"My Frenchman paints a dismal picture of the future," she said.
"Your Frenchman is a realist," he answered.
"And if I sailed with you now, and never returned to Navron?" she asked.
"Who can tell? Regret perhaps, and disillusion, and a looking back over your shoulder."
"Not with you," she said, "never with you."
"Well then, perhaps no regrets. But more building of nests, and more rearing of broods, and I having to sail alone again, and so a losing once more of adventure. So you see, my Dona, there is no escape for a woman, only for a night and for a day."
"No, you are right," she said, "there is no escape for a woman. Therefore if I sail with you again I shall be a cabin-boy, and borrow Pierre Blanc's breeches once and for always, and there will be no complications of a primitive nature, so that our hearts and our minds can be easy, and you can seize ships and make your landings on the coast, and I, the humble cabin-boy, will brew your supper for you in the cabin, and ask no questions, and hold no conversation with you."
"And how long would we endure that, you and I?"
"For as long as we pleased."
"You mean, for as long as I pleased. Which would be neither for a night nor an hour, and anyway, not this night and not this hour, my Dona."
The fire burnt low, and sank away to nothing, and later she said to him, "Do you know what day this is?"
"Yes," he said, "midsummer day. The longest in the year."
"Therefore," she said, "tonight we should sleep here, instead of in the ship. Because it will never happen again. Not for us. Not in this way, in the creek here."
"I know," he said, "that is why I brought the blankets in the boat. And the pillow for your head. Did you not see them?"
She looked up at him, but she could not see his face any longer, for it was in shadow, the fire-light being gone, and then without a word he got up and went down to the boat, and then came back to her with the bedding and pillow in his arms, and he spread them out in the clearing under the trees, close to the water's edge. The tide was ebbing now, and the mud-flats showing. The trees shivered in a little wind, and then were still again. The night-jars were silent and the sea-birds slept. There was no moon, only the dark sky above their heads, and beside them the black waters of the creek.
"Tomorrow, very early, I shall go to Navron," she told him, "at sunrise, before you are awake." "Yes," he said.
"I will call William before the household is astir, and then if all is well with the children, and there is no need for me to stay, I will return to the creek."
"And then?"
"Well, I do not know. That is for you to say. It is unwise to plan. Planning so often goes astray."
"We will make a pretence of planning," he said, "we will make a pretence that you come back to breakfast with me, and afterwards we take the boat and go down the river, and you shall fish again, but this time perhaps more successfully than the last."
"We will catch many fish?"
"That we will not decide tonight. We will leave that until the moment comes."
"And when we have done with fishing," she went on, "we will swim. At noon, when the sun is hottest upon the water. And afterwards, we will eat, and then sleep on our backs on a little beach. And the heron will come down to feed with the turn of the tide, so that you can draw him again."
"No, I shall not draw the heron," he said, "it is time I made another drawing of the cabin-boy of
"And so another day," she said, "and another, and another. And no past and no future, only the present."
"But today," he said, "is the longest day. Today is midsummer. Have you forgotten that?"
"No," she said. "No, I have not forgotten."
And somewhere, she thought, before she slept, somewhere there is another Dona, lying in that great canopied bed in London, restless and lonely and knowing nothing of this night beside the creek, or of