a click; and then, normal again with the shutting
away of the threatened treasure, turned to Dolly, smiling.

“Ay, well, we’ll talk about that later, when we’ve got things settled.
Now I’m wanting my tea. Fill kettle and boil it, will you, while I set
the cloth?... We’re taking this over seriously,” she added, with a
laugh, “and forgetting it’s just pretence!”

Dolly laughed, too, not only in polite recognition of the assumption
with which they had started out, but because she felt relieved. There
had been a strong feeling of tension in the air as they stood before
the cupboard, and she was glad to get away from it. For the first time
it crossed her kindly, unthinking little mind that things might have
been better conducted, that afternoon....

But she was soon at her ease again when they were seated at their meal,
pleasantly conscious, as they kept telling each other, laughing, how
well they had earned it. Her confidence returned, which had so nearly
been shattered by the episode of the jam, and she let herself babble
freely. Mattie found herself listening with interest to local gossip,
and giving fervent attention to the local scandals. Hitherto she had
never cared a rap what happened in the hamlet, and could only conclude
that this was one of the many changes which had come upon her to-day.

She had sworn to herself that she would not mention Canada again,
but before they were half-way through the meal she had broken her
intention. By the time she had poured the second cups of tea she was
gone abroad, taking an interested Dolly with her. Seated at a cottage
tea-table, they were yet gold-seekers and explorers, game-hunters in
the Rockies, and adventurers shooting the rapids. Their lungs were
braced by the air of the Strong Country, and its distances lightened
their eyes. The wind that blows over the prairies filled and freshened
the little room.

“I’d a dream about it, last night,” Mattie said presently, reverting to
that solemn and lovely subject a little shyly. “I was There, just as
I’m here now, and with none of that nasty crossing. I saw the places
and the folks and the insides of the houses.... And everything was as
nice as could be, in spite of your cousin Jessie!”

With her own lips she had invoked the demon of the situation, and
instantly it was at grips with her. Dolly, dashed by the sense of
insecurity which had alarmed her before tea, had kept a guard on her
tongue as soon as Canada was mentioned. But now Mattie, of her own
accord, had raised that guard, and she rushed in briskly.

“Jessie wouldn’t know a nice spot if it up and told her about it,” she
said gaily. “She was always a wet blanket.... But they’ll get the
surprise of their lives when they hear you’re coming, Mrs. Kirkby.
Jessie says they’ve all of ’em given up hopes of it long ago.”

A sudden quiet seemed to fall and envelop Mattie, a quiet which spread
and spread and travelled over the kitchen. After a long moment--“Who
told her they’d given up hope?” she enquired, stilly.

“Ellen told her herself,” Mrs. Machell replied, uneasily conscious that
the tension was returning. “‘Father’ll be getting past it, is what she
says, and I reckon so will Mother.’ She’s a grand plan now for coming
over to you instead. She’s just breaking her heart, Jessie says, to get
back again over here.... She talks of bringing little Sally with her
when she comes, and leaving her if you want her. She’ll be a help to
you, she says, now you’re beginning to get on; and Sally’s as keen as
mustard to come and live with Granny.”

She stopped then, startled by the loudness of her voice in the
growing stillness, which seemed at the same time both to accentuate
it and rebuke it. Looking across at her hostess, she felt almost
panic-stricken at the change which had come upon her. It was
impossible, she said to herself, that those few chattered words should
so greatly have disturbed her. As if it mattered what Jessie said,
or what she chose to repeat! Yet Mattie was sunk in her chair as if
the vigour which usually sustained her had suddenly departed from
her. Exhaustion had drained the blood from her face, and without its
customary bright colour it looked somehow smaller. And wrapping her
round about was that curious curtain of quiet; a shroud, as it were,
automatically produced for something that had ceased to be....

Glancing at the clock, Dolly stood up sharply, setting the china
ringing.

“I’ll have to be going, Mrs. Kirkby,” she said as quietly as she could,
yet shrinking again from her voice as it smote upon the silence.
“Len’ll be wanting his tea. I’ll just have time to lend you a hand with
the washing-up, and then I must be off.”

She had still another moment of panic before Mattie stirred, afterwards
getting to her feet in a series of rather helpless movements. Dolly
watched her with troubled eyes, wondering always how far she was
responsible for the sudden situation. Even now that Mattie was standing
up and moving about, she felt ill at ease with her. The absurd thought
flashed through her mind that the Mrs. Kirkby who had got up was not
the same Mrs. Kirkby who had sat down!...

Between them, they got the washing-up put through in record time, which
yet seemed unnaturally long because of the heavy silence in which
they did it. Mattie’s work was as efficient as ever, but it seemed to
have lost its spring. Her hands, moving with dull sureness among the
cups and saucers, looked strangely old and weak. Dolly was dull, too,
her brain groping its way back over the talk of the afternoon, and
anathematising both her own foolishness and the grumblings of Cousin
Jessie. It was with a sense of acute relief that at last she put on her
hat and hurried to the door.

“Well, I’ll be saying good day to you, Mrs. Kirkby,” she announced
hastily to the still only half-recognisable figure of Mattie which had
followed her. “It’s been real pleasant to have a chat. If you want a
bit of help again when it really comes to packing, you’ve only to let
me know.”

