<SPAN name="vol_4_chap_02"></SPAN>
<h3>Volume Four--Chapter Two.</h3>
<h4>Janet’s Nephew.</h4>
<p>Edwin was a fairly conspicuous object at the dining-room window. As Janet and the child
drew level with the corner her eye accidentally caught Edwin’s. He nodded, smiling,
and took the cigarette out of his mouth and waved it. They were old friends. He was
surprised to notice that Janet blushed and became self-conscious. She returned his smile
awkwardly, and then, giving a gesture to signify her intention, she came in at the gate.
Which action surprised Edwin still more. With all her little freedoms of manner, Janet was
essentially a woman stately and correct, and time had emphasised these qualities in her.
It was not in the least like her to pay informal, capricious calls at a quarter to ten in
the morning.</p>
<p>He went to the front door and opened it. She was persuading the child up the tiled
steps. The breeze dashed gaily into the house.</p>
<p>“Good morning. You’re out early.”</p>
<p>“Good morning. Yes. We’ve just been down to the post-office to send off a
telegram, haven’t we, George?”</p>
<p>She entered the hall, the boy following, and shook hands, meeting Edwin’s gaze
fairly. Her esteem for him, her confidence in him, shone in her troubled, candid eyes. She
held herself proudly, mastering her curious constraint. “Now just see that!”
she said, pointing to a fleck of black mud on the virgin elegance of her pale brown
costume. Edwin thought anew, as he had often thought, that she was a distinguished and
delightful piece of goods. He never ceased to be flattered by her regard. But with harsh
masculine impartiality he would not minimise to himself the increasing cleft under her
chin, nor the deterioration of her once brilliant complexion.</p>
<p>“Well, young man!” Edwin greeted the boy with that insolent familiarity
which adults permit themselves to children who are perfect strangers.</p>
<p>“I thought I’d just run in and introduce my latest nephew to you,”
said Janet quickly, adding, “and then that would be over.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” Edwin murmured. “Come into the drawing-room, will you?
Maggie’s upstairs.”</p>
<p>They passed into the drawing-room, where a servant in striped print was languidly
caressing the glass of a bookcase with a duster. “You can leave this a bit,”
Edwin said curtly to the girl, who obsequiously acquiesced and fled, forgetting a brush on
a chair.</p>
<p>“Sit down, will you?” Edwin urged awkwardly. “And which particular
nephew is this? I may tell you he’s already raised a great deal of curiosity in the
town.”</p>
<p>Janet most unusually blushed again.</p>
<p>“Has he?” she replied. “Well, he isn’t my nephew at all really,
but we pretend he is, don’t we, George? It’s cosier. This is Master George
Cannon.”</p>
<p>“Cannon? You don’t mean—”</p>
<p>“You remember Mrs Cannon, don’t you? Hilda Lessways? Now, Georgie, come and
shake hands with Mr Clayhanger.”</p>
<p>But George would not.</p>
<h4>Two.</h4>
<p>“Indeed!” Edwin exclaimed, very feebly. He knew not whether his voice was
natural or unnatural. He felt as if he had received a heavy blow with a sandbag over the
heart: not a symbolic, but a real physical blow. He might, standing innocent in the
street, have been staggeringly assailed by a complete stranger of mild and harmless
appearance, who had then passed tranquilly on. Dizzy astonishment held him, to the
exclusion of any other sentiment. He might have gasped, foolish and tottering:
“Why—what’s the meaning of this? What’s happened?” He looked
at the child uncomprehendingly, idiotically. Little by little—it seemed an age, and
was in fact a few seconds—he resumed his faculties, and remembered that in order to
keep a conventional self-respect he must behave in such a manner as to cause Janet to
believe that her revelation of the child’s identity had in no way disturbed him. To
act a friendly indifference seemed to him, then, to be the most important duty in life.
