II
So the city
claimed me once more - the same city made now somehow less poignant and less
terrifying than it had been in the past by new displacements in time. If some parts of the old fabric had worn
away, others had been restored. In the
first few weeks of my new employment I had time to experience both a sense of
familiarity and one of alienation, measuring stability against change, past
against present tense. And if the
society of my friends remained relatively the same, new influences had entered,
new winds had sprung up; we had all begun, like those figures on revolving
turntables in jewellers' shops, to turn new facets of ourselves towards each
other. Circumstances also helped to
provide a new counterpoint, for the old, apparently unchanged city had now
entered the penumbra of a war. For my
part I had come to see it as it must always have been - a shabby little seaport
built upon a sand-reef, a moribund and spiritless backwater. True, this unknown factor 'war' had given it
a specious sort of modern value, but this belonged to the invisible world of
strategies and armies, not to ourselves, the inhabitants; it had swollen its
populations by many thousands of refugees in uniform and attracted those long
nights of dull torment which were only relatively dangerous, for as yet the
enemy was confining his operations strictly to the harbour area. Only a small area of the Arab quarter came
under direct fire; the upper town remained relatively untouched, except perhaps
for an occasional error of judgement.
No, it was only the harbour at which the enemy scratched, like a dog at
an inflamed scab. A mile away from it
the bankers conducted their affairs by day as if from the immunity of New
York. Intrusions into their world were
rare and accidental. It came as a
painful surprise to confront a shop-front which had been blasted in, or a
lodging-house blown inside out with all its inhabitants' clothes hanging in
festoons from the neighbouring trees.
This was not part of the normal expectation of things; it had the
shocking rarity value merely of some terrible street accident.
How had
things changed? It was not danger, then,
but a less easily analysable quality which made the notion of war distinctive;
a sensation of some change in the specific gravity of things. It was as if the oxygen content of the air we
breathed were being steadily, invisibly reduced day by day; and side by side
with this sense of inexplicable blood-poisoning came other pressures of a
purely material kind brought about by the huge shifting population of soldiers
in whom the blossoming of death released the passions and profligacies
which lie buried in every herd. Their
furious gaiety tried hard to match the gravity of the crisis in which they were
involved; at times the town was racked by the frenetic outbursts of their
disguised spleen and boredom until the air became charged with the mad spirit
of carnival; a saddening and heroic pleasure-seeking which disturbed and
fractured the old harmonies on which personal relationships had rested,
straining the links which bound us. I am
thinking of Clea, and her loathing for the war and
all it stood for. She feared, I think, that the vulgar blood-soaked reality of this war
world which spread around her might one day poison and infect our own
kisses. 'Is it fastidious to want to
keep your head, to avoid this curious sexual rush of blood to the head which
comes with war, exciting the women beyond endurance? I would not have thought the smell of death
could be so exciting to them! Darley, I don't want to be part of this mental saturnalia,
these overflowing brothels. And all
these poor men crowded up here.
Alexandria has become a huge orphanage, everyone grabbing at the last
chance of life. You haven't been long
enough yet to feel the strain. The disorientation.
The city was always perverse, but it took its pleasures with style at an
old-fashioned tempo, even in rented beds: never up against a wall or a tree or
a truck! And now at times the town seems
to be like some great public urinal. You
step over the bodies of drunkards as you walk home at night. I suppose the sunless have been robbed even
of sensuality and drink compensates them for the loss! But there is no place in all this for
me. I cannot see these soldiers as Pombal does. He
gloats on them like a child - as if they were bright lead soldiers - because he
sees in them the only hope that France will be freed. I only feel ashamed for them, as one might to
see friends in convict garb; out of shame and sympathy I feel like turning my
face away. Oh, Darley,
it isn't very sensible, and I know I am doing them a grotesque injustice;
possibly it is just selfishness. So I
force myself to serve them tears at their various canteens, roll bandages, arrange concerts. But
inside myself I shrink smaller every day.
