Anne still stood by the bed holding her basin and her towel ready. From

time to time they gave him little pieces of ice to suck.

Once he opened his eyes, looked round the room and spoke. "Is your

mother there?"

"Do you want her?" Eliot said.

"No. It'll only upset her. Don't let her come in."

He closed his eyes and opened them again.

"Is that Anne?"

"Yes. Who did you think it was?"

"I don't know...I'm sorry, Anne."

"Darling--" the word broke from a tender inarticulate sound she made.

Then: "Jerrold--," he said.

Jerrold came closer. His father's right arm unfolded itself and

stretched out towards him along the bed.

Anne whispered, "Take his hand." Jerrold took it. He could feel it

tremble as he touched it.

"It's all right, Jerry," he said. "It's all right." He gave a little

choking cough. His eyes darkened with a sudden anxiety, a fear. His hand

slackened. His head sank forward. Anne came between them. Jerrold felt

the slight thrust of her body pushing him aside. He saw her arms

stretched out, and the white gleam of the basin, then, the haemorrhage,

jet after jet. Then his father's face tilted up on Eliot's arm, very

white, and Anne stooping over him tenderly, and her hand with the towel,

wiping the red foam from his lips.

Then eyes glazed between half-shut lids, mouth open, and the noise of

death.

Eliot's arm laid down its burden. He got up and put his hand on

Jerrold's shoulder and led him out of the room. "Go out into the air,"

he said. "I'll tell Mother."

Jerrold staggered downstairs, and through the hall and out into the

blinding sunshine.

Far down the avenue he could hear the whirring of the car coming back

from Cheltenham; the lines of the beech trees opened fan-wise to let it

through. He saw Colin sitting up beside Scarrott.

Above his head a lattice ground and clattered. Somebody was going

through the front rooms, shutting the windows and pulling down the

blinds.

Jerrold turned back into the house to meet Colin there.

Upstairs his father's door opened and shut softly and Anne came out. She

moved along the gallery to her room. Between the dark rails he could see

her white skirt, and her arm, hanging, and the little specks of red

splashed on the white sleeve.




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