Mattie spoke to her then, though in an altered tone which corresponded
with her altered presence. With an obvious effort she made her little
speech of thanks,--Dolly moving restlessly the while,--and then bade
her wait a moment. Going back into the kitchen, she reappeared with a
pot of her Best Strawberry.

“Nay, I want you to take it,” she insisted, firmly if dully, as Mrs.
Machell protested. “You’ve been right kind. I’ll give you them pink
vases, if you’ll have ’em, before the sale, but anyhow I’d like you to
have a taste of my good strawberry.”

The tears came into Dolly’s eyes. Regardless of the jam-pot, she put
her arms round Mattie’s neck and hugged her.

“I don’t need presents just for enjoying myself!” she said, laughing
and crying together. “Eh, Mrs. Kirkby, but I’d be right glad if I heard
as you weren’t going!”

She was gone herself then, running across the gardens, jam-pot in
hand, and Mattie waited until she had lost sight of her. Her lips had
quivered a little at the warm pressure of Dolly’s cheek, but they did
not quiver now. Her figure straightened itself slightly as she turned
on her heel, and went back slowly, but with set purpose, into the
darkening house.




VI


She went back into the kitchen and sat down at the table from which the
tea-things had been removed, and which now wore its evening glory of
crimson cloth. The sight of the cloth reminded her that Kirkby had not
yet come in for his meal, and she wondered what had become of him. But
she forgot him again in the urge for settlement with herself which had
suddenly seized her. Sinking herself in the problems which beset her,
she lost all consciousness of time and place.

She sat heavily in her chair, with the heaviness of exhaustion, but
with less of that air of lowered vitality which had frightened Mrs.
Machell. A little force had returned to her joined hands, laid loosely
along the table. Her face, lifted and looking straight before her, was
the face of one who at the same time sits in judgment and awaits the
decision of some tribunal.

She was still numb from the shock of Dolly’s communication, but she
was bracing herself all the time. She was trying to make herself
understand that she had still to decide about Canada, still to set the
balance dipping one way or the other. She had thought the choice made
long since, clinched long ago beyond all possible change. But the truth
was that you could neither test nor be tested by a situation which
had not as yet arisen. She saw now that the decision had never really
been made at all; that it never could have been made until Kirkby had
written the letter....

She had forgotten, too, that, while she waited, time had been at
work, busily adding its make-weights on this side or on that. She had
forgotten that people alter ... that places alter ... that she herself,
even in the iron mould of her obsession, might possibly alter....
Behind her set face she was filled with fear that some still-unnoticed
change might tip the scale against her.

So many ages seemed to have fled since the joy of the morning that she
peered back at it with dim eyes as at some memory of childhood. Yet the
steps by which she had come to this pass had been so swift that her
brain swam at their mere remembrance. But they had only seemed swift
because of the suddenness with which revelation after revelation had
been sprung upon her. The truths lying behind those changes of thought
and scene must have been growing in secret for many a long year.

It was not only the whinings of Cousin Jessie which had taken her
courage from her, stealing it, hour by hour, as if it was her very
life-blood that they drained. The dream itself had undermined it,
puzzling and depressing her even while it glorified and exalted. She
remembered the Questions, and shrank from the finger of warning which
they so obviously had pointed. And she remembered that Ellen ... but
she was still too bruised and shocked to dare to dwell upon Ellen.

And after the dream there had been other portents and signs, each of
them, as it were, putting out an unseen arm in order to stay her. All
day long she had been called to attention by the things about her, as
well as by the sudden, unwished-for rising of old memories. Both within
and without, as it were, she had been attacked, and before each attack
had retreated a step further. All day long it had been brought home to
her that she was exchanging the substance for the shadow, and that, in
her insistence upon Canada, she was cutting herself off from the things
which really mattered.

She said to herself angrily, as if accusing some outside power, that
she had not known that places and houses could hold you against your
will. She had tried to keep herself free, like a soldier awaiting his
orders, and she had never once been free. Not only that, but it was
she herself who had been forced to betray herself. Even while she was
nursing and keeping warm her hatred of her surroundings, her heart
was beginning to love them. Even while she had imagined herself to be
facing steadily forward, she was already beginning to look back.

Dick Nelson had been right in saying that, no matter how you might
fight against it, you were bound to settle, in the end. She had been
angry about it, at the time, angry and contemptuous, but she saw what
he meant now. The gardens had grown no wider for her as time went on,
but they had grown deeper. She had taken root.... It seemed as if the
place where you had suffered held you as surely in the end as the
place where you had been content....

And in the same way people got hold of you, after a while ... even
those you disliked, let alone people like Mrs. Grisedale and Mrs.
Ellwood. In spite of yourself they became part of your life,--that life
which you had not wanted, perhaps, which had either been thrust upon
you, or which you had chosen by mistake, but which nevertheless you had
steadily gone on living. You could not keep yourself away from people,
no matter how you tried. Even if you shared nothing else with them, you
shared the same countryside. Your life was marked by the milestones
of their happenings, just as their lives were marked by yours. And
when the time came to die, you lay down together to sleep in the same
soil....

She was too old for Canada, she said to herself, accepting the fact
calmly because as yet it had not come home to her. Not too old in body,
perhaps, in spite of her age, but almost certainly in spirit. You could
not fret and fight, year after year, as she had fretted and fought,
without something wearing out in you. And even her body felt too old
to-night for the land of which she had always thought as a place of
vivid youth. She would feel better in the morning, of course,--better
and more equal to things,--because you always did feel better in the
morning. It was one of the lessons of life that you could face things
in the morning which you could not face at night. But always the night
came again.... In any case, something told her that to-day she had
touched what was for her the highest point of living. After to-day she
would begin definitely to grow old.

