CHAPTER XVII
Ivor brought his hands down with a bang on to the final
chord of his rhapsody. There was just a
hint of that triumphant harmony that the seventh had been struck along with the
octave by the thumb of the left hand; but the general effect of splendid noise
emerged clearly enough. Small details
matter little so long as the general effect is good. And, besides, that hint of the seventh was
decidedly modern. He turned round in his
seat and tossed the hair back out of his eyes.
'There,' he
said. 'That's the best I can do for you,
I'm afraid.'
Murmurs of
applause and gratitude were heard, and Mary, her large china eyes fixed on the
performer, cried out aloud, 'Wonderful!' and gasped for new breath as though
she were suffocating.
Nature and
fortune had vied with one another in heaping on Ivor
Lombard all their choicest gifts. He had
wealth and he was perfectly independent.
He was good looking, possessed an irresistible charm of manner, and was
the hero of more amorous successes than he could well remember. His accomplishments were extraordinary for
their number and variety. He had a
beautiful untrained tenor voice; he could improvise, with a startling
brilliance, rapidly and loudly, on the piano.
He was a good amateur medium and telepathist, and had a
considerable first-hand knowledge of the next world. He could write rhymed verses with an
extraordinary rapidity. For painting
symbolical pictures he had a dashing style, and if the drawing was sometimes a
little weak, the colour was always pyrotechnical. He excelled in amateur theatricals and, when
occasion offered, he could cook with genius.
He resembled Shakespeare in knowing little Latin and less Greek. For a mind like his, education seemed
supererogatory. Training would only have
destroyed his natural aptitudes.
'Let's go
out into the garden,' Ivor suggested. 'It's a wonderful night.'
'Thank
you,' said Mr Scogan, 'but I for one prefer these
still more wonderful armchairs.' His
pipe had begun to bubble oozily every time he pulled
at it. He was perfectly happy.
Henry Wimbush was also happy.
He looked for a moment over his pince-nez in Ivor's
direction and then, without saying anything, returned to the grimy little
sixteenth-century account books which were now his favourite reading. He knew more about Sir Ferdinando's
household expenses than about his own.
The outdoor
party, enrolled under Ivor's banner, consisted of
Anne, Mary, Denis, and, rather unexpectedly, Jenny. Outside it was warm and dark; there was no
moon. They walked up and down the
terrace, and Ivor sang a Neapolitan song: 'Stretti, stretti' - close, close
- with something about the little Spanish girl to follow. The atmosphere began to palpitate. Ivor put his arm
round Anne's waist, dropped his head sideways on to her shoulder, and in that
position walked on, singing as he walked.
It seemed the easiest, the most natural, thing
in the world. Denis wondered why he had
never done it. He hated Ivor.
'Let's go
down to the pool,' said Ivor. He disengaged his embrace and turned round to
shepherd his little flock. They made
their way along the side of the house to the entrance of the yew-tree walk that
led down to the lower garden. Between
the blank precipitous wall of the house and the tall yew trees the path was a
chasm of impenetrable gloom. Somewhere
there were steps down to the right, a gap in the yew hedge. Denis, who headed the party, groped his way
cautiously; in this darkness, one had an irrational fear of yawning precipices,
of horrible spiked obstructions.
Suddenly from behind him he heard a shrill, startled, 'Oh!' and then a
sharp, dry concussion that might have been the sound of a slap. After that, Jenny's voice was heard
pronouncing, 'I am going back to the house.'
Her tone was decided, and even as she pronounced the words she was
melting away into the darkness. The
incident, whatever it had been, was closed.
Denis resumed his forward groping.
From somewhere behind, Ivor began to sing
again, softly:
'Phillis plus avare que tendre,
Ne gagnant rien à refuser,
Un jour exigea à Silvandre
Trente moutons pour un baiser.'
The melody dropped and climbed again with a kind of
easy languor; the warm darkness seemed to pulse like blood about them.
'Le lendemain, nouvelle affaire:
Pour le berger, le troc fut bon ...'
