The Three Furlongers
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The Three Furlongers - Sheila Kaye-Smith
Sheila Kaye-Smith
The Three Furlongers
Published by Good Press, 2022
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4064066123741
Table of Contents
BOOK I
CHAPTER I SPARROW HALL
CHAPTER II SHOVELSTRODE
CHAPTER III IN THE RAIN
CHAPTER IV FATE'S AFTERTHOUGHT
CHAPTER V THE HERO
CHAPTER VI THICK WOODS
CHAPTER VII OVER THE GATES OF PARADISE
CHAPTER VIII BRAMBLETYE
CHAPTER IX SOME PEOPLE ARE HAPPY—IN DIFFERENT WAYS
CHAPTER X TONY BACKS AN OUTSIDER
CHAPTER XI DISILLUSION AT SIXTEEN
CHAPTER XII CHILDREN DANCING IN THE DUSK
CHAPTER XIII KEEPING CHRISTMAS
CHAPTER XIV WOODS AT DAWN
CHAPTER XV THE SERMON ON FORGIVENESS
BOOK II
CHAPTER I GLIMPSES AND DREAMS
I
II
III
IV
CHAPTER II THE LETTER THAT DID NOT COME
CHAPTER III ONLY A BOY
CHAPTER IV FLAMES
CHAPTER V COWSANISH
CHAPTER VI AND I ALSO DREAMED
CHAPTER VII WOODS AT NIGHT
CHAPTER VIII VIGIL
CHAPTER IX AND YOU ALSO SAID ...
CHAPTER X A TOAST
BOOK I
Table of Contents
THREE AGAINST THE WORLD
THE THREE FURLONGERS
CHAPTER I SPARROW HALL
Table of Contents
The twilight was dropping over the fields of three counties—Surrey, Kent and Sussex—all touching in the woods round Sparrow Hall. In the sky above and in the fields below lights were creeping out one by one. The Great Wain lit up over Cansiron, just as the farmer's wife set the lamp in the window of Anstiel, and the lights of Dorman's Land were like a reflection of the Pleiades above them.
Janet Furlonger sat waiting in the kitchen of Sparrow Hall—now and then springing up to lift the lid off the pot and smell the brown soup, or to put her face to the window-pane and watch the creeping night, seen dimly through the thick green glass and the mists that steamed up from the fields of Wilderwick.
Janet was immensely tall, and her movements were grand and free. In rest she had a kind of statuesque dignity: she did not stoop, as if ashamed of her height, but held herself proudly, with lifted chin. People used to say that she walked as if she were showing off beautiful clothes. This was meant to be a joke, for Janet's clothes were terrible—old, and badly made. Hats, collars and waist-bands she evidently thought superfluous; it was also fairly obvious that she dispensed with stays—which caused scandal, not because her figure was bad, but because it was too good. Wind, sun and rain had tinted her face to a delicate wood-nut brown, through which the red glowed timidly, like the flush on a spring catkin.
Footsteps sounded on the frosty road, drawing steadily nearer. The next minute the gate clicked. Janet started to her feet, flung open the kitchen door, and ran out into the garden, between rows of chrysanthemums still faintly sweet. Two men were coming up the path, and with outstretched arms she rushed to one of them.
Nigel!—old man!
He did not speak, but folded her to him, bending his face to hers. It was too dark for them to see each other distinctly. All that was clear was the outline of the roof and chimney against the still tremulous west.
Janet pulled him softly up the path, into the doorway, where it was darker still. She put up her hands to his face and gently felt the outlines of his features. Then she began to laugh.
What a fool I am! Didn't I say I wasn't going to have any silly sentimentality?—and here I am, simply wallowing in it. Come into the kitchen, young men, and see what I've got for the satisfaction of your gross appetites.
They followed her into the kitchen, and she turned round and looked at them both. They were very different. The elder brother, Leonard, was like Janet—dark both of hair and eye, with a healthy red under his tan. The younger's hair was between brown and auburn, and his eyes were large and blue and innocent like a child's. His mouth was not like a child's—indeed, there was a peculiar look of age in its drooping corners, and his teeth flashed suddenly, almost vindictively, when he spoke; it was lucky that they were so white and even, for he showed them with every movement of his lips—two fierce, shining rows.
You're late,
said Janet. No, don't look at the clock, unless you've remembered how to do the old sum. It's really something after nine, and the train is supposed to get in at half-past seven.