Safety was what you needed most when you were beginning to get on; not
to be high adventurers and pioneers. Pioneers and adventurers weren’t
safe,--couldn’t be, in the nature of things. Whatever happened, she
and Kirkby would have certain dangers to face, even though they were
not going actually into the wilds. Dangers from people and food, from
climate and travel and strain.... There were dangers everywhere, of
course,--even here; but long custom had taught them how to avoid them.
You got used to most of your dangers, except for those unforeseen; and
when you were used to your dangers they were no longer very dangerous.

Safety and peace and quiet, and a certain amount of ease; not hen-hulls
and yelling children, such as Cousin Jessie had pictured. Jessie,
of course, had been drawing the long bow, even if she had not been
telling absolute untruths. But it would be different from England,
nevertheless. Whatever Luke’s home might be like, it would not have the
settled dignity of the home in which he had been reared. As for their
own, which had yet to be built, it would have even less than Luke’s. It
would have no dignity because it would have no memories and no past.
It would be empty, and they would not have time to fill it. They would
barely have grown used to it, and it to them, before death, with a
crooked finger, would beckon them both out.

It was too late, she said to herself again, and felt through her calm
the upstriking pang which the words inevitably evoke. It was true,
as Dick said, that you could wait too long, so that, when the time
came, and the chance offered, you were not able to take it. And the
reason you were not able was because you had nothing left with which
to meet it. The strength which you needed for new conditions had been
squandered long ago, frittered away, day by day, in striving and
rebellion.

The children thought it too late, too.... Her heart contracted as she
remembered that, and she drew in her breath sharply. They had ceased to
look for her long since,--if it was true what Jessie had told Dolly.
It seemed a betrayal beyond pardon that they should not have gone on
hoping as long as they could; at all events until she, who had lived on
that hope, had finally resigned it. But she had never hinted at such a
thing, not even in the latest of her letters. Perhaps they had laughed
at the letters, she thought, shrinking; had mocked, even if ever so
kindly, at the old mother who would not own herself defeated....

At least they had not mocked her when they wrote, nor had they ever
implied that they had ceased to expect her. They had kept it up, just
as she had kept it up, and with all the old happy anticipation. And for
long enough now it had been just pretence ... that is, if you could
believe Jessie. She felt suddenly that she hated letters and the things
that they could do.... Jessie’s letters, which had brought about this
present trouble ... the letters from the children, without which she
might possibly have settled down long since....

She came at last to the thought of Ellen, and forced herself to meet
it. It was Ellen who had hurt her most,--Ellen, who had been nearest to
her, and had always understood her. Not only had she ceased to believe
that she would come, but, with the plan for her own visit growing in
her mind, she must also have ceased to hope for it. She had told a
complete stranger that she was breaking her heart, longingly looking
back to the home she had left so gladly. She had not told her mother
that she was breaking her heart.... Mattie felt the desolation of one
who, dedicated to some cause, finds that the comrade with whom he has
travelled has secretly turned back.

She remembered Ellen’s packet now, and, getting up to look for it,
returned with it resolutely to the table. She opened it slowly,
fumbling with paper and string, and without any interest in what she
was doing. Her mind, persistently turned inward upon its sorrow,
refused to focus for more than a second upon any external object. All
that she could think of at the moment was the hard fact of Ellen’s
backsliding, and the breaking of the bond which had so long existed
between them.

There was a photograph in the packet, as she had thought, and presently
she had unwrapped it and had it lying before her. There was no
accompanying letter that she could find; but there was nothing in that,
as she had had one only yesterday. Taking the picture in her hands, she
made a determined effort to fix her attention upon it.

After that first glance at it, however, she made as if to throw it
down, for the woman in it was not Ellen. This was a middle-aged
stranger, with traces of hard work in her face and hands, a little
droop to her head and a slight stoop to her shoulders. The lips smiled,
it was true, but behind the attempt at gaiety the face was tired. Even
the clothes she wore had something a little strange about them to
Mattie’s English eyes.

Yet for all that it was still Ellen.... Even as she looked she saw the
likeness stand out, first, in the curve of the cheek, and then in the
curve of the mouth. They were Ellen’s eyes, when she came to study
them, though the laughing and dancing in them had sunk deeper. They
were Ellen’s hands, too, which, even to this day, had kept their old
childish habit of clutching at her gown.

Her heart swelled as she looked, both on her own account and on her
daughter’s, thinking of the light, laughing thing that had gone out
of the cottage, to return to her in this guise. She had known that
she would look older, of course, and, as far as she could, had taught
herself to expect it. But she could never have believed that the years
would make so much difference. She remembered that Ellen was younger
than Dolly,--Dolly, with her plump, straight, little figure and
cheerful, unlined face,-and felt the tears that were in her heart rise
up and fill her throat.

A horror of Canada seized her,--horror and fear of the land which had
played such havoc with Ellen, and which had taken her away from her
in more senses than she knew. For it was neither the added years nor
the look of endurance which troubled her, after the first. People
grew older in England, as well as anywhere else, and Ellen had never
been very strong.... What frightened her was the unmistakable air of
another country, turning her daughter into a stranger.

