DEATH IN THE FAMILY
Arthur Morel was growing
up. He was a quick, careless, impulsive boy, a
good deal like his father. He hated study, made
a great moan if he had to work, and escaped as soon
as possible to his sport again.
In appearance he remained the flower
of the family, being well made, graceful, and full
of life. His dark brown hair and fresh colouring,
and his exquisite dark blue eyes shaded with long
lashes, together with his generous manner and fiery
temper, made him a favourite. But as he grew
older his temper became uncertain. He flew into
rages over nothing, seemed unbearably raw and irritable.
His mother, whom he loved, wearied
of him sometimes. He thought only of himself.
When he wanted amusement, all that stood in his way
he hated, even if it were she. When he was in
trouble he moaned to her ceaselessly.
“Goodness, boy!” she said,
when he groaned about a master who, he said, hated
him, “if you don’t like it, alter it, and
if you can’t alter it, put up with it.”
And his father, whom he had loved
and who had worshipped him, he came to detest.
As he grew older Morel fell into a slow ruin.
His body, which had been beautiful in movement and
in being, shrank, did not seem to ripen with the years,
but to get mean and rather despicable. There came
over him a look of meanness and of paltriness.
And when the mean-looking elderly man bullied or ordered
the boy about, Arthur was furious. Moreover,
Morel’s manners got worse and worse, his habits
somewhat disgusting. When the children were growing
up and in the crucial stage of adolescence, the father
was like some ugly irritant to their souls. His
manners in the house were the same as he used among
the colliers down pit.
“Dirty nuisance!” Arthur
would cry, jumping up and going straight out of the
house when his father disgusted him. And Morel
persisted the more because his children hated it.
He seemed to take a kind of satisfaction in disgusting
them, and driving them nearly mad, while they were
so irritably sensitive at the age of fourteen or fifteen.
So that Arthur, who was growing up when his father
was degenerate and elderly, hated him worst of all.
Then, sometimes, the father would
seem to feel the contemptuous hatred of his children.
“There’s not a man tries
harder for his family!” he would shout.
“He does his best for them, and then gets treated
like a dog. But I’m not going to stand
it, I tell you!”
But for the threat and the fact that
he did not try so hard as he imagined, they would
have felt sorry. As it was, the battle now went
on nearly all between father and children, he persisting
in his dirty and disgusting ways, just to assert his
independence. They loathed him.
Arthur was so inflamed and irritable
at last, that when he won a scholarship for the Grammar
School in Nottingham, his mother decided to let him
live in town, with one of her sisters, and only come
home at week-ends.
Annie was still a junior teacher in
the Board-school, earning about four shillings a week.
But soon she would have fifteen shillings, since she
had passed her examination, and there would be financial
peace in the house.
Mrs. Morel clung now to Paul.
He was quiet and not brilliant. But still he
stuck to his painting, and still he stuck to his mother.
Everything he did was for her. She waited for
his coming home in the evening, and then she unburdened
herself of all she had pondered, or of all that had
occurred to her during the day. He sat and listened
with his earnestness. The two shared lives.
William was engaged now to his brunette,
and had bought her an engagement ring that cost eight
guineas. The children gasped at such a fabulous
price.
“Eight guineas!” said
Morel. “More fool him! If he’d
gen me some on’t, it ‘ud ha’ looked
better on ’im.”
“Given you some of it!”
cried Mrs. Morel. “Why give you some
of it!”
She remembered he had bought
no engagement ring at all, and she preferred William,
who was not mean, if he were foolish. But now
the young man talked only of the dances to which he
went with his betrothed, and the different resplendent
clothes she wore; or he told his mother with glee
how they went to the theatre like great swells.
He wanted to bring the girl home.
Mrs. Morel said she should come at the Christmas.
This time William arrived with a lady, but with no
presents. Mrs. Morel had prepared supper.
Hearing footsteps, she rose and went to the door.
William entered.
“Hello, mother!” He kissed
her hastily, then stood aside to present a tall, handsome
girl, who was wearing a costume of fine black-and-white
check, and furs.
“Here’s Gyp!”
Miss Western held out her hand and showed her teeth
in a small smile.
“Oh, how do you do, Mrs. Morel!” she exclaimed.
“I am afraid you will be hungry,” said
Mrs. Morel.
“Oh no, we had dinner in the train. Have
you got my gloves, Chubby?”
William Morel, big and raw-boned, looked at her quickly.
“How should I?” he said.
“Then I’ve lost them. Don’t
be cross with me.”
A frown went over his face, but he
said nothing. She glanced round the kitchen.
It was small and curious to her, with its glittering
kissing-bunch, its evergreens behind the pictures,
its wooden chairs and little deal table. At that
moment Morel came in.
“Hello, dad!”
“Hello, my son! Tha’s let on me!”
The two shook hands, and William presented
the lady. She gave the same smile that showed
her teeth.
“How do you do, Mr. Morel?”
Morel bowed obsequiously.
“I’m very well, and I
hope so are you. You must make yourself very
welcome.”
“Oh, thank you,” she replied, rather amused.
“You will like to go upstairs,” said Mrs.
Morel.
“If you don’t mind; but not if it is any
trouble to you.”
“It is no trouble. Annie will take you.
Walter, carry up this box.”
“And don’t be an hour
dressing yourself up,” said William to his betrothed.
Annie took a brass candlestick, and,
too shy almost to speak, preceded the young lady to
the front bedroom, which Mr. and Mrs. Morel had vacated
for her. It, too, was small and cold by candlelight.
The colliers’ wives only lit fires in bedrooms
in case of extreme illness.
“Shall I unstrap the box?” asked Annie.
“Oh, thank you very much!”
Annie played the part of maid, then went downstairs
for hot water.
“I think she’s rather
tired, mother,” said William. “It’s
a beastly journey, and we had such a rush.”
“Is there anything I can give her?” asked
Mrs. Morel.
“Oh no, she’ll be all right.”
But there was a chill in the atmosphere.
After half an hour Miss Western came down, having
put on a purplish-coloured dress, very fine for the
collier’s kitchen.
“I told you you’d no need to change,”
said William to her.
“Oh, Chubby!” Then she
turned with that sweetish smile to Mrs. Morel.
“Don’t you think he’s always grumbling,
Mrs. Morel?”
“Is he?” said Mrs. Morel. “That’s
not very nice of him.”
“It isn’t, really!”
“You are cold,” said the mother.
“Won’t you come near the fire?”
Morel jumped out of his armchair.
“Come and sit you here!” he cried.
“Come and sit you here!”
“No, dad, keep your own chair. Sit on the
sofa, Gyp,” said William.
“No, no!” cried Morel.
“This cheer’s warmest. Come and sit
here, Miss Wesson.”
“Thank you so much,” said
the girl, seating herself in the collier’s armchair,
the place of honour. She shivered, feeling the
warmth of the kitchen penetrate her.
