<h2><span>CHAPTER XX</span></h2>
<div class="block2">
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<div>"Yourself are with yourself the sole consortress</div>
<div>In that unleaguerable fortress;</div>
<div>It knows you not for portress."</div>
<div class="right"><span class="smcap">Francis Thompson.</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>I have often envied Lesage's stratagem in which he makes Le diable
boiteux transport his patron to a high point in the city, and then
obligingly remove roof after roof from the houses spread out beneath his
eyes, revealing with a sublime disregard for edification what is going
on in each of them in turn. That is just what I should like to do with
you, Reader, transport you to the top of, shall we say, the low church
tower of Riff, and take off one red roof after another of the clustering
houses beneath us. But I should not choose midnight, as Lesage did, but
tea-time for my visitation, and then if you appeared bored, I would
quickly whisk off another roof.</p>
<p>We might look in at Roger's cottage near the church first of all, and
see what he is doing.</p>
<p>On this particular afternoon, some three weeks after his conversation
with Annette under the apple tree, I am sorry to record that he was
doing nothing. That was a pity, for there was a great deal waiting to be
done. July and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</SPAN></span> a new quarter were at hand. Several new leases had to be
looked over, the death of one of his farmers had brought up the old
hateful business of right of heriot, the accounts of the Aldeburgh house
property were in at last and must be checked. There was plenty to do,
but nevertheless Roger was sitting in his office-room, with his elbow on
his last labour-sheet, and his chin in his hand. He, usually so careful,
had actually blotted the names of half a dozen labourers. His
housekeeper, the stoutest woman in Riff, sister to the late Mr.
Nicholls, had put his tea near him half an hour before. Mr. Nicholls'
spinster sister was always called "Mrs. Nicholls." But it was the wedded
Mrs. Nicholls who had obtained the situation of Roger's housekeeper by
sheer determination for the unwedded lady of the same name, and when
Roger had faintly demurred at the size of his housekeeper designate, had
informed him sternly that "she was stout only in appearance."</p>
<p>It was a pity he had let his tea grow cold, and had left his plate of
thick, rectangular bread-and-butter untouched.</p>
<p>Roger was a person who hated thought, and he was thinking, and the
process was fatiguing to him. He had for years "hustled" along like a
sturdy pony on the rounds of his monotonous life, and had been fairly
well satisfied with it till now. But lately the thoughts which would
have been invading a more imaginative man for a long time past had at
last reached him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</SPAN></span> had filtered down through the stiff clay of the upper
crust of his mind.</p>
<p>Was he going on <i>for ever</i> keeping another man's property assiduously
together, doing two men's work for one man's pay? When his uncle made
him his agent he lived in the house at Hulver, and his horses were kept
for him, and the two hundred a year was a generous allowance. But Dick
had not increased it when he succeeded. He had given him the cottage,
which was in use as an estate office, rent free, but nothing else. Roger
had not liked to say anything at first, even when his work increased,
and later on Dick had not been "to be got at." And the years were
passing, and Roger was thirty-five. He ought to be marrying if he was
ever going to marry at all. Of course, if Dick were in a state of health
to be appealed to at close quarters—he never answered letters—he would
probably act generously. He had always been open-handed. But Dick, poor
beggar, was dead already as far as any use he could be to himself or others.</p>
<p>Roger shuddered at the recollection of the shapeless, prostrate figure,
with the stout, vacant face, and the fat hand, that had once been so
delicate and supple, which they had wanted to guide to do it knew not what.</p>
<p>Roger could not see that he had any future. But then he had not had any
for years past, so why was he thinking about that now? Annette was the
reason. Till Annette came to Riff he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</SPAN></span> had always vaguely supposed that
he and Janey would "make a match of it" some day. Janey was the only
person he really knew. I do not mean to imply for a moment that Roger in
his pink coat at the Lowshire Hunt Ball was not a popular partner. He
was. And in times past he had been shyly and faintly attracted by more
than one of his pretty neighbours. But he was fond of Janey. And now
that his uncle was dead, Janey was, perhaps, the only person left for
whom he had a rooted attachment. But it seemed there were disturbing
women who could inspire feelings quite different from the affection and
compassion he felt for his cousin. Annette was one of them. Roger
resented the difference, and then dwelt upon it. He distrusted Annette's
parentage. "Take a bird out of a good nest." That was his idea of a
