“Darling, how’s everything? I miss you a lot. I rode in a point-to-point yesterday. Didn’t do any good. How’s the dragon? Yours always, Henry.”
Sometimes a whole week passed without a letter.
Once Shirley went up to London and they had a short and unsatisfactory meeting.
He refused the invitation she brought him from Laura.
“I don’t want to come down and stay for the week-end! I want to marry you, and have you to myself for always. not come down and ‘walk out’ with you under Laura’s censorious eye. Don’t forget, Laura will turn you against me if she possibly can.”
“Oh, Henry, she’d never do anything like that. Never-she hardly ever mentions you.”
“Hopes you’ll forget about me, I expect.”
“As if I should!”
“Jealous old cat.”
“Oh, Henry, Laura’s a darling.”
“Not to me.”
Shirley went back home unhappy and restless.
In spite of herself, Laura began to feel worn down.
“Why don’t you ask Henry down for a week-end?”
Shirley said sullenly:
“He doesn’t want to come.”
“Not want to come? How extraordinary.”
“I don’t think it’s so extraordinary. He knows you don’t like him.”
“I do like him.” Laura tried to make her voice convincing.
“Oh, Laura, you don’t!”
“I think Henry’s a very attractive person.”
“But you don’t want me to marry him.”
“Shirley-that isn’t true, I only want you to be quite, quite sure.”
“I am sure.”
Laura cried desperately:
“It’s only because I love you so much. I don’t want you to make any mistake.”
“Well, don’t love me so much. I don’t want to be eternally loved!” She added: “The truth is, you’re jealous.”
“Jealous?”
“Jealous of Henry. You don’t want me to love anyone but you.”
“Shirley!”
Laura turned away, her face white.
“You’ll never want me to marry anyone.”
Then, as Laura moved away, walking stiffly, Shirley rushed after her in warm-hearted apology.
“Darling, I didn’t mean it, I didn’t mean it. I’m a beast. But you always seem so against-Henry.”
“It’s because I feel he’s selfish.” Laura repeated the words she had used to Mr. Baldock. “He isn’t-he isn’t-kind. I can’t help feeling that in some ways he could be-ruthless.”
“Ruthless,” Shirley repeated the word thoughtfully without any symptom of distress. “Yes, Laura, in a way you’re right. Henry could be ruthless.”
She added: “It’s one of those things that attracts me in him.”
“But think-if you were ill-in trouble-would he look after you?”
“I don’t know that I’m so keen on being looked after. I can look after myself. And don’t worry about Henry. He loves me.”
‘Love?’ thought Laura. ‘What is love? A young man’s thoughtless greedy passion? Is Henry’s love for her anything more than that? Or is it true, and am I jealous?’
She disengaged herself gently from Shirley’s clinging arms and walked away deeply disturbed.
‘Is it true that I don’t want her to marry anybody? Not just Henry’s Anybody? I don’t think so now, but that’s because there is no one else she wants to marry. If someone else were to come along, should I feel the same way as I do now, saying to myself: Not him-not him? Is it true that I love her too much? Baldy warned me…. I love her too much, and so I don’t want her to marry – I don’t want her to go away-I want to keep her-never to let her go. What have I got against Henry really? Nothing. I don’t know him, I’ve never known him. He’s what he was at first-a stranger. All I do know is that he doesn’t like me. And perhaps he’s right not to like me.’
On the following day, Laura met young Robin Grant coming out of the vicarage. He took his pipe out of his mouth, greeted her, and strolled beside her into the village. After mentioning that he had just come down from London, he remarked casually:
“Saw Henry last night. Having supper with a glamorous blonde. Very attentive. Mustn’t tell Shirley.”
He gave a whinny of laughter.
Although Laura recognised the information far exactly what it was, a piece of spite on Robin’s part, since he himself had been deeply attracted to Shirley, yet it gave her a qualm.