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I said of course he would, but he shook his head.

Then he gave one last look round the room. The photographs of me and

his Mother were gone. The bed was stripped and the one blanket neatly folded.

"I've swept the room out so that you won't have anything extra to do,"

he said.

"You can shut this place up and forget it. I gave Mr. Mortmain his books back before he went off to Scoatney. I'll miss having books."

"But you can buy them for yourself now," I told him.

He said he hadn't thought of that--"I don't seem able to take in the money part, somehow."

"Mind you save--just in case," I warned him.

He nodded and said he'd probably soon be feeding pigs again.

Then we heard Mr. Stebbins hooting his horn.

I said: "I'll see you off but let's say a private good-bye here." I held out my hand, but added: "Please kiss me if you'd like to--I'd like it if you would."

For a second I thought he was going to; then he shook his head and

barely clasped my hand. I tried to help him carry the little sea-chest but he hoisted it up on his shoulder. We went out to the car. Heloise was there, investigating the wheels, and after Stephen had strapped the chest on to the luggage-carrier he stooped and kissed her on the head.

He never looked back once as they drove along the lane.

While I was washing up the breakfast things, I realized that I had no idea where he would be staying. Would he go back to the Fox-Cottons? I suppose Rose will know.

(i wrote to her that morning, saying I had been in the wrong and asking her to forgive me. I must say she took her time about answering; but

this after noon I had a telegram from her which said she would write

when she could, and would I please try to understand. She didn't put

in anything about forgiving me, but as it was signed "your ever loving Rose" I suppose she has.) I worked on my journal most of Monday, finishing in floods of tears too late to get my face right before

Thomas came home. He said: "You've been howling, haven't you? I

suppose the castle's depressing after being in London"--which made things nice and easy for me. I said yes, that was it, and that it had been sad seeing Stephen go and wondering what would happen to him.

"I wouldn't worry about Stephen," said Thomas.

"He's sure to be a riot on the pictures. All the girls in the village are in love with him--they used to hang about on the Godsend road

trying to waylay him. One of these days you're going to find out what you've missed."

I started to get tea; Thomas had brought a haddock.

"Father'll get tea at Scoatney, so we needn't wait," I said.

"The servants must be tired of feeding him," said Thomas.

"What does he do there, day after day? Does he just read for the fun of it, or is he up to something ?"

"Ah, if we only knew that," I said.

"Harry says he ought to be psychoanalyzed."

I turned in astonishment.

"Does Harry know about psychoanalysis?"

"His Father talks about it sometimes--he's a doctor, you know."

"Does he believe in it?"

"No, he's always very sneery. But Harry rather fancies it."

I had to concentrate on cooking the haddock then; but while we were

eating it I brought up the subject of psycho-analysis again, and told Thomas of the conversation Simon and I had about it that first time we talked on the mound-though I couldn't remember it very clearly.

"I wish I'd got Simon to tell me more," I said.

"Would Harry's Father have any helpful books, do you think ?"

Thomas said he would find out, though that now Rose was going to marry Simon, it didn't matter so much whether Father wrote or not.

"Oh, Thomas, it does!" I cried.

"It matters most terribly to Father.

And to us, too- because if all the eccentric things he's been doing, on and off for months now, aren't leading somewhere, well, then he is

going crazy. And a crazy Father's not a good idea, quite apart from

our tender feelings towards him."

"Have you tender feelings towards him his I don't know that I have

--not that I dislike him."

Just then, Father came in. He barely said "Hello" in answer to mine and started up the kitchen stairs to his bedroom.

Half-way up, he stopped and looked down at us; then came back

quickly.

"Can you spare me this?" he asked, picking up the backbone of the haddock between his forefinger and thumb.

I thought he was being sarcastic- that he meant we had left him no

fish. I explained that we hadn't expected him, and offered to cook

some eggs at once.

He said: "Oh, I've had tea," and then carried the haddock-bone, dripping milk, out through the back door and across to the gatehouse.

About followed him hopefully. By the time he got back- a very

disappointed cat- Thomas and I were lurching about, laughing in a way that hurts.

