"What did she do it for, Eliot?"
"What does mother do anything for? I imagine she wanted to put Jerrold off so that you could stick on with Colin. You"ve taken him off her hands and she wants him kept off."
"So she told him I was Colin"s mistress."
"Mind you, she doesn"t think a bit the worse of you for that. She admires you for it no end."
"Do you suppose I care what she thinks? It"s her making Jerrold think it...Eliot, how could she?"
"She could, because she only sees things as they affect herself."
"Do you believe she really thinks it?"
"She"s made herself think it because she wanted to."
"But why--why should she want to?"
"I"ve told you why. She"s afraid of having to look after Colin. I"ve no illusions about mother. She"s always been like that. She wouldn"t see what she was doing to you. Before she did it she"d persuaded herself that it was Colin and not Jerrold that you cared for. And she wouldn"t do it deliberately at all. I know it has all the effect of low cunning, but it isn"t. It"s just one of her sudden movements. She"d rush into it on a blind impulse."
Anne saw it all, she saw that Adeline had slandered her to Jerrold and to Eliot, that she had made use of her love for Colin, which was her love for Jerrold, to betray her; that she had betrayed her to safeguard her own happy life, without pity and without remorse; she had done all of these things and none of them. They were the instinctive movements of her funk. Where Adeline"s ease and happiness were concerned she was one incarnate funk. You couldn"t think of her as a reasonable and responsible being, to be forgiven or unforgiven.
"It doesn"t matter how she did it. It"s done now," she said.
"Really, Anne, it was too bad of Colin. He oughtn"t to have let you."
"He couldn"t help it, poor darling. He wasn"t in a state. Don"t put that into his head. It just had to happen... I don"t care, Eliot. If it was to be done again to-morrow I"d do it. Only, if I"d known, I could have told Jerrold the truth. The others can think what they like. It"ll only make me stick to Colin all the more. I promised Jerrold I"d look after him and I shall as long as he wants me. It serves them all right. They all left him to me--Daddy and Aunt Adeline and Queenie, I mean--and they can"t stop me now."
"Mother doesn"t want to stop you. It"s your father."
"I"ll write and tell Daddy. Besides, it"s too late. If I left Colin to-morrow it wouldn"t stop the scandal. My reputation"s gone and I can"t get it back, can I?"
"Dear Anne, you don"t know how adorable you are without it."
"Look here, Eliot, what did your mother tell _you_ for?"
"Same reason. To put me off, too."
They looked at each other and smiled. Across their memories, across the years of war, across Anne"s agony they smiled. Besides its courage and its young, candid cynicism, Anne"s smile expressed her utter trust in him.
"As if," Eliot said, "it would have made the smallest difference."
"Wouldn"t it have?"
"No, Anne. Nothing would."
"That"s what Jerrold said. And _he_ thought it. I wondered what he meant."
"He meant what I mean."
The moments pa.s.sed, ticked off by the beating of his heart, time and his heart beating violently together. Not one of them was his moment, not one would serve him for what he had to say, falling so close on their intolerable conversation. He meant to ask Anne to marry him; but if he did it now she would suspect him of chivalry; it would look as if he wanted to make up to her for all she had lost through Colin; as if he wanted more than anything to save her.
So Eliot, who had waited so long, waited a little longer, till the evening of his last day.
iii
Anne had gone up with him to Wyck Manor, to see the soldiers. Ever since they had come there she had taken cream and fruit to them twice a week from the Farm. Unaware of what was thought of her, she never knew that the scandal of young Fielding and Miss Severn had penetrated the Convalescent Home with the fruit and cream. And if she had known it she would not have stayed away. People"s beastliness was no reason why she shouldn"t go where she wanted, where she had always gone. The Convalescent Home belonged to the Fieldings, and the Fieldings were her dearest friends who had been turned into relations by her father"s marriage. So this evening, absorbed in the convalescents, she never saw the matron"s queer look at her or her pointed way of talking only to Eliot.
Eliot saw it.
He thought: "It doesn"t matter. She"s so utterly good that nothing can touch her. All the same, if she marries me she"ll be safe from this sort of thing."
They had come to the dip of the valley and the Manor Farm water.
"Let"s go up the beech walk," he said.
They went up and sat in the beech ring where Anne had sat with Jerrold three months ago. Eliot never realised how repeatedly Jerrold had been before him.
"Anne," he said, "it"s more than five years since I asked you to marry me."
"Is it, Eliot?"
"Do you remember I said then I"d never give you up?"
"I remember. Unless Jerrold got me, you said. Well, he hasn"t got me."
"I wouldn"t want you to tie yourself up with me if there was the remotest chance of Jerrold; but, as there isn"t, don"t you think--"
"No, Eliot, I don"t."
"But you do care for me, Anne, a little. I know you do."
"I care for you a great deal; but not in that sort of way."
"I"m not asking you to care for me in the way you care for Jerrold. You may care for me any way you please if you"ll only marry me. You don"t know how awfully little I"d be content to take."
"I shouldn"t be content to give it, though. You oughtn"t to have anything but the best."
"It would be the best for me, you see."
"Oh no, Eliot, it wouldn"t. You only think it would because you"re an angel. It would be awful of me to give so little when I take such a lot.
I know what your loving would be."
"If you know you must have thought of it. And if you"ve thought of it--"
"I"ve only thought of it to see how impossible it is. It mightn"t be if I could leave off loving Jerrold. But I can"t...Eliot, I"ve got the queerest feeling about him. I know you"ll think me mad, when he"s gone and married somebody else, but I feel all the time as if he hadn"t, as if he belonged to me and always had; and I to him. Whoever Maisie"s married it isn"t Jerrold. Not the real Jerrold."
"The fact remains that she"s married him."