And he knew not why.</p>
<p>“I thought,” he said in a low voice, and then he began again, “I
thought you hadn’t been seeing anything of her, of Mrs Cannon, for a long time
now.”</p>
<p>The child was climbing on a chair at the window that gave on the garden, absorbed in
exploration and discovery, quite ignoring the adults. Either Janet had forgotten him, or
she had no hope of controlling him and was trusting to chance that the young wild stag
would do nothing too dreadful.</p>
<p>“Well,” she admitted, “we haven’t.” Her constraint
recurred. Very evidently she had to be careful about what she said. There were reasons why
even to Edwin she would not be frank. “I only brought him down from London
yesterday.”</p>
<p>Edwin trembled as he put the question—</p>
<p>“Is she here too—Mrs Cannon?”</p>
<p>Somehow he could only refer to Mrs Cannon as “her” and
“she.”</p>
<p>“Oh no!” said Janet, in a tone to indicate that there was no possibility of
Mrs Cannon being in Bursley.</p>
<p>He was relieved. Yes, he was glad. He felt that he could not have endured the sensation
of her nearness, of her actually being in the next house. Her presence at the
Orgreaves’ would have made the neighbourhood, the whole town, dangerous. It would
have subjected him to the risk of meeting her suddenly at any corner. Nay, he would have
been forced to go in cold blood to encounter her. And he knew that he could not have borne
to look at her. The constraint of such an interview would have been torture too acute.
Strange, that though he was absolutely innocent, though he had done nought but suffer, he
should feel like a criminal, should have the criminal’s shifting downcast
glance!</p>
<hr>
<h4>Three.</h4>
<p>“Auntie!” cried the boy. “Can’t I go into this garden?
There’s a swing there.”</p>
<p>“Oh no!” said Janet. “This isn’t our garden. We must go home.
We only just called in. And big boys who won’t shake hands—”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes!” Edwin dreamily stopped her. “Let him go into the garden
for a minute if he wants to. You can’t run off like that! Come along, my
lord.”</p>
<p>He saw an opportunity of speaking to her out of the child’s hearing. Janet
consented, perhaps divining his wish. The child turned and stared deliberately at Edwin,
and then plunged forward, too eager to await guidance, towards the conquest of the
garden.</p>
<p>Standing silent and awkward in the garden porch, they watched him violently agitating
the swing, a contrivance erected by a good-natured Uncle Edwin for the diversion of
Clara’s offspring.</p>
<p>“How old is he?” Edwin demanded, for the sake of saying something.</p>
<p>“About nine,” said Janet.</p>
<p>“He doesn’t look it.”</p>
<p>“No, but he talks it—sometimes.”</p>
<p>George did not in fact look his age. He was slight and small, and he seemed to have no
bones—nothing but articulations that functioned with equal ease in all possible
directions. His skin was pale and unhealthy. His eyes had an expression of fatigue, or he
might have been ophthalmic. He spoke loudly, his gestures were brusque, and his life was
apparently made up of a series of intense, absolute absorptions. The general effect of his
personality upon Edwin was not quite agreeable, and Edwin’s conclusion was that
George, in addition to being spoiled, was a profound and rather irritating egoist by
nature.</p>
<p>“By the way,” he murmured, “what’s <i>Mr</i> Cannon?”</p>
<p>“Oh!” said Janet, hesitating, with emotion, “she’s a
widow.”</p>
<p>He felt sick. Janet might have been a doctor who had informed him that he was suffering
from an unexpected disease, and that an operation severe and perilous lay in front of him.
