<h2 id="id01604" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<h5 id="id01605">CARRYING ON</h5>
<p id="id01606" style="margin-top: 2em">After that first terrible evening, during which no one had looked upon
their agony, David Linton and his child took up their life again and
tried to splice the broken ends as best they might. Their guests, who
came down to breakfast nervously, preparing to go away at once, found
them in the dining-room, haggard and worn, but pleasantly courteous;
they talked of the morning's news, of the frost that seemed
commencing, of the bulbs that were sending delicate spear-heads up
through the grass or the bare flower-beds. There were arrangements
for the day to be made for those who cared to ride or drive: the
trains to be planned for a gunner subaltern whose leave was expiring
next day. Everything was quite as usual, outwardly.</p>
<p id="id01607">"Pretty ghastly meal, what?" remarked the young gunner to a chum, as
they went out on the terrace. "Rather like dancing at a funeral."</p>
<p id="id01608">Philip Hardress came into the morning-room, where Mr. Linton and Norah
were talking.</p>
<p id="id01609">"I don't need to tell you how horribly sorry I am," he faltered.</p>
<p id="id01610">"No—thanks, Phil."</p>
<p id="id01611">"You—you haven't any details?"</p>
<p id="id01612">"No."</p>
<p id="id01613">"Wally will write as soon as he can," Norah added.</p>
<p id="id01614">"Yes, of course. The others want me to say, sir, of course they will
go away. They all understand. I can go too, just to the hotel. I
can supervise Hawkins from there."</p>
<p id="id01615">"I hope none of you will think of doing any such thing," David Linton
said. "Our work here is just the same. Jim would never have wished
us not to carry on."</p>
<p id="id01616">"But——" Hardress began.</p>
<p id="id01617">"There isn't any 'but.' Norah and I are not going to sit mourning,
with our hands in front of us. We mean to work a bit harder, that's
all. You see"—the ghost of a smile flickered across the face that
had aged ten years in a night—"more than ever now, whatever we do for
a soldier is done for Jim."</p>
<p id="id01618">Hardress made a curious little gesture of protest.</p>
<p id="id01619">"And I'm left—half of me!"</p>
<p id="id01620">"You have got to help us, Phil," Norah said. "We need you badly."</p>
<p id="id01621">"I can't do much," he said. "But as long as you want me, I'm here.<br/>
Then I'm to tell the others, sir——"<br/></p>
<p id="id01622">"Tell them we hope they will help us to carry on as usual," said David
Linton. "I'll come across with you presently, Phil, to look at the
new cultivator: I hear it arrived last night."</p>
<p id="id01623">He looked at Norah as the door closed.</p>
<p id="id01624">"You're sure it isn't too much for you, my girl? I will send them
away if you would rather we were by ourselves for a while."</p>
<p id="id01625">"I promised Jim that whatever happened we'd keep smiling," Norah said.
"He wouldn't want us to make a fuss. Jim always did so hate fusses,
didn't he, Dad?"</p>
<p id="id01626">She was quite calm. Even when Mrs. Hunt came hurrying over, and put
her kind arms about her, Norah had no tears.</p>
<p id="id01627">"I suppose we haven't realized it," she said. "Perhaps we're trying
not to. I don't want to think of Jim as dead—he was so splendidly
alive, ever since he was a tiny chap."</p>
<p id="id01628">"Try to think of him as near you," Mrs. Hunt whispered.</p>
<p id="id01629">"Oh, he is. I know Jim never would go far from us, if he could help
it. I know he's watching, somewhere, and he will be glad if we keep
our heads up and go straight on. He would trust us to do that." Her
face changed. "Oh, Mrs. Hunt,—but it's hard on Dad!"</p>
<p id="id01630">"He has you still."</p>
<p id="id01631">"I'm only a girl," said Norah. "No girl could make up for a son: and
such a son as Jim. But I'll try."</p>
<p id="id01632">There came racing little feet in the hall, and Geoffrey burst in.</p>
<p id="id01633">"It isn't true!" he shouted. "Say it isn't true, Norah! Allenby says
the Germans have killed Jim—I know they couldn't." He tugged at her
woollen coat. "Say it's a lie, Norah—Jim couldn't be dead!"</p>
<p id="id01634">"Geoff—Geoff, dear!" Mrs. Hunt tried to draw him away.</p>
<p id="id01635">"Don't!" Norah said. She put her arms round the little boy—and
suddenly her head went down on his shoulder. The tears came at last.
