Suddenly her whole body quivered as if his had touched it. And when she

looked at him she had the queer feeling that she saw him for the first

time. Never before like that. Never before.

But to him she was the same Anne. He knew her face as he knew his

mother's face or Colin's. He knew, he remembered all her ways.

And this was not what he wanted. He wanted some strange wonder and

excitement; he wanted to find it in Anne and in nobody but Anne, and he

couldn't find it. He wanted to be in love with Anne and he wasn't. She

was too near him, too much a part of him, too well-known, too

well-remembered. She made him restless and impatient, looking, looking

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for the strangeness, the mystery he wanted and couldn't find.

If only he could have seen her suddenly for the first time.

Extraordinary, because this inactivity did violence to Anne's nature;

besides, Auntie Adeline behaved as if you were uninteresting and

unimportant, not attending to a word you said. Yet her strength lay in

her inconsistency. One minute her arrogance ignored you and the next she

came humbly and begged for your caresses; she was dependent, like a

child, on your affection. Anne thought that pathetic. And there was

always her fascination. That was absolute; above logic and morality,

irrefutable as the sweetness of a flower. Everybody felt it, even the

servants whom she tormented with her incalculable wants. Jerrold and

Colin, even Eliot, now that he was grown-up, felt it. As for Uncle

Robert he was like a young man in the beginning of first love.

Adeline judged people by their attitude to her. Anne, whether she

listened to her or not, was her own darling. Her husband and John Severn

were adorable, Major Markham of Wyck Wold and Mr. Hawtrey of Medlicote,

who admired her, were perfect dears, Sir John Corbett of Underwoods, who

didn't, was that silly old thing. Resist her and she felt no mean

resentment; you simply dropped out of her scene. Thus her world was

peopled with her adorers.

Anne couldn't have told you whether she felt the charm on its own

account, or whether the pleasure of being with her was simply part of

the blessed state of being at Wyck-on-the-Hill. Enough that Auntie

Adeline was there where Uncle Robert and Eliot and Colin and Jerrold

were; she belonged to them; she belonged to the house and garden; she

stood with the flowers.




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