Yes—but I got hung up at Grinstead station, playing guardian angel to a kid.
Let's hope the kid didn't ask to see your wings,
said Leonard. Was it a girl-kid or a boy-kid?
A girl-kid. There were five of 'em in my carriage. They'd been sent home from school for some reason or other, and this one evidently hadn't let her people know, for when she got out at East Grinstead there was no one to meet her. All the station cabs had been snapped up, and some loathly bounder got hold of her—goodness knows what would have happened if I hadn't turned up and managed to scatter him. I got her a taxi from the Dorset, and sent her off in it to Shovelstrode.
Shovelstrode!—then she must be old Strife's daughter. What age was she?
I should put her down at sixteen, but very innocent.
Pretty?
Ye—es.
Nigel, my boy, you haven't let the grass grow under your feet.
Idiot!—we never exchanged a word except in the way of business. She wanted to know my name, but I took care to say Smith. There was nothing exciting about it at all—only an infernal loss of time.
Quite so. You didn't find me in a particularly good temper when you turned up at Hackenden.
The first words that passed between us were—'Is that you, you ass?' and 'Yes, you fool.' We haven't done the thing properly at all—we've forgotten to fall on each other's necks.
Let's do it now,
said Len, and the two boys collapsed into a mock embrace, in the grips of which they staggered up and down the kitchen, knocking over several chairs.
Oh, stop, you duffers!
shouted Janet; but she was laughing. Nigel hasn't changed a bit,
she said to herself.
What have they been doing to your clothes?
asked Leonard, as his brother finally hurled him off. They stink, lad, they stink.
They've been fumigated,
said Nigel. I've worn off some of the reek in the train, but to-morrow Janey shall peg 'em out to air.
We'll hang 'em across the road from the orchard. Lord! won't the Wilderwick freaks sit up!
It'll take ages to get that smell out,
said Janet ruefully, and your hair, too, Nigel—when'll that look decent again?
I say, stop your personal remarks, you two—and give me something to eat. I'm all one aching void.
Janet took the soup off the fire, and slopped it into three blue bowls. Nigel went round the table, setting straight the spoons and forks, which Janey seemed to have flung on from a distance.
What's that for?
she asked.
The young man started, then flushed slightly.
Hullo! I didn't notice what I was doing. I always had to do that in prison.
Put things straight?—what a good idea!
Yes. Everything had to be straight—in rows. Ugh!
For the first time he looked self-conscious.
Well, it's a very good habit to have got into. You may be quite useful now.
I'm damned if I'd have done it,
said Leonard.
You had to do it,
said Nigel; if you didn't ...
and a shudder passed over him.
What?
asked his brother and sister with interest.
He flushed more deeply, and the muscles of his face quivered.
Then a surprising, terrible thing happened—so surprising and so terrible that Leonard and Janey could only stand and gape. Nigel hid his face in his hands, and began to cry.
For some moments they stared at him with blank, horror-stricken eyes. Scarcely a minute ago he had been uproarious—forgetting pain and shame in the substantial ecstasies of reunion, smothering—after the Furlonger habit—all memories of anguish in a joke. Never since his earliest manhood had they seen him cry, not even on the day they had said good-bye to him for so long. Now he was crying miserably, weakly, hopelessly—crying quietly like a child, his hands covering his eyes, his shoulders shaking a little. Then suddenly he gasped, almost whimpered—
Don't ask me those questions. Don't ask me any more questions.
Nigel,
cried Janet, finding her tongue at last, I'm so sorry. I didn't know you minded. Please don't cry any more—it hurts us.
We didn't mean anything, old man,
said Leonard huskily. Do cheer up, and forget all about it.
Nigel took away his hands from his eyes, and Len and Janey glanced quickly at each other. They had expected to see his face swollen and disfigured, but except for a slight redness round the eyes it was quite unchanged. They both knew that it is only the faces of those who cry continually which are so little altered by tears.
For a moment they could not speak. A chill seemed to have dropped on Sparrow Hall, and all three heard the moaning of the wind—as it swept up to the windows, rattled them, then seemed to hurry away, sighing over the fields.
Come, drink your soup, old chap,
said Janet, pulling up his chair to the table. Write me down an ass, a tactless ass,
she growled to herself; but how could I know he would take on that way?