"Oh, poor About!" I gasped, as I gave him some scraps from my plate.

"Stop laughing, Thomas. We shall be ashamed of our callousness if Father really is going off his head."

"He isn't -he's putting it on or something," said Thomas. Then a scared look came into his eyes and he added:

"Try to keep knives away from him. I'm going to talk to Harry's father tomorrow."

But Harry's Father wasn't in the least helpful.

"He says he's not a psycho-analyst or a psychiatrist or a

psycho-anything, thank God," Thomas told me, when he got back in the evening.

"And he couldn't think why we wanted to make Father write again, because he once had a look at Jacob Wrestling and didn't understand a word of it. Harry was quite embarrassed."

"Does Harry understand it, then?"

"Yes, of course he does--it's the first I've heard about its being hard to understand. Anyway, what's double-Dutch to one generation's just

"The cat sat on the mat" to the next."

"Even the ladder chapter ?"

"Oh, that!" Thomas smiled tolerantly.

"That's just Father's fun.

And who says you always have to understand things his You can like them without understanding them--like "em better sometimes. I ought to have known Harry's Father would be no help to us-he's the kind of man who

says he enjoys a good yarn."

I certainly have been underestimating Thomas--only a few weeks ago I

should have expected him to enjoy a good yarn himself.

And now I find he has read quite a lot of difficult modern poetry (some master at his school lent it to him) and taken it in his stride.

I wish he had let me read it--though I know very well I can't like

things without understanding them. I am astonished to discover how

high-brow his tastes are--far more so than mine; and it is most

peculiar how he can be so appreciative of all forms of art, but so

matter-of-fact and unemotional about it. But then, he is like that

over most things he has been so calm and assured this last week that I often felt he was older than I was. Yet he can get the giggles and

plunge back into being the most ordinary schoolboy.

Really, the puzzling ness of people!

After we talked about Harry's Father, Thomas settled down to his

homework and I wandered out into the lane. There was a vast red sunset full of strangely shaped, prophetic-looking clouds, and a hot due-south wind was blowing--an exciting sort of wind, I always think; we don't

often get it. But I was too depressed to take much interest in the

evening. All day long I had been hopeful about psycho-analysis; I had expected Thomas to bring home some books we could get our teeth into.

And I hadn't only been thinking of Father's welfare. Early that

morning it had struck me that if he started writing again, Rose might believe there would be enough money coming in to make life bearable,

and still might break her engagement off. I wasn't banking on winning Simon even if she gave him up. But I knew, and shall always know, that he ought not to marry a girl who feels towards him as Rose does.

I went to the end of the lane and turned on to the Godsend road, trying all the time to think of some way of helping both Father and myself.

When I came to the high part of the road I looked back and saw his lamp alight in the gatehouse. I thought how often I had seen it shining

across the fields on my summer evening walks, and how it always

conjured up an image of him-remote, withdrawn, unapproachable. I said to myself, "Surely one ought to know a little more of one's father than we do ?" And as I began walking back to the castle I wondered if the fault could be ours, as well as his. Had I myself really tried to make friends with him his I was sure I had in the past--but had I lately?

No. I excused myself by thinking: "Oh, it's hopeless to make friends with people who never talk about themselves." And then it came to me that one of the few things I do know about psycho-analysis is that

people have to be made to talk about themselves. Had I tried hard

enough with Father--hadn't I always been rebuffed too easily his "Are you frightened of him ?" I asked myself. I knew in my heart that I was. But why his "Has he ever in his life struck any of you ?" Never.

His only weapon has been silence--and sometimes a little sarcasm.

"Then what is this insurmountable barrier round him? What's it made of?

Where did it come from ?"

It had become as if someone outside myself were asking the questions, attacking me with them. I tried to find answers. I wondered if

Mother's training that we must never worry or disturb him had gone on operating-and Topaz had perpetuated it by her habit of protecting him.

I wondered if I had some undetected fear left from the day when I saw him brandishing the cake-knife --if I believed, without ever having

admitted, it, that he really did mean to stab Mother.

"Heavens," I thought, "I'm psycho-analyzing myself, now! If only I could do this to Father!"