“Fetch me a hanky, Chubby dear!”
she said, putting up her mouth to him, and using the
same intimate tone as if they were alone; which made
the rest of the family feel as if they ought not to
be present. The young lady evidently did not
realise them as people: they were creatures to
her for the present. William winced.
In such a household, in Streatham,
Miss Western would have been a lady condescending
to her inferiors. These people were to her, certainly
clownish—in short, the working classes.
How was she to adjust herself?
“I’ll go,” said Annie.
Miss Western took no notice, as if
a servant had spoken. But when the girl came
downstairs again with the handkerchief, she said:
“Oh, thank you!” in a gracious way.
She sat and talked about the dinner
on the train, which had been so poor; about London,
about dances. She was really very nervous, and
chattered from fear. Morel sat all the time smoking
his thick twist tobacco, watching her, and listening
to her glib London speech, as he puffed. Mrs.
Morel, dressed up in her best black silk blouse, answered
quietly and rather briefly. The three children
sat round in silence and admiration. Miss Western
was the princess. Everything of the best was
got out for her: the best cups, the best spoons,
the best table cloth, the best coffee-jug. The
children thought she must find it quite grand.
She felt strange, not able to realise the people, not
knowing how to treat them. William joked, and
was slightly uncomfortable.
At about ten o’clock he said to her:
“Aren’t you tired, Gyp?”
“Rather, Chubby,” she
answered, at once in the intimate tones and putting
her head slightly on one side.
“I’ll light her the candle, mother,”
he said.
“Very well,” replied the mother.
Miss Western stood up, held out her hand to Mrs. Morel.
“Good-night, Mrs. Morel,” she said.
Paul sat at the boiler, letting the
water run from the tap into a stone beer-bottle.
Annie swathed the bottle in an old flannel pit-singlet,
and kissed her mother good-night. She was to
share the room with the lady, because the house was
full.
“You wait a minute,” said
Mrs. Morel to Annie. And Annie sat nursing the
hot-water bottle. Miss Western shook hands all
round, to everybody’s discomfort, and took her
departure, preceded by William. In five minutes
he was downstairs again. His heart was rather
sore; he did not know why. He talked very little
till everybody had gone to bed, but himself and his
mother. Then he stood with his legs apart, in
his old attitude on the hearthrug, and said hesitatingly:
“Well, mother?”
“Well, my son?”
She sat in the rocking-chair, feeling
somehow hurt and humiliated, for his sake.
“Do you like her?”
“Yes,” came the slow answer.
“She’s shy yet, mother.
She’s not used to it. It’s different
from her aunt’s house, you know.”
“Of course it is, my boy; and she must find
it difficult.”
“She does.” Then
he frowned swiftly. “If only she wouldn’t
put on her blessed airs!”
“It’s only her first awkwardness, my boy.
She’ll be all right.”
“That’s it, mother,”
he replied gratefully. But his brow was gloomy.
“You know, she’s not like you, mother.
She’s not serious, and she can’t think.”
“She’s young, my boy.”
“Yes; and she’s had no
sort of show. Her mother died when she was a
child. Since then she’s lived with her aunt,
whom she can’t bear. And her father was
a rake. She’s had no love.”
“No! Well, you must make up to her.”
“And so—you have to forgive her a
lot of things.”
“What do you have to forgive her, my boy?”
“I dunno. When she seems
shallow, you have to remember she’s never had
anybody to bring her deeper side out. And she’s
fearfully fond of me.”
“Anybody can see that.”
“But you know, mother—she’s—she’s
different from us. Those sort of people, like
those she lives amongst, they don’t seem to have
the same principles.”
“You mustn’t judge too hastily,”
said Mrs. Morel.
But he seemed uneasy within himself.
In the morning, however, he was up singing and larking
round the house.
“Hello!” he called, sitting on the stairs.
“Are you getting up?”
“Yes,” her voice called faintly.
“Merry Christmas!” he shouted to her.
Her laugh, pretty and tinkling, was
heard in the bedroom. She did not come down in
half an hour.
“Was she really getting up when she said
she was?” he asked of Annie.
“Yes, she was,” replied Annie.
He waited a while, then went to the stairs again.
“Happy New Year,” he called.
“Thank you, Chubby dear!” came the laughing
voice, far away.
“Buck up!” he implored.
It was nearly an hour, and still he
was waiting for her. Morel, who always rose before
six, looked at the clock.
“Well, it’s a winder!” he exclaimed.
The family had breakfasted, all but
William. He went to the foot of the stairs.
“Shall I have to send you an
Easter egg up there?” he called, rather crossly.
She only laughed. The family expected, after that
time of preparation, something like magic. At
last she came, looking very nice in a blouse and skirt.
“Have you really been all this time getting
ready?” he asked.
“Chubby dear! That question is not permitted,
is it, Mrs. Morel?”
She played the grand lady at first.
When she went with William to chapel, he in his frock-coat
and silk hat, she in her furs and London-made costume,
Paul and Arthur and Annie expected everybody to bow
to the ground in admiration. And Morel, standing
in his Sunday suit at the end of the road, watching
the gallant pair go, felt he was the father of princes
and princesses.
And yet she was not so grand.
For a year now she had been a sort of secretary or
clerk in a London office. But while she was with
the Morels she queened it. She sat and let Annie
or Paul wait on her as if they were her servants.
She treated Mrs. Morel with a certain glibness and
Morel with patronage. But after a day or so she
began to change her tune.
William always wanted Paul or Annie
to go along with them on their walks. It was
so much more interesting. And Paul really did
admire “Gipsy” wholeheartedly; in fact,
his mother scarcely forgave the boy for the adulation
with which he treated the girl.
On the second day, when Lily said:
“Oh, Annie, do you know where I left my muff?”
William replied:
“You know it is in your bedroom. Why do
you ask Annie?”
And Lily went upstairs with a cross,
shut mouth. But it angered the young man that
she made a servant of his sister.
On the third evening William and Lily
were sitting together in the parlour by the fire in
the dark. At a quarter to eleven Mrs. Morel was
heard raking the fire. William came out to the
kitchen, followed by his beloved.
“Is it as late as that, mother?”
he said. She had been sitting alone.
“It is not late, my boy,
but it is as late as I usually sit up.”
“Won’t you go to bed, then?” he
asked.
“And leave you two? No, my boy, I don’t
believe in it.”
“Can’t you trust us, mother?”
“Whether I can or not, I won’t
do it. You can stay till eleven if you like,
and I can read.”
“Go to bed, Gyp,” he said to his girl.
“We won’t keep mater waiting.”
“Annie has left the candle burning,
Lily,” said Mrs. Morel; “I think you will
see.”
“Yes, thank you. Good-night, Mrs. Morel.”
William kissed his sweetheart at the
foot of the stairs, and she went. He returned
to the kitchen.
