<SPAN name="vol_3_chap_14"></SPAN>
<h3>Volume Three--Chapter Fourteen.</h3>
<h4>The Watch.</h4>
<p>When Edwin the next morning, rather earlier than usual on Sundays, came forth from his
bedroom to go into the bathroom, he was startled by a voice from his father’s
bedroom calling him. It was Maggie’s. She had heard him open his door, and she
joined him on the landing.</p>
<p>“I was waiting for you to be getting up,” she said in a quiet tone.
“I don’t think father’s so well, and I was wondering whether I
hadn’t better send Jane down for the doctor. It’s not certain he’ll call
to-day if he isn’t specially fetched.”</p>
<p>“Why?” said Edwin. “What’s up?”</p>
<p>“Oh, nothing,” Maggie answered. “Nothing particular, but you
didn’t hear him ringing in the night?”</p>
<p>“Ringing? No! What time?”</p>
<p>“About one o’clock. Jane heard the bell, and she woke me. So I got up to
him. He said he couldn’t do with being alone.”</p>
<p>“What did you do?”</p>
<p>“I made him something hot and stayed with him.”</p>
<p>“What? All night?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Maggie.</p>
<p>“But why didn’t you call me?”</p>
<p>“What was the good?”</p>
<p>“You ought to have called me,” he said with curt displeasure, not really
against Maggie, but against himself for having heard naught of all these happenings.
Maggie had no appearance of having passed the night by her father’s bedside.</p>
<p>“Oh,” she said lightly, “I dozed a bit now and then. And as soon as
the girl was up I got her to come and sit with him while I spruced myself.”</p>
<p>“I’ll have a look at him,” said Edwin, in another tone.</p>
<p>“Yes, I wish you would.” Now, as often, he was struck by Maggie’s
singular deference to him, her submission to his judgement. In the past her attitude had
been different; she had exercised the moral rights of an elder sister; but latterly she
had mysteriously transformed herself into a younger sister.</p>
<p>He went towards his father, drawing his dressing-gown more closely round him. The
chamber had an aspect of freshness and tidiness that made it almost gay—until he
looked at the object in the smoothed and rectified bed. He nodded to his father, who
merely gazed at him. There was no definite, definable change in the old man’s face,
but his bearing, even as he lay, was appreciably more melancholy and impotent. The mere
sight of a man so broken and so sad was humiliating to the humanity which Edwin shared
with him.</p>
<p>“Well, father,” he nodded familiarly. “Don’t feel like getting
up, eh?” And, remembering that he was the head of the house, the source of authority
and of strength, he tried to be cheerful, casual, and invigorating, and was disgusted by
the futile inefficiency of the attempt. He had not, like Auntie Hamps, devoted a lifetime
to the study of the trick.</p>
<p>Darius feebly moved his hopeless head to signify a negative.</p>
<p>And Edwin thought, with a lancinating pain, of what the old man had mumbled on the
previous evening: “I shall never go down them stairs again.” Perhaps the old
man never would go down those stairs again! He had paid no serious attention to the remark
at the moment, but now it presented itself to him as a solemn and prophetic utterance, of
such as are remembered with awe for years and continue to jut up clear in the mind when
all minor souvenirs of the time have crumbled away. And he would have given much of his
pride to be able to go back and help the old man upstairs once more, and do it with a more
loving patience.</p>
<p>“I’ve sent Jane,” said Maggie, returning to the bedroom.
“You’d better go and finish dressing.”</p>
<p>On coming out of the bathroom he discovered Albert on the landing, waiting.</p>
<p>“The missis would have me come up and see how he was,” said Albert.