She sat for a long time trying to will the young Ellen back into the
picture, and saw the youth come into it by degrees as the spring green
comes upon the hedgerows. And presently, when she had her again, the
longing to see her grew greater than she could bear. Silently and
unknown to her, as she stared, the tears ran down her face....

She must see her, at all costs, she said to herself, in spite of
Ellen’s lack of confidence and the bitterness of betrayal. It would be
harder to go now, both because of her own clearer vision of things, and
because of the fading impulse from Over There which had done so much
to sustain her. The glamour had gone out of the enterprise for ever.
But she could not afford to wait until Ellen should find both money and
opportunity for her visit. At all costs, she must go to Canada.

But even as she made her decision she remembered the sea, and shrank
from it in her mind as if from an actual presence. It had frightened
her even in her morning freshness; in her evening weariness it became
a stalking horror. Her passion for size and space, together with her
power of visualisation, turned upon her now to her own undoing. The
Atlantic rose up against her in its sullen depth and strength, in chain
upon chain of endless, rolling mountains. Presently, as it seemed, the
advancing terror was in the garden and in the house, and under the
waves of her huge vision she saw herself sink and drown....

She came back at last to find herself twisted in her chair, with
her eyes fixed upon some half-seen but definitely soothing object.
As her mind cleared she found that she was looking through the open
larder door, and out through the window beyond which vignetted the
privet hedge. She could see the lawn, too, shadowy and mysterious with
the evening, and the rosebush, slimmed and thinned to almost elfin
proportions. Over the hedge-top there still lingered a segment of
silvered, tranquil sky....

Her heart stopped pounding as she looked, and the choking terror which
had sprung on her out of the ocean slowly loosed its grip. The peace of
the garden reached her even in the house, making an exquisite stillness
where the sea had roared and rolled. She sat drinking in the quiet,
watching the sky fade and the lawn dim as veil after veil was laid upon
them.... And then again she remembered Ellen.

She would never be able to get to Ellen if she could not face the sea,
and she knew now that she could not face it. There was no deliverance,
after all. All that she could do was to sit and wait for Ellen to come,
and Ellen might never come.... She sprang to her feet, crying aloud
that she was trapped, as Kirkby, down in the garden, was crying that he
was trapped. She could neither go nor stay, she said to herself, get
to Ellen nor remain here. Life, after all these years of bitterness
and despair, could do nothing better for her than to get her into this
trap....

With the supreme terror upon her of those who see themselves caught by
life she ran to the door, and beheld the bowed figure of Kirkby, dusky
and ghost-like in the distance. Leaving the house, as if it was her own
self that she left, she went running and stumbling towards him across
the gardens.




PART III

THEIRS




I


He came hurriedly to meet her, forgetting himself and his personal
misery in this sudden alarm. “What’s to do, Mattie? What’s wrong?” he
enquired anxiously, as they drew near to each other in the shadows.

She stumbled the last few yards, and clung to his arm. He could feel
her shaking. Even in the dusk he could see the marks of tears upon her
face.

“What’s to do?” he said again.

She made an effort to control herself then, and heard her voice come
out as if from some other person.

“We can’t go,” she said, and her voice broke. “It’s no use! We can’t
go.”

He felt, as it were, a sudden lightening of the atmosphere about them;
as if the sun, already gone some time, had for the moment broken out
afresh.... But he was too tired to feel more; too tired, certainly, to
feel glad. Indeed, he was conscious, rather, of a faint resentment
that the problem which had cost so much to settle should be about to be
reopened.

“Best come into the house, hadn’t you?” he said, evading it for the
moment, and gently urging her back again in the direction from which
she had come. “It’s getting damp out here.”

She nodded her head with a docility which sat strangely upon her,
and, still holding to his arm, allowed him to lead her back. She said
nothing more as they went, only catching at her breath from time to
time with little signals of distress which awoke in him a succession of
answering quivers. The gardens saw them enter the house together, and
disappear into the further gloom of the kitchen.

The sight of the red tablecloth aroused her temporarily, as it had done
before. “Eh, now! You’ve never had your tea,” she sighed, shocked out
of her preoccupation by that great forgetfulness.

“I’ll get a bite of something presently,” Kirkby said, taking off his
hat with the limp gesture of a man whose weariness had long since
passed the stage of desire for food and drink. “It’s you I’m bothered
about. What’s been to do you’ve gone and got yourself in such a state?”

She dropped back into the seat from which she had raised herself in
order to go to him, and sank her head on her hand.

“It’s just that,” she said. “We can’t go.... I’ve seen it coming on
like all day, and now it’s come to bide.”

He eyed her thoughtfully, not daring to take what she said
literally,--scarcely, indeed, wishing at that moment to take it
literally.... “You’re over-tired, that’s what it is,” he said, at last.
“You haven’t hurt yourself, have you, pulling that furniture about?”

“Nay, I’ve taken no harm.”

“Likely you haven’t thought on to get your own tea, neither?” he
enquired.

“Ay, but I have,--and a rare good tea an’ all!” She winced at the
remembrance, recalling the happy half-hour which she and Dolly had
spent before Cousin Jessie had struck her to the heart.... “But we
can’t go.”

He stood hesitating in front of her, his mind wholly occupied by the
need to get her comforted. She was tired, he said to himself, and folks
didn’t always mean what they said when they were tired. His heart
ached as he looked at her, remembering as he did the fine joyfulness of
spirit with which she had parted from him at noon.