“Can’t you trust us, mother?” he
repeated, rather offended.
“My boy, I tell you I don’t
believe in leaving two young things like you
alone downstairs when everyone else is in bed.”
And he was forced to take this answer. He kissed
his mother good-night.
At Easter he came over alone.
And then he discussed his sweetheart endlessly with
his mother.
“You know, mother, when I’m
away from her I don’t care for her a bit.
I shouldn’t care if I never saw her again.
But, then, when I’m with her in the evenings
I am awfully fond of her.”
“It’s a queer sort of
love to marry on,” said Mrs. Morel, “if
she holds you no more than that!”
“It is funny!” he
exclaimed. It worried and perplexed him.
“But yet—there’s so much between
us now I couldn’t give her up.”
“You know best,” said
Mrs. Morel. “But if it is as you say, I
wouldn’t call it love—at any
rate, it doesn’t look much like it.”
“Oh, I don’t know, mother. She’s
an orphan, and—”
They never came to any sort of conclusion.
He seemed puzzled and rather fretted. She was
rather reserved. All his strength and money went
in keeping this girl. He could scarcely afford
to take his mother to Nottingham when he came over.
Paul’s wages had been raised
at Christmas to ten shillings, to his great joy.
He was quite happy at Jordan’s, but his health
suffered from the long hours and the confinement.
His mother, to whom he became more and more significant,
thought how to help.
His half-day holiday was on Monday
afternoon. On a Monday morning in May, as the
two sat alone at breakfast, she said:
“I think it will be a fine day.”
He looked up in surprise. This meant something.
“You know Mr. Leivers has gone
to live on a new farm. Well, he asked me last
week if I wouldn’t go and see Mrs. Leivers, and
I promised to bring you on Monday if it’s fine.
Shall we go?”
“I say, little woman, how lovely!”
he cried. “And we’ll go this afternoon?”
Paul hurried off to the station jubilant.
Down Derby Road was a cherry-tree that glistened.
The old brick wall by the Statutes ground burned scarlet,
spring was a very flame of green. And the steep
swoop of highroad lay, in its cool morning dust, splendid
with patterns of sunshine and shadow, perfectly still.
The trees sloped their great green shoulders proudly;
and inside the warehouse all the morning, the boy had
a vision of spring outside.
When he came home at dinner-time his
mother was rather excited.
“Are we going?” he asked.
“When I’m ready,” she replied.
Presently he got up.
“Go and get dressed while I wash up,”
he said.
She did so. He washed the pots,
straightened, and then took her boots. They were
quite clean. Mrs. Morel was one of those naturally
exquisite people who can walk in mud without dirtying
their shoes. But Paul had to clean them for her.
They were kid boots at eight shillings a pair.
He, however, thought them the most dainty boots in
the world, and he cleaned them with as much reverence
as if they had been flowers.
Suddenly she appeared in the inner
doorway rather shyly. She had got a new cotton
blouse on. Paul jumped up and went forward.
“Oh, my stars!” he exclaimed. “What
a bobby-dazzler!”
She sniffed in a little haughty way, and put her head
up.
“It’s not a bobby-dazzler at all!”
she replied. “It’s very quiet.”
She walked forward, whilst he hovered round her.
“Well,” she asked, quite
shy, but pretending to be high and mighty, “do
you like it?”
“Awfully! You are a fine little woman
to go jaunting out with!”
He went and surveyed her from the back.
“Well,” he said, “if
I was walking down the street behind you, I should
say: ‘Doesn’t that little person
fancy herself!”’
“Well, she doesn’t,” replied Mrs.
Morel. “She’s not sure it suits her.”
“Oh no! she wants to be in dirty
black, looking as if she was wrapped in burnt paper.
It does suit you, and I say you look nice.”
She sniffed in her little way, pleased, but pretending
to know better.
“Well,” she said, “it’s
cost me just three shillings. You couldn’t
have got it ready-made for that price, could you?”
“I should think you couldn’t,” he
replied.
“And, you know, it’s good stuff.”
“Awfully pretty,” he said.
The blouse was white, with a little sprig of heliotrope
and black.
“Too young for me, though, I’m afraid,”
she said.
“Too young for you!” he
exclaimed in disgust. “Why don’t you
buy some false white hair and stick it on your head.”
“I s’ll soon have no need,” she
replied. “I’m going white fast enough.”
“Well, you’ve no business
to,” he said. “What do I want with
a white-haired mother?”
“I’m afraid you’ll
have to put up with one, my lad,” she said rather
strangely.
They set off in great style, she carrying
the umbrella William had given her, because of the
sun. Paul was considerably taller than she, though
he was not big. He fancied himself.
On the fallow land the young wheat
shone silkily. Minton pit waved its plumes of
white steam, coughed, and rattled hoarsely.
“Now look at that!” said
Mrs. Morel. Mother and son stood on the road to
watch. Along the ridge of the great pit-hill crawled
a little group in silhouette against the sky, a horse,
a small truck, and a man. They climbed the incline
against the heavens. At the end the man tipped
the wagon. There was an undue rattle as the waste
fell down the sheer slope of the enormous bank.
“You sit a minute, mother,”
he said, and she took a seat on a bank, whilst he
sketched rapidly. She was silent whilst he worked,
looking round at the afternoon, the red cottages shining
among their greenness.
“The world is a wonderful place,”
she said, “and wonderfully beautiful.”
“And so’s the pit,”
he said. “Look how it heaps together, like
something alive almost—a big creature that
you don’t know.”
“Yes,” she said. “Perhaps!”
“And all the trucks standing
waiting, like a string of beasts to be fed,”
he said.
“And very thankful I am they
are standing,” she said, “for that
means they’ll turn middling time this week.”
“But I like the feel of men
on things, while they’re alive. There’s
a feel of men about trucks, because they’ve
been handled with men’s hands, all of them.”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Morel.
They went along under the trees of
the highroad. He was constantly informing her,
but she was interested. They passed the end of
Nethermere, that was tossing its sunshine like petals
lightly in its lap. Then they turned on a private
road, and in some trepidation approached a big farm.
A dog barked furiously. A woman came out to see.
“Is this the way to Willey Farm?” Mrs.
Morel asked.
Paul hung behind in terror of being
sent back. But the woman was amiable, and directed
them. The mother and son went through the wheat
and oats, over a little bridge into a wild meadow.
Peewits, with their white breasts glistening, wheeled
and screamed about them. The lake was still and
blue. High overhead a heron floated. Opposite,
the wood heaped on the hill, green and still.
“It’s a wild road, mother,”
said Paul. “Just like Canada.”
“Isn’t it beautiful!” said Mrs.
Morel, looking round.
“See that heron—see—see
her legs?”
He directed his mother, what she must
see and what not. And she was quite content.
“But now,” she said, “which way?
He told me through the wood.”
The wood, fenced and dark, lay on their left.
