The Forsyte Saga - Volume 3 - Page 103/204

That evening Chance, which visits the lives of even the best-invested

Forsytes, put a clue into Fleur's hands. Her father came down to dinner

without a handkerchief, and had occasion to blow his nose.

"I'll get you one, dear," she had said, and ran upstairs. In the sachet

where she sought for it--an old sachet of very faded silk--there were

two compartments: one held handkerchiefs; the other was buttoned,

and contained something flat and hard. By some childish impulse Fleur

unbuttoned it. There was a frame and in it a photograph of herself as

a little girl. She gazed at it, fascinated, as one is by one's own

presentment. It slipped under her fidgeting thumb, and she saw that

another photograph was behind. She pressed her own down further, and

perceived a face, which she seemed to know, of a young woman, very

good-looking, in a very old style of evening dress. Slipping her own

photograph up over it again, she took out a handkerchief and went down.

Only on the stairs did she identify that face. Surely--surely Jon's

mother! The conviction came as a shock. And she stood still in a flurry

of thought. Why, of course! Jon's father had married the woman her

father had wanted to marry, had cheated him out of her, perhaps. Then,

afraid of showing by her manner that she had lighted on his secret,

she refused to think further, and, shaking out the silk handkerchief,

entered the dining-room.

"I chose the softest, Father."

"H'm!" said Soames; "I only use those after a cold. Never mind!"

That evening passed for Fleur in putting two and two together; recalling

the look on her father's face in the confectioner's shop--a look strange

and coldly intimate, a queer look. He must have loved that woman very

much to have kept her photograph all this time, in spite of having lost

her. Unsparing and matter-of-fact, her mind darted to his relations with

her own mother. Had he ever really loved her? She thought not. Jon was

the son of the woman he had really loved. Surely, then, he ought not to

mind his daughter loving him; it only wanted getting used to. And a sigh

of sheer relief was caught in the folds of her nightgown slipping over

her head.