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<h2> CHAPTER III—RICHMOND PARK </h2>
<p>On the afternoon that Soames crossed to France a cablegram was received by
Jolyon at Robin Hill:</p>
<p>"Your son down with enteric no immediate danger will cable again."</p>
<p>It reached a household already agitated by the imminent departure of June,
whose berth was booked for the following day. She was, indeed, in the act
of confiding Eric Cobbley and his family to her father's care when the
message arrived.</p>
<p>The resolution to become a Red Cross nurse, taken under stimulus of
Jolly's enlistment, had been loyally fulfilled with the irritation and
regret which all Forsytes feel at what curtails their individual
liberties. Enthusiastic at first about the 'wonderfulness' of the work,
she had begun after a month to feel that she could train herself so much
better than others could train her. And if Holly had not insisted on
following her example, and being trained too, she must inevitably have
'cried off.' The departure of Jolly and Val with their troop in April had
further stiffened her failing resolve. But now, on the point of departure,
the thought of leaving Eric Cobbley, with a wife and two children, adrift
in the cold waters of an unappreciative world weighed on her so that she
was still in danger of backing out. The reading of that cablegram, with
its disquieting reality, clinched the matter. She saw herself already
nursing Jolly—for of course they would let her nurse her own
brother! Jolyon—ever wide and doubtful—had no such hope. Poor
June!</p>
<p>Could any Forsyte of her generation grasp how rude and brutal life was?
Ever since he knew of his boy's arrival at Cape Town the thought of him
had been a kind of recurrent sickness in Jolyon. He could not get
reconciled to the feeling that Jolly was in danger all the time. The
cablegram, grave though it was, was almost a relief. He was now safe from
bullets, anyway. And yet—this enteric was a virulent disease! The
Times was full of deaths therefrom. Why could he not be lying out there in
that up-country hospital, and his boy safe at home? The un-Forsytean
self-sacrifice of his three children, indeed, had quite bewildered Jolyon.
He would eagerly change places with Jolly, because he loved his boy; but
no such personal motive was influencing them. He could only think that it
marked the decline of the Forsyte type.</p>
<p>Late that afternoon Holly came out to him under the old oak-tree. She had
grown up very much during these last months of hospital training away from
home. And, seeing her approach, he thought: 'She has more sense than June,
child though she is; more wisdom. Thank God she isn't going out.' She had
seated herself in the swing, very silent and still. 'She feels this,'
thought Jolyon, 'as much as I' and, seeing her eyes fixed on him, he said:
"Don't take it to heart too much, my child. If he weren't ill, he might be
in much greater danger."</p>
<p>Holly got out of the swing.</p>
<p>"I want to tell you something, Dad. It was through me that Jolly enlisted
and went out."</p>
<p>"How's that?"</p>
<p>"When you were away in Paris, Val Dartie and I fell in love. We used to
ride in Richmond Park; we got engaged. Jolly found it out, and thought he
ought to stop it; so he dared Val to enlist. It was all my fault, Dad; and
I want to go out too. Because if anything happens to either of them I
should feel awful. Besides, I'm just as much trained as June."</p>
<p>Jolyon gazed at her in a stupefaction that was tinged with irony. So this
was the answer to the riddle he had been asking himself; and his three
children were Forsytes after all. Surely Holly might have told him all
this before! But he smothered the sarcastic sayings on his lips.
Tenderness to the young was perhaps the most sacred article of his belief.
He had got, no doubt, what he deserved. Engaged! So this was why he had so
lost touch with her! And to young Val Dartie—nephew of Soames—in
the other camp! It was all terribly distasteful. He closed his easel, and
set his drawing against the tree.</p>
<p>"Have you told June?"</p>
<p>"Yes; she says she'll get me into her cabin somehow. It's a single cabin;
but one of us could sleep on the floor. If you consent, she'll go up now
and get permission."</p>
<p>'Consent?' thought Jolyon. 'Rather late in the day to ask for that!' But
again he checked himself.</p>
<p>"You're too young, my dear; they won't let you."</p>
<p>"June knows some people that she helped to go to Cape Town. If they won't
let me nurse yet, I could stay with them and go on training there. Let me
go, Dad!"</p>
<p>Jolyon smiled because he could have cried.</p>
<p>"I never stop anyone from doing anything," he said.</p>
<p>Holly flung her arms round his neck.</p>
<p>"Oh! Dad, you are the best in the world."</p>
<p>'That means the worst,' thought Jolyon. If he had ever doubted his creed
of tolerance he did so then.</p>
<p>"I'm not friendly with Val's family," he said, "and I don't know Val, but
Jolly didn't like him."</p>
<p>Holly looked at the distance and said:</p>
<p>"I love him."</p>
<p>"That settles it," said Jolyon dryly, then catching the expression on her
face, he kissed her, with the thought: 'Is anything more pathetic than the
faith of the young?' Unless he actually forbade her going it was obvious
that he must make the best of it, so he went up to town with June. Whether
due to her persistence, or the fact that the official they saw was an old
school friend of Jolyon's, they obtained permission for Holly to share the
single cabin. He took them to Surbiton station the following evening, and
they duly slid away from him, provided with money, invalid foods, and
those letters of credit without which Forsytes do not travel.</p>
<p>He drove back to Robin Hill under a brilliant sky to his late dinner,
served with an added care by servants trying to show him that they
sympathised, eaten with an added scrupulousness to show them that he
appreciated their sympathy. But it was a real relief to get to his cigar
on the terrace of flag-stones—cunningly chosen by young Bosinney for
shape and colour—with night closing in around him, so beautiful a
night, hardly whispering in the trees, and smelling so sweet that it made
him ache. The grass was drenched with dew, and he kept to those
flagstones, up and down, till presently it began to seem to him that he
was one of three, not wheeling, but turning right about at each end, so
that his father was always nearest to the house, and his son always
nearest to the terrace edge. Each had an arm lightly within his arm; he
dared not lift his hand to his cigar lest he should disturb them, and it
burned away, dripping ash on him, till it dropped from his lips, at last,
which were getting hot. They left him then, and his arms felt chilly.
Three Jolyons in one Jolyon they had walked.</p>
<p>He stood still, counting the sounds—a carriage passing on the
highroad, a distant train, the dog at Gage's farm, the whispering trees,
the groom playing on his penny whistle. A multitude of stars up there—bright
and silent, so far off! No moon as yet! Just enough light to show him the
dark flags and swords of the iris flowers along the terrace edge—his
favourite flower that had the night's own colour on its curving crumpled
petals. He turned round to the house. Big, unlighted, not a soul beside
himself to live in all that part of it. Stark loneliness! He could not go
on living here alone. And yet, so long as there was beauty, why should a
man feel lonely? The answer—as to some idiot's riddle—was:
Because he did. The greater the beauty, the greater the loneliness, for at
the back of beauty was harmony, and at the back of harmony was—union.
Beauty could not comfort if the soul were out of it. The night,
maddeningly lovely, with bloom of grapes on it in starshine, and the
breath of grass and honey coming from it, he could not enjoy, while she
who was to him the life of beauty, its embodiment and essence, was cut off
from him, utterly cut off now, he felt, by honourable decency.</p>
<p>He made a poor fist of sleeping, striving too hard after that resignation
which Forsytes find difficult to reach, bred to their own way and left so
comfortably off by their fathers. But after dawn he dozed off, and soon
was dreaming a strange dream.</p>
<p>He was on a stage with immensely high rich curtains—high as the very
stars—stretching in a semi-circle from footlights to footlights. He
himself was very small, a little black restless figure roaming up and
down; and the odd thing was that he was not altogether himself, but Soames
as well, so that he was not only experiencing but watching. This figure of
himself and Soames was trying to find a way out through the curtains,
which, heavy and dark, kept him in. Several times he had crossed in front
of them before he saw with delight a sudden narrow rift—a tall chink
of beauty the colour of iris flowers, like a glimpse of Paradise, remote,
ineffable. Stepping quickly forward to pass into it, he found the curtains
closing before him. Bitterly disappointed he—or was it Soames?—moved
on, and there was the chink again through the parted curtains, which again
closed too soon. This went on and on and he never got through till he woke
with the word "Irene" on his lips. The dream disturbed him badly,
especially that identification of himself with Soames.</p>
<p>Next morning, finding it impossible to work, he spent hours riding Jolly's
horse in search of fatigue. And on the second day he made up his mind to
move to London and see if he could not get permission to follow his
daughters to South Africa. He had just begun to pack the following morning
when he received this letter:</p>
<p>"GREEN HOTEL,</p>
<p>"June 13.</p>
<p>"RICHMOND. "MY DEAR JOLYON,</p>
<p>"You will be surprised to see how near I am to you. Paris became
impossible—and I have come here to be within reach of your advice. I
would so love to see you again. Since you left Paris I don't think I have
met anyone I could really talk to. Is all well with you and with your boy?
No one knows, I think, that I am here at present.</p>
<p>"Always your friend,</p>
<p>"IRENE."</p>
<p>Irene within three miles of him!—and again in flight! He stood with
a very queer smile on his lips. This was more than he had bargained for!</p>
<p>About noon he set out on foot across Richmond Park, and as he went along,
he thought: 'Richmond Park! By Jove, it suits us Forsytes!' Not that
Forsytes lived there—nobody lived there save royalty, rangers, and
the deer—but in Richmond Park Nature was allowed to go so far and no
further, putting up a brave show of being natural, seeming to say: 'Look
at my instincts—they are almost passions, very nearly out of hand,
but not quite, of course; the very hub of possession is to possess
oneself.' Yes! Richmond Park possessed itself, even on that bright day of
June, with arrowy cuckoos shifting the tree-points of their calls, and the
wood doves announcing high summer.</p>
<p>The Green Hotel, which Jolyon entered at one o'clock, stood nearly
opposite that more famous hostelry, the Crown and Sceptre; it was modest,
highly respectable, never out of cold beef, gooseberry tart, and a dowager
or two, so that a carriage and pair was almost always standing before the
door.</p>
<p>In a room draped in chintz so slippery as to forbid all emotion, Irene was
sitting on a piano stool covered with crewel work, playing 'Hansel and
Gretel' out of an old score. Above her on a wall, not yet Morris-papered,
was a print of the Queen on a pony, amongst deer-hounds, Scotch caps, and
slain stags; beside her in a pot on the window-sill was a white and rosy
fuchsia. The Victorianism of the room almost talked; and in her clinging
frock Irene seemed to Jolyon like Venus emerging from the shell of the
past century.</p>
<p>"If the proprietor had eyes," he said, "he would show you the door; you
have broken through his decorations." Thus lightly he smothered up an
emotional moment. Having eaten cold beef, pickled walnut, gooseberry tart,
and drunk stone-bottle ginger-beer, they walked into the Park, and light
talk was succeeded by the silence Jolyon had dreaded.</p>
<p>"You haven't told me about Paris," he said at last.</p>
<p>"No. I've been shadowed for a long time; one gets used to that. But then
Soames came. By the little Niobe—the same story; would I go back to
him?"</p>
<p>"Incredible!"</p>
<p>She had spoken without raising her eyes, but she looked up now. Those dark
eyes clinging to his said as no words could have: 'I have come to an end;
if you want me, here I am.'</p>
<p>For sheer emotional intensity had he ever—old as he was—passed
through such a moment?</p>
<p>The words: 'Irene, I adore you!' almost escaped him. Then, with a
clearness of which he would not have believed mental vision capable, he
saw Jolly lying with a white face turned to a white wall.</p>
<p>"My boy is very ill out there," he said quietly.</p>
<p>Irene slipped her arm through his.</p>
<p>"Let's walk on; I understand."</p>
<p>No miserable explanation to attempt! She had understood! And they walked
on among the bracken, knee-high already, between the rabbit-holes and the
oak-trees, talking of Jolly. He left her two hours later at the Richmond
Hill Gate, and turned towards home.</p>
<p>'She knows of my feeling for her, then,' he thought. Of course! One could
not keep knowledge of that from such a woman!</p>
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