“I can feel a bit of a path
this road,” said Paul. “You’ve
got town feet, somehow or other, you have.”
They found a little gate, and soon
were in a broad green alley of the wood, with a new
thicket of fir and pine on one hand, an old oak glade
dipping down on the other. And among the oaks
the bluebells stood in pools of azure, under the new
green hazels, upon a pale fawn floor of oak-leaves.
He found flowers for her.
“Here’s a bit of new-mown
hay,” he said; then, again, he brought her forget-me-nots.
And, again, his heart hurt with love, seeing her hand,
used with work, holding the little bunch of flowers
he gave her. She was perfectly happy.
But at the end of the riding was a
fence to climb. Paul was over in a second.
“Come,” he said, “let me help you.”
“No, go away. I will do it in my own way.”
He stood below with his hands up ready
to help her. She climbed cautiously.
“What a way to climb!”
he exclaimed scornfully, when she was safely to earth
again.
“Hateful stiles!” she cried.
“Duffer of a little woman,” he replied,
“who can’t get over ’em.”
In front, along the edge of the wood,
was a cluster of low red farm buildings. The
two hastened forward. Flush with the wood was
the apple orchard, where blossom was falling on the
grindstone. The pond was deep under a hedge and
overhanging oak trees. Some cows stood in the
shade. The farm and buildings, three sides of
a quadrangle, embraced the sunshine towards the wood.
It was very still.
Mother and son went into the small
railed garden, where was a scent of red gillivers.
By the open door were some floury loaves, put out to
cool. A hen was just coming to peck them.
Then, in the doorway suddenly appeared a girl in a
dirty apron. She was about fourteen years old,
had a rosy dark face, a bunch of short black curls,
very fine and free, and dark eyes; shy, questioning,
a little resentful of the strangers, she disappeared.
In a minute another figure appeared, a small, frail
woman, rosy, with great dark brown eyes.
“Oh!” she exclaimed, smiling
with a little glow, “you’ve come, then.
I am glad to see you.” Her voice was
intimate and rather sad.
The two women shook hands.
“Now are you sure we’re
not a bother to you?” said Mrs. Morel. “I
know what a farming life is.”
“Oh no! We’re only
too thankful to see a new face, it’s so lost
up here.”
“I suppose so,” said Mrs. Morel.
They were taken through into the parlour—a
long, low room, with a great bunch of guelder-roses
in the fireplace. There the women talked, whilst
Paul went out to survey the land. He was in the
garden smelling the gillivers and looking at the plants,
when the girl came out quickly to the heap of coal
which stood by the fence.
“I suppose these are cabbage-roses?”
he said to her, pointing to the bushes along the fence.
She looked at him with startled, big brown eyes.
“I suppose they are cabbage-roses when they
come out?” he said.
“I don’t know,” she faltered.
“They’re white with pink middles.”
“Then they’re maiden-blush.”
Miriam flushed. She had a beautiful warm colouring.
“I don’t know,” she said.
“You don’t have much in your garden,”
he said.
“This is our first year here,”
she answered, in a distant, rather superior way, drawing
back and going indoors. He did not notice, but
went his round of exploration. Presently his mother
came out, and they went through the buildings.
Paul was hugely delighted.
“And I suppose you have the
fowls and calves and pigs to look after?” said
Mrs. Morel to Mrs. Leivers.
“No,” replied the little
woman. “I can’t find time to look
after cattle, and I’m not used to it. It’s
as much as I can do to keep going in the house.”
“Well, I suppose it is,” said Mrs. Morel.
Presently the girl came out.
“Tea is ready, mother,” she said in a
musical, quiet voice.
“Oh, thank you, Miriam, then
we’ll come,” replied her mother, almost
ingratiatingly. “Would you care to
have tea now, Mrs. Morel?”
“Of course,” said Mrs. Morel. “Whenever
it’s ready.”
Paul and his mother and Mrs. Leivers
had tea together. Then they went out into the
wood that was flooded with bluebells, while fumy forget-me-nots
were in the paths. The mother and son were in
ecstasy together.
When they got back to the house, Mr.
Leivers and Edgar, the eldest son, were in the kitchen.
Edgar was about eighteen. Then Geoffrey and Maurice,
big lads of twelve and thirteen, were in from school.
Mr. Leivers was a good-looking man in the prime of
life, with a golden-brown moustache, and blue eyes
screwed up against the weather.
The boys were condescending, but Paul
scarcely observed it. They went round for eggs,
scrambling into all sorts of places. As they were
feeding the fowls Miriam came out. The boys took
no notice of her. One hen, with her yellow chickens,
was in a coop. Maurice took his hand full of
corn and let the hen peck from it.
“Durst you do it?” he asked of Paul.
“Let’s see,” said Paul.
He had a small hand, warm, and rather
capable-looking. Miriam watched. He held
the corn to the hen. The bird eyed it with her
hard, bright eye, and suddenly made a peck into his
hand. He started, and laughed. “Rap,
rap, rap!” went the bird’s beak in his
palm. He laughed again, and the other boys joined.
“She knocks you, and nips you,
but she never hurts,” said Paul, when the last
corn had gone. “Now, Miriam,” said
Maurice, “you come an ’ave a go.”
“No,” she cried, shrinking back.
“Ha! baby. The mardy-kid!” said her
brothers.
“It doesn’t hurt a bit,” said Paul.
“It only just nips rather nicely.”
“No,” she still cried, shaking her black
curls and shrinking.
“She dursn’t,” said
Geoffrey. “She niver durst do anything except
recite poitry.”
“Dursn’t jump off a gate,
dursn’t tweedle, dursn’t go on a slide,
dursn’t stop a girl hittin’ her. She
can do nowt but go about thinkin’ herself somebody.
‘The Lady of the Lake.’ Yah!”
cried Maurice.
Miriam was crimson with shame and misery.
“I dare do more than you,”
she cried. “You’re never anything
but cowards and bullies.”
“Oh, cowards and bullies!” they repeated
mincingly, mocking her speech.
“Not such a clown
shall anger me,
A boor is answered silently,”
he quoted against her, shouting with laughter.
She went indoors. Paul went with
the boys into the orchard, where they had rigged up
a parallel bar. They did feats of strength.
He was more agile than strong, but it served.
He fingered a piece of apple-blossom that hung low
on a swinging bough.
“I wouldn’t get the apple-blossom,”
said Edgar, the eldest brother. “There’ll
be no apples next year.”
“I wasn’t going to get it,” replied
Paul, going away.
The boys felt hostile to him; they
were more interested in their own pursuits. He
wandered back to the house to look for his mother.
As he went round the back, he saw Miriam kneeling
in front of the hen-coop, some maize in her hand,
biting her lip, and crouching in an intense attitude.
The hen was eyeing her wickedly. Very gingerly
she put forward her hand. The hen bobbed for
her. She drew back quickly with a cry, half of
fear, half of chagrin.
