Then She Fled Me (25 page)

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Authors: Sara Seale

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Sometimes she would carry tea up to the nursery and then wish she had not, for she felt like an intruder when she found them together in the firelight with the lamp still unlit. Adrian would watch her laz
i
ly as she set down the tray with a clatter and lit the lamp, and in the spreading ring of light she would observe her sister

s face, soft and flushed, her eyes bright with dreams, and for no reason she would find herself snapping at Adrian

s next remark.

She did not think the tea-parties were a success. Kathy,
she imagined, resented the intrusion, and Adrian himself, she thought, regarded her with a quizzical eye. She would sit rather silently while Kathy poured the tea and waited o
n
Adrian with charming solicitude, and think of those other nursery teas so long ago, with her father burning the toast
,
while his attention wandered as it always did to his eldest daughter, and the smell of the whisky with which he insisted on lacing his tea mingling with the smell of lamp oil and turf and burnt toast so that Nonie, coming in to fetch Danny to bed, would exclaim that the place smelt like a saloon bar.


What are you thinking about?

she heard Adrian ask on one of these occasions.


Other nursery teas,

she answered reminiscently.

Do you remember, Kathy, when Danny was still small and Father used to have tea with us up here
and
bu
rn
the toast because he was always looking at you?


I remember you once attacking him with both fists to get his attention, and he telling you that was no way to capture a man

s heart,

Kathy laughed.

Adrian smiled.


Were you violent even then, Sarah?

he asked idly, but his eyes, had she been watching them, were compassionate.


I didn

t often try to wean him from Kathy,

she replied carelessly.

It wouldn

t have been much use, anyway. I was a very plain child.


But did Nonie never tell you that handsome is as handsome does, and beauty is but skin deep, and all the rest of those comforting
cliché
s?


Well, they didn

t comfort me. I only thought it most unfair that Kathy

s hair curled and mine didn

t. I used to think that was the reason she could always get round people.


The real reason was that you always flew into rages and I didn

t,

said Kathy a little smugly.

Adrian laughed


Soft ways are usually the most disarming,

he said, and Sarah saw his eyes follow the turn of Kathy

s head as she moved and the lamplight fell full on her delicate profile.

Sarah, watching them, thought with sudden passion: it

s the same old story; just so used Father

s eyes to follow her
when she moved and his voice grow gentle as he spoke. With Father I could accept being shut out because I knew he loved me too, but with Adrian I can

t accept it and I don

t know why.


Have some more cinnamon toast,

she said quickly, and he grinned as he helped himself.


I shall get fat,

he said.

She looked at his long lean frame and laughed derisively.

You! You

re herring-gutted!

she said, to which he retorted lazily:


Speak for yourself!

After tea she would leave them to go out to the farm again or help Nonie in the kitchen, but Kathy would linger on, enjoying this new warm intimacy the snow-bound house had forced upon them, finding for the time, in Adrian, all the nebulous qualities she had desired in Joe.


Sarah seems
to work very hard,

he said once, and she answered timidly, detecting a rebuke in his voice:


Sarah

s always been the man of the family. I—I

m not very useful, really, Adrian.

He smiled at her kindly.


You

re not built for rough weather, are you, Kathy?

he said.

Your function in life is to charm, I don

t doubt, and you do that very nicely.


Do you think so?

she said, clasping her hands to her breast.

Do I charm you, Adrian?


You

d charm any man,

he told her gracefully, and she took the easy compliment with all seriousness.


When Father was alive,

she said wistfully,

he
had such plans for me. We were going to Dublin, he and I,
and he would squire me, he said, just as he used to squire my mother. Father was so proud of me.


And Sarah?

Adrian asked with a lift of the eyebrow.

Wasn

t she going to Dublin, too?


Och! Sarah has no use for cities,

Kathy said.

Dun R
u
ry is all she

s ever wanted.


I wonder,

said Adrian.

I think she had a great love for her father. Was it always that way, Kathy?


What way?


You first and Sarah a very poor second
?

Her blue eyes widened.


I don

t understand you,

she said.

Father loved us both.


Never mind,

he replied. No, Kathy wouldn

t understand. The right of beauty had been hers since she was
born
. It was a right that could not be disputed.

