i They would never know what it cost her to come back and look after

Colin. That knowledge was beyond Adeline Fielding. She congratulated

Anne and expected Anne to congratulate herself on being "well out of

it." Her safety was revolting and humiliating to Anne when she thought

of Queenie and Cutler and Dicky, and Eliot and Jerrold and all the

allied armies in the thick of it. She had left a world where life was

lived at its highest pitch of intensity for a world where people were

only half-alive. To be safe from the chance of sudden violent death was

to be only half-alive.

Her one consolation had been that now she would see Jerrold. But she did

not see him. Jerrold had given up his appointment in the Punjaub three

weeks before the outbreak of the war. His return coincided with the

retreat from Mons. He had not been in England a week before he was in

training on Salisbury Plain. Anne had left Wyck when he arrived; and

before he got leave she was in Belgium with her Field Ambulance. And

now, in October of nineteen fifteen, when she came back to Wyck, Jerrold

was fighting in France.

At least they knew what had happened to Colin; but about Eliot and

Jerrold they knew nothing. Anything might have happened to them since

they had written the letters that let them off from week to week,

telling them that they were safe. Anything might happen and they might

never know.

Anne's fear was dumb and secret. She couldn't talk about Jerrold. She

lived every minute in terror of Adeline's talking, of the cries that

came from her at queer unexpected moments: between two cups of tea, two

glances at the mirror, two careful gestures of her hands pinning up her

hair.

"I cannot bear it if anything happens to Jerrold, Anne."

"Oh Anne, I wonder what's happening to Jerrold."

"If only I knew what was happening to Jerrold."

"If only I knew where Jerrold _was_. Nothing's so awful as not knowing."

And at breakfast, over toast and marmalade: "Anne, I've got such an

awful feeling that something's happened to Jerrold. I'm sure these

feelings aren't given you for nothing... You aren't eating anything,

darling. You _must_ eat."

Every morning at breakfast Anne had to look through the lists of killed,

missing and wounded, to save Adeline the shock of coming upon Jerrold's

or Eliot's name. Every morning Adeline gazed at Anne across the table

with the same look of strained and agonised enquiry. Every morning

Anne's heart tightened and dragged, then loosened and lifted, as they

were let off for one more day.

One more day? Not one more hour, one minute. Any second the wire from

the War Office might come.




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