Mrs. Hunt went softly from the room.</p>
<p id="id01636">There were plenty of tears in the household: The servants had all
loved the big cheery lad, with the pleasant word for each one. They
went about their work red-eyed, and Allenby chafed openly at the age
that kept him at home, doing a woman's work, while boys went out to
give their lives, laughing, for Empire.</p>
<p id="id01637">"It ain't fair," he said to Miss de Lisle, who sobbed into the muffler
she was knitting. "It ain't fair. Kids, they are—no more. They
ain't meant to die. Oh, if I could only get at that there Kayser!"</p>
<p id="id01638">Then, after a week of waiting, came Wally's letter.</p>
<p id="id01639">*****</p>
<p id="id01640">"Norah, Dear,—</p>
<p id="id01641">"I don't know how to write to you. I can't bear to think about
you and your father. It seems it must be only a bad dream—and all
the time I know it isn't, even though I keep thinking I hear his
whistle—the one he used for me.</p>
<p id="id01642">"I had better tell you about it.</p>
<p id="id01643">"We had orders to attack early one morning. Jim was awfully keen; he
had everything ready, and he had been talking to the men until they
were all as bucked up as they could be. You know, he was often pretty
grave about his work, but I don't think I ever saw him look so happy
as he did that morning. He looked just like a kid. He told me he
felt as if he were going out on a good horse at Billabong. We were
looking over our revolvers, and he said, 'That's the only thing that
feels wrong; it ought to be a stock whip!'</p>
<p id="id01644">"We hadn't much artillery support. Our guns were short of shells, as
usual. But we took the first trench, and the next. Jim was just
everywhere. He was always first; the men would have followed him down
a precipice. He was laughing all the time.</p>
<p id="id01645">"We didn't get much time before they counter-attacked. They came on
in waves—as if there were millions of them, and we had a pretty stiff
fight in the trench. It was fairly well smashed about. I was pretty
busy about fifty yards away, but I saw Jim up on a broken traverse,
using his revolver just as calmly as if he were practising in camp,
and cheering on the men. He gave me a 'Coo-ee!'</p>
<p id="id01646">"And then—oh, I don't know how to tell you. Just as I was looking at
him a shell burst near him: and when the smoke blew over there was
nothing—traverse and trench and all, it was just wiped out. I
couldn't get near him—the Boches were pouring over in fresh masses,
and we got the signal to retire—and I was the only one left to get
the men back.</p>
<p id="id01647">"He couldn't have felt anything; that's the only thing.</p>
<p id="id01648">"I wish it had been me. I'm nobody's dog, and he was just everything
to you two—and the best friend a fellow ever had. It would have been
so much more reasonable if it had been me. I just feel that I hate
myself for being alive. I would have saved him for you if I could,
Norah,
"Wally."</p>
<p id="id01649">*****</p>
<p id="id01650">There were letters, too, from Jim's Colonel, and from Major Hunt, and
Garrett, and every other brother-officer whom Jim had sent to
Homewood; and others that Norah and her father valued almost more
highly—from men who had served under him. Letters that made him glow
with pride—almost forgetting grief as they read them. It seemed so
impossible to think that Jim would never come again.</p>
<p id="id01651">"I can't feel as though he were dead," Norah said, looking up at her
father. "I know I've got to get used to knowing he has gone away from
us for always. But I like to think of him as having only changed
work. Jim never could be idle in Heaven; he always used to say it
seemed such a queer idea to sit all day in a white robe and play a
harp. Jim's Heaven would have to be a very busy one, and I know he's
gone there, Dad."</p>
<p id="id01652">David Linton got up and went to the bookcase. He came back with
<i>Westward Ho!</i> in his hand.</p>
<p id="id01653">"I was reading Kingsley's idea of it last night," he said. "I think
it helps, Norah. Listen. 'The best reward for having wrought well
already, is to have more to do; and he that has been faithful over a
few things, must find his account in being made ruler over many
things. That is the true and heroical rest, which only is worthy of
gentlemen and sons of God.' Jim was only a boy, but he went straight
and did his best all his life. I think he has just been promoted to
some bigger job."</p>
<p id="id01654">So they held their heads high, as befitted people with just cause for
being proud, and set themselves to find the rest that comes from hard
work. There was plenty to do, for the house was always full of Tired
People. Not that the Lintons ever tried to entertain their guests.