“You’d best tell me about it, hadn’t you, Mattie?” he ventured
presently. “You’d feel a deal better if you could tell somebody.”

“There’s nothing to tell....” She avoided his eyes, feeling the colour
rise in her cheek. She was ashamed that even Kirkby should see her in
this moment of defeat. “Nothing much, I mean,” she went on, in a dull
tone, “and what there is you’d likely not understand.”

“I could try, anyway, Mattie.”

She gave a deep sigh and put her hands before her face. He waited
patiently, standing with that still poise of his in which he seemed to
breathe as quietly as a flower. And almost at once she began to speak,
jerkily at first, but gradually gathering smoothness and speed, and
keeping her hands always on either side of her face as if they guarded
her.

“It’s just we’ve waited too long.... Things alter if you wait. You stop
wanting things you’ve always wanted, and you get to like things you
used to hate. And you get old, waiting. I didn’t know till to-day I
was getting old.”

“You’re not old, Mattie.”

“I’m old inside,--old in my heart. Folks as keep their hearts up never
get old, but I’ve not kept mine. If I could have kept my heart up I’d
have been young, even at a hundred, but I’ve not kept it up. I’ve been
letting go all the time, though I didn’t know it.”

“How d’you mean--letting go?”

“Giving up about going to Canada,--that’s what I’m trying to say. I’ve
been thinking all these years I’d be mad to go when the time came.
I thought I’d be that glad I wouldn’t mind what I found Over There
or what I’d to leave behind. And it isn’t like that at all. Now it’s
really come to it, I’m--afraid.”

“How d’you mean--afraid?”

She gave a little laugh that was more dreary than any sob,--the laugh
of the naturally brave person who for the first time in life comes
under the domination of fear.

“Afraid of near everything, it seems to me!... Afraid I’ll get
hankering after things, this side, when it’s too late to come back.
Afraid of breaking my heart Over There, as I’ve broken it over
here.... Afraid of all the new folks and new sights. Afraid of the
sea----”

She shuddered as she said the last word, seeing, even as she spoke,
the first wave of her vision come rolling back upon her. Kirkby looked
surprised.

“What’s put that into your head?” he asked, puzzled. “You’ve never let
on before you minded the sea?”

“I’ve always minded it,” Mattie said. “First time I set eyes on
it,--ay, and long before that. But I wouldn’t let on about it even to
myself. I made out it wouldn’t matter, just as I made out other things
wouldn’t matter. But I was only cheating myself all the time. They _do_
matter, and I do mind; and now I’m old I haven’t the courage to face
’em.”

“You’ll face ’em right enough to-morrow,--see if you won’t! You’re
over-tired to-night. I’ll be bound you weren’t bothering about the sea
when you woke this morning!”

He spoke purposely in a light, bantering tone, hoping to stir her out
of her trouble; but she shook her head.

“There’ll be another night to-morrow.... It’s the nights you’ve got to
think of, when you’re getting old. And it isn’t only the sea. There’s
other things as well.”

“Tell me the other things, Mattie.”

She shook her head again, but almost at once she was launched upon
her tale, as if the little movement had flung her into the tideway.
As well as she could she described to him her reactions during the
day, beginning with the little cloud which had shadowed even the dream
itself, and which had grown to such proportions by the evening. Her
talk halted and turned upon itself and wandered to and fro, until not
only the tale but the hours themselves seemed twisted into a tangle.
Something, however, of the actual state of things emerged finally from
the muddle, together with a fairly definite indication of how it had
come about.

She told him, still shielded by her hands, how the house and the garden
had caught at her unawares, rising up against her with armed memories
which she had not known to possess the power to wound her. She told him
of Dick’s grumbled warnings, of her passion for the privet hedge, of
the jealousy and injured pride with which she had found herself facing
Mrs. Machell. She told him at great length of the underminings of
Cousin Jessie. And at the last, sighing and half-sobbing, she told him
of the betrayal of the children, and the greater treachery of Ellen.

“That’s what’s getting at me most,” she finished, hating her own voice
as she heard it quiver. “That’s what’s done me down. T’other things
was bad enough, of course, fretting me right and left till I was near
frantic. But I’d have got over ’em, likely, after a bit, and when I
was feeling better. Likely I would, that is. I’m not so sure.... But
what beats me is the children going back on us and thinking we wouldn’t
come. Folks as stop believing in a thing like as not stop wanting
it,--that’s how it seems to me.”

Kirkby had stood silent during the first part of the recital, and had
seated himself silently when he found it promised to be a long one.
Once, later, he got up to look for the lamp, only to find that Mattie
had forgotten to fill it. This oversight on the part of one usually
so methodical and efficient told him more than even the hurried and
broken talk with which she was assailing him. Lighting a candle which
he discovered on the mantelpiece, he sat down again, setting the light
between them.

He was not thinking much as he listened; only allowing her to pour
her story into his mind, so that, when the time came, and she was
silent again, he might find the right words with which to cheer her.
Still less was he feeling.... He had already exhausted his own powers
of emotion, first, in that journey into the past which he had taken,
across the river, and then in his final revolt and recession in the
garden. He felt utterly detached from the situation which was riving
Mattie in twain as if it was with an actual devil that she strove.
Whether they went or stayed made no difference to him at the moment.
He had passed, for the time being, to a plane where the things of this
world could no longer affect him, either for good or evil.

