The Forsyte Saga John Galsworthy (hot novels to read TXT) đ
- Author: John Galsworthy
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âCome along!â he said.
She did not move.
âDidnât you hear, Father? Isnât it queerâ âour nameâs the same. Are we cousins?â
âWhatâs that?â he said. âForsyte? Distant, perhaps.â
âMy nameâs Jolyon, sir. Jon, for short.â
âOh! Ah!â said Soames. âYes. Distant. How are you? Very good of you. Goodbye!â
He moved on.
âThanks awfully,â Fleur was saying. âAu revoir!â
âAu revoir!â he heard the boy reply.
II Fine Fleur ForsyteEmerging from the âpastry-cookâs,â Soamesâ first impulse was to vent his nerves by saying to his daughter: âDropping your handkerchief!â to which her reply might well be: âI picked that up from you!â His second impulse therefore was to let sleeping dogs lie. But she would surely question him. He gave her a sidelong look, and found she was giving him the same. She said softly:
âWhy donât you like those cousins, Father?â Soames lifted the corner of his lip.
âWhat made you think that?â
âCela se voit.â
âThat sees itself!â What a way of putting it! After twenty years of a French wife Soames had still little sympathy with her language; a theatrical affair and connected in his mind with all the refinements of domestic irony.
âHow?â he asked.
âYou must know them; and you didnât make a sign. I saw them looking at you.â
âIâve never seen the boy in my life,â replied Soames with perfect truth.
âNo; but youâve seen the others, dear.â
Soames gave her another look. What had she picked up? Had her Aunt Winifred, or Imogen, or Val Dartie and his wife, been talking? Every breath of the old scandal had been carefully kept from her at home, and Winifred warned many times that he wouldnât have a whisper of it reach her for the world. So far as she ought to know, he had never been married before. But her dark eyes, whose southern glint and clearness often almost frightened him, met his with perfect innocence.
âWell,â he said, âyour grandfather and his brother had a quarrel. The two families donât know each other.â
âHow romantic!â
âNow, what does she mean by that?â he thought. The word was to him extravagant and dangerousâ âit was as if she had said: âHow jolly!â
âAnd theyâll continue not to know each, other,â he added, but instantly regretted the challenge in those words. Fleur was smiling. In this age, when young people prided themselves on going their own ways and paying no attention to any sort of decent prejudice, he had said the very thing to excite her wilfulness. Then, recollecting the expression on Ireneâs face, he breathed again.
âWhat sort of a quarrel?â he heard Fleur say.
âAbout a house. Itâs ancient history for you. Your grandfather died the day you were born. He was ninety.â
âNinety? Are there many Forsytes besides those in the Red Book?â
âI donât know,â said Soames. âTheyâre all dispersed now. The old ones are dead, except Timothy.â
Fleur clasped her hands.
âTimothy? Isnât that delicious?â
âNot at all,â said Soames. It offended him that she should think âTimothyâ deliciousâ âa kind of insult to his breed. This new generation mocked at anything solid and tenacious. âYou go and see the old boy. He might want to prophesy.â Ah! If Timothy could see the disquiet England of his great-nephews and great-nieces, he would certainly give tongue. And involuntarily he glanced up at the Iseeum; yesâ âGeorge was still in the window, with the same pink paper in his hand.
âWhere is Robin Hill, Father?â
Robin Hill! Robin Hill, round which all that tragedy had centred! What did she want to know for?
âIn Surrey,â he muttered; ânot far from Richmond. Why?â
âIs the house there?â
âWhat house?â
âThat they quarrelled about.â
âYes. But whatâs all that to do with you? Weâre going home tomorrowâ âyouâd better be thinking about your frocks.â
âBless you! Theyâre all thought about. A family feud? Itâs like the Bible, or Mark Twainâ âawfully exciting. What did you do in the feud, Father?â
âNever you mind.â
âOh! But if Iâm to keep it up?â
âWho said you were to keep it up?â
âYou, darling.â
âI? I said it had nothing to do with you.â
âJust what I think, you know; so thatâs all right.â
She was too sharp for him; fine, as Annette sometimes called her. Nothing for it but to distract her attention.
âThereâs a bit of rosaline point in here,â he said, stopping before a shop, âthat I thought you might like.â
When he had paid for it and they had resumed their progress, Fleur said:
âDonât you think that boyâs mother is the most beautiful woman of her age youâve ever seen?â
Soames shivered. Uncanny, the way she stuck to it!
âI donât know that I noticed her.â
âDear, I saw the corner of your eye.â
âYou see everythingâ âand a great deal more, it seems to me!â
âWhatâs her husband like? He must be your first cousin, if your fathers were brothers.â
âDead, for all I know,â said Soames, with sudden vehemence. âI havenât seen him for twenty years.â
âWhat was he?â
âA painter.â
âThatâs quite jolly.â
The words: âIf you want to please me youâll put those people out of your head,â sprang to Soamesâ lips, but he choked them backâ âhe must not let her see his feelings.
âHe once insulted me,â he said.
Her quick eyes rested on his face.
âI see! You didnât avenge it, and it rankles. Poor Father! You let me have a go!â
It was really like lying in the dark with a mosquito hovering above his face. Such pertinacity in Fleur was new to him, and, as they reached the hotel, he said grimly:
âI did my best. And thatâs enough about these people. Iâm going up till dinner.â
âI shall sit here.â
With a parting look at her extended in a chairâ âa look half-resentful, half-adoringâ âSoames moved into the lift and was transported to their suite on the fourth floor. He stood by the window of the sitting-room which gave view over Hyde Park, and drummed a finger on its pane. His feelings were confused, tetchy, troubled. The throb of that old wound, scarred over by Time and new interests, was mingled with displeasure and anxiety, and a slight pain in his chest where that nougat stuff had disagreed. Had Annette come in? Not
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