The Forsyte Saga - Volume 3 - Page 25/204

"Soames!"

Soames turned his head a very little.

"How are you?" he said. "Haven't seen you for twenty years."

"No. Whatever made you come here?"

"My sins," said Soames. "What stuff!"

"Stuff? Oh, yes--of course; it hasn't arrived yet.

"It never will," said Soames; "it must be making a dead loss."

"Of course it is."

"How d'you know?"

"It's my Gallery."

Soames sniffed from sheer surprise.

"Yours? What on earth makes you run a show like this?"

"I don't treat Art as if it were grocery."

Soames pointed to the Future Town. "Look at that! Who's going to live in

a town like that, or with it on his walls?"

June contemplated the picture for a moment.

"It's a vision," she said.

"The deuce!"

There was silence, then June rose. 'Crazylooking creature!' he thought.

"Well," he said, "you'll find your young stepbrother here with a woman I

used to know. If you take my advice, you'll close this exhibition."

June looked back at him. "Oh! You Forsyte!" she said, and moved on.

About her light, fly-away figure, passing so suddenly away, was a look

of dangerous decisions. Forsyte! Of course, he was a Forsyte! And so was

she! But from the time when, as a mere girl, she brought Bosinney into

his life to wreck it, he had never hit it off with June and never

would! And here she was, unmarried to this day, owning a Gallery!... And

suddenly it came to Soames how little he knew now of his own family.

The old aunts at Timothy's had been dead so many years; there was

no clearing-house for news. What had they all done in the War? Young

Roger's boy had been wounded, St. John Hayman's second son killed; young

Nicholas' eldest had got an O. B. E., or whatever they gave them.

They had all joined up somehow, he believed. That boy of Jolyon's and

Irene's, he supposed, had been too young; his own generation, of course,

too old, though Giles Hayman had driven a car for the Red Cross--and

Jesse Hayman been a special constable--those "Dromios" had always been

of a sporting type! As for himself, he had given a motor ambulance, read

the papers till he was sick of them, passed through much anxiety, bought

no clothes, lost seven pounds in weight; he didn't know what more he

could have done at his age. Indeed, thinking it over, it struck him that

he and his family had taken this war very differently to that affair

with the Boers, which had been supposed to tax all the resources of

the Empire. In that old war, of course, his nephew Val Dartie had

been wounded, that fellow Jolyon's first son had died of enteric, "the

Dromios" had gone out on horses, and June had been a nurse; but all that

had seemed in the nature of a portent, while in this war everybody had

done "their bit," so far as he could make out, as a matter of course. It

seemed to show the growth of something or other--or perhaps the decline

of something else. Had the Forsytes become less individual, or

more Imperial, or less provincial? Or was it simply that one hated

Germans?... Why didn't Fleur come, so that he could get away? He saw

those three return together from the other room and pass back along the

far side of the screen. The boy was standing before the Juno now. And,

suddenly, on the other side of her, Soames saw--his daughter, with

eyebrows raised, as well they might be. He could see her eyes glint

sideways at the boy, and the boy look back at her. Then Irene slipped

her hand through his arm, and drew him on. Soames saw him glancing

round, and Fleur looking after them as the three went out.