CHAPTER VIII
'What I complain of,' said Mark Rampion, 'is the horrible
unwholesome tameness of our world.'
Mary Rampion laughed wholeheartedly from the depths of her
lungs. 'You wouldn't say that,' she
said, 'if you'd been your wife instead of you.
Tame? I could tell you something
about tameness.'
There was certainly
nothing very tame about Mark Rampion's
appearance. His profile was steep, with
a hooked fierce nose like a cutting instrument and a pointed chin. The eyes were blue and piercing, and the very
fine hair, a little on the reddish side of golden, fluttered up at every
movement, every breath of wind, like wisps of blown flame.
'Well,
you're not exactly a sheep either,' said Rampion. 'But two people aren't the world. I was talking about the world, not us. It's tame, I say. Like one of those horrible big gelded cats.'
'Did you
find the War so tame?' asked Spandrell, speaking from
the half-darkness outside the little world of pink-tinged lamplight in which
their table stood. He sat leaning
backwards, his chair tilted on his hind legs against the wall.
'Even the
War,' said Rampion.
'It was a domesticated outrage.
People didn't go and fight because their blood was up. They went because they were told to; they
went because they were good citizens.
"Man is a fighting animal," as your stepfather is so fond of
saying in his speeches. But what I
complain of is that he's a domestic animal.'
'And
getting more domestic every day,' said Mary Rampion,
who shared her husband's opinions - or perhaps it would be truer to say, shared
most of his feelings and, consciously or unconsciously, borrowed his opinions
when she wanted to express them. 'It's
factories, it's Christianity, it's science, it's
respectability, it's our education,' she explained. 'They weigh on the modern soul. They suck the life out of it. They ...'
'Oh, for
God's sake shut up!' said Rampion.
'But isn't that what you say?'
'What I say
is what I say. It becomes quite
different when you say it.'
The
expression of irritation which had appeared on Mary Rampion's
face cleared away. She laughed. 'Ah, well,' she said good-humouredly,
'ratiocination was never my strongest point.
But you might be a little more polite about it in public.'
'I don't
suffer fools gladly.'
'You'll
suffer one very painfully, if you're not careful,' she menaced laughingly.
'If you'd
like to throw a plate at him,' said Spandrell,
pushing one over to her as he spoke, 'don't mine me.'
Mary
thanked him. 'It would do him good,' she
said. 'He gets so bumptious.'
'And it
would do you no harm,' retorted Rampion, ‘if I gave
you a black eye in return.'
'You just
try. I'll take you on with one hand tied
behind my back.'
They all
burst out laughing.
'I put my
money on Mary,' said Spandrell, tilting back his
chair. Smiling with a pleasure which he
would have found it hard to explain, he looked from one to the other - from the
thin, fierce, indomitable little man to the big golden woman. Each separately was good; but together, as a
couple, they were better still. Without
realizing it, he had quite suddenly begun to feel happy.
'We'll have
it out one of these days,' said Rampion and laid his
hand for a moment on hers. It was a
delicate hand, sensitive and expressive.
An aristocrat's hand if ever there was one, thought Spandrell. And hers, so blunt
and strong and honest, was a peasant's.
And yet by birth it was Rampion who was the
peasant and she the aristocrat. Which only showed what nonsense the genealogies talked.
'Ten
rounds,' Rampion went on. 'No gloves.'
He turned to Spandrell.
'You ought
to get married, you know,' he said.
Spandrell's happiness suddenly collapsed. It was though he had come with a jolt to his
senses. He felt almost angry with
himself. What business had he to
go and sentimentalize over a happy couple?
'I can't
box,' he answered; and Rampion detected a bitterness in his jocularity, an inward hardening.
'No,
seriously,' he said, trying to make out the expression on the other's
face. But Spandrell's
head was in the shadow, and the light of the interposed lamp on the table
between them dazzled him.
'Yes,
seriously,' echoed Mary. 'You
ought. You'd be a changed man.'
