CHAPTER XXIII
Gombauld was by no means so furious
at their apparition as Denis had hoped and expected he would be. Indeed, he was rather pleased than annoyed
when the two faces, one brown and pointed, the other round and pale, appeared
in the frame of the open door. The
energy born of his restless irritation was dying within him, returning to its
emotional elements. A moment more and he
would have been losing his temper again - and Anne would be keeping hers,
infuriatingly. Yes, he was positively
glad to see them.
'Come in,
come in,' he called out hospitably.
Followed by
Mr Scogan, Denis climbed the little ladder and
stepped over the threshold. He looked
suspiciously from Gombauld to his sitter, and could
learn nothing from the expression of their faces except that they both seemed
pleased to see the visitors. Were they
really glad, or were they cunningingly simulating
gladness? He wondered.
Mr Scogan, meanwhile, was looking at the portrait.
'Excellent,'
he said approvingly, 'excellent. Almost
too true to character, if that is possible; yes, positively too true. But I'm surprised to find you putting in all
this psychology business.' He pointed to
the face, and with his extended finger followed the slack curves of the painted
figure. 'I thought you were one of the
fellows who went in exclusively for balanced masses and impinging planes.'
Gombauld laughed.
'This is a little infidelity,' he said.
'I'm
sorry,' said Mr Scogan. 'I for one, without ever having had the
slightest appreciation of painting, have always taken particular pleasure in Cubismus. I like to
see pictures from which nature has been completely banished, pictures which are
exclusively the product of the human mind.
They give me the same pleasure as I derive from a good piece of
reasoning or a mathematical problem or an achievement of engineering. Nature, or anything that reminds me of
nature, disturbs me; it is too large, too complicated, above all too utterly
pointless and incomprehensible. I am at
home with the works of man; if I choose to set my mind to it, I can understand
anything that any man has made or thought.
That is why I always travel by Tube, never by bus if I can possibly help
it. For, travelling by bus, one can't
avoid seeing, even in
While Mr Scogan was discoursing, Denis had crossed over to the
father side of the little square chamber, where Anne was sitting, still in her
graceful, lazy pose, on the low chair.
'Well?' he
demanded, looking at her almost fiercely.
What was he asking of her? He
hardly knew himself.
Anne looked
up at him, and for answer echoed his 'Well?' in another, a laughing key.
Denis had
nothing more, at the moment, to say. Two
or three canvases stood in the corner behind Anne's chair, their faces turned
to the wall. He pulled them out and
began to look at the paintings.
'May I see
too?' Anne requested.
He stood
them in a row against the wall. Anne had
to turn round in her chair to look at them.
There was the big canvas of the man fallen from the horse, there was a
painting of flowers, there was a small landscape. His hands on the back of the chair, Denis
leaned over her. From behind the easel
at the other side of the room Mr Scogan was talking
away. For a long time they looked at the
pictures, saying nothing; or, rather, Anne looked at the pictures, while Denis,
for the most part, looked at Anne.
'I like the
man and the horse; don't you?' she said at last, looking up with an inquiring
smile.
Denis
nodded, and then in a queer, strangled voice, as though it had cost him a great
effort to utter the words, he said, 'I love you.'
It was a
remark which Anne had heard a good many times before and mostly heard with
equanimity. But on this occasion -
perhaps because they had come so unexpectedly, perhaps for some other reason -
the words provoked in her a certain surprised commotion.
'My poor
Denis,' she managed to say, with a laugh; but she was blushing as she spoke.