The Jalna Saga – Deluxe Edition: All Sixteen Books of the Enduring Classic Series & The Biography of Mazo de la Roche

Home > Other > The Jalna Saga – Deluxe Edition: All Sixteen Books of the Enduring Classic Series & The Biography of Mazo de la Roche > Page 450
The Jalna Saga – Deluxe Edition: All Sixteen Books of the Enduring Classic Series & The Biography of Mazo de la Roche Page 450

by de la Roche, Mazo


  As the car drew near the school Adeline leant forward in pleasurable anticipation. She savoured her freedom from rules and regulations. How hard she had found it to conform to them! The very core of her had rebelled at doing everything in unison with fifty others. Yet on the surface she had not been rebellious. She had a sense of duty implanted in her chiefly by her two great-uncles. Even when she was very small it had been — “You owe this to your father — you must behave in a way to please your mother — remember, you are a Whiteoak!” when she did disobey rules it had not been in little ways but in larger matters that had occasionally shaken the school. Roma, on the other hand, was constantly evading rules but in such a way that she was seldom found out. Yet Roma clung to the school, felt a little dread of the time when she must leave it.

  Now Renny and the two girls were in the reception room together, the headmistress having given her greetings, exclaimed at Adeline’s growth and exchanged a look with Renny in silent commentary on her beauty.

  Roma’s beauty, thought Renny, was her hair, of an odd shade of gold that had an almost greenish cast. It was Eden’s hair, he thought, and he searched her face for a resemblance to Eden. But, if it were there, it was no more than a fleeting shadow in her smile. Her eyes and cheekbones were those of her mother, Minny Ware.

  Roma said, — “Aren’t you a lucky thing! Going off on an ocean voyage and all of us here swotting away with never any fun.”

  “Your last letter,” answered Adeline, “was full of the fun you’d been having.”

  “Oh, that was nothing. I’ve forgotten it.”

  Renny said, — “Your time will come, Roma.”

  She smiled at him. “Will it? when?”

  “Well, perhaps next year or the year after — when I go across with Adeline.”

  Roma’s narrow eyes were hard with jealousy. “She again — so soon?”

  “He’s just talking,” put in Adeline, her spirit in arms against the thought of Roma’s going with them. “Goodness knows when I shall travel again.”

  At that moment they looked like women. Roma went on, — “Everybody says there’ll be another war before long. Then I may never get across — excepting with some horrible women’s auxiliary corps.”

  “Nonsense,” said Renny.

  “Anyway,” Adeline exclaimed, “that’s all in the future. We’re in the present.”

  “I was born in Italy,” said Roma. “I’m longing to see it. It makes you feel different when you’ve been born abroad.”

  Adeline considered this one of Roma’s “uncomfortable” remarks. She said tersely, — “You can’t remember anything about it.”

  “Oh, yes, I can. I remember a lot.”

  “what?” asked Renny. “You were only two when you came to Jalna.”

  “I remember cypress trees, and a dark woman and little donkeys, and falling on hard stones and cutting my knee.”

  “I wonder who was the dark woman,” said Renny. “Certainly not your mother.”

  “I don’t remember her name but I remember her.”

  Adeline said, — “I’ll bet you wouldn’t know her today if you met her.”

  “Oh, yes, I should. I’d know my father too.”

  “You’ve seen very good photographs of him,” said Renny.

  “Even if I hadn’t seen them I’d know him. I’d know his voice.”

  “You’ve never heard his voice!” exclaimed Adeline.

  “I’ve heard it in his poetry.”

  Adeline pressed back the hair from her forehead in a gesture of despair. Was Roma going to spend this short time for which they had come so far, in talking in this embarrassing fashion? She appealed to Renny: “Are we going to take Roma out to lunch?”

  “Yes. Miss Ellis said we might.” His eyes were on Roma’s face. “I’m glad,” he said gravely, “that you read Eden’s poetry. It is supposed to be very good. It was a pity he died so young.”

  “Do you think so?” A faint smile lifted Roma’s lip — “I don’t.”

  His eyebrows shot up in his dismay. “what a thing to say, Roma! what do you mean?”

  “I think it’s good to die young — before you find out too much.”

