"Here, darling, will be the centre of our lives. This is our temple.
Round this building all our happiness will revolve."
"Yes, dear," said Maggie. She was taken then for a little walk. They went down Ivy Road and into Skeaton High Street. Here were the shops.
Mr. Bloods, the bookseller"s, Tunstall the butcher, Toogood the grocer, Father the draper, Minster the picture-dealer, Harcourt the haberdasher, and so on. Maggie rather liked the High Street; it reminded her of the High Street in Polchester, although there was no hill. Out of the High Street and on to the Esplanade. You should never see an Esplanade out of the season, Katherine had once said to Maggie.
That dictum seemed certainly true this time. There could be no doubt that this Esplanade was not looking its best under the bl.u.s.tering March wind. Here a deserted bandstand, there a railway station, here a dead haunt for pierrots, there a closed and barred cinema house, here a row of stranded bathing-machines, there a shuttered tea-house--and not a living soul in sight. In front of them was a long long stretch of sand, behind them to right and left the huddled tenements of the town, in front of them, beyond the sand, the grey sea--and again not a living soul in sight. The railway line wound its way at their side, losing itself in the hills and woods of the horizon.
"There are not many people about, are there?" said Maggie. Nor could she wonder. The East wind cut along the desolate stretches of silence, and yet how strange a wind! It seemed to have no effect at all upon the sea, which rolled in sluggishly with snake-like motion, throwing up on the dim colourless beach a thin fringe of foam, baring its teeth at the world in impotent discontent.
"Oh! there"s a boy!" cried Maggie, amazed at her own relief. "How often do the trains come in?" she asked.
"Well, we don"t have many trains in the off-season," said Paul. "They put on several extra ones in the summer."
"Oh, what"s the sand doing?" Maggie cried.
She had seen sand often enough in her own Glebeshire, but never sand like this. Under the influence of the wind it was blowing and curving into little spirals of dust; a sudden cloud, with a kind of personal animosity rose and flung itself across the rails at Maggie and Paul.
They were choking and blinded--and in the distance clouds of sand rose and fell, with gusts and impulses that seemed personal and alive.
"What funny sand!" said Maggie again. "When it blows in Glebeshire it blows and there"s a perfect storm. There"s a storm or there isn"t.
Here--" She broke off. She could see that Paul hadn"t the least idea of what she was speaking.
"The sand is always blowing about here," he said. "Now what about tea?"
They walked back through the High Street and not a soul was to be seen.
"Does n.o.body live here?" asked Maggie.
"The population," said Paul quite gravely, "is eight thousand, four hundred and fifty-four."
"Oh, I see," said Maggie.
They had tea in the dusty study again.
"I"m going to change this house," said Maggie.
"Change it?" asked Paul. "What"s my little girl going to do?"
"She"s going to destroy ever so many things," said Maggie.
"You"d better wait," said Paul, moving a little away, "until Grace comes back, dear. You can consult with her."
Maggie said nothing.
Next day Mrs. Constantine, Miss Purves, and Mrs. Maxse came to tea.
They had tea in the drawing-room all amongst the squashed strawberries.
Three large ferns in crimson pots watched them as they ate. Maggie thought: "Grace seems to have a pa.s.sion for ferns." She had been terribly nervous before the ladies" arrival--that old nervousness that had made her tremble before Aunt Anne at St. Dreot"s, before the Warlocks, before old Martha. But with it came as always her sense of independence and individuality.
"They can"t eat me," she thought. It was obvious at once that they did not want to do anything of the kind. They were full of kindness and curiosity. Mrs. Constantine took the lead, and it was plain that she had been doing this all her life. She was a large black and red woman with clothes that fitted her like a uniform. Her hair was of a raven gleaming blackness, her cheeks were red, her manner so a.s.sured and commanding that she seemed to Maggie at once like a policeman directing the traffic. The policeman of Christian Skeaton she was, and it did not take Maggie two minutes to discover that Paul was afraid of her. She had a deep ba.s.s voice and a hearty laugh.
"I can understand her," thought Maggie, "and I believe she"ll understand me."
Very different Miss Purves. If Mrs. Constantine was the policeman of Skeaton, Miss Purves was the town-crier. She rang her bell and announced the news, and also insisted that you should tell her without delay any item of news that you had collected.
