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Authors: Jane Arbor

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By your journalism?” asked Joanna.

“Yes. And Roger has made no secret of how he has hated
that.
But I was lucky. I had been dabbling in it for a long time as a hobby, and when the need arose I was fortunate enough to get several regular commissions. The money has helped a lot, but you do see why I’ve never been able to meet Roger’s arguments against it? The alternative would have been to sell things which ultimately he would have missed., These, for instance”—again her fingers strayed to her pearls—

which are Carnehill heirlooms and which I couldn’t part with.”

“You could have told him the truth,” said Joanna slowly. “He wouldn’t have blamed you.” For the first time she understood that which had struck her most forcibly about Carrieghmere—its strange mixture of past luxury and present poverty which had
once
seemed inexplicable. It had a past which Roger Carnehill remembered
and
believed in. Its present in alien hands, was something quite different. And yet—so well had she come to know him lately—she felt confident that he would accept the new facts as a challenge rather than with useless regret or impotent anger.

Mrs. Carnehill was saying: “Blame, is it? Would I have cared about his blame if I had thought that to tell him would not set him back hopelessly from recovery

?”

“That was earlier,” Joanna reminded her gently. “Now it can’t hurt him physically to learn that he
will be returning to something different from that which he left. In fact, now he must be told. For very soon he will be able to get about and see for himself.”

“Yes, I realize that,” said the older woman wretchedly. “But it’s the harder for having put it off for so long
—”

“I think
—I
could tell him,” put in Joanna. “In fact, he will scarcely need telling. For I believe

he knows.”

“He knows?”

“ ‘Guesses’ might have been a better word. For a long time he has worried more about what has been kept from him than he could have done over the truth, Mrs. Carnehill. Forgive my saying this now. Perhaps you feel I should have said it before, but until you spoke to me I couldn’t very well interfere.”

Mrs. Carnehill looked at her gratefully. “Bless you, Joanna,” she said. “I wish I’d had a daughter like you! D’you mean you’d prepare him for the facts which Justin and I will have to put before him sooner or later?”

“Yes. If he needs ‘preparation’—which I doubt. Lately we’ve talked about a lot of things—among them, the picking up of threads, the
re-shouldering of responsibility. In certain moods he dreads the thought; in others, increasingly as he gets stronger, he is ready to face anything that lies in front. You see
,
in the past he has been hurt and bewildered by your reluctance to share the worst with him; by contrast the future is his oyster for the opening. And when the time comes he won’t be afraid to accept what he finds.”

A note of quiet, confident belief in Roger’s character had crept into Joanna’s voice as she spoke. She did not know that something else shone behind her eyes—something which Mrs. Carnehill, watching her, vaguely sensed, but as yet did not understand. She said again: “Bless you!” And then added, half-enviously but without bitterness: “Almost I could believe that you know my own son better than I do myself!”

Joanna did not answer. She did not know herself how it was that she could speak so confidently of Roger’s reactions to a future she would not be there to see. She knew now that, for a different reason from his mother’s, she too had dreaded this day

the day that marked the first step towards his needing her no more. In the re-blossoming of Carrieghmere under his guidance there would be no room for Nurse Joanna Merivale of London. As a “case” she would have done with Roger Carnehill; she would have had to learn to forget him—as a
man.

For a moment the thought meant nothing to her reason. It was her heart which took the significance of it in a cold spear-thrust of pain. For the heart has no weapon and no armor—only its own great capacity for fulfilment. And fulfilment, Joanna knew in that instant of revelation, was something which she must deny herself for ever. She had come to Carrieghmere upon prosaic duty. When she left it she would go, knowing that she had come to love Roger for himself alone and that the dulling pulse of time would bring forgetfulness.