  “Then he didn’t die young enough.”

  “what a pity!”

  Adeline sprang up. “I didn’t come here,” she cried, “to talk about death.”

  “It’s the first time,” said Renny, “that Roma has spoken to me of her father.” He spoke soothingly, as though to a colt that had shied at something on the road.

  “Daddy, she can talk to you about death all the holidays, if she wants.”

  Roma stood up. “All right,” she said, “let’s go. Will you come up with me, Adeline, while I get my hat and coat?”

  The two girls went up the stairs together. From the classrooms came the hum of voices. Somewhere scales were being practised on the piano. Clean spring air came in at an open window and a tree was seen rustling its half-open leaves in the May breeze. In the room shared by four girls Adeline surveyed the beds, carefully made by the girls themselves. She exclaimed:

  “To think that I once slept here! How did I ever bear it!”

  “You had fun and so do we. Last night we had a party. I mean just the four of us.”

  “I know — buns and chocolate bars and at midnight you crept down to the kitchen and made cocoa!”

  “Yes … Adeline.”

  “Well?”

  “what if … over there … you’d meet someone?”

  “what sort of someone?”

  “I mean, supposing you fell in love — over in Ireland.”

  “Don’t you worry. I shan’t do that.”

  “what’s to stop you?”

  “Roma, your hair’s lovely.”

  “So’s yours.”

  “Yours is like greeny gold — not like that pinkish blond stuff they make out of peroxide.”

  “Yours is like copper, Adeline … You know, I shan’t be a bit surprised if you have an affair over there. There’s Mooey’s friend Pat Crawshay.”

  “And there’s Mooey himself!” cried Adeline. “And a million other Irishmen.” Then she spoke seriously: “Roma, there isn’t a man living I’d leave Jalna for.”

  “You should have said — for whom I’d leave Jalna.”

  “Roma! Can’t you ever forget you took first prize in English?”

  “But seriously, Adeline, you might fall in love.”

  “No fear. I’m going to Ireland to enjoy myself.”

  “They say being in love is fun.”

  “who said?”

  “Well, perhaps not actually fun, but exciting.”

  “You may have that sort of excitement. Just living is excitement enough for me.”

  “I’m looking forward to the time when I —”

  “Oh, for goodness’ sake, shut up, and put your coat on!”

  “Adeline, if it happens, will you write and tell me?”

  “Yes.”

  “You swear that?”

  “Yes. Come on!”

  “Adeline, would you like to be famous?”

  “I’d like to come out on top in an international horse show. For high jumping, I mean.”

  “what I mean is for poetry or writing a novel.”

  “Well … I’ve never thought about it.”

  “Won’t you ever think romantic thoughts?”

  “Never … I’d better go and tell Daddy you don’t want to come out to lunch.”

  “But I do!” She put on her dark blue coat and little round hat.

  They walked lightly, side by side, down the stairs.

  In the country town hotel Renny looked at them with pride as they sat at table. They were a pretty pair, he thought. The blood of his family running strong in their young veins. Himself and Eden translated into feminine bodies. Eden’s and his manliness submerged into foreign meaning. They sat up nicely, he noticed. They never had been allowed to slouch like some girls. They studied the menu with dignity and were very polite to th
e waiter. Yes, they were a pair to be proud of. He would have liked to keep Roma at Jalna, but Alayne so disliked the child that he had sent her to live with his sister Meg and the arrangement had turned out very well. Meggie was so kind, so affectionate, she was bound to make anyone under her roof happy.

  After lunch Roma was taken back to the school, with a few extra dollars in her handbag and a box of chocolates. Renny and Adeline turned homeward. He always had disliked motoring and, considering the reckless nature of his driving, it seemed a miracle that he never had had an accident. Now he handed over the wheel to Adeline and relaxed with a cigarette.

  Out of the sides of his eyes he saw her clear-cut profile, almost stern in her calm concentration. She drove well, he thought, and it was pleasant to go homeward through the early May afternoon with her at the wheel. He did not like the thought of parting with her, even for so short a time. Almost he wished he were going with her, but then he would miss his favourite season at Jalna. Had he a favourite season? Were they not all dear to him in their turn? As they neared the house he said:

  “Take a good look at it. Pretty fine old house, isn’t it? I don’t mean that it’s so handsome, but there’s an air about it. A woman like my grandmother couldn’t live there for nearly seventy years without leaving her mark on it. And there was my grandfather and my father. Men of character.”

