The Forsyte Saga - Volume 3 - Page 186/204

Then, with an infinite relief, he saw her turn back toward the house.

What could he give her to make amends? Pearls, travel, horses, other

young men--anything she wanted--that he might lose the memory of her

young figure lonely by the water! There! She had set that tune going

again! Why--it was a mania! Dark, thrumming, faint, travelling from the

house. It was as though she had said: "If I can't have something to keep

me going, I shall die of this!" Soames dimly understood. Well, if it

helped her, let her keep it thrumming on all night! And, mousing back

through the fruit garden, he regained the verandah. Though he meant to

go in and speak to her now, he still hesitated, not knowing what to say,

trying hard to recall how it felt to be thwarted in love. He ought to

know, ought to remember--and he could not! Gone--all real recollection;

except that it had hurt him horribly. In this blankness he stood passing

his handkerchief over hands and lips, which were very dry. By craning

his head he could just see Fleur, standing with her back to that piano

still grinding out its tune, her arms tight crossed on her breast, a

lighted cigarette between her lips, whose smoke half veiled her face.

The expression on it was strange to Soames, the eyes shone and stared,

and every feature was alive with a sort of wretched scorn and anger.

Once or twice he had seen Annette look like that--the face was too

vivid, too naked, not his daughter's at that moment. And he dared not go

in, realising the futility of any attempt at consolation. He sat down in

the shadow of the ingle-nook.

Monstrous trick, that Fate had played him! Nemesis! That old unhappy

marriage! And in God's name-why? How was he to know, when he wanted

Irene so violently, and she consented to be his, that she would never

love him? The tune died and was renewed, and died again, and still

Soames sat in the shadow, waiting for he knew not what. The fag of

Fleur's cigarette, flung through the window, fell on the grass; he

watched it glowing, burning itself out. The moon had freed herself above

the poplars, and poured her unreality on the garden. Comfortless light,

mysterious, withdrawn--like the beauty of that woman who had never loved

him--dappling the nemesias and the stocks with a vesture not of earth.

Flowers! And his flower so unhappy! Ah! Why could one not put happiness

into Local Loans, gild its edges, insure it against going down?

Light had ceased to flow out now from the drawing-room window. All was

silent and dark in there. Had she gone up? He rose, and, tiptoeing,

peered in. It seemed so! He entered. The verandah kept the moonlight

out; and at first he could see nothing but the outlines of furniture

blacker than the darkness. He groped toward the farther window to shut

it. His foot struck a chair, and he heard a gasp. There she was, curled

and crushed into the corner of the sofa! His hand hovered. Did she want

his consolation? He stood, gazing at that ball of crushed frills and

hair and graceful youth, trying to burrow its way out of sorrow. How

leave her there? At last he touched her hair, and said: