Authors: Stella Gibbons
Sarah suddenly sat upright. She had heard the front-door bell.
Even as she was struggling up from her chair, there were sounds approaching, and then the door opened quietly and there was Dr Masters, with Frank's grave face behind him.
âOh, Mr Frankâ' Sarah began. âOh, Mr Frank . . .'
âNow you go out with Mr Frank while I have a look at her,' Dr Masters said kindly, putting his hand for an instant on Sarah's shoulder, âand send one of the girls up â Pilar would be best. You go too,' he added to Juliet, âbut stay outside in case she wants you.'
Juliet sprang up, dropping the hand she was holding, and darted to the door. Dr Masters's glance went after her, then he turned to his patient.
When Pilar had hurried in, and shut the door, the three stood on the landing in silence, Frank softly patting the sobbing Sarah's back while Juliet stared over the balusters down at the dining-room door.
In a moment, restless with hunger, she said to Frank: âYou got home before he came for you?' jerking her head towards the shut door.
âJust. I was starting to make lunch.'
Her grin flashed. âDon't talk about lunch! I'm starving.'
Frank let quite half a minute pass before he said deliberately, âJuliet, I sometimes wonder if you're human. A human
being, as most people understand the words. Even if you are “starving”, can't you keep the fact to yourself? No, it's no use. You can't understand.'
âCan't help being hungry, neither. Still,' defiantly, âI done a bit of work since I got in.'
The bedroom door opened noiselessly. âFrank?' said Dr Masters. âAsleep. Here a minute, will you.'
Frank went in, and the door shut again. Sarah continued to sob, and Juliet ran downstairs and pushed open the door of the servants' quarters.
âShe's better, she's asleep,' she announced to the doleful group seated around the big room, âand Mr Frank says will you bring in the lunch.'
âGood â good.' Rosario produced a surprisingly robust smile. âWe must eat to keep ourselves strong for the grief to come,' which, judging by various signs, they had already been doing.
Antonio now made imperious gestures, and bustling began.
Pilar timidly approached Juliet, who was already at the door.
âOh, Mees â what you think will happen to us, to me and all of us, if she die? We don't weesh to go home. No work, not much food, no fun and our muzzer is very, very oldâ'
âGod knows. But you make up to Mr Frank, he's a softie, he'll look after you. Oh, there's the bell.' Juliet always thus referred to the gong, which Rosario was striking softly in the hall. âMr Frank's the one.'
She was gone, leaving Pilar, as a good Catholic girl, shocked by advice which she had misinterpreted.
When they were seated at lunch, to which Dr Masters had been asked to stay, he said: âYou must have a nurse, and at once.'
âSarah won't like that,' observed Frank.
âI'm afraid we can't consider the Sarahs of this world when someone's dying.'
Frank glanced at him, but said nothing.
Juliet continued to eat roast beef.
âI was thinking that there'll be no one really in charge,' Frank said presently.
âI know. I
might
spare Clemence, butâ'
âOh, you can't do that. No, I've a much better idea â what about Clem's mother? There's no one in this house who could stand up to old Dolly. She's fond of Addy, and she'd enjoy it.'
Dr Masters smiled drily. âYes, wouldn't she. I'll look in on my way home.'
Juliet having bolted a portion of some exotic Spanish sweet muttered something about âwork', and sped up to her room.
For a moment she sat motionless, staring unseeingly through the open window. Then her mind turned away from the âreal' world, into that world of immovable laws which, to her,
was
the real one. Her last thought, as she forgot everyone, was:
Why do there have to be other people?
At about four o'clock her train of thought was interrupted by irritating sounds. A taxi driving up, distant voices â an imperious old one, debating the fixed amount of the fare from Wanby to Leete. Later, footsteps along the passage and the penetrating old voice:
âWhere's that child? Tell her I shall expect her for tea in the drawing-room in twenty minutes. And Pilar â you are Pilar, aren't you? I thought so, I remember that attractive way of doing your hair â
toast
please, and see that it's
really hot
, and the tea made with
boiling
water.'