suitable marriage. Never in his wildest moments would he have thought of
marrying a woman whose father was a Frenchman, much less a Frenchman who
kept a public-house. He wasn't thinking of such a thing now—at least,
he told himself he wasn't. But he had been deeply chagrined at Annette's
mention of her father all the same, so deeply that he had not repeated
the odious fact even to Janey, the recipient of all the loose matter in his mind.</p>
<p>How kind Annette had been to poor Janey during these last weeks! Janey
had unaccountably and dumbly hung back at first, but Annette was not to
be denied. Roger, with his elbow<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</SPAN></span> on his labour-sheet, saw that whatever
her father might be, the least he could do would be to ride up to Riff
at an early date and thank her.</p>
<p>It is only a step from Roger's cottage to the Dower House.</p>
<p>All was silent there. Janey and Harry had gone up to Hulver to sail his
boat after tea, and the house was deserted. Tommy, the gardener's boy,
the only person to whom Harry had confided his marriage, was clipping
the edges of the newly-mown grass beneath Lady Louisa's window.</p>
<p>And Lady Louisa herself?</p>
<p>She lay motionless with fixed eyes, while the nurse, her
daughter-in-law, read a novel near the open window.</p>
<p>She knew what had happened. She remembered everything. Her hearing and
sight were as clear as ever. But she could make no sign of understanding
or recognition. A low, guttural sound she could sometimes make, but not
always, and the effort was so enormous that she could hardly induce
herself to make it. At first she had talked unceasingly, unable to
remember that the words which were so clear to herself had no sound for
those bending over her, trying to understand what she wished. Janey and
the doctor had encouraged her, had comforted her, had made countless
experiments in order to establish means of communication with her, but without avail.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Would you like me to read, mother? See, I am holding your hand. Press
it ever so little, and I shall know you would like a little reading."</p>
<p>No faintest pressure.</p>
<p>"Don't trouble to answer, mother, but if you would like to see Roger for
a few minutes, shut your eyes."</p>
<p>The eyes remained open, fixed. Lady Louisa tried to shut them, but she could not.</p>
<p>"Now I am going to hold up these large letters one after another. If
there is something you wish me to do, spell it to me. Make a sound when
I reach the right letter. I begin with A. Now we come to B. Here is C."</p>
<p>But after many fruitless attempts Janey gave up the letters. Her mother
groaned at intervals, but when the letters were written down they did
not make sense. No bridge could span the gulf. At last the doctor
advised Janey to give up trying to span it.</p>
<p>"Leave her in peace," he said in Lady Louisa's hearing, that acute
hearing which was as intact as her eyesight.</p>
<p>So Lady Louisa was left in peace.</p>
<p>She saw the reins and whip which she had held so tightly slip out of her
hands. She who had imposed her will on others all her life could impose
it no longer. She was tended by a traitor whom she hated, yet she was
unable to denounce her, to rid herself of her daily, hourly presence.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>A wood pigeon cooed tranquilly in the cedar, and Lady Louisa groaned.</p>
<p>The nurse put down her book, and came and stood beside the bed. The two
enemies looked at each other, the younger woman boldly meeting the
impotent hatred of her patient's eyes.</p>
<p>"It's no use, milady," she said, replacing a little cushion under her
elbow. "You're down, and I'm up, and you've got to make up your mind to
it. Harry told me you'd got it out of him. Are you any the happier for
knowing I'm your daughter-in-law? I'd meant to spare you that. It was
that as brought on the stroke. Very clever you were to wheedle it out of
Harry, but it didn't do you much good. You'd turn me out without a
character if you could, wouldn't you? But you can't. And listen to me.
You won't ever be any better, or I shouldn't talk like this. I dare say
I'm pretty bad, but I'd never say there wasn't a chance while there was
the least little scrap of one left. But there isn't, not one scrap. It's
all over with your high and mighty ways, and riding rough-shod over
everybody, and poor Miss Manvers. It's no use crying. You've made others
cry often enough. Now it's your turn. And don't go and think I'm going
to be cruel to you because you've been cruel to others. I'm not. I'm
sorry enough for you, lying there like a log, eating your heart out. I'm
going to make you as comfortable as ever I can, and to do my duty by
you. And when you're gone I'm going to make Harry happier<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</SPAN></span> than he's
ever been under your thumb. So now you understand."</p>
<p>Lady Louisa understood. Her eyes, terrible, fierce as a wounded
panther's, filled with tears. She made no other sign.</p>
<p>The nurse wiped them away.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</SPAN></span></p>
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