Spandrell uttered a brief and snorting laugh, and letting
his chair fall back on to its four legs, leaned forward across the table. Pushing aside his coffee cup and his half
emptied liqueur glass, he planted his elbows on the table and his chin in his
hands. His face came into the light of
the rosy lamp. Like a gargoyle, Mary
thought, a gargoyle in a pink boudoir.
There was one on Notre Dame in just that attitude, leaning forward with
his demon's face between his claws. Only
the gargoyle was a comic devil, so extravagantly diabolical that you couldn't
take his devilishness very seriously. Spandrell was a real person, not a caricature; that was why
his face was so much more cynical and tragical. It was a gaunt face. Cheekbone and jaw showed in hard outline
through the tight skin. The grey eyes
were deeply set. In the cadaverous mask
only the mouth was fleshy - a wide mouth, with lips that stood out from the
skin like two thick weals.
'When he
smiles,' Lucy Tantamount had once said of him, 'it's like an appendicitis
operation with ironical corners.' The
red scar was sensual, but firm at the same time and determined, as was the
round chin below. There were lines round
the eyes and at the corners of his lips.
The thick brown hair had begun to retreat from the forehead.
'He might
be fifty, to look at him,' Mary Rampion was
thinking. 'And yet, what is his
age?' She made calculations and decided
that he couldn't be more than thirty-two or thirty-three. Just the right age for
settling down.'
'A changed
man,' she repeated.
'But I
don't particularly want to be changed.'
Mark Rampion nodded.
'Yes, that's the trouble with you, Spandrell. You like stewing in your disgusting
suppurating juice. You don't want to be
made healthy. You enjoy your
unwholesomeness. You're rather proud of
it, even.'
'Marriage
would be the cure,' persisted Mary, indefatigably enthusiastic in the cause of
the sacrament to which she herself owed all her life and happiness.
'Unless, of
course, it merely destroyed the wife,' said Rampion. 'He might infect her with his own gangrene.'
Spandrell through back his head and laughed profoundly,
but, as was his custom, almost inaudibly, a muted explosion. 'Admirable!' he said. 'Admirable!
The first really good argument in favour of matrimony I ever heard. Almost thou persuadest
me, Rampion.
I've never actually carried it as far as marriage.'
'Carried
what?' asked Rampion, frowning a little. He disliked the other's rather
melodramatically cynical way of talking.
So damned pleased with his naughtinesses! Like a stupid child,
really.
'The process of infection.
I'd always stopped this side of the registry office. But I'll cross the threshold next time.' He drank some more brandy. 'I'm like Socrates,' he went on. 'I'm divinely appointed to corrupt the youth,
the female youth more particularly. I
have a mission to educate them in the way they shouldn't go.' He threw back his head to emit that voiceless
laugh of his. Rampion
looked at him distastefully. So theatrical. It was
as though the man were overacting in order to convince himself he was there at
all.
'But if you
only knew what marriage could mean,' Mary earnestly put in. 'If you only knew ...'
'But, my
dear woman, of course he knows,' Rampion interrupted
with impatience.
'We've been
married more than fifteen years now,' she went on, the missionary spirit strong
within her. And I assure you ...'
'I wouldn't
waste my breath, if I were you.'
Mary
glanced enquiringly at her husband.
Wherever human relationships were concerned, she had an absolute trust
in Rampion's judgement. Through those labyrinths he threaded his way
with a sure tact which she could only envy, not imitate. 'He can smell people's souls,' she used to
say of him. She herself had but an
indifferent nose for souls. Wisely then,
she allowed herself to be guided by him.
She glanced at him. Rampion was staring into his coffee cup. His forehead was puckered into a frown; he
had evidently spoken in earnest. 'Oh,
very well,' she said and lit another cigarette.
Spandrell looked from one to the other almost
triumphantly. 'I have a regular
technique with the young ones,' he went on in the same too cynical manner. Mary shut her eyes and thought of the time
when she and Rampion had been young.