There were bright days when the snow stopped falling and the sun shone on the blinding hills. Then they would build snow men and pelt one another with snowballs, and Sarah would trudge through the snow dragging a homemade sleigh with provisions for the isolated cottages down the glen. They would invade Nonie

s kitchen, shaking the snow from their clothes, demanding hot drinks at all hours of the day, and she treated them all alike, grumbling equally at Adrian if he failed to remove his boots at the door and setting him to any chore he felt inclined to do. He was one of the family now, and she closed her eyes to the weekly cheque his presence brought to the house.

Often he would sit talking to her when the others had left the kitchen, and then she would come to her own chair by the fire, and da
rn
sheets while she told him stories of Dun Rury before it had sunk to its present decay.


Then you didn

t share the general opinion that the place should be sold?

he asked her once.

She was silent for quite a while before she answered.

Well, as to that, I wouldn

t be knowin

,

she said slowly.

Mr. Denis—that

s Miss Sarah

s father—would never sell, and the place a burden to him before he died, an

Miss Sarah carries out her father

s wishes, but what is the right of it I wouldn

t be knowin

. There

s Danny, you see, an

there

s Miss Sarah herself, though she wouldn

t be thinkin

she would be livin

anny different. But there

s no money to put the place to rights an

the day of the small farm is over, so they tell me. Machinery, electricity, certified herds is what is wanted now.


But could the place be farmed in the old way and pay for itself—with a few improvements, of course?


Ah, sure it could, if there was money for the improvements, but will you tell me where that

s co
m
in

from?

she replied.

Do you ask for a home-farm to be more than self
-
supporting, and maybe a pig or a calf for market an

a bit of butter for the tourist? That

s what it was in the old days and had Mr. Denis not run through his money with his horses an

greyhounds, an

bettin

an drinkin

, there

d have been no need for boarders at Dun Rury, for saving your pardon, sir, it

s guest to the house you should be, an himself tur
n
in

in his grave for hospitality that is bought.

Adrian smiled.


Times are changing everywhere, Nonie,

he said.

It

s
no longer considered shameful to sell what is marketable, whether it

s commodities or just good will, but Sarah works too hard. She

s too young to be shouldering the responsibility of a family.

Nonie smiled at him over her darning.


Well, that

s the way it is,

she said.

Miss Emma

s never known responsibility, Miss Kathy

s the fine lady through no fault of her own, an

Danny

s only a child. Miss Sarah—well, she

s her father over again, stubborn, passionate, with never a hold on the money. But she has courage, that wan, never you doubt that.


I don

t doubt it, Nonie,

he said gently.

Sometimes it makes me feel like weeping.

There was no more snow, but it would lie, No
lan
said. With the bitter black frosts it would lie till rain came. From the nursery windows the scene was very lovely. The lough shimmering under the clear, bright sky, reflecting the sheeted hills, and the shining, unbroken expanse of whiteness stretching as far as the eye could see.

There h
ad
been no mail for over a week, and Adrian let his work drift. In a world where time was not there was no longer any sense of urgency. He drifted himself, and relaxed in the long, uninterrupted hours of Kathy

s undemanding companionship.

Once Sarah found him in the library. He was sitting at the piano, improvising on the old melody—The
lar
k
in the clear air.
She had known before she entered the room that it was not Kathy playing and she stood in the doorway listening. To her untutored ear there seemed nothing faulty in his execution, but he suddenly crashed his hands down on the keys, then sat looking at them as if he hated them.

She ran across the room and leaned over the piano.


Play it for me,

she said.

Play it for me to sing to.

He looked up at her and the old bitterness was back in
his face.


It

s useless,

he said harshly.

My hands are dumb, clumsy—I have to fumble for the notes.


Is it the first time you

ve tried since they mended your hands?

she asked.


The first time for many months—and the last.


Play it for me,

she said again.

Play
t
he
l
ar
k
in the
cl
ear air.
It

s so quiet, so gentle, it will not hurt you.

His mouth tightened and he touched the keyboard uncertainly.


What key do you like it in?

he asked, and she, laughed.

You know I don

t understand about things like that. I think I start on that note.

She struck a note with one
finger and her hand brushed his.


A major,

he said automatically and began to play the introduction. As her voice rose, fresh and clear, he glanced up at her, and watching her thin
,
unaware face he forgot his hands.

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