The impartial observer in him asked somewhat disdainfully why he should allow himself to
be deranged in this physical manner, and he could only reply feebly and very meekly that
he did not know. He felt sick.</p>
<p>Suddenly he said to himself making a discovery—</p>
<p>“Of course she won’t come to Bursley. She’d be ashamed to meet
me.”</p>
<p>“How long?” he demanded of Janet.</p>
<p>“It was last year, I think,” said Janet, with emotion increased, her voice
heavy with the load of its sympathy. When he first knew Janet an extraordinary quick
generous concern for others had been one of her chief characteristics. But of late years,
though her deep universal kindness had not changed, she seemed to have hardened somewhat
on the surface. Now he found again the earlier Janet.</p>
<p>“You never told me.”</p>
<p>“The truth is, we didn’t know,” Janet said, and without giving Edwin
time to put another question, she continued: “The poor thing’s had a great
deal of trouble, a very great deal. George’s health, now! The sea air doesn’t
suit him. And Hilda couldn’t possibly leave Brighton.”</p>
<p>“Oh! She’s still at Brighton?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Let me see—she used to be at—what was it?—Preston
Street?”</p>
<p>Janet glanced at him with interest: “What a memory you’ve got! Why,
it’s ten years since she was here!”</p>
<p>“Nearly!” said Edwin. “It just happened to stick in my mind. You
remember she came down to the shop to ask me about trains and things the day she
left.”</p>
<p>“Did she?” Janet exclaimed, raising her eyebrows.</p>
<p>Edwin had been suspecting that possibly Hilda had given some hint to Janet as to the
nature of her relations with him. He now ceased to suspect that. He grew easier. He
gathered up the reins again, though in a rather limp hand.</p>
<p>“Why is she so bound to stay in Brighton?” he inquired with affected
boldness.</p>
<p>“She’s got a boarding-house.”</p>
<p>“I see. Well, it’s a good thing she has a private income of her
own.”</p>
<p>“That’s just the point,” said Janet sadly. “We very much doubt
if she has any private income any longer.”</p>
<p>Edwin waited for further details, but Janet seemed to speak unwilling. She would follow
him, but she would not lead.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Four.</h4>
<p>Behind them he could hear the stir of Mrs Hamps’s departure. She and Maggie were
coming down the stairs. Guessing not the dramatic arrival of Janet Orgreave and the
mysterious nephew, Mrs Hamps, having peeped into the empty dining-room, said: “I
suppose the dear boy has gone,” and forthwith went herself. Edwin smiled cruelly at
the thought of what her joy would have been actually to inspect the mysterious nephew at
close quarters, and to learn the strange suspicious truth that he was not a nephew after
all.</p>
<p>“Auntie!” yelled the boy across the garden.</p>
<p>“Come along, we must go now,” Janet retorted.</p>
<p>“No! I want you to swing me. Make me swing very high.”</p>
<p>“George!”</p>
<p>“Let him swing a bit,” said Edwin. “I’ll go and swing
him.” And calling loud to the boy: “I’ll come and swing you.”</p>
<p>“He’s dreadfully spoiled,” Janet protested. “You’ll make
him worse.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care,” said Edwin carelessly.</p>
<p>He seemed to understand, better than he had ever done with Clara’s litter, how
and why parents came to spoil their children. It was not because they feared a struggle of
wills; but because of the unreasoning instinctive pleasure to be derived from the
conferring of pleasure, especially when the pleasure thus conferred might involve doubtful
consequences. He had not cared for the boy, did not care for him. In theory he had the
bachelor’s factitious horror of a spoiled child. Nevertheless he would now support
the boy against Janet. His instinct said: “He wants something. I can give it him.
Let him have it. Never mind consequences. He shall have it.”</p>
<p>He crossed the damp grass, and felt the breeze and the sun. The sky was a moving medley
of Chinese white and Prussian blue, that harmonised admirably with the Indian red
architecture which framed it on all sides. The high trees in the garden of the Orgreaves
were turning to rich yellows and browns, and dead leaves slanted slowly down from their
summits a few reaching even the Clayhanger garden, speckling its evergreen with ochre. On
the other side of the west wall traps and carts rattled and rumbled and creaked along
Trafalgar Road.</p>
<p>The child had stopped swinging, and greeted him with a most heavenly persuasive
grateful smile. A different child! A sudden angel, with delicate distinguished gestures!