Tired People came to a big, quiet house, where everything ran
smoothly, and all that was possible was done for comfort. Beyond
that, they did exactly as they chose. There were horses and the motor
for those who cared to ride and drive; the links for golfers; walks
with beautiful scenery for energetic folk, and dainty rooms with big
easy-chairs, or restful lounges under the trees on the lawn, for those
who asked from Fate nothing better than to be lazy. No one was
expected to make conversation or to behave as an ordinary guest.
Everywhere there was a pleasant feeling of homeliness and welcome; shy
men became suddenly at their ease; nerve-racked men, strained with
long months of the noise and horror of war, relaxed in the peace of
Homewood, and went back to duty with a light step and a clear eye.
Only there was missing the wild merriment of the first few weeks, when
Jim and Wally dashed in and out perpetually and kept the house in a
simmer of uncertainty and laughter. That could never come again.</p>
<p id="id01655">But beyond the immediate needs of the Tired People there was much to
plan and carry out. Conscription in England was an established fact;
already there were few fit men to be seen out of uniform. David
Linton looked forward to a time when shortage of labour, coupled with
the deadly work of the German submarines, should mean a shortage of
food; and he and Norah set themselves to provide against that time of
scarcity. Miss de Lisle and Philip Hardress entered into every plan,
lending the help of brains as well as hands. The farm was put under
intensive culture, and the first provision made for the future was
that of fertilizers, which, since most of them came from abroad, were
certain to be scarce. Mr. Linton and Hardress breathed more freely
when they had stored a two years' supply. The flock of sheep was
increased; the fowl-run doubled in size, and put in charge of a
disabled soldier, a one-armed Australian, whom Hardress found in
London, ill and miserable, and added to the list of Homewood's
patients—and cures. Young heifers were bought, and "boarded-out" at
neighbouring farms; a populous community of grunting pigs occupied a
little field. And in the house Norah and Miss de Lisle worked through
the spring and summer, until the dry and spacious cellars and
storerooms showed row upon row of shelves covered with everything that
could be preserved or salted or pickled, from eggs to runner beans.</p>
<p id="id01656">Sometimes the Tired People lent a hand, becoming interested in their
hosts' schemes. Norah formed a fast friendship with a cheerful
subaltern in the Irish Guards, who was with them for a wet fortnight,
much of which he spent in the kitchen stoning fruit, making jam, and
acting as bottler-in-chief to the finished product. There were many
who asked nothing better than to work on the farm, digging, planting
or harvesting: indeed, in the summer, one crop would have been ruined
altogether by a fierce storm, but for the Tired People, who, from an
elderly Colonel to an Australian signaller, flung themselves upon it,
and helped to finish getting it under cover—carrying the last sheaves
home just as the rain came down in torrents, and returning to Homewood
in a soaked but triumphant procession. Indeed, nearly all the
unending stream of guests came under the spell of the place; so that
Norah used to receive anxious inquiries from various corners of the
earth afterwards—from Egypt or Salonica would come demands as to the
success of a catch-crop which the writer had helped to sow, or of a
brood of Buff Orpingtons which he had watched hatching out in the
incubator: even from German East Africa came a letter asking after a
special litter of pigs! Perhaps it was that every one knew that the
Lintons were shouldering a burden bravely, and tried to help.</p>
<p id="id01657">They kept Jim very close to them. A stranger, hearing the name so
often on their lips, might have thought that he was still with them.