“It won’t hurt you,” said Paul.
She flushed crimson and started up.
“I only wanted to try,” she said in a
low voice.
“See, it doesn’t hurt,”
he said, and, putting only two corns in his palm,
he let the hen peck, peck, peck at his bare hand.
“It only makes you laugh,” he said.
She put her hand forward and dragged
it away, tried again, and started back with a cry.
He frowned.
“Why, I’d let her take
corn from my face,” said Paul, “only she
bumps a bit. She’s ever so neat. If
she wasn’t, look how much ground she’d
peck up every day.”
He waited grimly, and watched.
At last Miriam let the bird peck from her hand.
She gave a little cry—fear, and pain because
of fear—rather pathetic. But she had
done it, and she did it again.
“There, you see,” said
the boy. “It doesn’t hurt, does it?”
She looked at him with dilated dark eyes.
“No,” she laughed, trembling.
Then she rose and went indoors.
She seemed to be in some way resentful of the boy.
“He thinks I’m only a
common girl,” she thought, and she wanted to
prove she was a grand person like the “Lady
of the Lake”.
Paul found his mother ready to go
home. She smiled on her son. He took the
great bunch of flowers. Mr. and Mrs. Leivers walked
down the fields with them. The hills were golden
with evening; deep in the woods showed the darkening
purple of bluebells. It was everywhere perfectly
stiff, save for the rustling of leaves and birds.
“But it is a beautiful place,” said Mrs.
Morel.
“Yes,” answered Mr. Leivers;
“it’s a nice little place, if only it
weren’t for the rabbits. The pasture’s
bitten down to nothing. I dunno if ever I s’ll
get the rent off it.”
He clapped his hands, and the field
broke into motion near the woods, brown rabbits hopping
everywhere.
“Would you believe it!” exclaimed Mrs.
Morel.
She and Paul went on alone together.
“Wasn’t it lovely, mother?” he said
quietly.
A thin moon was coming out. His
heart was full of happiness till it hurt. His
mother had to chatter, because she, too, wanted to
cry with happiness.
“Now wouldn’t I help
that man!” she said. “Wouldn’t
I see to the fowls and the young stock! And I’d
learn to milk, and I’d talk with him, and
I’d plan with him. My word, if I were
his wife, the farm would be run, I know! But
there, she hasn’t the strength—she
simply hasn’t the strength. She ought never
to have been burdened like it, you know. I’m
sorry for her, and I’m sorry for him too.
My word, if I’d had him, I shouldn’t
have thought him a bad husband! Not that she does
either; and she’s very lovable.”
William came home again with his sweetheart
at the Whitsuntide. He had one week of his holidays
then. It was beautiful weather. As a rule,
William and Lily and Paul went out in the morning together
for a walk. William did not talk to his beloved
much, except to tell her things from his boyhood.
Paul talked endlessly to both of them. They lay
down, all three, in a meadow by Minton Church.
On one side, by the Castle Farm, was a beautiful quivering
screen of poplars. Hawthorn was dropping from
the hedges; penny daisies and ragged robin were in
the field, like laughter. William, a big fellow
of twenty-three, thinner now and even a bit gaunt,
lay back in the sunshine and dreamed, while she fingered
with his hair. Paul went gathering the big daisies.
She had taken off her hat; her hair was black as a
horse’s mane. Paul came back and threaded
daisies in her jet-black hair—big spangles
of white and yellow, and just a pink touch of ragged
robin.
“Now you look like a young witch-woman,”
the boy said to her. “Doesn’t she,
William?”
Lily laughed. William opened
his eyes and looked at her. In his gaze was a
certain baffled look of misery and fierce appreciation.
“Has he made a sight of me?”
she asked, laughing down on her lover.
“That he has!” said William, smiling.
He looked at her. Her beauty
seemed to hurt him. He glanced at her flower-decked
head and frowned.
“You look nice enough, if that’s
what you want to know,” he said.
And she walked without her hat.
In a little while William recovered, and was rather
tender to her. Coming to a bridge, he carved her
initials and his in a heart.
L. L. W.
W. M.
She watched his strong, nervous hand,
with its glistening hairs and freckles, as he carved,
and she seemed fascinated by it.
All the time there was a feeling of
sadness and warmth, and a certain tenderness in the
house, whilst William and Lily were at home. But
often he got irritable. She had brought, for
an eight-days’ stay, five dresses and six blouses.
“Oh, would you mind,”
she said to Annie, “washing me these two blouses,
and these things?”
And Annie stood washing when William
and Lily went out the next morning. Mrs. Morel
was furious. And sometimes the young man, catching
a glimpse of his sweetheart’s attitude towards
his sister, hated her.
On Sunday morning she looked very
beautiful in a dress of foulard, silky and sweeping,
and blue as a jay-bird’s feather, and in a large
cream hat covered with many roses, mostly crimson.
Nobody could admire her enough. But in the evening,
when she was going out, she asked again:
“Chubby, have you got my gloves?”
“Which?” asked William.
“My new black SUEDE.”
“No.”
There was a hunt. She had lost them.
“Look here, mother,” said
William, “that’s the fourth pair she’s
lost since Christmas—at five shillings
a pair!”
“You only gave me two of them,” she
remonstrated.
And in the evening, after supper,
he stood on the hearthrug whilst she sat on the sofa,
and he seemed to hate her. In the afternoon he
had left her whilst he went to see some old friend.
She had sat looking at a book. After supper William
wanted to write a letter.
“Here is your book, Lily,”
said Mrs. Morel. “Would you care to go on
with it for a few minutes?”
“No, thank you,” said the girl. “I
will sit still.”
“But it is so dull.”
William scribbled irritably at a great
rate. As he sealed the envelope he said:
“Read a book! Why, she’s never read
a book in her life.”
“Oh, go along!” said Mrs. Morel, cross
with the exaggeration,
“It’s true, mother—she
hasn’t,” he cried, jumping up and taking
his old position on the hearthrug. “She’s
never read a book in her life.”
“’Er’s like me,”
chimed in Morel. “‘Er canna see what there
is i’ books, ter sit borin’ your nose
in ’em for, nor more can I.”
“But you shouldn’t say
these things,” said Mrs. Morel to her son.
“But it’s true, mother—she
can’t read. What did you give her?”
“Well, I gave her a little thing
of Annie Swan’s. Nobody wants to read dry
stuff on Sunday afternoon.”
“Well, I’ll bet she didn’t read
ten lines of it.”
“You are mistaken,” said his mother.
All the time Lily sat miserably on the sofa.
He turned to her swiftly.
“Did you ready any?” he asked.
“Yes, I did,” she replied.
“How much?”
“I don’t know how many pages.”
“Tell me one thing you read.”
She could not.
She never got beyond the second page.
He read a great deal, and had a quick, active intelligence.
She could understand nothing but love-making and chatter.