“So I’ve run in between school and chapel. When I told her what a doing he
gave us, getting him upstairs, she was quite in a way, and she would have me come up. The
kid’s better.” He was exceedingly and quite genuinely fraternal, not having
his wife’s faculty for nourishing a feud.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Two.</h4>
<p>The spectacular developments were rapid. In the afternoon Auntie Hamps, Clara, Maggie,
and Edwin were grouped around the bed of Darius. A fire burned in the grate; flowers were
on the dressing-table. An extra table had been placed at the foot of the bed. The room was
a sick-room.</p>
<p>Dr Heve had called, and had said that the patient’s desire not to be left alone
was a symptom of gravity. He suggested a nurse, and when Maggie, startled, said that
perhaps they could manage without a nurse, he inquired how. And as he talked he seemed to
be more persuaded that a nurse was necessary, if only for night duty, and in the end he
went himself to the new Telephone Exchange and ordered a nurse from the Pirehill Infirmary
Nursing Home. And the dramatic thing was that within two hours and a half the nurse had
arrived. And in ten minutes after that it had been arranged that she should have
Maggie’s bedroom and that she should take night duty, and in order that she might be
fresh for the night she had gone straight off to bed.</p>
<p>Then Clara had arrived, in spite of the illness of her baby, and Auntie Hamps had
forced herself up Trafalgar Road, in spite of her rheumatism. And a lengthy confabulation
between the women had occurred in the dining-room, not about the invalid, but about what
‘she’ had said, and about the etiquette of treating ‘her,’ and
about what ‘she’ looked like and shaped like; ‘her’ and
‘she’ being the professional nurse. With a professional nurse in it, each
woman sincerely felt that the house was no longer itself, that it had become the house of
the enemy.</p>
<p>Darius lay supine before them, physically and spiritually abased, accepting, like a
victim who is too weak even to be ashamed, the cooings and strokings and prayers and
optimistic mendacities of Auntie Hamps, and the tearful tendernesses of Clara.</p>
<p>“I’ve made my will,” he whimpered.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes,” said Auntie Hamps. “Of course you have!”</p>
<p>“Did I tell you I’d made my will?” he feebly insisted.</p>
<p>“Yes, father,” said Clara. “Don’t worry about your
will.”</p>
<p>“I’ve left th’ business to Edwin, and all th’ rest’s
divided between you two wenches.” He was weeping gently.</p>
<p>“Don’t worry about that, father,” Clara repeated. “Why are you
thinking so much about your will?” She tried to speak in a tone that was easy and
matter-of-fact. But she could not. This was the first authentic information that any of
them had had as to the dispositions of the will, and it was exciting.</p>
<p>Then Darius began to try to sit up, and there were protests against such an act. Though
he sat up to take his food, the tone of these apprehensive remonstrances implied that to
sit up at any other time was to endanger his life. Darius, however, with a weak scowl,
continued to lift himself, whereupon Maggie aided him, and Auntie Hamps like lightning put
a shawl round his shoulders. He sighed, and stretched out his hand to the night-table for
his gold watch and chain, which he dangled towards Edwin.</p>
<p>“I want ye—” He stopped, controlling the muscles of his face.</p>
<p>“He wants you to wind it up,” said Clara, struck by her own insight.</p>
<p>“No, he doesn’t,” said Edwin. “He knows it’s wound
up.”</p>
<p>“I want ye—” Darius recommenced. But he was defeated again by his
insidious foe. He wept loudly and without restraint for a few moments, and then suddenly
ceased, and endeavoured to speak, and wept anew, agitating the watch in the direction of
Edwin.</p>
<p>“Take it, Edwin,” said Mrs Hamps. “Perhaps he wants it put
away,” she added, as Edwin obeyed.</p>
<p>Darius shook his head furiously. “I want him—” Sobs choked him.</p>
<p>“I know what he wants,” said Auntie Hamps. “He wants to give dear
Edwin the watch, because Edwin’s been so kind to him, helping him to dress every
day, and looking after him just like a professional nurse—don’t you,
dear?”</p>
<p>Edwin secretly cursed her in the most horrible fashion. But she was right.</p>
<p>“Ye–hes,” Darius confirmed her, on a sob.</p>
<p>“He wants to show his gratitude,” said Auntie Hamps.</p>
<p>“Ye–hes,” Darius repeated, and wiped his eyes.</p>
<p>Edwin stood foolishly holding the watch with its massive Albert chain. He was very
genuinely astonished, and he was profoundly moved. His father’s emotion concerning
him must have been gathering force for months and months, increasing a little and a little
every day in those daily, intimate contacts, until at length gratitude had become, as it
were, a spirit that possessed him, a monstrous demon whose wild eagerness to escape
defeated itself. And Edwin had never guessed, for Darius had mastered the spirit till the
moment when the spirit mastered him. It was out now, and Darius, delivered, breathed more
freely. Edwin was proud, but his humiliation was greater than his pride. He suffered
humiliation for his father. He would have preferred that Darius should never have felt
gratitude, or, at any rate, that he should never have shown it. He would have preferred
that Darius should have accepted his help nonchalantly, grimly, thanklessly, as a right.