I had come round the last bend of the lane and could see him through

the lamp-lit window of the gatehouse. What was he doing? The fact

that he was at his desk didn't necessarily mean he was writing--he

always sits there when reading the Encyclopedia, because it is so heavy to hold. Was he reading now his His head was bent, but I couldn't see what over. Just then he raised his hand to push his hair back. He was holding a pencil And that instant, the voice that had been attacking me as I walked home said: "Suppose he's really working all the time?

Supposing he's writing some wonderful, money-earning book- but you

don't find out until it's too late to help you and Rose?"

I began walking towards the castle again. I don't remember planning

anything, even making a definite decision- it was as if my mind could not go ahead of my steps. I went into the dimness of the gatehouse

passage, then into the blackness of the tower staircase. I groped my

way up to Father's door. I knocked on it.

"Go away," came the instant reply.

The key was in the outside keyhole so I knew he hadn't locked himself in. I opened the door.

As I went in, he swung round from his desk looking furious.

But almost before I had time to notice his expression it was as if a

curtain came down over it, and the fury was hidden.

"Something important ?" he asked, in a perfectly controlled voice.

"Yes. Very," I said, and shut the door behind me.

He got up, looking at me closely.

"What's the matter, Cassandra?

You're unusually pale. Are you ill his You'd better sit down."

But I didn't sit. I stood there staring at the room. Something had

happened to it. Facing me, instead of the long rows of bookshelves

stretching between the north and south windows, was an expanse of

brightly colored paper.

"Heavens, what have you been doing in here ?" I gasped.

He save what I was staring at. ""Oh, those are just American comic strips--commonly called 'the funnies."

Now what is it, Cassandra ?"

I went closer and saw that what I had taken for wallpaper was sheets

and sheets from newspapers, the top edges of which were tacked to the edges of the bookshelves. In the dim light from the lamp I couldn't

see the pictures clearly, but they seemed to be small colored

illustrations joined together.

"Where did they come from ?" I asked.

"I brought them back from Scoatney yesterday.

They're from the American Sunday papers--I gather Neil can't live

without them.

Good heavens, don't start reading them."

"Are they to do with your work ?"

He opened his mouth to reply, and then a nervous, secretive look came into his eyes.

"What have you come here for?" he said sharply.

"Never you mind about my work."

I said: "But it's that I've come about. Father, you've got to let me know what you're doing."

For a second he stared at me in silence. Then he said icily: "And is this the sole reason for this visitation-to cross-examine me?"

"No, no," I began, and then pulled myself up.

"Yes, it is--it's exactly that. And I'm not giving up until I get an answer."

"Out you go," said Father.

He took me by the arm and marched me to the door--I was so astonished that I put up hardly any resistance.

But at the last second, I jerked away from him and dashed across to his desk. I had a wild hope that I might see some of his work there.

He was after me instantly, but I just had time to catch a glimpse of

pages and pages with long lists on them in his writing. Then he

grabbed me by the wrist and pulled me round- never have I seen such

fury as was in his eyes. He flung me away from the desk with such

force that I went right across the room and crashed into the door. It hurt so badly that I let out a yell and burst into tears.

"Oh, God, is it your elbow?" said Father.

"That can be agony."

He came over and tried to feel if there were any broken bones-even

through the pain I noticed how astonishingly his anger had vanished. I went on choking with tears--it really was agony, right down to my wrist and hand. After a minute or so, Father began to walk me up and down,

with his arm round me.

"It's going off," I told him as soon as I could.

"Let me sit down for a bit."

We sat on the sofa together and he lent me his handkerchief to mop up on. Soon I was able to say:

"It's almost better now--look!" I moved my hand and arm to show him.

"It was nothing serious."

"It might have been," he said in a queer, strained voice.

"I

haven't lost my temper like that since was He stopped dead, then got up and went back to his desk.

I said: "Not since you went for Mother with the cake-knife ?" and was astounded to hear the words coming out of my mouth. I added hastily,

"Of course I know you didn't really go for her, it was all a mistake, but- well, you were very angry with her. Oh, Father--do you think

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