PAGE 9
The Eleventh Hour
by
Jeff rose abruptly and went across to the fire to knock the ashes from his pipe. Having done so, he remained bent for several seconds, as though he were trying to read his fortune in the dying embers. Then very slowly he straightened himself and spoke.
“I think you forget,” he said, “that Colonel Elliot was the son of an earl.”
But Granny Grimshaw remained unabashed and wholly unimpressed. She laid down the poker with decision. “I was never one to sneer at good birth,” she said. “But I hold that you come of a breed as old and as good as any in the land. Your father was a yeoman of the good old-fashioned sort; and your mother–well, everyone hereabouts knows that she was a lady born and bred. I don’t see what titles have to do with breeding,” said Granny Grimshaw stoutly. “Not that I despise the aristocracy. Dear me, no! But when all is said and done, no man can be better than a gentleman, and no woman can look higher. And there are gentlemen in every walk of life just the same as there are the other sort. And you, Master Jeff, you’re one of the gentlemen.”
Jeff laughed a somewhat grim laugh, and turned to put out the lamp.
“You’re a very nice old woman, Granny,” he said. “But you are not an impartial judge.”
“Ah, my dearie,” said Granny Grimshaw, “but I know what women’s hearts are made of.”
A somewhat irrelevant retort, which nevertheless closed the discussion.
They went upstairs together, and parted on the landing.
“And you’ll go to bed now, won’t you?” urged Granny Grimshaw.
“All right,” said Jeff.
But once in his own room he went to the low lattice-window that overlooked the mill-stream, and stood before it looking gravely forth over the still water. It was a night of many stars. Beyond the stream there stretched a dream-valley across which the river mists were trailing. The tall trees in the meadows stood up with a ghostly magnificence against them. The whole scene was one of wondrous peace, and all, as far as he could see, was his. But the man’s eyes brooded over his acres with a dumb dissatisfaction, and when he turned from the window at last it was with a gesture of hopelessness.
“God help me for a fool!” he muttered between his teeth. “If I went near her, they would kick me out by the back door.”
He began to undress with savage energy, and finally flung himself down on the old four-poster in which his father had lain before him, lying there motionless, with fixed and sleepless eyes, while the hours went by over his head.
Once–it was just before daybreak–he rose and went again to the open window that overlooked his prosperous valley. A change had come over the face of it. The mists were lifting, lifting. He saw the dark forms of cattle standing here and there. The river wound, silent and mysterious, away into the dim, quiet distance. A church clock struck, its tone vague and remote as a voice from another world. And as if in answer to its solemn call a lark soared upwards from the meadow by the mill-stream with a burst of song.
The east was surely lightening. The night was gone. Jeff leaned his burning temple against the window-frame with a feeling akin to physical sickness. He was tired–dead tired; but he knew that he could not sleep now. The world was waking. From the farmyard round the corner of the house there came the flap of wings and the old rooster’s blatant greeting to the dawn.
In another half-hour the whole place would be stirring. He had wasted a whole night’s rest.
Fiercely he straightened himself. Surely his brain must be going! Why, he had only spoken to her twice. And then, like a spirit that mocked, the words ran through his brain: “Who ever loved that loved not at first sight?”