He was accustomed to having all his thoughts sifted
through his mother’s mind; so, when he wanted
companionship, and was asked in reply to be the billing
and twittering lover, he hated his betrothed.
“You know, mother,” he
said, when he was alone with her at night, “she’s
no idea of money, she’s so wessel-brained.
When she’s paid, she’ll suddenly buy such
rot as marrons glaces, and then I have to buy her
season ticket, and her extras, even her underclothing.
And she wants to get married, and I think myself we
might as well get married next year. But at this
rate—”
“A fine mess of a marriage it
would be,” replied his mother. “I
should consider it again, my boy.”
“Oh, well, I’ve gone too
far to break off now,” he said, “and so
I shall get married as soon as I can.”
“Very well, my boy. If
you will, you will, and there’s no stopping you;
but I tell you, I can’t sleep when I think about
it.”
“Oh, she’ll be all right, mother.
We shall manage.”
“And she lets you buy her underclothing?”
asked the mother.
“Well,” he began apologetically,
“she didn’t ask me; but one morning—and
it was cold—I found her on the station
shivering, not able to keep still; so I asked her
if she was well wrapped up. She said: ’I
think so.’ So I said: ‘Have you
got warm underthings on?’ And she said:
‘No, they were cotton.’ I asked her
why on earth she hadn’t got something thicker
on in weather like that, and she said because she had
nothing. And there she is—a bronchial
subject! I had to take her and get some
warm things. Well, mother, I shouldn’t mind
the money if we had any. And, you know, she ought
to keep enough to pay for her season-ticket; but no,
she comes to me about that, and I have to find the
money.”
“It’s a poor lookout,” said Mrs.
Morel bitterly.
He was pale, and his rugged face,
that used to be so perfectly careless and laughing,
was stamped with conflict and despair.
“But I can’t give her
up now; it’s gone too far,” he said.
“And, besides, for some things I couldn’t
do without her.”
“My boy, remember you’re
taking your life in your hands,” said Mrs. Morel.
“Nothing is as bad as a marriage that’s
a hopeless failure. Mine was bad enough, God
knows, and ought to teach you something; but it might
have been worse by a long chalk.”
He leaned with his back against the
side of the chimney-piece, his hands in his pockets.
He was a big, raw-boned man, who looked as if he would
go to the world’s end if he wanted to. But
she saw the despair on his face.
“I couldn’t give her up now,” he
said.
“Well,” she said, “remember
there are worse wrongs than breaking off an engagement.”
“I can’t give her up now,”
he said.
The clock ticked on; mother and son
remained in silence, a conflict between them; but
he would say no more. At last she said:
“Well, go to bed, my son.
You’ll feel better in the morning, and perhaps
you’ll know better.”
He kissed her, and went. She
raked the fire. Her heart was heavy now as it
had never been. Before, with her husband, things
had seemed to be breaking down in her, but they did
not destroy her power to live. Now her soul felt
lamed in itself. It was her hope that was struck.
And so often William manifested the
same hatred towards his betrothed. On the last
evening at home he was railing against her.
“Well,” he said, “if
you don’t believe me, what she’s like,
would you believe she has been confirmed three times?”
“Nonsense!” laughed Mrs. Morel.
“Nonsense or not, she has!
That’s what confirmation means for her—a
bit of a theatrical show where she can cut a figure.”
“I haven’t, Mrs. Morel!”
cried the girl—“I haven’t! it
is not true!”
“What!” he cried, flashing
round on her. “Once in Bromley, once in
Beckenham, and once somewhere else.”
“Nowhere else!” she said, in tears—“nowhere
else!”
“It was! And if it wasn’t why
were you confirmed twice?”
“Once I was only fourteen, Mrs. Morel,”
she pleaded, tears in her eyes.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Morel;
“I can quite understand it, child. Take
no notice of him. You ought to be ashamed, William,
saying such things.”
“But it’s true. She’s
religious—she had blue velvet Prayer-Books—and
she’s not as much religion, or anything else,
in her than that table-leg. Gets confirmed three
times for show, to show herself off, and that’s
how she is in everything—everything!”
The girl sat on the sofa, crying. She was not
strong.
“As for love!” he
cried, “you might as well ask a fly to love you!
It’ll love settling on you—”
“Now, say no more,” commanded
Mrs. Morel. “If you want to say these things,
you must find another place than this. I am ashamed
of you, William! Why don’t you be more
manly. To do nothing but find fault with a girl,
and then pretend you’re engaged to her!”
Mrs. Morel subsided in wrath and indignation.
William was silent, and later he repented,
kissed and comforted the girl. Yet it was true,
what he had said. He hated her.
When they were going away, Mrs. Morel
accompanied them as far as Nottingham. It was
a long way to Keston station.
“You know, mother,” he
said to her, “Gyp’s shallow. Nothing
goes deep with her.”
“William, I wish you wouldn’t
say these things,” said Mrs. Morel, very uncomfortable
for the girl who walked beside her.
“But it doesn’t, mother.
She’s very much in love with me now, but if I
died she’d have forgotten me in three months.”
Mrs. Morel was afraid. Her heart
beat furiously, hearing the quiet bitterness of her
son’s last speech.
“How do you know?” she
replied. “You don’t know, and
therefore you’ve no right to say such a thing.”
“He’s always saying these things!”
cried the girl.
“In three months after I was
buried you’d have somebody else, and I should
be forgotten,” he said. “And that’s
your love!”
Mrs. Morel saw them into the train
in Nottingham, then she returned home.
“There’s one comfort,”
she said to Paul—“he’ll never
have any money to marry on, that I am sure of.
And so she’ll save him that way.”
So she took cheer. Matters were
not yet very desperate. She firmly believed William
would never marry his Gipsy. She waited, and she
kept Paul near to her.
All summer long William’s letters
had a feverish tone; he seemed unnatural and intense.
Sometimes he was exaggeratedly jolly, usually he was
flat and bitter in his letter.
“Ah,” his mother said,
“I’m afraid he’s ruining himself
against that creature, who isn’t worthy of his
love—no, no more than a rag doll.”
He wanted to come home. The midsummer
holiday was gone; it was a long while to Christmas.
He wrote in wild excitement, saying he could come
for Saturday and Sunday at Goose Fair, the first week
in October.
“You are not well, my boy,”
said his mother, when she saw him. She was almost
in tears at having him to herself again.
“No, I’ve not been well,”
he said. “I’ve seemed to have a dragging
cold all the last month, but it’s going, I think.”
It was sunny October weather.
He seemed wild with joy, like a schoolboy escaped;
then again he was silent and reserved. He was
more gaunt than ever, and there was a haggard look
in his eyes.
“You are doing too much,” said his mother
to him.
He was doing extra work, trying to
make some money to marry on, he said. He only
talked to his mother once on the Saturday night; then
he was sad and tender about his beloved.