Nigel obediently began to swallow the soup, while Len and Janey talked across him with laboured airiness about the weather. After the soup came bacon and eggs, and potatoes cooked in their skins. Nigel's spirits began to rise—he seemed childishly delighted with the food, though Janet's cooking was sketchy in the extreme. When the meal was over, he joined in the washing up, which was done at a sink in the corner of the kitchen.
What sort of people are the Lowes?
he asked suddenly, polishing a fork with a vigour and thoroughness which made Leonard and Janey tremble lest he should realise what he was doing. What sort of people are the Lowes?
Janet flushed.
Oh, they're quite ordinary,
said Leonard, quite ordinarily unpleasant, I mean. The old chap's narrow and pious, like most devil-dodgers, and the young 'un's like an ape.
And they've got all the Kent land?
Oh, it's nothing to speak of. You know that end was always too low for wheat
—poor Len was in a panic lest his brother should begin to cry again.
But, strangely enough, Nigel was able to discuss the fallen fortunes of Sparrow Hall with even less emotion than Len and Janey. The tides of his grief seemed to find their way into small streams only. It was about the side-issues of their tragedy that he asked most questions. Was Leonard still going to have a man to help him, now his brother had returned?—Was any profit likely to be made in their reduced circumstances?—Was there any chance of buying back what they had sold to Lowe?
We shall have to go quietly,
said Len, but I don't see why we shouldn't pull through if we're careful. I've given Boorman a week's notice. He can bump round here till it's up, and lend you a hand now and then—I don't suppose you'll tumble into things just at first.
Nigel suddenly turned away.
I'm going out—to have a look round the place.
Now!
Yes—it's a beautiful clear night.
Janet and Leonard moved towards the door.
I'm going alone,
said Nigel shortly.
Janet and Leonard stood still. They stared at each other, at first with surprise, then a little forlornly, while their brother pulled on his overcoat, and went out of the room.
Never, since they could remember, had one of the Furlongers preferred to be without the others.
It was past midnight, and Janet was not yet asleep. She lay in bed, with a lighted candle beside her, her hair tumbled over the pillow and over her body, her neck gleaming through the heavy strands.
Her room was full of warm splashes of colour. The bedspread and carpet, though faded, glowed with sudden reds and gentle browns—faded red roses were on the wall. The window was low, so that when she turned on the pillow she could look straight out of it at a huddled mass of woods. It was uncurtained, and the stars flashed through the thick panes.
There was a knock at the door.
Come in
—and Nigel came in softly.
Hullo, old man.
I want to speak to you, Janey.
And I want to speak to you. Come and sit on the bed.
I—I want to say I'm sorry I cried this evening.
Oh, don't!
gasped Janet.
It's a habit one gets into in prison—crying about little things. Prison is made up of little things and crying about 'em—that's why it's so hellish.
Her hand groped on the coverlet for his.
I expect I'll get out of it—crying, I mean—now I'm back.
Don't let it worry you, old boy—we're pals, you and Len and I. But—but—don't you really like us talking to you about prison?
He lifted his head quickly.
It all depends.
You see, there you were ragging and laughing about your clothes and your hair and all that. So how was I to know you'd mind——
But it's different. Oh, I don't suppose you'll understand—but it's different. Having one's clothes fumigated and one's hair cut short is a joke—it's funny, it's a joke, so I laughed. But being obliged to have everything exactly straight—every damned fork in its damned place——
he stopped suddenly and ground his teeth. It's the little things that are so infernal and degrading; big things one has to make oneself big to tackle, somehow, and it helps. But the little things ... one just cries. Listen, Janey. Once a fortnight they used to come and search us in our cells. We used to stand there just in our vests and drawers, and they'd pass their hands over us. Well, I could stand that, for it was horrible—sickening and monstrous and horrible. But when you were punished just because your tins weren't in the exact mathematical space allotted to them—it wasn't horrible or monstrous at all, just childish and silly; and when a dozen childish and silly things crowd into your day, why, you become childish and silly yourself, that's all. What I can't forgive prison isn't that it's made me hard or wicked or wretched, but that it's made me childish and silly—so if I deserved hanging when I went in, I'm hardly worth spanking now I've come out.
What I can't forgive prison is the miserable ideas you've picked up in it.
There aren't any ideas in prison—only habits.