In appearance she was like any old maid whose love of gossip has led her to abandon her appearance. She had obviously surrendered the idea of attracting the male, and flung on her clothes--an old black hat, a grey coat and skirt--with a negligence that showed that she cared for worthier things. She gave the impression that there was no time to be lost were one to gather all the things in life worth hearing.
If Mrs. Constantine stood for the police and Miss Purves the town-crier, Mrs. Maxse certainly represented Society. She was dressed beautifully, and she must have been very pretty once. Her hair was now grey, but her cheeks had still a charming bloom. She was delicate and fragile, rustling and scented, with a beautiful string of pearls round her neck (this, in the daytime, Maggie thought very odd), and a large black hat with a sweeping feather. Her voice was a little sad, a little regretful, as though she knew that her beautiful youth was gone and was making the best of what she had.
She told Maggie that "she couldn"t help" being an idealist.
"I know it"s foolish of me," she said in her gentle voice, smiling her charming smile. "They all tell me so. But if life isn"t meant to be beautiful, where are we? Everything must have a meaning, mustn"t it, Mrs. Trenchard, and however often we fail--and after all we are only human--we must try, try again. I believe in seeing the best in people, because then they live up to that. People are what we make them, don"t you think?"
"The woman"s a fool," thought Maggie. Nevertheless, she liked her kindness. She was so strangely driven. She wished to think of Martin always, never to forget him, but at the same time not to think of the life that was connected with him. She must never think of him as some one who might return. Did that once begin all this present life would be impossible--and she meant to make this new existence not only possible but successful. Therefore she was building, so hard as she could, this new house; the walls were rising, the rooms were prepared, every window was barred, the doors were locked, no one from outside should enter, and everything that belonged to it--Paul, Grace, the Church, these women, Skeaton itself, her household duties, the servants, everything and every one was pressed into service. She must have so much to do that she could not think, she must like every one else so much that she could not want any one else--that other world must be kept out, no sound nor sight of it must enter ... If even she could forget Martin. What had he said to her. "Promise me whatever I am, whatever I do, you will love me always"--and she had promised. Here she was married to Paul and loving Martin more than ever! As she looked at Mrs. Constantine she wondered what she would say did she know that.
Nevertheless, she had not deceived Paul ... She had told him. She would make this right. She would force this life to give her what she needed, work and friends and a place in the world. Her face a little white with her struggle to keep her house standing, she turned to her guests. She was afraid that she did not play the hostess very well. She felt as though she were play-acting. She repeated phrases that she had heard Katherine Mark use, and laughed at herself for doing so. She suspected that they thought her very odd, and she fancied that Mrs. Constantine looked at her short hair with grave suspicion.
Afterwards, when she told Paul this, he was rather uncomfortable.
"It"ll soon be long again, dear, won"t it?" he said.
"Don"t you like it short then?" she asked.
"Of course I like it, but there"s no reason to be unusual, is there? We don"t want to seem different from other people, do we, darling?"
"I don"t know," said Maggie. "We want to be ourselves. I don"t think I shall ever grow my hair long again. It"s so much more comfortable like this."
"If I ask you, dear," said Paul.
"No, not even if you ask me," she answered, laughing.
She noticed then, for the first time, that he could look sulky like a small school-boy.
"Why, Paul," she said. "If you wanted to grow a beard I shouldn"t like it, but I shouldn"t dream of stopping you."
"That"s quite different," he answered. "I should never dream of growing a beard. Grace won"t like it if you look odd."
"Grace isn"t my teacher," said Maggie with a sudden hot hostility that surprised herself.
She discovered, by the way, very quickly that the three ladies had no very warm feelings for Grace. They showed undisguised pleasure at the thought that Maggie would now be on various Committees instead of her sister-in-law.
"It will be your place, of course, as wife of the vicar," said Mrs.
Constantine. "Hitherto Miss Trenchard--"
"Oh, but I couldn"t be on a Committee," cried Maggie. "I"ve never been on one in my life. I should never know what to do."
"Never been on a Committee!" cried Miss Purves, quivering with interest. "Why, Mrs. Trenchard, where have you been all this time?"
"I"m only twenty," said Maggie. They certainly thought it strange of her to confess to her age like that. "At home father never had any Committees, he did it all himself, or rather didn"t do it."
Mrs. Constantine shook her head. "We must all help you," she said.
"You"re very young, my dear, for the responsibilities of this parish."