Together, they talked of him always; not sadly, but remembering the
long, happy years that now meant a memory too dear ever to let go.
Jim had once asked Norah for a promise. "If I go West," he said,
"don't wear any horrible black frocks." So she went about in her
ordinary dresses, especially the blue frocks he had loved—with just a
narrow black band on her arm. There were fresh flowers under his
picture every day, but she did not put them sadly. She would smile at
the frank happy face as she arranged leaves and blossoms with a loving
hand.</p>
<p id="id01658">Later on, David Linton fitted up a carpenter's bench and a workshop;
the days were too full for much thinking, but he found the evenings
long. He enlisted Hardress in his old work of splint-making, and then
found that half his guests used to stray out to the lit workshop after
dinner and beg for jobs, so that before long the nearest Hospital
Supply Depot could count on a steady output of work from Homewood.
Mrs. Hunt and Norah used to come as polishers; Miss de Lisle suddenly
discovered that her soul for cooking included a corner for carpentry,
and became extraordinarily skilful in the use of chisel and plane.
When the autumn days brought a chill into the air, Mr. Linton put a
stove into the workshop; and it became a kind of club, where the whole
household might often be found; they extended their activities to the
manufacture of crutches, bed-rests, bed-tables, and half a dozen other
aids to comfort for broken men. No work had helped David Linton so
much.</p>
<p id="id01659">In the early summer Wally came back on leave: a changed Wally, with
grim lines where there had once been only merry ones in his lean,
brown face. He did not want to come to Homewood; only when begged to
come did he master the pitiful shrinking he felt from meeting them.</p>
<p id="id01660">"I didn't know how to face you," he said. Norah had gone to meet him,
and they were walking back from the station.</p>
<p id="id01661">"Don't, Wally; you hurt," she said.</p>
<p id="id01662">"It's true, though; I didn't. I feel as if you must hate me for
coming back—alone."</p>
<p id="id01663">"Hate you!—and you were Jim's chum!"</p>
<p id="id01664">"I always came as Jim's chum," Wally said heavily. "From the very
first, when I was a lonely little nipper at school, I sort of belonged
to Jim. And now—well, I just can't realize it, Norah. I can't keep
on thinking about him as dead. I know he is, and one minute I'm
feeling half-insane about it, and the next I forget, and think I hear
him whistling or calling me." He clenched his hands. "It's the
minute after that that is the worst of all," he said.</p>
<p id="id01665">For a time they did not speak. They walked on slowly, along the
pleasant country lane with its blossoming hedges.</p>
<p id="id01666">"I know," Norah said. "There's not much to choose between you and Dad
and me, when it comes to missing Jim. But as for you—well you did
come as Jim's chum first—and always; but you came just as much
because you were yourself. You know you belonged to Billabong, as we
all did. You can't cut yourself off from us now, Wally."</p>
<p id="id01667">"I?" he echoed. "Well, if I do, I have mighty little left. But I
felt that you couldn't want to see me. I know what it must be like to
see me come back without him."</p>
<p id="id01668">"I'm not going to say it doesn't hurt," said Norah. "Only it hurts
you as much as it does us. And the thing that would be ever so much
worse is for you not to come. Why, you're the only comfort we have
left. Don't you see, you're like a bit of Jim coming back to us?"</p>
<p id="id01669">"Oh, Norah—Norah!" he said. "If I could only have saved him!"</p>
<p id="id01670">"Don't we know you'd have died quite happily if you could!" Norah
said. "Just as happily as he would have died for you."</p>
<p id="id01671">"He did, you know," Wally said. All the youth and joy had gone out of
his voice, leaving it flat and toneless. "Two or three times that
morning he kept me out of a specially hot spot, and took it himself.