He hid his face for a minute in the coverlet. Janet's hand crept over his hair.
You'll soon be happy again, old boy,
she whispered.
Perhaps I shall.
I hope to God you will—and now, dear, it's dreadfully late, and you're tired. Hadn't you better go to bed?
He turned to her impulsively.
You'll stick to me, you and Len?—whatever I'm like—even—even if I'm not quite the same as I used to be.
Strange to say, her impression of him was of an infinite childishness. She realised with a pang that while for the last three years she and Leonard had been growing older in their contact with a world of love and sorrow, this boy, in spite of all he had suffered, had merely been shut up with a few rules and habits. In many ways he was younger than when he first went to gaol, more ignorant and more childish—he had lost his grip of life. In other ways he was terribly, horribly older.
She put her arms around his neck, and kissed this pathetic old child, this poor childish old man.
CHAPTER II SHOVELSTRODE
Table of Contents
A row of lights gleamed from Shovelstrode Manor, on the north slope of Ashdown Forest. Shovelstrode was in Sussex, and looked straight over the woods into Surrey and Kent. Round it the pines heaped up till they gave a ragged edge to the hill behind it. Into the house they cast many shadows, and even when at night they were curtained out of the lighted rooms, one could hear them rustling and thrumming a strange tune.
Tony Strife crept up the back stairs to the schoolroom. She paused for a moment and listened to a distant buzz of voices. Her mother must be having visitors, so she would not go near her—she would sit in the schoolroom till it was time to dress for dinner. Tony was sixteen, healthy and clean-limbed, with a thick mouse-coloured plait between her shoulders. She wore a school-girl's blouse and skirt, with a tie of her school cricket-colours. She had in her manner all the mixture of confidence and deference which points to one who is paramount in her own little world, but is for some reason cast adrift in another where she has never been more than subordinate.
The schoolroom was in darkness. The fire was unlighted and the blinds were up, so that the shadows of the pines rushed over the square of moonlight on the floor, waving and gliding and curtseying in the wind. Tony, who had expected drawn blinds and a cosy fireside, was a little dismayed at the dreariness of her kingdom. I wonder if they got my postcard,
she thought forlornly. But the schoolroom was the schoolroom, with or without a fire, and her own special province now that Awdrey had grown up, and exchanged its austere boundaries for a world of calls and dances and chiffons and flirtations. It was a little bit of the glorious land of school from which she had been so abruptly exiled. For the first time since her return a certain warmth glowed in her heart—she sat down on the window-sill and looked out at the pines.
She wondered how soon she would be able to go back to school. Perhaps there would be no more cases, and the clear, all-sufficient life would start again at the half-term. Meantime she would write every week to her three best friends and the mistress she had a rave on,
she would work up her algebra and perhaps get her remove into the sixth next term; and she would finish that beastly nightgown she had been struggling with ever since Easter, and be able to start a frock, like the rest of the form.
Her calculations were interrupted by the sound of footsteps in the passage and a rather strident voice calling—
Tony! Tony!
The next minute the door flew open, and a girl a few years older than herself burst in.
"Hullo!—so you are home! I saw your box in the hall, and swore you must have come back for some reason or other; but of course mother wouldn't believe me. What on earth have you come for?"
They've got whooping-cough at school, and Mrs. Arkwright sent us all home. Didn't mother get my postcard?
Postcard! of course not. We'd no idea you were coming, and your room isn't ready for you, or anything. You ought to have known better than to send only a card—they get kept back for days sometimes. And when you arrived, why didn't you come into the drawing-room and see mother, instead of sneaking up here?
I thought you had visitors—I could hear them talking. I meant to come down after I'd changed.
I see. Well, you'd better come now and speak to mother. She's quite worried about your being here, or rather about my saying you're here when she says you aren't.
Right-O!
and Tony followed her sister out of the room.
In a way Awdrey was like her, but with a more piquant, impertinent cast of features. She was dressed in the latest combination of fashion and sport, with a very short skirt to display her pretty ankles and purple silk stockings. She was strongly scented with some pleasant, flower-like scent, which, however, made Tony wrinkle up her nose with disgust.
You were quite right about there being visitors,
said the elder girl in a more friendly tone. Captain le Bourbourg was here, and as only mother and I were in, I went with him to the door—complications, of course!
Ass,
said Tony shortly.
Awdrey giggled,