Yet I always believed that a love of human beings would flower more
strongly out of a common misfortune. It
isn't true. And now I am afraid that you
too will begin to like me the less for these absurdities of thought, these
revulsions of feeling. To be here, just
the two of us, sitting by candlelight is almost a miracle in such a world. You can't blame me for trying to hoard and
protect it against the intrusive world outside, can you? Curiously, what I hate most about it all is
the sentimentality which spells violence in the end!'
I understand
what she meant, and when she feared; and yet from the depths of my own inner
selfishness I was glad of these external pressures, for they circumscribed our
world perfectly, penned us up more closely together, isolated us! In the old world I would have had to share Clea with a host of other friends and admirers. Not now.
Curiously,
too, some of these external factors around us, involving us in its
death-struggles - gave our newest passion a fulfilment not based on desperation
yet nevertheless built just as certainly upon the sense of impermanence. It was of the same order, though different in
kind to the dull orgiastic rut of the various armies; it was quite impossible
to repudiate the truth, namely, that death (not even at hand, but in the air)
sharpens kisses, adds unbearable poignance to every
smile and handclasp. Even though I was
no soldier the dark question mark hovered over our thoughts, for the real
issues of the heart were influenced by something of which we were all, however
reluctantly, part: a whole world. If the
war did not mean a way of dying, it meant a way of ageing, of tasting the true
staleness in human things, and of learning to confront change bravely. No-one could tell what lay beyond the closed
chapter of every kiss. In those long
quiet evenings before the bombardment began we would sit upon that small square
of carpet by the light of candles, debating these matters, punctuating our
silences with embraces which were the only inadequate answer we could offer to
the human situation. Nor, lying in each
other's arms during those long nights of fitful sleep broken by the sirens, did
we ever (as if by a silent convention) speak of love. To have uttered the word might acknowledge a
more rare yet less perfect variety of the state which now bewitched us,
perfected in us this quite unpremeditated relationship. Somewhere in Moeurs
there is a passionate denunciation of the word.
I cannot remember into whose mouth the speech has been put - perhaps
Justine's. 'It may be defined as a cancerous
growth of unknown origin which may take up its site anywhere without the
subject knowing or wishing it. How often
have you tried to love the "right" person in vain, even when your
heart knows it has found him after so much seeking? No, an eyelash, a perfume, a haunting walk, a
strawberry on the neck, the smell of almonds on the breath - these are the
accomplices the spirit seeks out to plan your overthrow.'
Thinking of
such passages of savage insight - and they are many in that strange book - I would
turn to the sleeping Clea and study her quiet profile
in order to ... to ingest her, drink the whole of her up without spilling a
drop, mingle my very heartbeats with hers.
'However near we would wish to be, so far exactly do we remain from each
other' wrote Arnauti.
It seemed to be no longer true of our condition. Or was I simply deluding myself once more,
refracting truth by the disorders inherent in my own vision? Strangely enough I neither knew nor cared
now; I had stopped rummaging through my own mind, had learned to take her like
a clear draught of spring water.
'Have you
been watching me asleep?'
'Yes.'
'Unfair! But what thinking?'
'Many things.'
'Unfair to watch a sleeping woman, off her guard.'
'Your eyes
have changed colour again. Smoke.'
(A mouth whose paint blurred slightly under kisses. The two small commas, which
were almost cusps, almost ready to turn into dimples when the lazy smiles broke
surface. She stretches and places
her arms behind her head, pushing back the helmet of fair hair which captures
the sheen of the candlelight. In the
past she had not possessed this authority over her own beauty. New gestures, new tendrils had grown,
languorous yet adept to express this new maturity. A limpid sensuality which
was now undivided by hesitations, self-questionings. A transformation of the old
'silly goose' into this fine, indeed impressive, personage, quite at one with
her own body and mind. How had
this come about?)
I: 'That commonplace book of Pursewarden's. How the devil did you come by it? I took it to the office today.'
She: 'Liza. I asked her for something to remember him
by. Absurd. As if one could forget the brute! He's everywhere. Did the notes startle you?'