Enjoyment in giving orders, like Lady Somebody in the second act of a Pinero play, coloured the well-produced tones. But Juliet had not heard of Pinero, and her impulse was to slip into her coat, and run.
Too late.
One of those taps on her door, which were such an irritating feature of life at Hightower: âSenora Massey, she want you having tea wiz her in the drawing-room.'
âOh all right. Tell her I'll be right down.'
But first she washed her face and hands with some expensive soap that was a present from her patroness.
She went downstairs smelling strongly of âBlue Grass'. Her satisfaction in being clean was linked with the austere perfection of the shapes that were her constant inward companions. As well imagine grease or dust coating a droplet of mercury as staining those abstractions; and, vaguely, she liked the same feeling to be about her own body.
Mrs Massey, wearing a becoming dress printed with mauve poppies, was sitting before the electric fire. Her eye fixed itself at once upon Juliet's slacks and T-shirt.
âMay I enquire if you think that is the proper way to dress in a house where someone is gravely ill?'
âI been out and didn't think to change.'
Juliet sat down on her tuffet and looked Mrs Massey full in the eye.
What a goblin
, thought the old lady, who was relishing
every minute of her position as friend of the family left in charge. She began to pour out tea.
âNo milk,' Juliet instructed, and took the lid off the toast dish.
âI hope you are not “slimming”, my dear, you are much too thin as it is and it is customary to wait for your hostess to help herself first. Have you never heard of anorexia nervosa?'
Juliet, mouth full of toast, shook her head.
âThen I will not enlighten you,' said Mrs Massey, suddenly bored and eager to get at the toast. Then, after a few moments, when boredom was verging on irritation, the door opened and Dr Masters came in, followed by Frank, and someone in nurse's uniform.
âEverything all right?' asked Frank. âOh, I beg your pardon â this is Nurse Judson. Mrs Massey, Miss Slater.'
âHow do you do, Nurse, such a comfort to have you here,' Mrs Massey said graciously; Juliet made a vague sound and an awkward movement, and Nurse Judson said âGood afternoon' in a voice suggesting that it was a bad one.
âTea â Edward? â Frank? It isn't very hot, but I'm sure you could drink a cup, Nurse. I'll ring for some more.'
âNo. No, thank you. We must go to our patient. But if you would get one of the girls to bring some upâ'
âOf course.' Mrs Massey rang; and when she looked away from the bell-push, Juliet was not there.
When Dr Masters had made his examination, having expressed the opinion that there would be no serious deterioration that night and promising to telephone early the next morning, he left, taking Frank with him; and there settled upon Hightower
that atmosphere of awed expectation which invades a house where a death is awaited.
Towards evening the wind subsided, as if with lingering sighs, in the boughs of hawthorn and apple tree; and pearly clouds clustered about a pearly moon. The servants stayed in their sitting-room with television silenced as a mark of respect, awaiting a summons from the two upstairs whom they already called the Old Ones. They abandoned English, and muttered in Spanish.
About half-past eleven, Juliet was seated at her table with fists thrust into her hair and her mind moving in another world, when her door was flung open.
âYou come along and stay in her room,' Sarah burst out hoarsely. âAll night if need be. She don't' â she began to cry â âdon't want . . . me. Just woke up and said so. Took one look at me and that's what she said: “I don't want you, where's my baby? I want my baby.” That's what she said . . .'
âBut isn't the nurse there?' Juliet did not move; her eyes slid round beneath the disordered pale mass of hair.
âCourse she's there, but you get off that chair and show a bit o' feelin' â after what Miss Addy done for youâ' Sarah began to cry again as she turned away and went along the passage to her own room.
Juliet went sullenly to the sickroom door, and tapped; it was opened noiselessly by Nurse Judson.
âYes? What do you want?' Her eyes were full of disapproval.
âSarah said I'd better come and sit with
her
,' jerking her head towards the bed.
â
I
am in charge here. Still, you had better come in, in case Miss Pennecuick should become conscious and ask for
you again.' She rustled aside to let Juliet enter, then resumed her seat near the bedside lamp and took up some knitting. âYou must keep absolutely quiet.'
