dreaded more questions. She tried to remember what she and Sydney had actually said.
‘Mummy?’
‘Yes, dear.’
‘Do Uncle Sydney and Aunt Carrie want to have a baby boy?’
‘Yes, of course.’
‘Then why do they wait till June? Why don’t they have it now?’
‘Because, Vernon, God knows best. And God wants them to have it in June.’
‘That’s a long time to wait,’ said Vernon. ‘If I were God I’d send people things at once, as soon as they wanted them.’
‘You mustn’t be blasphemous, dear,’ said Myra gently.
Vernon was silent. But he was puzzled. What was blasphemous? He rather thought that it was the same word Cook had used speaking of her brother. She had said he was a most—something—man and hardly ever touched a drop! She had spoken as though such an attitude was highly commendable. But evidently Mummy didn’t seem to think the same about it.
Vernon added an extra prayer that evening to his usual petition of ‘God bless Mummy and Daddy and makemeagooboy armen.’
‘Dear God,’ he prayed. ‘Will you send me a puppy in June—or July would do if you are very busy.’
‘Now why in June?’ said Miss Robbins. ‘You are a funny little boy. I should have thought you would have wanted the puppy now.’
‘That would be blamafous,’ said Vernon and eyed her reproachfully.
Suddenly the world became very exciting. There was a war—in South Africa—and Father was going to it!
Everyone was excited and upset. For the first time, Vernon heard of some people called the Boers. They were the people that Father was going to fight.
His father came home for a few days. He looked younger and more alive and a great deal more cheerful. He and Mummy were quite nice to each other and there weren’t any scenes or quarrels.
Once or twice, Vernon thought, his father squirmed uneasily at some of the things his mother said. Once he said irritably:
‘For God’s sake, Myra, don’t keep talking of brave heroes laying down their lives for their country. I can’t stand that sort of cant.’
But his mother had not got angry. She only said:
‘I know you don’t like me saying it. But it’s true.’
On the last evening before he left, Vernon’s father called to his small son to go for a walk with him. They strolled all round the place, silently at first, and then Vernon was emboldened to ask questions.
‘Are you glad you’re going to the war, Father?’
‘Very glad.’
‘Is it fun?’
‘Not what you’d call fun, I expect. But it is in a way. It’s excitement, and then, too, it takes you away from things—right away.’
‘I suppose,’ said Vernon thoughtfully, ‘there aren’t any ladies at the war?’
Walter Deyre looked sharply at his son, a slight smile hovering on his lips. Uncanny, the way the boy sometimes hit the nail on the head quite unconsciously.
‘That makes for peace, certainly,’ he said gravely.
‘Will you kill a good many people, do you think?’ inquired Vernon interestedly.
His father replied that it was impossible to tell accurately beforehand.
‘I hope you will,’ said Vernon, anxious that his father should shine. ‘I hope you’ll kill a hundred.’
‘Thank you, old man.’
‘I suppose,’ began Vernon and then stopped.
‘Yes?’ said Walter Deyre encouragingly.
‘I suppose—sometimes—people do get killed in war.’
Walter Deyre understood the ambiguous phrase.
‘Sometimes,’ he said.
‘You don’t think you will, do you?’
‘I might. It’s all in the day’s work, you know.’
Vernon considered the phrase thoughtfully. The feeling that underlay it came dimly to him.
‘Would you mind if you were, Father?’
‘It might be the best thing,’ said Walter Deyre, more to himself than to the child.
‘I hope you won’t,’ said Vernon.
‘Thank you.’
His father smiled a little. Vernon’s wish had sounded so politely conventional. But he did not make the mistake Myra would have done, of thinking the child unfeeling.
They had reached the ruins of the Abbey. The sun was just setting. Father and son looked round and Walter Deyre drew in his breath with a little intake of pain. Perhaps he might never stand here again.
‘I’ve made a mess of things,’ he thought to himself.
‘Vernon?’
‘Yes, Father?’
‘If I am killed, Abbots Puissants will belong to you. You know that, don’t you?’
‘Yes, Father.’
Silence again. So much that he would have liked to say—but he wasn’t used to saying things. These were the things that one didn’t put into words. Odd, how strangely at home he felt with that small person, his son. Perhaps it had been a mistake not to have got to know the boy better. They might have had some good times together. He was shy of the boy—and the boy was shy of him. And yet somehow, they were curiously in harmony. They both of them disliked saying things—
‘I’m fond of the old place,’ said Walter Deyre. ‘I expect you will be too.’
‘Yes, Father.’
‘Queer to think of the old monks—catching their fish—fat fellows—that’s how I always think of them—comfortable chaps.’
They lingered a few minutes longer.
‘Well,’ said Walter Deyre, ‘we must be getting home. It’s late.’
They turned. Walter Deyre squared his shoulders. There was a leave taking to be got through—an emotional one if he knew Myra—and he rather dreaded it. Well, it would soon be over. Goodbyes were painful things—better if one made no fuss about them, but then of course Myra would never see it that way.
Poor Myra. She’d had a rotten deal on the whole. A fine-looking creature, but he’d married her really for the sake of Abbots Puissants—and she had married him for love. That was the root of the whole trouble.
‘Look after your mother, Vernon,’ he said suddenly. ‘She’s been very good to you, you know.’
He rather hoped, in a way, that he wouldn’t come back. It would be best so. Vernon had his mother.
And yet, at that thought, he had a queer traitorous feeling. As though he were deserting the boy …
‘Walter,’ cried Myra, ‘you haven’t said goodbye to Vernon.’
Walter looked across at his son, standing there wide-eyed.
‘Goodbye, old chap. Have a good time.’
‘Goodbye, Father.’
That was all. Myra was scandalized—had he no love for the boy? He hadn’t even kissed him. How queer they were—the Deyres. So casual. Strange, the way they had nodded to each other, across the width of the room. So alike …
‘But