'Here are
the steps,' cried Denis. He guided his
companions over the danger, and in a moment they had the turf of the yew-tree
walk under their feet. It was lighter
here, or at least it was just perceptibly less dark; for the yew walk was wider
than the path that had led them under the lea of the house. Looking up, they could see between the high
black hedges a strip of sky and a few stars.
'Car il obtint de la bergère ...'
went on Ivor, and then
interrupted himself to shout, 'I'm going to run down,' and he was off, full
speed, down the invisible slope, singing unevenly as he went:
'Trente baisers pour un mouton.'
The others followed.
Denis shambled in the rear, vainly exhorting everyone to caution: the
slope was steep, one might break one's neck. What was wrong with these people, he wondered? They had become like young kittens after a
dose of cat-nip. He himself felt a
certain kittenishness sporting within him; but it was, like all his emotions,
rather a theoretical feeling; it did not overmasteringly
seek to express itself in a practical demonstration of kittenishness.
'Be
careful,' he shouted once more, and hardly were the
words out of his mouth when, thump! there was the sound of a heavy fall in
front of him, followed by the long 'F-f-f-f-f' of a breath indrawn with pain
and afterwards by a very sincere, 'Oo-ooh!' Denis was almost pleased; he had told them
so, the idiots, and they wouldn't listen.
He trotted down the slope towards the unseen sufferer.
Mary came
down the hill like a runaway steam-engine.
It was tremendously exciting, this blind rush through the dark; she felt
she would never stop. But the ground
grew level beneath her feet, her speed insensibly slackened, and suddenly she
was caught by an extended arm and brought to an abrupt halt.
'Well,'
said Ivor as he tightened his embrace, 'you're caught
now, Anne.'
She made an
effort to release herself. 'It's not
Anne. It's Mary.'
Ivor burst into a peal of amused laughter. 'So it is!' he exclaimed. 'I seem to be making nothing but floaters
this evening. I've already made one with
Jenny.' He laughed again, and there was
something so jolly about his laughter that Mary could not help laughing
too. He did not remove his encircling
arm, and somehow it was all so amusing and natural that Mary made no further
attempt to escape from it. They walked
along by the side of the pool, interlaced.
Mary was too short for him to be able, with any comfort, to lay his head
on her shoulder. He rubbed his cheek,
caressed and caressing, against the thick, sleek mass of her hair. In a little while he began to sing again; the
night trembled amorously to the sound of his voice. When he had finished he kissed her. Anne or Mary: Mary or Anne. It didn't seem to make much difference which
it was. There were differences in
detail, of course; but the general effect was the same; and, after all, the
general effect was the important thing.
Denis made
his way down the hill.
'Any damage
done?' he called out.
'Is that
you, Denis?' I've hurt my ankle so - and
my knee, and my hand. I'm all in pieces.'
'My poor
Anne,' he said. 'But then,' he couldn't
help adding, 'it was silly to start running downhill in the dark.'
'Ass!' she
retorted in a tone of tearful irritation; 'of course it was.'
He sat down
beside her on the grass, and found himself breathing the faint, delicious
atmosphere of perfume that she carried always with her.
'Light a
match,' she commanded. 'I want to look
at my wounds.'
He felt in
his pockets for the matchbox. The light
spurted and then grew steady. Magically,
a little universe had been created, a world of colours and forms - Anne's face,
the shimmering orange of her dress, her white, bare arms, a patch of green turf
- and round about a darkness that had become solid and utterly blind. Anne held out her hands; both were green and
earthy with her fall, and the left exhibited two or three red abrasions.
'Not so
bad,' she said. But Denis was terribly
distressed, and his emotion was intensified when, looking up at her face, he
saw that the trace of tears, involuntary tears of pain, lingered on her
eyelashes. He pulled out his
handkerchief and began to wipe away the dirt from the wounded hand. The match went out; it was not worth while to
light another. Anne allowed herself to
be attended to, meekly and gratefully.