  “And you, too!” she said eagerly.

  “Yes. Me too.… A lot has gone on under that roof. It seems to me that the house knows all about it. Do you think I’m haywire?”

  “Oh, no. I feel the same about it.” Always she tried to feel what he did.

  “Now when you see Maurice’s place, you’ll see a grander house but to me it hasn’t the same feeling. It’s an old house, built in an old land, by people who had lived there since God knows when. But there was the first house built on this thousand acres —”

  “It’s not a thousand acres now, is it?”

  “No. Just five hundred. Half of it was sold off, at various times, to get my uncles out of financial difficulties. Now that’s something I’ve never done and never shall do — sell an acre of this land … As I was saying, this is the first house built on it. The primeval forest was hewn down to make way for it. Your great-grandmother came every day to watch the building of it, and before it was quite finished she took to her bed — that same painted leather bed you sleep in — and gave birth to a son there.”

  “I wonder if I ever shall,” she said.

  “what?”

  “Give birth to a son there.”

  He looked at her in a moment’s astonishment. “Good Lord, what put that idea into your head?”

  “You did.”

  The car was at the door. Renny stared at her, then he said — “Well, not for a good many years, I hope.”

  “Say when I’m forty?”

  He laughed. “Even twenty-five is a long way off.” Then he added seriously, — “There’s room enough at Jalna for you and your husband and Archer and his wife — when the time comes.” Always he was convinced of the elasticity of Jalna and its capacity to shelter all the family.

  “It would need to be a castle to have room enough for me and Archer’s wife.”

  Renny looked at her inquiringly.

  “I’d be bound to hate any woman Archer would choose. He’s conceited and she’d be bound to be conceited.”

  “He’ll get over that.”

  “She wouldn’t.”

  Finch came out of the house. He asked, — “Did you have a nice time, Adeline?”

  “You can imagine it. We drove to the school, picked up Roma, took her out to lunch, took her back to the school.”

  “Well, it was a satisfaction, I suppose, to tell her goodbye.”

  “It always is,” she returned cheerfully.

  Renny said, — “Roma grows less like Eden in looks.”

  “Does she?” said Finch. “That’s a pity.”

  “Still she has his hair and when she smiles there’s a distinct look of him.”

  “Let’s hope she inherits his talent.”

  The three went into the house where the uncles were waiting to be told all about the visit to Roma.

  A visit to another school was in prospect. This was to say goodbye to Adeline’s brother Archer and her cousins, the two young sons of Piers. She looked forward with much pleasure to this because she thought boys’ schools were more interesting than girls’ and because the older cousin, Nooky, was her favourite.

  He was a gentle boy of eighteen, tall and fair, with hazel eyes. He would seldom have been in trouble at home or at school, had it not been for the influence of his wild young brother Philip. But this year he had grown fast. He was head boy of the school. He would matriculate at the end of term, bringing honour to the school, the Headrd confidently expected. He felt that he had outgrown Philip. Yet Philip showed him no deference beyond what he was forced to show him as a prefect. At fifteen he was Nooky’s superior in sports. He was so good at football and hockey, at running and jumping, that the sports-minded rds often ignored his escapades. The brothers were much attached to each other and, at home, shared the same room. They looked on Maurice as almost an outsider.

  The youngest of the three Whiteoaks, Archer, bearing Alayne’s maiden name, also bore a striking resemblance to her father who had been a professor in a New England university. He had a noble white forehead which sun never noticeably tanned, piercing blue eyes, and a mouth usually set in a sombre line as though the weight of the world was on his shoulders. Yet when he did consent to give a smile it was one of extraordinary sweetness. It was a disappointment and even a heartache to his mother that physical resemblance was so far all he seemed to bear to her father. She could not have told you what was wrong with Archer’s nature but certainly it seemed to her that a good deal was wrong.

  On this day he was one of those who were to be confirmed by the visiting Archbishop. Renny, Alayne, and Adeline were coming for the occasion.