“And yet, you know, mother,
for all that, if I died she’d be broken-hearted
for two months, and then she’d start to forget
me. You’d see, she’d never come home
here to look at my grave, not even once.”
“Why, William,” said his
mother, “you’re not going to die, so why
talk about it?”
“But whether or not—” he replied.
“And she can’t help it.
She is like that, and if you choose her—well,
you can’t grumble,” said his mother.
On the Sunday morning, as he was putting his collar
on:
“Look,” he said to his
mother, holding up his chin, “what a rash my
collar’s made under my chin!”
Just at the junction of chin and throat
was a big red inflammation.
“It ought not to do that,”
said his mother. “Here, put a bit of this
soothing ointment on. You should wear different
collars.”
He went away on Sunday midnight, seeming
better and more solid for his two days at home.
On Tuesday morning came a telegram
from London that he was ill. Mrs. Morel got off
her knees from washing the floor, read the telegram,
called a neighbour, went to her landlady and borrowed
a sovereign, put on her things, and set off.
She hurried to Keston, caught an express for London
in Nottingham. She had to wait in Nottingham nearly
an hour. A small figure in her black bonnet,
she was anxiously asking the porters if they knew
how to get to Elmers End. The journey was three
hours. She sat in her corner in a kind of stupor,
never moving. At King’s Cross still no
one could tell her how to get to Elmers End. Carrying
her string bag, that contained her nightdress, a comb
and brush, she went from person to person. At
last they sent her underground to Cannon Street.
It was six o’clock when she
arrived at William’s lodging. The blinds
were not down.
“How is he?” she asked.
“No better,” said the landlady.
She followed the woman upstairs.
William lay on the bed, with bloodshot eyes, his face
rather discoloured. The clothes were tossed about,
there was no fire in the room, a glass of milk stood
on the stand at his bedside. No one had been
with him.
“Why, my son!” said the mother bravely.
He did not answer. He looked
at her, but did not see her. Then he began to
say, in a dull voice, as if repeating a letter from
dictation: “Owing to a leakage in the hold
of this vessel, the sugar had set, and become converted
into rock. It needed hacking—”
He was quite unconscious. It
had been his business to examine some such cargo of
sugar in the Port of London.
“How long has he been like this?”
the mother asked the landlady.
“He got home at six o’clock
on Monday morning, and he seemed to sleep all day;
then in the night we heard him talking, and this morning
he asked for you. So I wired, and we fetched
the doctor.”
“Will you have a fire made?”
Mrs. Morel tried to soothe her son, to keep him still.
The doctor came. It was pneumonia,
and, he said, a peculiar erysipelas, which had started
under the chin where the collar chafed, and was spreading
over the face. He hoped it would not get to the
brain.
Mrs. Morel settled down to nurse.
She prayed for William, prayed that he would recognise
her. But the young man’s face grew more
discoloured. In the night she struggled with
him. He raved, and raved, and would not come
to consciousness. At two o’clock, in a dreadful
paroxysm, he died.
Mrs. Morel sat perfectly still for
an hour in the lodging bedroom; then she roused the
household.
At six o’clock, with the aid
of the charwoman, she laid him out; then she went
round the dreary London village to the registrar and
the doctor.
At nine o’clock to the cottage
on Scargill Street came another wire:
“William died last night. Let father come,
bring money.”
Annie, Paul, and Arthur were at home;
Mr. Morel was gone to work. The three children
said not a word. Annie began to whimper with fear;
Paul set off for his father.
It was a beautiful day. At Brinsley
pit the white steam melted slowly in the sunshine
of a soft blue sky; the wheels of the headstocks twinkled
high up; the screen, shuffling its coal into the trucks,
made a busy noise.
“I want my father; he’s
got to go to London,” said the boy to the first
man he met on the bank.
“Tha wants Walter Morel? Go in theer an’
tell Joe Ward.”
Paul went into the little top office.
“I want my father; he’s got to go to London.”
“Thy feyther? Is he down? What’s
his name?”
“Mr. Morel.”
“What, Walter? Is owt amiss?”
“He’s got to go to London.”
The man went to the telephone and rang up the bottom
office.
“Walter Morel’s wanted,
number 42, Hard. Summat’s amiss; there’s
his lad here.”
Then he turned round to Paul.
“He’ll be up in a few minutes,”
he said.
Paul wandered out to the pit-top.
He watched the chair come up, with its wagon of coal.
The great iron cage sank back on its rest, a full carfle
was hauled off, an empty tram run on to the chair,
a bell ting’ed somewhere, the chair heaved,
then dropped like a stone.
Paul did not realise William was dead;
it was impossible, with such a bustle going on.
The puller-off swung the small truck on to the turn-table,
another man ran with it along the bank down the curving
lines.
“And William is dead, and my
mother’s in London, and what will she be doing?”
the boy asked himself, as if it were a conundrum.
He watched chair after chair come
up, and still no father. At last, standing beside
a wagon, a man’s form! the chair sank on its
rests, Morel stepped off. He was slightly lame
from an accident.
“Is it thee, Paul? Is ’e worse?”
“You’ve got to go to London.”
The two walked off the pit-bank, where
men were watching curiously. As they came out
and went along the railway, with the sunny autumn field
on one side and a wall of trucks on the other, Morel
said in a frightened voice:
“’E’s niver gone, child?”
“Yes.”
“When wor’t?”
“Last night. We had a telegram from my
mother.”
Morel walked on a few strides, then
leaned up against a truck-side, his hand over his
eyes. He was not crying. Paul stood looking
round, waiting. On the weighing machine a truck
trundled slowly. Paul saw everything, except
his father leaning against the truck as if he were
tired.
Morel had only once before been to
London. He set off, scared and peaked, to help
his wife. That was on Tuesday. The children
were left alone in the house. Paul went to work,
Arthur went to school, and Annie had in a friend to
be with her.
On Saturday night, as Paul was turning
the corner, coming home from Keston, he saw his mother
and father, who had come to Sethley Bridge Station.
They were walking in silence in the dark, tired, straggling
apart. The boy waited.
“Mother!” he said, in the darkness.
Mrs. Morel’s small figure seemed not to observe.
He spoke again.
“Paul!” she said, uninterestedly.
She let him kiss her, but she seemed unaware of him.
In the house she was the same—small,
white, and mute. She noticed nothing, she said
nothing, only:
“The coffin will be here to-night,
Walter. You’d better see about some help.”
Then, turning to the children: “We’re
bringing him home.”
Then she relapsed into the same mute
looking into space, her hands folded on her lap.
Paul, looking at her, felt he could not breathe.
The house was dead silent.
“I went to work, mother,” he said plaintively.
“Did you?” she answered, dully.
After half an hour Morel, troubled and bewildered,
came in again.
“Wheer s’ll we ha’e him when he
DOEScome?” he asked his wife.
“In the front-room.”
“Then I’d better shift th’ table?”