As in a dream she heard Mrs. Carnehill saying anxiously: “Joanna—you’ve gone suddenly white! We work you too hard to be sure! But we’ve come to lean upon you so much—all of us! But you must take things more easily now. Presently, as Roger gets stronger, you’ll be able to begin to enjoy Carrieghmere
—”

The bland assumption that for a long time to come she would be there to “enjoy” the place was something with which Joanna longed with every fibre to agree. But through dry lips she said:

“Soon there’ll be no need for my staying on any longer. Time, then, will be all the nursing Mr. Carnehill will need. Dr. Beltane will judge, of course.
But—a week or two, perhaps
—”
(That was the
brief measure of bitter-sweetness left to her still. A week or two more. And then—nothing.)

Mrs. Carnehill was protesting; “Oh, no! Longer than that. You’ll stay on as our guest if necessary, Joanna. Your matron would permit that, surely?”

Joanna shook her head and sought refuge in the excuses she would make if she really wanted to bring a case to its appropriate end.

“I’m afraid not. You see, from my reports Matron will know approximately when I may be booked for another patient. She couldn’t hope to run a nursing home at all if we were allowed a complete elasticity of time on each case. Dr. Beltane will tell Matron when I may be spa
r
ed. Then—I must go.”

A trace of the Carnehill petulance which she knew so well in Roger hardened the older woman’s mouth for a moment. “And supposing,” she asked rather sharply, “Roger takes badly the things I have told you tonight? Supposing the news sets him back a long way?”

“Physically,” said Joanna decisively, “it can hardly do that any more. And even if it were a shock to him—and I doubt that—it would not be to me that he would turn. Rather to you—or to—to Shaun. Anyway, to his own people.”

Something stronger than her own will, something which impelled her to probe her own pain, had forced Shuan’s name to her lips. To plead the girl’s cause with his mother was indirectly to serve him, she felt. For, loving him as she did, Shuan might show him the way to happiness in the end.

But Mrs. Carnehill said rather bitterly:

You
forget.
I
kept the truth from him. He will hardly trust me. As for Shuan—she is only a child!”

And Joanna was left to reflect upon the strange alchemy which could, for instance, allow the older woman to know that
René
Menden loved Shuan, yet hid from her the fact that the girl—

only a child”—might herself love and suffer to the same degree.

Though there was now a magic in simply being with him, in the days which followed Joanna often
found it difficult to meet Roger’s eyes and to keep her hitherto disciplined hands from trembling as they went about their prosaic tasks. But in the end it was the very discipline of her profession which told her that for as long as Roger Carnehill had need of her skill she must give it as freely and as impersonally as ever. Other women before her had surely come to love where they had served, as she had done. And was not her very pain part of the pattern of the ecstasy of loving which she had longed to know?

Even so, discipline found it difficult to control every movement of her hands, her eyes, every inflection of her voice during those awkward days. And though she told herself it might be her imagination, Roger himself seemed to have changed. As he grew stronger and able to do more things for himself he took on a new dignity which seemed no longer to need to armor itself against the world by an indulgence in caprice and self-pity. Roger Carnehill, returning slowly to man’s estate, was above all things a man
...

Once, when they sat together on the terrace and she had supposed him to be reading, she looked up quickly to find his eyes deeply concentrated upon her face. Momentarily there seemed to be in them a question...

“That is
h
ow,” had flashed a swift arrow of thought through her mind, “he may some day look at the woman he loves.” But today it could have been only a cruel trick of light or shadow which had put that depth of feeling into a casual glance. For in the next instant he had raised his eyebrows, looked away, and made an indifferent remark.

As she had expected, he took the tale of Carrieghmere’s difficulties without surprise, almost without dismay.

He said only: “I’ve known for a long time, of course, that Mother has been hiding something

for my sake, as she thought, poor dear. Though why she couldn’t have given me a hint before the thing became a landslide
—”

“At first they wouldn’t let her,” Joanna pointed out. “Then I suppose it began to look like gross mismanagement, and inasmuch as it was that, she felt she had let you down.”

“If it’s mismanagement, that’s M
c
Kiley’s pigeon,” argued Roger with a new grim set to his lips. “If Mother had only let me at him—!”