  Archer, with the other small boys in his dormitory, had been waked by the early bell, had fallen asleep again. Then had come the slippered steps of Robertson, a prefect, his commanding roar, the leap out of bed and the rush to the lavatory. Archer stood in front of a basin and gingerly washed his face. Hughes, the boy at the next basin, was splashing water over its edge on to the floor and over Archer’s bare feet.

  “Stop it!” shouted Archer.

  “He wants you to be nice and clean for the ceremony,” said Elton.

  Archer threw a handful of water at him. A water fight began. The matron put her head in at the door. Instantly there was order, except from little rosy-faced Elton who found it impossible to obey orders without persuasion. He thrust a wet hand down Archer’s back. Archer writhed away, giving a gurgling yell.

  “Come here, Elton,” the matron said sternly.

  He went to her, his rosy face shining with wet.

  “You are to be confirmed today, aren’t you?”

  “Yes, Miss Macqueen.”

  “Well, I think you ought to behave properly this morning, don’t you?”

  “Yes, Miss Macqueen.”

  “If I have any more disturbance from any of you there’ll be trouble, do you hear?”

  They all heard and looked at her meekly out of bright mischievous eyes. But the door was scarcely shut behind her when there was a hubbub. The morning was lovely. It was a whole holiday. They could not bring themselves to behave. Archer sprang on Elton and brought him to the floor. They rolled together in the wet. Hughes put his thumb under a tap and sent a spray of water into the face of Trotter, a plump boy, the only child of very rich parents who pampered him. Trotter was always brought to school in a limousine, driven by a chauffeur, instead of coming by train with the mob. Everything he owned was too expensive. Each week a package of fruit, sweets and cake, such as not supplied by the school, arrived by post for him. Trotter was lucky if he got one orange out of the package. Usually it was fallen upon before ever he saw it, opened, and the conte
nts distributed. After holidays he returned from home with his pockets full of money. Then, while it lasted, he had friends of a sort, but his air was so strutting, he was so conscious of his own superiority, that soon he was alone again. His loving parents little realized when they read his letters, so full of his happy doings at school, how miserable he really was.

  Now, with the water squirting full in his face, he gasped, ran, stumbled, and one of his fine kid slippers fell off. Instantly it was pounced on, struggled over, hurled into the air, flung down the room, and finally kicked out of the window. Trotter was really roused. He took off his remaining slipper and began to beat Elton with it. The scene was riotous when the door opened and the Head Boy looked in.

  The effect was far more startling than if the matron had reappeared. Seldom did the Head Boy condescend to look into the room. Struck motionless the small boys stared questioningly at him.

  “Elton and Trotter,” he said, “both of you will go to the prefects’ study after breakfast.”

  He left, closing the door quietly behind him.

  “It’s a caning for you!” exclaimed Archer. He did a handstand, waving his wet pink feet in the air.

  “It will be my forty-second since September!” cried Elton boasting. He kept strict account of his canings and no other boy could rival him in this respect. No boy was better liked by the other boys, the prefects, and the rds. No boy in the school was happier, but he was incorrigible. Rules, for him, were made to be broken. Impositions, being kept in, lectures on behaviour or kindly talks, had no effect whatever on him, rosy-cheeked rascal that he was.

  “It will be my first,” mourned Trotter.

  All scampered back to their dormitory, which was in an incredible state of disordered bedding and clothes strewn on beds and floor. An observer might well wonder how the boys were able to find their own garments and get into them with such speed. A lover of beauty might well have admired the swift movements of their naked white bodies, from which summer tan was gone and which still retained the charming contours of childhood.

  Now more than a hundred boys were gathered for breakfast, standing with bent heads while grace was said. This grace was punctuated by quiet shuffling of feet and low coughs, for colds were plentiful. In this school the boys ranged in age from seven to nineteen — from tender small ones to six-footers. They set about eating their porridge; Elton with gusto, Trotter languidly, Archer Whiteoak not at all, for he disliked anything milky. Alayne had arranged for extra milk for him to drink at recess. This he was able to sell for a few cents a glass to boys who liked it.

 

‹ Prev