“It’s Ellen bothers me most,” Mattie was saying, the quiver in her
voice becoming more and more pronounced. “I’d have thought Ellen would
have looked for me till I was in my coffin,--ay, and after that! Jessie
says she talks nowadays of coming here instead, but I doubt she never
will. Likely she’ll wait and wait and never come, same as I’ve waited
and waited and never gone.... And if she puts it off a deal longer I
won’t answer for it we’ll know her. That’s her photo she’s sent, over
there, and for more than a while I made sure it was somebody else.”

Kirkby turned his eyes towards the photograph on the table, and turned
them away again. He had no desire to look at it just then, or to test
the truth of what Mattie was saying. His power to interest himself
in such things would return to-morrow, when he would welcome even a
doubtful presentment of his absent daughter. But to-night he had passed
beyond his children, and felt no bond with them. They were no more to
him at the moment than the transplanted sapling is to the parent stem
from which it was once grown.

“You’re taking a deal for granted, it seems to me,” he said, at last.
“You’ve only Len’s wife’s word for it about Ellen and the rest, and not
at first hand, neither. Yon cousin of hers needs taking with a deal of
salt.”

Mattie nodded drearily.

“You’re right, there! She’s one of them do-nowts as has always a
sight to complain of, wherever they are.... But I feel it’s true, all
the same. It’s only natural folks should give up looking for you when
you’ve been so long on the road.”

“I don’t see it matters whether they’ve given up or not. They’d be just
as glad to see you, once you’d got across.”

“It _would_ matter,” Mattie said. “Something’d have gone ... broken ...
nay, I can’t explain!” She stopped, hunting vainly for words with which
to convey to him that the motive power would be crippled, the circuit
hopelessly snapped.... “But it wouldn’t be the same.”

He gazed at her with his clear, faded eyes, wondering to himself how
far it was wise to attempt to argue with her.

“You’ll not take kindly to stopping, Mattie,” he said presently,
tentatively but bravely. “You’ve got to remember that.”

“I’m not likely to forget it.”

“It isn’t as if you wouldn’t feel different in the morning, you know.
You’re tired, to-night. You’ll get hankering again, I doubt, as soon as
you’re rested.”

“I doubt I will.”

“Folks don’t change that easy,” Kirkby persisted. “You’ve been set on
Canada so long, you’ll find it hard to put away from you.”

“I’ve got to try.”

“There’ll be letters coming an’ all----” he continued firmly, and she
put out her hand, crying, “Nay, now! Don’t, don’t!” but he steeled
himself against her. However it hurt, they had both of them got to be
sure that she knew what she was doing.

“And there’s the grandchildren, you’ll think on; you’ve not forgotten
them? You’ll likely never set eyes on them if you don’t go. It costs
a deal to go back and forwards, these days, and there’s time as well.
Sally’ll likely come, if Ellen’s bringing her to stop, but not Joe’s
lad or the rest----”

She stumbled to her feet, throwing out her hand a second time as if to
lay it across his patient, relentless mouth.

“Nay, now! _Don’t_, I tell you! D’you think I don’t know what it’ll be
like, and how it’s going to hurt before I’ve finished with it? Day and
night I’ll remember,--day and night. But it’s got to be borne. Some way
or other I’ve got into a trap, and I doubt I’ll never get out.”

“You _can_ get out, Mattie,” Kirkby said gently. “You’ve only to say
the word.”

“Nay, but I can’t.” She looked down at her hands as she rested them
on the table, as if already she saw ghostly fetters forming about her
wrists.... “Words won’t make any difference, nor letters, neither. It’s
my own self makes the trap,--being too old, and being afraid of things.
You should have let us go when I was younger and able to face it.
You’ve kept us here too long.”

“’Twasn’t me, Mattie,” Kirkby said, wincing a little for the first
time. “’Twas just life.”

“Nay, it was you, all right!” she said, lifting her head again. She
sent him a look which he had seen more than once before, a hard,
sneering look which called him an enemy and hated him as it said it. He
met it quietly.... “It was you kept us. And now I’ve got to go eating
my heart out till I die!”

Moving away from the table, she began to walk up and down the room,
clasping and unclasping her hands.

“And it’ll be worse now than it was before,--a deal worse, a deal
harder to bear. There’ll be nothing to hope for, now.... It’ll be just
prison again, and the same old life right on to the end. If I’d known
things were going to turn out like this, I’d have finished myself long
ago!”

She was crying now and wringing her hands, stumbling blindly from
point to point, and blundering against things in her passage. From
time to time she looked wildly from side to side, as if she saw the
cottage-walls closing in upon her. From his seat by the table Kirkby
sat and watched her, as only the night before he had watched the
firelight beat against the ceiling....

She came suddenly to a pause, and, putting out a clenched fist, struck
it against the mantelpiece.

“I can’t bear it!” she said in a loud tone. “I can’t bear it, and I
won’t! There’s my children waiting for me Over There, and I’ll get to
them, if I have to walk. It’s my life that I ought to have had, and
that I’ve been cheated out of, and I mean to have it.” Her voice rose
higher. “What is it goes wrong with things when folks get cheated out
of their lives?”

Her tone lowered itself then as suddenly as it had risen, and became
passionate and pleading. “I take back everything I said just now,” she
told him gently. “I want to go....” Turning unsteadily, she came to
him, holding out her hands. “You’ll not think any more about what I
said? You’ll let us go?”