“But that, for good or ill is something which, all along, she has tried to avoid—a clash between the two of you, which would have meant that Justin McKiley would have to go. She believed it best to let matters go on, hoping they would right themselves as he assured her they would, and trying to close the gap in her own way.”

“M’m.” It was typical of the new Roger that, even to Joanna, he would no longer indulge in irritable criticism of Mrs. Carnehill’s work. For a moment there was silence. Then he snapped: “How well have you come to know McKiley since you’ve been here?”

The abruptness of the question so took Joanna aback that she flushed and stammered almost guiltily: “N-not very well. Why?”

“But you’ve come to know something of him?” he persisted. “Joanna”—there was almost a note of pleading in his voice where earlier there would have been truculence—

there’s no need to continue indefinitely the ‘Tell Roger nothing theory, you know!”

Because she dared not defend herself as she would have wished, Joanna could only say evenly: “I’m not keeping anything from you. I don’t know Mr. McKiley very well. He has been to dinner with Mrs. Carnehill and the rest of us several times. He drove me back from Dublin on the day I went with you to the nursing home. And on—another occasion he took me in and brought me out from Dublin. Once I went to a party of his at the Dower House
—”

“You did? I didn’t know that?”

“You weren’t here. It was on the first day I mentioned. He gave me lunch at the Sheldon, drove me home and asked me on the way to go to the party in the evening.”

“And you went?”

“Yes. It was just an ordinary cocktail affair
—”

“I see.” There was a world of withheld comment in his tone, but just what such comment referred to Joanna could not guess.

There was a pause. When Roger spoke again it was with a studied lightness that he said:

“Well, it took Justin to introduce us to the cocktail party here at Carrieghmere! In my day we went in for something more robust in the way of entertainment. We shall again
—”
Then he went on
more seriously: “Joanna, don’t you see that I’ve got to try to be just to the fellow, if only for Mother’s sake, because she believes that he is doing his best? But also, very soon. I’ve got to try to find what he has been doing with my affairs. For more than two years he has been free to fell my timber, sell my stock, rule my tenants, and conduct a private life about which I know very little. I realize that the last is my concern only so far as it may affect the rest. But if I find it does affect the rest
—”

“You mean,” said Joanna slowly, “that you think he may have been using his position at Carrieghmere in some way?”

“I don’t know. How could I?” retorted Roger with something of his old irritability. “I only know that he drives the sort of car we’ve never been able to afford, throws expensive parties, and keeps rather

exotic company. In particular, there’s a woman

Magda Somebody.
René
has mentioned her.”

“Yes. I’ve met her,” Joanna told him. “At the party and later in Dublin.”

“And she is his sort?”

“Essentially so, I should say.” For a moment Joanna was deeply tempted to try to express what she thought and instinctively felt about Justin McKiley.

But she realized that in seeking to deal with Justin with scrupulous fairness, Roger needed facts about the man—facts uncluttered by the feminine prejudice which was all she could bring to her judgment of him.

She did not know, of course, what passed between Roger and his mother in their first long talk after that, nor the details of the even longer interview between Roger and his agent. But after the latter Roger commented: “I suppose, as I begin to take over, only time is going to tell whether the fellow has been twisting us or not. I thought perhaps he wouldn’t be able to produce figures. But he can, and except that everything he buys costs more and everything he sells brings in less, there doesn’t seem much wrong with them. What am I to do?”

“Wait,” counselled Joanna. “If he’s really loyal and honest you might serve Carrieghmere badly by doing anything hastily. If he isn’t—you must still give yourself time to prove a case against him. Does that sound good sense to you?” she added with a smile.

Roger made a wry grimace. “Uncommonly so, though it’s advice I’m reluctant to take. Because I don’t like the man you don’t know how I long to make a clean sweep of him and all his works! But until I can take over completely myself or, as you say, prove a case against him, I realize that would
be an insane thing entirely. Joanna

!” Suddenly,
surprisingly he reached for her hand, gripped it within his own as he repeated: “Joanna—when shall I be free

r
eally
free?”

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