Anne Severn and the Fieldings - Page 286/574

Mrs. Sutton had once been Colin's nurse up at the Manor: she had married

old Sutton after his first wife's death; old Sutton who wouldn't die and

let Anne have his farm. And now she watched them as if she were afraid

of what they might do next.

"Poor old Nanna," Jerrold said.

"Goodness knows what she thinks of us," said Anne.

"It doesn't matter what she thinks," said Colin.

And they laughed; they laughed; and Jerrold was not quite sure, yet.

But before the night was over he thought he was.

They had given him the little room in the gable. It led out of Colin's

room. And there on the chimneypiece he saw an old photograph of himself

at the age of thirteen, holding a puppy in his arms. He had given it to

Anne on the last day of the midsummer holidays, nineteen hundred. Also

he found a pair of Anne's slippers under the bed, and, caught in a crack

of the dressing-table, one long black hair. This room leading out of

Colin's was Anne's room.

And Colin called out to him, "Do you mind leaving the door open, Jerry?

I can't sleep if it's shut."

They were silent for a while. He was intensely aware of her as she

turned her head round, slowly, to look at him, straight and full.

And the sense of his nearness came over her, soaking in deeper, swamping

her brain. Her wide open eyes darkened; her breathing came in tight,

short jerks; her nerves quivered. She wondered whether he could feel

their quivering, whether he could hear her jerking breath, whether he

could see something queer about her eyes. But she had to look at him,

not shyly, furtively, but straight and full, taking him in.

He was changed. The war had changed him. His face looked harder, the

mouth closer set under the mark of the little clipped fawn-brown

moustache. His eyes that used to flash their blue so gayly, to rest so

lightly, were fixed now, dark and heavy with memory. They had seen too

much. They would never lose that dark memory of the things they had

seen. She wondered, was Colin right? Had the war done worse things to

Jerrold than it had done to him? He would never tell her.

"Jerrold," she said, suddenly, "did you have a good time in India?"

"I suppose so. I dare say I thought I had."