The Forsyte Saga John Galsworthy (hot novels to read TXT) đ
- Author: John Galsworthy
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Fleur looked at her watch, and rose. His mother went with her into the house. Jon stayed with his father, puffing at the cigarette.
âSee her into the car, old man,â said Jolyon; âand when sheâs gone, ask your mother to come back to me.â
Jon went. He waited in the hall. He saw her into the car. There was no chance for any word; hardly for a pressure of the hand. He waited all that evening for something to be said to him. Nothing was said. Nothing might have happened. He went up to bed, and in the mirror on his dressing-table met himself. He did not speak, nor did the image; but both looked as if they thought the more.
IV In Green StreetUncertain whether the impression that Prosper Profond was dangerous should be traced to his attempt to give Val the Mayfly filly; to a remark of Fleurâs: âHeâs like the hosts of Midianâ âhe prowls and prowls aroundâ; to his preposterous inquiry of Jack Cardigan: âWhatâs the use of keepinâ fit?â or, more simply, to the fact that he was a foreigner, or alien as it was now called. Certain, that Annette was looking particularly handsome, and that Soamesâ âhad sold him a Gauguin and then torn up the cheque, so that Monsieur Profond himself had said: âI didnât get that small picture I bought from Mr. Forsyde.â
However suspiciously regarded, he still frequented Winifredâs evergreen little house in Green Street, with a good-natured obtuseness which no one mistook for naivete, a word hardly applicable to Monsieur Prosper Profond. Winifred still found him âamusing,â and would write him little notes saying: âCome and have a âjollyâ with usââ âit was breath of life to her to keep up with the phrases of the day.
The mystery, with which all felt him to be surrounded, was due to his having done, seen, heard, and known everything, and found nothing in itâ âwhich was unnatural. The English type of disillusionment was familiar enough to Winifred, who had always moved in fashionable circles. It gave a certain cachet or distinction, so that one got something out of it. But to see nothing in anything, not as a pose, but because there was nothing in anything, was not English; and that which was not English one could not help secretly feeling dangerous, if not precisely bad form. It was like having the mood which the War had left, seatedâ âdark, heavy, smiling, indifferentâ âin your Empire chair; it was like listening to that mood talking through thick pink lips above a little diabolic beard. It was, as Jack Cardigan expressed itâ âfor the English character at largeâ ââa bit too thickââ âfor if nothing was really worth getting excited about, there were always games, and one could make it so! Even Winifred, ever a Forsyte at heart, felt that there was nothing to be had out of such a mood of disillusionment, so that it really ought not to be there. Monsieur Profond, in fact, made the mood too plain in a country which decently veiled such realities.
When Fleur, after her hurried return from Robin Hill, came down to dinner that evening, the mood was standing at the window of Winifredâs little drawing-room, looking out into Green Street, with an air of seeing nothing in it. And Fleur gazed promptly into the fireplace with an air of seeing a fire which was not there.
Monsieur Profond came from the window. He was in full fig, with a white waistcoat and a white flower in his buttonhole.
âWell, Miss Forsyde,â he said, âIâm awful pleased to see you. Mr. Forsyde well? I was sayinâ today I want to see him have some pleasure. He worries.â
âYou think so?â said Fleur shortly.
âWorries,â repeated Monsieur Profond, burring the râs.
Fleur spun round. âShall I tell you,â she said, âwhat would give him pleasure?â But the words, âTo hear that you had cleared out,â died at the expression on his face. All his fine white teeth were showing.
âI was hearinâ at the Club today about his old trouble.â
Fleur opened her eyes. âWhat do you mean?â
Monsieur Profond moved his sleek head as if to minimize his statement.
âBefore you were born,â he said; âthat small business.â
Though conscious that he had cleverly diverted her from his own share in her fatherâs worry, Fleur was unable to withstand a rush of nervous curiosity. âTell me what you heard.â
âWhy!â murmured Monsieur Profond, âyou know all that.â
âI expect I do. But I should like to know that you havenât heard it all wrong.â
âHis first wife,â murmured Monsieur Profond.
Choking back the words, âHe was never married before,â she said: âWell, what about her?â
âMr. George Forsyde was tellinâ me about your fatherâs first wife marryinâ his cousin Jolyon afterward. It was a small bit unpleasant, I should think. I saw their boyâ ânice boy!â
Fleur looked up. Monsieur Profond was swimming, heavily diabolical, before her. Thatâ âthe reason! With the most heroic effort of her life so far, she managed to arrest that swimming figure. She could not tell whether he had noticed. And just then Winifred came in.
âOh! here you both are already; Imogen and I have had the most amusing afternoon at the Babiesâ bazaar.â
âWhat babies?â said Fleur mechanically.
âThe âSave the Babies.â I got such a bargain, my dear. A piece of old Armenian workâ âfrom before the Flood. I want your opinion on it, Prosper.â
âAuntie,â whispered Fleur suddenly.
At the tone in the girlâs voice Winifred closed in on her.
âWhatâs the matter? Arenât you well?â
Monsieur Profond had withdrawn into the window, where he was practically out of hearing.
âAuntie, heâ âhe told me that father has been married before. Is it true that he divorced her, and she married Jon Forsyteâs father?â
Never in all the life of the mother of four little Darties had Winifred felt more seriously embarrassed. Her nieceâs face was so pale, her eyes so dark, her voice so whispery and strained.
âYour father didnât wish you to hear,â she said,
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