... A wondrous screwing-up of the eyes in the sun! Weak eyes, perhaps! The thick eyebrows
recalled Hilda’s. Possibly he had Hilda’s look! Or was that fancy? Edwin was
sure that he would never have guessed George’s parentage.</p>
<p>“Now!” he warned. “Hold tight.” And, going behind the boy, he
strongly clasped his slim little waist in its blue sailor-cloth, and sent the whole
affair—swing-seat and boy and all—flying to the skies. And the boy shrieked in
the violence of his ecstasy, and his cap fell on the grass. Edwin worked hard without
relaxing.</p>
<p>“Go on! Go on!” The boy shriekingly commanded.</p>
<p>And amid these violent efforts and brusque delicious physical contacts, Edwin was
calmly penetrated and saturated by the mystic effluence that is disengaged from young
children. He had seen his father dead, and had thought: “Here is the most majestic
and impressive enigma that the earth can show!” But the child George—aged nine
and seeming more like seven—offered an enigma surpassing in solemnity that of death.
This was Hilda’s. This was hers, who had left him a virgin. With a singular thrilled
impassivity he imagined, not bitterly, the history of Hilda. She who was his by word and
by kiss, had given her mortal frame to the unknown Cannon—yielded it. She had
conceived. At some moment when he, Edwin, was alive and suffering, she had conceived. She
had ceased to be a virgin. Quickly, with an astounding quickness—for was not George
nine years old?—she had passed from virginity to motherhood. And he imagined all
that too; all of it; clearly. And here, swinging and shrieking, exerting the powerful and
unique charm of infancy, was the miraculous sequel! Another individuality; a new being;
definitely formed, with character and volition of its own; unlike any other individuality
in the universe! Something fresh! Something unimaginably created! A phenomenon absolutely
original of the pride and the tragedy of life! George!</p>
<p>Yesterday she was a virgin, and to-day there was this! And this might have been his,
ought to have been his! Yes, he thrilled secretly amid all those pushings and joltings!
The mystery obsessed him. He had no rancour against Hilda. He was incapable of rancour,
except a kind of wilful, fostered rancour in trifles. Thus he never forgave the inventor
of Saturday afternoon Bible-classes. But rancour against Hilda! No! Her act had been above
rancour, like an act of Heaven! And she existed yet. On a spot of the earth’s
surface entitled Brighton, which he could locate upon a map, she existed: a widow, in
difficulty, keeping a boarding-house. She ate, slept, struggled; she brushed her hair. He
could see her brushing her hair. And she was thirty-four—was it? The wonder of the
world amazed and shook him. And it appeared to him that his career was more romantic than
ever.</p>
<p>George with dangerous abruptness wriggled his legs downwards and slipped off the seat
of the swing, not waiting for Edwin to stop it. He rolled on the grass and jumped up in
haste. He had had enough.</p>
<p>“Well, want any more?” Edwin asked, breathing hard.</p>
<p>The child made a shy, negative sigh, twisting his tousled head down into his right
shoulder. After all he was not really impudent, brazen. He could show a delicious
timidity. Edwin decided that he was an enchanting child. He wanted to talk to him, but he
could not think of anything natural and reasonable to say by way of opening.</p>
<p>“You haven’t told me your name, you know,” he began at length.
“How do I know what your name is? George, yes—but George what? George is
nothing by itself, I know ten million Georges.”</p>
<p>The child smiled.</p>
<p>“George Edwin Cannon,” he replied shyly.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Five.</h4>
<p>“Now, George!” came Janet’s voice, more firmly than before. After
all, she meant in the end to be obeyed. She was learning her business as aunt to this new
and difficult nephew; but learn it she would, and thoroughly!</p>
<p>“Come on!” Edwin counselled the boy.</p>
<p>They went together to the house. Maggie had found Janet, and the two were conversing.
Soon afterwards aunt and nephew departed.</p>
<p>“How very odd!” murmured Maggie, with an unusual intonation, in the hall,
as Edwin was putting on his hat to return to the shop. But whether she was speaking to
herself or to him, he knew not.</p>
<p>“What?” he asked gruffly.</p>
<p>“Well,” she said, “isn’t it?”</p>
<p>She was more like Auntie Hamps, more like Clara, than herself in that moment. He
resented the suspicious implications of her tone. He was about to give her one of his
rude, curt rejoinders, but happily he remembered in time that scarce half an hour earlier
he had turned over a new leaf; so he kept silence. He walked down to the shop in a deep
dream.</p>
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