Helena began suddenly to laugh. He looked at her inquiringly.
‘I remember,’ she said, still laughing, ‘at Knockholt — you — a half-grown lamb — a dog — in procession.’ She marked the position of the three with her finger.
‘What an ass I must have looked!’ he said.
‘Sort of silent Pied Piper,’ she laughed.
‘Dogs do follow me like that, though,’ he said.
‘They did Siegmund,’ she said.
‘Ah!’ he exclaimed.
‘I remember they had for a long time a little brown dog that followed him home.’
‘Ah!’ he exclaimed.
‘I remember, too,’ she said, ‘a little black-and-white kitten that followed me. Mater would not have it in — she would not. And I remember finding it, a few days after, dead in the road. I don’t think I ever quite forgave my mater that.’
‘More sorrow over one kitten brought to destruction than over all the sufferings of men,’ he said.
She glanced at him and laughed. He was smiling ironically.
‘For the latter, you see,’ she replied, ‘I am not responsible.’
As they neared the top of the hill a few spots of rain fell.
‘You know,’ said Helena, ‘if it begins it will continue all night. Look at that!’
She pointed to the great dark reservoir of cloud ahead.
‘Had we better go back?’ he asked.
‘Well, we will go on and find a thick tree; then we can shelter till we see how it turns out. We are not far from the cars here.’
They walked on and on. The raindrops fell more thickly, then thinned away.
‘It is exactly a year today,’ she said, as they-walked on the round shoulder of the down with an oak-wood on the left hand. ‘Exactly!’
‘What anniversary is it, then?’ he inquired.
‘Exactly a year today, Siegmund and I walked here — by the day, Thursday. We went through the larch-wood. Have you ever been through the larch-wood?’
‘No.’
‘We will go, then,’ she said.
‘History repeats itself,’ he remarked.
‘How?’ she asked calmly.
He was pulling at the heads of the cocksfoot grass as he walked.
‘I see no repetition,’ she added.
‘No,’ he exclaimed bitingly; ‘you are right!’
They went on in silence. As they drew near a farm they saw the men unloading a last wagon of hay on to a very brown stack. He sniffed the air. Though he was angry, he spoke.
‘They got that hay rather damp,’ he said. ‘Can’t you smell it — like hot tobacco and sandal-wood?’
‘What, is that the stack?’ she asked.
‘Yes, it’s always like that when it’s picked damp.’
The conversation was restarted, but did not flourish. When they turned on to a narrow path by the side of the field he went ahead. Leaning over the hedge, he pulled three sprigs of honeysuckle, yellow as butter, full of scent; then he waited for her. She was hanging her head, looking in the hedge-bottom. He presented her with the flowers without speaking. She bent forward, inhaled the rich fragrance, and looked up at him over the blossoms with her beautiful, beseeching blue eyes. He smiled gently to her.
‘Isn’t it nice?’ he said. ‘Aren’t they fine bits?’
She took them without answering, and put one piece carefully in her dress. It was quite against her rule to wear a flower. He took his place by her side.
‘I always like the gold-green of cut fields,’ he said. ‘They seem to give off sunshine even when the sky’s greyer than a tabby cat.’
She laughed, instinctively putting out her hand towards the glowing field on her right.
They entered the larch-wood. There the chill wind was changed into sound. Like a restless insect he hovered about her, like a butterfly whose antennae flicker and twitch sensitively as they gather intelligence, touching the aura, as it were, of the female. He was exceedingly delicate in his handling of her.
The path was cut windingly through the lofty, dark, and closely serried trees, which vibrated like chords under the soft bow of the wind. Now and again he would look down passages between the trees — narrow pillared corridors, dusky as if webbed across with mist. All round was a twilight, thickly populous with slender, silent trunks. Helena stood still, gazing up at the tree-tops where the bow of the wind was drawn, causing slight, perceptible quivering. Byrne walked on without her. At a bend in the path he stood, with his hand on the roundness of a larch-trunk, looking back at her, a blue fleck in the brownness of congregated trees. She moved very slowly down the path.
‘I might as well not exist, for all she is aware of me,’ he said to himself bitterly. Nevertheless, when she drew near he said brightly:
‘Have you noticed how the thousands of dry twigs between the trunks make a brown mist, a brume?’
She looked at him suddenly as if interrupted.
‘H’m? Yes, I see what you mean.’
She smiled at him, because of his bright boyish tone and manner.
‘That’s the larch fog,’ he laughed.
‘Yes,’ she said, ‘you see it in pictures. I had not noticed it before.’
He shook the tree on which his hand was laid.
‘It laughs through its teeth,’ he said, smiling, playing with everything he touched.
As they went along she caught swiftly at her hat; then she stooped, picking up a hat-pin of twined silver. She laughed to herself as if pleased by a coincidence.
‘Last year,’ she said, ‘the larch-fingers stole both my pins — the same ones.’
He looked at her, wondering how much he was filling the place of a ghost with warmth. He thought of Siegmund, and seemed to see him swinging down the steep bank out of the wood exactly as he himself was doing at the moment, with Helena stepping carefully behind. He always felt a deep sympathy and kinship with Siegmund; sometimes he thought he hated Helena.
They had emerged at the head of a shallow valley — one of those wide hollows in the North Downs that are like a great length of tapestry held loosely by four people. It was raining. Byrne looked at the dark blue dots rapidly appearing on the sleeves of Helena’s dress. They walked on a little way. The rain increased. Helena looked about for shelter.
‘Here,’ said Byrne —‘here is our tent — a black tartar’s — ready pitched.’
He stooped under the low boughs of a very large yew tree that stood just back from the path. She crept after him. It was really a very good shelter. Byrne sat on the ledge of a root, Helena beside him. He looked under the flap of the black branches down the valley. The grey rain was falling steadily; the dark hollow under the tree was immersed in the monotonous sound of it. In the open, where the bright young corn shone intense with wet green, was a fold of sheep. Exposed in a large pen on the hillside, they were moving restlessly; now and again came the ‘tong-ting-tong’ of a sheep-bell. First the grey creatures huddled in the high corner, then one of them descended and took shelter by the growing corn lowest down. The rest followed, bleating and pushing each other in their anxiety to reach the place of desire, which was no whit better than where they stood before.
‘That’s like us all,’ said Byrne whimsically. ‘We’re