And if through disease, the old man could not cease to be a tyrant with dignity, could not
become human without this appalling ceremonial abasement—better that he should have
exercised harshness and oppression to the very end! There was probably no phenomenon of
human nature that offended Edwin’s instincts more than an open conversion.</p>
<p>Maggie turned nervously away and busied herself with the grate.</p>
<p>“You must put it on,” said Auntie Hamps sweetly. “Mustn’t he,
father?”</p>
<p>Darius nodded.</p>
<p>The outrage was complete. Edwin removed his own watch and dropped it into the pocket of
his trousers, substituting for it the gold one.</p>
<p>“There, father!” exclaimed Auntie Hamps proudly, surveying the curve of the
Albert on her nephew’s waistcoat.</p>
<p>“Ay!” Darius murmured, and sank back on the pillow with a sigh of
relief.</p>
<p>“Thanks, father,” Edwin muttered, reddening. “But there was no
occasion.”</p>
<p>“Now you see what it is to be a good son!” Auntie Hamps observed.</p>
<p>Darius murmured indistinctly.</p>
<p>“What is it?” she asked, bending down.</p>
<p>“I must have his,” said Darius. “I must have a watch here.”</p>
<p>“He wants your old one in exchange,” Clara explained eagerly.</p>
<p>Edwin smiled, discovering a certain alleviation in this shrewd demand of his
father’s, and he drew out the silver Geneva.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Three.</h4>
<p>Shortly afterwards the nurse surprised them all by coming into the room. She carried a
writing-case. Edwin introduced her to Auntie Hamps and Clara. Clara blushed and became
mute. Auntie Hamps adopted a tone of excessive deference, of which the refrain was
“Nurse will know best.” Nurse seemed disinclined to be professional.
Explaining that as she was not able to sleep she thought she might as well get up, she
took a seat near the fire and addressed herself to Maggie. She was a tall and radiant
woman of about thirty. Her aristocratic southern accent proved that she did not belong to
the Five Towns, and to Maggie, in excuse for certain questions as to the district, she
said that she had only been at Pirehill a few weeks. Her demeanour was extraordinarily
cheerful. Auntie Hamps remarked aside to Clara what a good thing it was that Nurse was so
cheerful; but in reality she considered such cheerfulness exaggerated in a sick-room, and
not quite nice. The nurse asked about the posts, and said she had a letter to write and
would write it there if she could have pen and ink. Auntie Hamps, telling her eagerly
about the posts, thought that these professional nurses certainly did make themselves at
home in a house. The nurse’s accent intimidated all of them.</p>
<p>“Well, nurse, I suppose we mustn’t tire our patient,” said Auntie
Hamps at last, after Edwin had brought ink and paper.</p>
<p>Edwin, conscious of the glory of a gold watch and chain, and conscious also of freedom
from future personal service on his father, preceded Auntie Hamps and Clara to the
landing, and Nurse herself sped them from the room, in her quality of mistress of the
room. And when she and Maggie and Darius were alone together she went to the bedside and
spoke softly to her patient. She was so neat and bright and white and striped, and so
perfect in every detail, that she might have been a model taken straight from a
shop-window. Her figure illuminated the dusk. An incredible luxury for the little boy from
the Bastille! But she was one of the many wonderful things he had earned.</p>
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