'Thank you,' she said, when he had finished cleaning and bandaging her
hand; and there was something in her tone that made him feel that she had lost
her superiority over him, that she was younger than he, had become, suddenly,
almost a child. He felt tremendously
large and protective. The feeling was so
strong that instinctively he put his arm about her. She drew closer, leaned against him, and so
they sat in silence. Then, from below,
soft but wonderfully clear through the still darkness, they heard the sound of Ivor's singing. He
was going on with his half-finished song:
'Le lendemain Phillis plus tendre,
Ne voulant déplaire au berger,
Fut trop heureuse de lui rendre
Trente moutons pour un baiser.'
There was a rather prolonged pause. It was as though time were being allowed for
the giving and receiving of a few of those thirty kisses. Then the voice sang on:
'Le lendemain Phillis peu sage
Aurait donné moutons et chien
Pour un baiser que le volage
A Lisette donnait pour rien.'
The last note died away into an uninterrupted silence.
'Are you
better?' Denis whispered. 'Are you
comfortable like this?'
She nodded
a Yes to both questions.
'Trente moutons pour un baiser.' The sheep, the woolly mutton - baa, baa,
baa...? Or the
shepherd? Yes, decidedly, he felt
himself to be the shepherd now. He was
the master, the protector. A wave of
courage swelled through him, warm as wine.
He turned his head, and began to kiss her face, at first rather
randomly, then, with more precision, on the mouth.
Anne
averted her head; he kissed the ear, the smooth nape that this movement
presented him. 'No,' she protested; 'no,
Denis.'
'Why not?'
'It spoils
our friendship, and that was so jolly.'
'Bosh!'
said Denis.
She tried
to explain. 'Can't you see,' she said,
'it isn't ... it isn't our stunt at all.'
It was true. Somehow she had
never thought of Denis in the light of a man who might make love; she had never
so much as conceived the possibilities of an amorous relationship with
him. He was so absurdly young, so ... so
... she couldn't find the adjective, but she knew what she meant.
'Why isn't
it our stunt?' asked Denis. 'And, by the
way, that's a horrible and inappropriate expression.'
'Because it isn't.'
'But if I
say it is?'
'It makes
no difference. I say it isn't.'
'I shall
make you say it is.'
'All right,
Denis. But you must do it another
time. I must go and get my ankle into
hot water. It's beginning to swell.'
Reasons of
health could not be gainsaid. Denis got
up reluctantly, and helped his companion to her feet. She took a cautious step. 'Ooh!'
She halted and leaned heavily on his arm.
'I'll carry
you,' Denis offered. He had never tried
to carry a woman, but on the cinema it always looked an easy piece of heroism.
'You couldn't,'
said Anne.
'Of course
I can.' He felt larger and more
protective than ever. 'Put your arms
round my neck,' he ordered. She did so
and, stooping, he picked her up under the knees and lifted her from the
ground. Good heavens, what a
weight! He took five staggering steps up
the slope, then almost lost his equilibrium, and had to deposit his burden
suddenly, with something of a bump.
Anne was
shaking with laughter. 'I said you
couldn't, my poor Denis.'
'I can,'
said Denis, without conviction. 'I'll
try again.'
'It's
perfectly sweet of you to offer, but I'd rather walk, thanks.' She laid her hand on his shoulder and, thus
supported, began to limp slowly up the hill.
'My poor
Denis!' she repeated, and laughed again.
Humiliated, he was silent. It
seemed incredible that, only two minutes ago, he should have been holding her
in his embrace, kissing her. Incredible. She was
helpless then, a child. Now she had
regained all her superiority; she was once more the far-off being, desired and
unassailable. Why had he been such a
fool as to suggest that carrying stunt?
He reached the house in a state of the profoundest depression.
He helped
Anne upstairs, left her in the hands of a maid, and came down again to the
drawing-room. He was surprised to find
them all sitting just where he had left them.
He had expected that, somehow, everything would be quite different - it
seemed such a prodigious time since he went away. All silent and all damned, he reflected, as
he looked at them. Mr Scogan's pipe still wheezed; that was the only sound. Henry Wimbush was
still deep in his account books; he had just made the discovery that Sir Ferdinando was in the habit of eating oysters the whole
summer through, regardless of the absence of the justifying R. Gombauld, in
horn-rimmed spectacles, was reading.
