Anne Severn and the Fieldings.
by May Sinclair.
I
CHILDREN
i
Anne Severn had come again to the Fieldings. This time it was because her mother was dead.
She hadn"t been in the house five minutes before she asked "Where"s Jerrold?"
"Fancy," they said, "her remembering."
And Jerrold had put his head in at the door and gone out again when he saw her there in her black frock; and somehow she had known he was afraid to come in because her mother was dead.
Her father had brought her to Wyck-on-the-Hill that morning, the day after the funeral. He would leave her there when he went back to India.
She was walking now down the lawn between the two tall men. They were taking her to the pond at the bottom where the goldfish were. It was Jerrold"s father who held her hand and talked to her. He had a nice brown face marked with a lot of little fine, smiling strokes, and his eyes were quick and kind.
"You remember the goldfish, Anne?"
"I remember everything."
She had been such a little girl before, and they said she had forgotten.
But she remembered so well that she always thought of Mr. Fielding as Jerrold"s father. She remembered the pond and the goldfish. Jerrold held her tight so that she shouldn"t tumble in. She remembered the big grey and yellow house with its nine ball-topped gables; and the lawn, shut in by clipped yew hedges, then spreading downwards, like a fan, from the last green terrace where the two enormous peac.o.c.ks stood, carved out of the yew.
Where it lay flat and still under the green wall she saw the tennis court. Jerrold was there, knocking b.a.l.l.s over the net to please little Colin. She could see him fling back his head and laugh as Colin ran stumbling, waving his racquet before him like a stiff flag. She heard Colin squeal with excitement as the b.a.l.l.s flew out of his reach.
Her father was talking about her. His voice was sharp and anxious.
"I don"t know how she"ll get on with your boys." (He always talked about Anne as if she wasn"t there.) "Ten"s an awkward age. She"s too old for Colin and too young for Eliot and Jerrold."
She knew their ages. Colin was only seven. Eliot, the clever one, was very big; he was fifteen. Jerrold was thirteen.
She heard Jerrold"s father answering in his quiet voice.
"You needn"t worry. Jerry"ll look after Anne all right."
"And Adeline."
"Oh yes, of course, Adeline." (Only somehow he made it sound as if she wouldn"t.)
Adeline was Mrs. Fielding. Jerrold"s mother.
Anne wanted to get away from the quiet, serious men and play with Jerrold; but their idea seemed to be that it was too soon. Too soon after the funeral. It would be all right to go quietly and look at the goldfish; but no, not to play. When she thought of her dead mother she was afraid to tell them that she didn"t want to go and look at the goldfish. It was as if she knew that something sad waited for her by the pond at the bottom. She would be safer over there where Jerrold was laughing and shouting. She would play with him and he wouldn"t be afraid.
The day felt like a Sunday, quiet, quiet, except for the noise of Jerrold"s laughter. Strange and exciting, his boy"s voice rang through her sadness; it made her turn her head again and again to look after him; it called to her to forget and play.
Little slim brown minnows darted backwards and forwards under the olive green water of the pond. And every now and then the fat goldfish came nosing along, orange, with silver patches, shining, making the water light round them, stiff mouths wide open. When they bobbed up, small bubbles broke from them and sparkled and went out.
Anne remembered the goldfish; but somehow they were not so fascinating as they used to be.
A queer plant grew on the rock border of the pond. Green fleshy stems, with blunt spikes all over them. Each carried a tiny gold star at its tip. Thick, cold juice would come out of it if you squeezed it. She thought it would smell like lavender.
It had a name. She tried to think of it.
Stonecrop. Stonecrop. Suddenly she remembered.
Her mother stood with her by the pond, dark and white and slender. Anne held out her hands smeared with the crushed flesh of the stonecrop; her mother stooped and wiped them with her pockethandkerchief, and there was a smell of lavender. The goldfish went swimming by in the olive-green water.
Anne"s sadness came over her again; sadness so heavy that it kept her from crying; sadness that crushed her breast and made her throat ache.
They went back up the lawn, quietly, and the day felt more and more like Sunday, or like--like a funeral day.
"She"s very silent, this small daughter of yours," Mr. Fielding said.
"Yes," said Mr. Severn.
His voice came with a stiff jerk, as if it choked him. He remembered, too.
ii
The grey and yellow flagstones of the terrace were hot under your feet.
Jerrold"s mother lay out there on a pile of cushions, in the sun. She was very large and very beautiful. She lay on her side, heaved up on one elbow. Under her thin white gown you could see the big lines of her shoulder and hip, and of her long full thigh, tapering to the knee.
Anne crouched beside her, uncomfortably, holding her little body away from the great warm ma.s.s among the cushions.
Mrs. Fielding was aware of this shrinking. She put out her arm and drew Anne to her side again.
"Lean back," she said. "Close. Closer."
And Anne would lean close, politely, for a minute, and then stiffen and shrink away again when the soft arm slackened.
Eliot Fielding (the clever one) lay on his stomach, stretched out across the terrace. He leaned over a book: _Animal Biology_. He was absorbed in a diagram of a rabbit"s heart and took no notice of his mother or of Anne.
Anne had been at the Manor five days, and she had got used to Jerrold"s mother"s caresses. All but one. Every now and then Mrs. Fielding"s hand would stray to the back of Anne"s neck, where the short curls, black as her frock, sprang out in a thick bunch. The fingers stirred among the roots of Anne"s hair, stroking, stroking, lifting the bunch and letting it fall again. And whenever they did this Anne jerked her head away and held it stiffly out of their reach.
She remembered how her mother"s fingers, slender and silk-skinned and loving, had done just that, and how their touch went thrilling through the back of her neck, how it made her heart beat. Mrs. Fielding"s fingers didn"t thrill you, they were blunt and fumbling. Anne thought: "She"s no business to touch me like that. No business to think she can do what mother did."
She was always doing it, always trying to be a mother to her. Her father had told her she was going to try. And Anne wouldn"t let her. She would not let her.
"Why do you move your head away, darling?"
Anne didn"t answer.