“Yes.”
“An’ ha’e him across th’ chairs?”
“You know there—Yes, I suppose so.”
Morel and Paul went, with a candle,
into the parlour. There was no gas there.
The father unscrewed the top of the big mahogany oval
table, and cleared the middle of the room; then he
arranged six chairs opposite each other, so that the
coffin could stand on their beds.
“You niver seed such a length
as he is!” said the miner, and watching anxiously
as he worked.
Paul went to the bay window and looked
out. The ash-tree stood monstrous and black in
front of the wide darkness. It was a faintly luminous
night. Paul went back to his mother.
At ten o’clock Morel called:
“He’s here!”
Everyone started. There was a
noise of unbarring and unlocking the front door, which
opened straight from the night into the room.
“Bring another candle,” called Morel.
Annie and Arthur went. Paul followed
with his mother. He stood with his arm round
her waist in the inner doorway. Down the middle
of the cleared room waited six chairs, face to face.
In the window, against the lace curtains, Arthur held
up one candle, and by the open door, against the night,
Annie stood leaning forward, her brass candlestick
glittering.
There was the noise of wheels.
Outside in the darkness of the street below Paul could
see horses and a black vehicle, one lamp, and a few
pale faces; then some men, miners, all in their shirt-sleeves,
seemed to struggle in the obscurity. Presently
two men appeared, bowed beneath a great weight.
It was Morel and his neighbour.
“Steady!” called Morel, out of breath.
He and his fellow mounted the steep
garden step, heaved into the candlelight with their
gleaming coffin-end. Limbs of other men were seen
struggling behind. Morel and Burns, in front,
staggered; the great dark weight swayed.
“Steady, steady!” cried Morel, as if in
pain.
All the six bearers were up in the
small garden, holding the great coffin aloft.
There were three more steps to the door. The yellow
lamp of the carriage shone alone down the black road.
“Now then!” said Morel.
The coffin swayed, the men began to
mount the three steps with their load. Annie’s
candle flickered, and she whimpered as the first men
appeared, and the limbs and bowed heads of six men
struggled to climb into the room, bearing the coffin
that rode like sorrow on their living flesh.
“Oh, my son—my son!”
Mrs. Morel sang softly, and each time the coffin swung
to the unequal climbing of the men: “Oh,
my son—my son—my son!”
“Mother!” Paul whimpered, his hand round
her waist.
She did not hear.
“Oh, my son—my son!” she repeated.
Paul saw drops of sweat fall from
his father’s brow. Six men were in the
room—six coatless men, with yielding, struggling
limbs, filling the room and knocking against the furniture.
The coffin veered, and was gently lowered on to the
chairs. The sweat fell from Morel’s face
on its boards.
“My word, he’s a weight!”
said a man, and the five miners sighed, bowed, and,
trembling with the struggle, descended the steps again,
closing the door behind them.
The family was alone in the parlour
with the great polished box. William, when laid
out, was six feet four inches long. Like a monument
lay the bright brown, ponderous coffin. Paul thought
it would never be got out of the room again.
His mother was stroking the polished wood.
They buried him on the Monday in the
little cemetery on the hillside that looks over the
fields at the big church and the houses. It was
sunny, and the white chrysanthemums frilled themselves
in the warmth.
Mrs. Morel could not be persuaded,
after this, to talk and take her old bright interest
in life. She remained shut off. All the way
home in the train she had said to herself : “If
only it could have been me!”
When Paul came home at night he found
his mother sitting, her day’s work done, with
hands folded in her lap upon her coarse apron.
She always used to have changed her dress and put
on a black apron, before. Now Annie set his supper,
and his mother sat looking blankly in front of her,
her mouth shut tight. Then he beat his brains
for news to tell her.
“Mother, Miss Jordan was down
to-day, and she said my sketch of a colliery at work
was beautiful.”
But Mrs. Morel took no notice.
Night after night he forced himself to tell her things,
although she did not listen. It drove him almost
insane to have her thus. At last:
“What’s a-matter, mother?” he asked.
She did not hear.
“What’s a-matter?” he persisted.
“Mother, what’s a-matter?”
“You know what’s the matter,” she
said irritably, turning away.
The lad—he was sixteen
years old—went to bed drearily. He
was cut off and wretched through October, November
and December. His mother tried, but she could
not rouse herself. She could only brood on her
dead son; he had been let to die so cruelly.
At last, on December 23, with his
five shillings Christmas-box in his pocket, Paul wandered
blindly home. His mother looked at him, and her
heart stood still.
“What’s the matter?” she asked.
“I’m badly, mother!”
he replied. “Mr. Jordan gave me five shillings
for a Christmas-box!”
He handed it to her with trembling hands. She
put it on the table.
“You aren’t glad!” he reproached
her; but he trembled violently.
“Where hurts you?” she said, unbuttoning
his overcoat.
It was the old question.
“I feel badly, mother.”
She undressed him and put him to bed.
He had pneumonia dangerously, the doctor said.
“Might he never have had it
if I’d kept him at home, not let him go to Nottingham?”
was one of the first things she asked.
“He might not have been so bad,” said
the doctor.
Mrs. Morel stood condemned on her own ground.
“I should have watched the living, not the dead,”
she told herself.
Paul was very ill. His mother
lay in bed at nights with him; they could not afford
a nurse. He grew worse, and the crisis approached.
One night he tossed into consciousness in the ghastly,
sickly feeling of dissolution, when all the cells
in the body seem in intense irritability to be breaking
down, and consciousness makes a last flare of struggle,
like madness.
“I s’ll die, mother!” he cried,
heaving for breath on the pillow.
She lifted him up, crying in a small voice:
“Oh, my son—my son!”
That brought him to. He realised
her. His whole will rose up and arrested him.
He put his head on her breast, and took ease of her
for love.
“For some things,” said
his aunt, “it was a good thing Paul was ill that
Christmas. I believe it saved his mother.”
Paul was in bed for seven weeks.
He got up white and fragile. His father had bought
him a pot of scarlet and gold tulips. They used
to flame in the window in the March sunshine as he
sat on the sofa chattering to his mother. The
two knitted together in perfect intimacy. Mrs.
Morel’s life now rooted itself in Paul.
William had been a prophet. Mrs.
Morel had a little present and a letter from Lily
at Christmas. Mrs. Morel’s sister had a
letter at the New Year.
“I was at a ball last night.
Some delightful people were there, and I enjoyed myself
thoroughly,” said the letter. “I had
every dance—did not sit out one.”
Mrs. Morel never heard any more of her.
Morel and his wife were gentle with
each other for some time after the death of their
son. He would go into a kind of daze, staring
wide-eyed and blank across the room. Then he
got up suddenly and hurried out to the Three Spots,
returning in his normal state. But never in his
life would he go for a walk up Shepstone, past the
office where his son had worked, and he always avoided
the cemetery.