“We’ll go, Mattie. Don’t you fret.”

“It’ll be just as it was, this morning?” she pursued, unsatisfied. “The
same as it was, last night?”

“Just as it was, Mattie.”

A smile touched for a moment her tear-wet face, and for the first time
he felt the tears spring to his own eyes. She looked at him kindly.

“You mustn’t be wild with me for chopping and changing like this. I
can’t help it. I’ve got to see ’em all again, and the grandchildren
and the houses. I’ve _got_ to see them. You can’t plan and work for a
thing all your life, and not get it in the end. It’d kill you, if you
didn’t get it,--leastways, it would me.... But I shan’t chop and change
again. I’ll get the letter written first thing in the morning, and the
one for the passage as well. We must begin thinking about the sale,
too, as soon as may be. I did a lot of planning, this afternoon, along
with Mrs. Machell. I don’t know that I’m best pleased to think of her
living in this house, though _she’s_ pleased enough, to be sure! I
near told her to think on it was my home and not hers, and would she
kindly remember it? There was the jam an’ all,--I’d nigh forgotten the
jam....” Her voice wavered as she spoke, and she looked away from him.
“And the privet hedge,--I don’t know how I’ll abide her having the
privet hedge.... Len, too, swaggering about the spot, and thinking he’s
as good a man as you.... I reckon they’re thinking already we’re as
good as overseas----”

She stopped then, and into her eyes came the fixed stare of one who
regards a great and imminent danger. The cry which came out of her
throat was no longer the cry of one beating against walls, but the cry
of one who drowns....

“Nay, but we can’t! We can’t! I’m cheating myself again. Just cheating
myself, that’s all.... I’ll never get to Canada, not this side o’ the
Judgment!”

Flinging herself heavily into her seat, she laid her head on her
arms, and her great sobs shook the silence. Outside in the darkness a
little wind got up, sighed along the paths and was gone again into the
darkness. An owl called, flapping with clumsy wings across the square
of the window, and went out towards the river. A sweet breath came in
from the gardens, where there were no flowers as yet to scent them.

Kirkby sat where he was for a long time, with his gaze fixed upon his
wife’s bowed head and labouring shoulders. It was the only way, as he
knew, to put a real end to the business, to exorcise, by those cruel
tears, the demon of her forty years’ obsession. Canada went out of
her as she wept, and all the beautiful hope which for so long it had
represented. Through every pore of her, as it were, ran out the poison
of her misery and discontent. She would be broken, perhaps, when she
came to herself, but she would no longer be tormented. She would be
older, perhaps,--perhaps permanently grown old,--but she might also
have found the things which belonged truly to her peace....

Yet even in the restraint of his measured wisdom he could not refrain
from making some attempt to comfort her. From time to time he put out
an apparently unnoticed hand, and drew it back again. Presently, when
he could bear the situation no longer, he got up and stood beside her.

He said: “Don’t cry, Mattie!... Mattie, don’t cry,” smoothing her
roughened hair and patting her shoulder and cheek. She paid no
attention, as far as he could gather, until presently the sobs
quietened and the shaking lessened. And instantly, as if at some signal
for which he had patiently waited, he began to speak.

“I just want to say again, Mattie, that we’ll go if you really want.
Likely you’d rather leave it over until the morning, but I doubt it
wouldn’t be wise. I couldn’t go through this sort of thing very often,
nor you, neither. We’d be best to fix it to-night.... And you don’t
need telling that, if you could make up your mind to it, I’d a deal
rather not go. I’ve had as bad a day thinking about it all as I ever
remember.” His detachment broke a little, and pain crept into his
voice. “I’ve loved the place, and I doubt I can’t leave it.”

“I’ve hated it, and I can’t leave it!” Mattie sobbed, lifting her head
a moment and letting it drop again.

“There’s some sorts of hate as is very near love,” Kirkby said
absently, without hearing what he was saying. “Only just now you said
that to-day you’d seen it different.”

Mattie sobbed again, remembering the enraptured hours in which that
miracle had happened, and realising that, now that she was a prisoner
once more, the enchantment would have passed for ever.

“It was just because I was going to get away from it,” she wept;
“that’s all. To-morrow it’ll all be nasty, just as before.”

“It’ll never be just as nasty, Mattie, whatever you think,” Kirkby said
firmly. “Once you’ve looked at a thing with love, you never rightly
forget it. It comes creeping back into your heart, no matter how often
you turn it out.”

She said nothing to that, and presently he went on again, speaking in a
dreamy tone as if he were weaving a spell of some sort about her, and
as if the sentences were being dropped by something outside him into
his tired brain.

“We’ve not done so badly together, Mattie, you and me, when you come
to think of it. We’ve quarrelled a deal about this Canadian business, I
know that, but we’ve not done so badly, all told. We’ve had a good life
together in a beautiful place, which is more than a lot of folks get.
We’ve been God-fearing folk, on the whole, and we’ve as good children
as ever stepped. We’ve had a good life, Mattie, and we’ve been together
a long while. Children matter a sight, I know, but we matter to each
other more. We’ve made something between us in this spot as we’ll never
have anywhere else. We’ve made our lives.... When folks get to the end
of things, all that they’ve got left to them is just their lives....”