He was always doing it: we nearly punched each other's heads about it
the day before—I told him he was using his rank unfairly. He just
grinned and said subalterns couldn't understand necessary strategy in
the field!"</p>
<p id="id01672">"He would!" said Norah, laughing.</p>
<p id="id01673">Wally stared at her.</p>
<p id="id01674">"I didn't think I'd ever see you laugh again!"</p>
<p id="id01675">"Not laugh!" Norah echoed. "Why, it wouldn't be fair to Jim if we
didn't. We keep him as near us as we can—talk about him, and about
all the old, happy times. We did have such awfully good times
together, didn't we? We're never going to get far away from him."</p>
<p id="id01676">The boy gave a great sigh.</p>
<p id="id01677">"I've been getting a long way from everything," he said.
"Since—since it happened I couldn't let myself think: it was just as
if I were going mad. The only thing I've wanted to do was to fight,
and I've had that."</p>
<p id="id01678">"He looks as if his mind were more tired than his body," David Linton
said that evening. "One can see that he has just been torturing
himself with all sorts of useless thoughts. You'll have to take him
in hand, Norah. Put the other work aside for a while and go out with
him—ride as much as you can. It won't do you any harm, either."</p>
<p id="id01679">"We never thought old Wally would be one of the Tired People," Norah
said musingly.</p>
<p id="id01680">"No, indeed. And I think there has been no one more utterly tired.<br/>
It won't do, Norah: the boy will be ill if we don't look after him."<br/></p>
<p id="id01681">"We've just got to make him feel how much we want him," Norah said.</p>
<p id="id01682">"Yes. And we have to teach him to think happily about Jim—not to
fight it all the time. Fighting won't make it any better," said David
Linton, with a sigh.</p>
<p id="id01683">But there was no riding for Wally, for a while. The next day found
him too ill to get up, and the doctor, sent for hastily, talked of
shock and over-strain, and ordered bed until his temperature should be
pleased to go down: which was not for many a weary day. Possibly it
was the best thing that could have happened to Wally. He grew, if not
reconciled, at least accustomed to his loss; grew, too, to thinking
himself a coward when he saw the daily struggle waged by the two
people he loved best. And Norah was wise enough to call in other
nurses: chief of them the Hunt babies, Alison and Michael, who rolled
on his bed and played with him, while Geoffrey sat as close to him as
possible, and could hardly be lured from the room. It was not for
weeks after his return that they heard Wally laugh; and then it was at
some ridiculous speech of Michael's that he suddenly broke into the
ghost of his old mirth.</p>
<p id="id01684">Norah's heart gave a leap.</p>
<p id="id01685">"Oh, he's better!" she thought. "You blessed little Michael!"</p>
<p id="id01686">And so, healing came to the boy's bruised soul. Not that the old,
light-hearted Wally came back: but he learned to talk of Jim, and no
longer to hug his sorrow in silence. Something became his of the
peace that had fallen upon Norah and her father. It was all they
could hope for, to begin with.</p>
<p id="id01687">They said good-bye to him before they considered him well enough to go
back to the trenches. But the call for men was insistent, and the boy
himself was eager to go.</p>
<p id="id01688">"Come back to us soon," Norah said, wistfully.</p>
<p id="id01689">"Oh, I'm safe to come back," Wally said. "I'm nobody's dog, you
know."</p>
<p id="id01690">"That's not fair!" she flashed. "Say you're sorry for saying it!"</p>
<p id="id01691">He flushed.</p>
<p id="id01692">"I'm sorry if I hurt you, Nor. I suppose I was a brute to say that."<br/>
Something of his old quaint fun came into his eyes for a moment.<br/>
"Anyhow it's something to be somebody's dog—especially if one happens<br/>
to belong to Billabong-in-Surrey!"<br/></p>
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