Jenny was mysteriously scribbling in her red notebook. And, seated in her favourite armchair at the
corner of the hearth, Priscilla was looking through a pile of drawings. One by one she held them out at arm's length
and, throwing back her mountainous orange head, looked long and attentively
through half-closed eyelids. She wore a
pale sea-green dress; on the slope of her mauve-powdered décolletage diamonds
twinkled. An immensely long
cigarette-holder projected at an angle from her face. Diamonds were embedded in her high-piled
coiffure; they glittered every time she moved.
It was a batch of Ivor's drawings - sketches
of Spirit Life, made in the course of tranced tours
through the other world. On the back of
each sheet descriptive titles were written: 'Portrait of an Angel, 15th March
'20; 'Astral Beings at Play, 3rd December '19; 'A Party of Souls on their Way
to a Higher Sphere, 21st May '21.'
Before examining the drawing on the obverse of each sheet, she turned it
over the read the title. Try as she
could - and she tried hard - Priscilla had never seen a vision or succeeded in
establishing any communication with the Spirit World. She had to be content with the reported
experiences of others.
'What have
you done with the rest of your party?' she asked, looking up as Denis entered
the room.
He
explained. Anne had gone to bed, Ivor and Mary were still in
the garden. He selected a book and a
comfortable chair, and tried, as far as the disturbed state of his mind would
permit him, to compose himself for an evening's reading. The lamplight was utterly serene; there was
no movement save the stir of Priscilla among her papers. All silent and all damned, Denis repeated to
himself, all silent and all damned....
It was
nearly an hour later when Ivor and Mary made their
appearance.
'We waited
to see the moon rise,' said Ivor.
'It was gibbous, you know,' Mary explained, very technical and
scientific.
'It was so
beautiful down in the garden! The trees,
the scent of the flowers, the stars ...' Ivor waved
his arms. 'And when the moon came up, it
was really too much. It made me burst
into tears.' He sat down at the piano
and opened the lid.
'There were
a great many meteorites,' said Mary to anyone who would listen. 'The earth must just be coming into the
summer shower of them. In July and
August ...'
But Ivor had already begun to strike the keys. He played the garden, the stars, the scent of
flowers, the rising moon. He even put in a nightingale that was not
there. Mary looked on and listened with
parted lips. The others pursued their
occupations, without appearing to be seriously disturbed. On this very July day, exactly three hundred
and fifty years ago, Sir Ferdinando had eaten seven
dozen oysters. The discovery of this
fact gave Henry Wimbush a peculiar pleasure. He had a natural piety which made him delight
in the celebration of memorial feasts.
The three hundredth and fiftieth anniversary of the seven dozen
oysters.... He wished he had known before dinner; he would have ordered
champagne.
On her way
to bed Mary paid a call. The light was
out in Anne's room, but she was not yet asleep.
'Why didn't
you come down to the garden with us?' Mary asked.
'I fell
down and twisted my ankle. Denis helped
me home.'
Mary was
full of sympathy. Inwardly, too, she was
relieved to find Anne's non-appearance so simply accounted for. She had been vaguely suspicious, down there
in the garden - suspicious of what, she hardly knew; but there had seemed to be
something a little louche in the way she had
suddenly found herself alone with Ivor. Not that she minded, of course; far from
it. But she didn't like the idea that
perhaps she was the victim of a put-up job.
'I do hope
you'll be better tomorrow,' she said, and she commiserated with Anne on all she
had missed - the garden, the stars, the scent of flowers, the meteorites
through whose summer shower the earth was now passing, the rising moon and its gibbosity. And then
they had had such interesting conversation.
What about? About
almost everything. Nature, art, science, poetry, the stars, spiritualism, the
relations of the sexes, music, religion.
Ivor, she thought, had an interesting mind.
The two young
ladies parted affectionately.