Juliet established herself on her low tuffet, avoiding glancing at the thing breathing noisily in the bed, and brought a pencil and sheet of paper from behind her back where she had been concealing them. She began to work again at her problem, picking up Miss Pennecuick's prayer book from the bedside table to serve as a rest for the paper.
The single lamp illuminated with its veiled glow the dim, hushed room. Nurse Judson took in Juliet's every action: she had been given a twopence-coloured version of the situation at Hightower by Mrs Massey, and was prepared to see Juliet as a conniving snake.
What a little oddity! And what was she doing? Sums? At near midnight, in a room with someone dying?
Nurse Judson knitted faster and more accurately in a fit of moral relish. Presently she rose noiselessly and went over to her patient in silent inspection. Juliet did not look up.
âI am going down to the kitchen,' Nurse Judson announced, âto make a cup of tea. I shall be about ten minutes, and don't you stir out of this room until I get back. And
keep your eyes on
her
â not on that whatever-it-is you're doing.'
She went to the door and opened it, then hesitated. The upstart could not be a day older than the probationers at the hospital where she had trained.
âDo you want one â some tea, I mean? If you do, I'll bring another cup.'
She had meant to keep her sentences curt and reserved. But some quality in the eyes now lifted to her own from what she
inwardly termed âthose blessed hieroglyphics' caused her to expand a little in speech and manner.
Juliet slowly shook her head, and Nurse Judson went noiselessly out.
How still the room was now! An unfamiliar sensation began to creep upon Juliet. She kept her eyes fixed upon the sheet of paper.
She could see, without looking, the white gleam of the bedcover, and the breathing thing that lay under it, the subdued tint of wallpaper and carpet. There was nothing to be afraid of.
But she was afraid.
Every vague remark that she had ever heard about death, the Vast Unmentionable of her century, floated in her mind, and in the warmth of the silent room she suddenly shivered.
Her hand hovered over the paper. But it was useless; the dance in her head, so beautiful in its intricacy, would not return. Somewhere outside time and space the dance went on, eternal and still beautiful; but human fear had broken in, and she could no longer enter that world where the dance continued.
She started violently. A deep, snorting noise had burst from the lump beneath the bedclothes, and Miss Pennecuick moved, and threw out an arm. Juliet sprang up and crept to the bed, and stood fascinated into objective curiosity that drove out fear.
Was she going to see death?
Miss Pennecuick's lips writhed uncertainly. Then her eyes slowly opened, and they were those of a sane and sorrowful old woman. She looked full at Juliet, standing in the glow of the lamp, with its light on her expressionless face.
Miss Pennecuick's lips writhed again, and she made a distorted attempt at speech. Then her voice came out on the silent air, soft and hoarse:
âYou never cared for me at all, did you?' she said.
A choking sound followed. And then all expression left her face. Her head rolled slowly sideways on the pillow, and was still.
Juliet did not move.
Auntie must be dead. Was that all? â And her voice quite ordinary. How funny her eyes looked. And her face . . .
She heard the door open.
âI think she's dead,' she said, not lowering her voice and without turning round. She continued to stare at the unrecognizable face.
Behind her there was a soft exclamation, and the sound of a tray being set down. Then Nurse Judson was at her side and bending over the bed, and taking certain actions with the body.
The nurse stood up with the faintest of sighs.
âYes, she's gone . . . what happened?' she asked in a subdued voice.
âNothing much.'
Juliet softened her own voice in imitation; apparently one did this when someone died.
âI was sitting thinking, like, and she made a funny noise and opened her eyes and looked straight at me . . . quite ordinary âwell, you know, sane, I mean â she looked . . . and thenâ'
She broke off.
Did the old woman's sentence, spoken plainly and sadly, mean that she had not been left any money? But Frank
would look after her
. âDid she say anything?' Juliet shook her head.
âWell.' Nurse Judson swallowed her indignation. Was the girl made of ice? âYou had better be off. It's' â she glanced at her wrist â âafter twelve.'