She had ceased crying long before he stopped, only sighing and bowing
her head upon her hand as she had done at the beginning. Her mind,
utterly wearied and over-strained, had for compensation that curious
quality peculiar to extreme exhaustion of seeing clear in flashes. By
virtue of those flashes, so much more vivid and poignant than those of
the normal course of thought, she was able for the first time to see
life as Kirkby saw it. For the first time she saw the dignity and the
beauty of the life to which he clung, and to which such characters as
his own owed their inward essence. Canada had gone out of her, as he
had hoped, and into the great space which it had left flowed Kirkby and
his gardens.

She remembered now that he had not been in the dream, and felt again
the sudden shoot of fear with which she had first realised it. The
violence of that pang showed her what she had never known until now,
that Kirkby was more to her than the children. He had not been more to
her once, as she had to admit. In her vigorous youth and middle-age she
had found him tiresome, with his gentle ways and lack of push. But the
years had done their work.... They had grown nearer together as time
went on, while the children had grown further. They had been through
things together of which neither the children nor anyone else could
ever have any knowledge. Their very quarrels had brought them together,
as if in fighting each other they had merely been fighting in order to
get to each other. Now, in this last struggle of all, the last veil had
been cleared away, and they saw each other close....

Kirkby was right when he said that all that you had at the end of
your life was just your life. This was their life, which they had made
together in this place, a completeness and a dearness, now that they
came to look back upon it, formed, not only out of their happy hours,
but out of their grim ones. It was theirs, and theirs only, shared by
nobody else in the world; a thing so much their own that it seemed as
if even God Himself must refrain from looking at it.... It was this
life, which was all that they had, that Kirkby had feared to lose if
they went away....

She drew her hand across her eyes, and, taking a deep breath, pulled
herself into an upright position.

“Well, that’s over,” she said bravely enough, though her voice shook.
“Over for good.... You needn’t fear I’ll ever bother you about Canada
again.”

“You’ll feel better to-morrow,” Kirkby said, falling back, after his
flight of eloquence, on that eternal and feeble consolation; and she
laughed a little, though without rancour and without bitterness.

“Better--or worse!... Ay, well. Never mind about that. It’s over, as I
said.... It seems queer to me now, though, always being so sure that I
should go.”

Her mind went back to the dream, with all its richness and reality, and
in one of those strange flashes she saw both its meaning and its hidden
comfort. She had always known that some day she would go to Canada,
and she _had_ gone, although not in the body. Nor would her body ever
be able to go now, because she herself would prevent it. But the dream
had shown her a way by which her spirit, at least, could sometimes gain
release. One of these days, if life pressed too hardly upon her, she
might be permitted to go again.

She took up, after that, the encouraging thought of Ellen’s coming, and
the short but beautiful happiness that her visit offered. For already
she was fast recovering her natural poise. Her mind, clearing and
gaining in strength, fastened upon hope after hope, as a child, strange
to its feet, fastens and clutches for support. Already she saw Ellen in
the house, and after Ellen the little girl; and she rose up out of her
desolation and grasped bravely at the future.

Kirkby was asking for the Hall letter when she heard him again, that
letter upon which so short a time ago the whole of her salvation had
hung, and which now seemed as remote and immaterial as if it had never
existed. They hunted for it together, and discovered it at last in a
spot where they could only have come across it by the merest accident.
She could not remember putting it there, nor had she seen it handled
by Mrs. Machell. It was almost as if some inner self of her own had
secretly put it away, knowing long before she knew it herself that she
would have no use for it.

Going to the hearth, where the fire, though low, was still red and
smouldering, Kirkby made as if to tear the letter across.

“I’d best burn it, hadn’t I?” he paused first to ask her, looking at
her. “It’s better not left about.”

For one last moment a pang shot through her as she stood there, staring
at it, seeing the chance which she had foregone made concrete and
passing from her for ever. She put out her hand as if meaning to snatch
it from him, and then dropped it again. “Nay, burn it,” she said,
turning away, and quivered at the tearing of the paper. Even turned
away she saw the little flame which the letter made before it died
down and was no more....

“I’ll see about getting you a bite,” she said then, moving away from
the hearth, and remembering with a housewife’s shame that Kirkby must
be nearly starving. Candle in hand, she went to and fro between kitchen
and larder, and soon had the belated meal set and waiting on the table.
When it was ready she called to him where he stood at the house-door,
staring into the darkness.

“I’ve just remembered I’ve promised my pink vases to Mrs. Machell!” she
laughed ruefully, her voice, in spite of all that she had been through,
sounding natural and brisk. “That’s if I went to Canada, I mean; and
now that Len won’t be getting the job I don’t like to disappoint her.”

“I’ll buy you another pair if you want ’em,” Kirkby answered, without
turning. “Mason and Mawson’s in Witham is as full of them as it can
stick.”

Mattie laughed again, with cheerful disgust.

“Nay, then, I’ve no use for ’em if there’s that many going begging!...
Your supper’s ready for you now if you feel like having it.”

He made no movement, however, to come within, and after a moment she
went across to her jam-cupboard and threw it open. For several minutes
she stood gazing soberly at its contents, while Kirkby, staring into
the dark, saw his dawnbell rising blue and exquisite against the
soil....

She fastened the cupboard again presently, and turned about with a
little shiver.

“Best shut the door, hadn’t you?” she called to Kirkby. “It’s getting a
bit chilly.”

He shut it.




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.

  The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber using
    the original cover and is entered into the public domain.