I: 'Yes. It was
as if he had appeared at my elbow. The
first thing I fell upon was a description of my new chief, Maskelyne
by name. It seems Pursewarden
worked with him once. Shall I read it to
you?'
She: 'I know it.'
('Like most
of my compatriots he had a large hand-illuminated sign hanging up on the front
of his mind reading ON NO ACCOUNT DISTURB.
At some time in the distant past he had been set going like a quartz
clock. He will run his course
unfaltering as a metronome. Do not let
the pipe alarm you. It is intended to
give a judicial air. White man smoke
puff puff, white man ponder
puff puff. In
fact white man is deeply deeply asleep under the
badges of office, the pipe, the nose, the freshly starched handkerchief
sticking out of his sleeve.')
She: 'Did you read it to Maskelyne?'
I: 'Naturally not.'
She: 'There are wounding things about all of us in it;
perhaps that is why I took a fancy to it!
I could hear the brute's voice as he uttered them. You know, my dear, I think I am the only
person to have loved old Pursewarden for himself
while he was alive. I got his
wavelength. I loved him for himself, I
say, because strictly he had no self.
Of course he could be tiresome, difficult, cruel
- like everyone else. But he exemplified
something - a grasp on something. That
is why his work will live and go on giving off light, so to speak. Light me a cigarette. He had cut a foothold in the cliff a bit
higher than I could dare to go - the point where one looks at the top because
one is afraid to look down! You tell me
that Justine also says something like this.
I suppose she got the same thing in a way - but I suspect her of being
merely grateful to him, like an animal whose master pulls a thorn from its
paw. His intuition was very feminine and
much sharper than hers - and you know that women instinctively like a man with
plenty of female in him; there, they suspect, is the only sort of lover
who can sufficiently identify himself with them to ... deliver them of being
just women, catalysts, strops, oil-stones.
Most of us have to be content to play the role of machine à plaisir!'
I: 'Why do you laugh, suddenly like that?'
She: 'I was remembering making a fool of myself with Pursewarden. I
suppose I should feel ashamed of it! You
will see what he says about me in the notebook.
He calls me "a juicy Hanoverian goose, the only truly kallipygous girl in the city"! I cannot think what possessed me, except that
I was so worried about my painting. It
had dried up on me. I couldn't get any
further somehow, canvas gave me a headache.
I finally decided that the question of my own blasted virginity was the
root cause of the business. You know it
is a terrible business to be a virgin - it is like not having one's Matric or Bac. You long to be delivered from it yet ... at
the same time this valuable experience should be with someone whom you care
for, otherwise it will be without value to your inside self. Well, there I was, stuck. So with one of those characteristic strokes
of fancy which in the past confirmed for everyone my stupidity I decided -
guess what? To offer myself grimly to
the only artist I knew I could trust, to put me out of my misery. Pursewarden, I
thought, might have an understanding of my state and some consideration for my
feelings. I'm amused to remember that I
dressed myself up in a very heavy tweed costume and flat shoes, and wore dark
glasses. I was timid, you see, as well
as desperate. I walked up and down the
corridor of the hotel outside his room for ages in despair and apprehension, my
dark glasses firmly on my nose. He was
inside. I could hear him whistling ass
he always did when he was painting a water-colour; a maddening tuneless
whistle! At last I burst in on him like
a fireman into a burning building, startling him, and said with trembling lips:
"I have come to ask you to dépuceler me,
please, because I cannot get any further with my work unless you do." I said it in French. It would have sounded dirty in English. He was startled. All sorts of conflicting emotions flitted
across his face for a second. And then,
as I burst into tears and sat down suddenly on a chair he threw his head back
and roared with laughter. He laughed
until the tears ran down his cheeks while I sat there in my dark glasses
sniffing. Finally he collapsed exhausted
on his bed and lay staring at the ceiling.
Then he got up, put his arms on my shoulders, removed my glasses, kissed
me, and put them back. Then he put his
hands on his hips and laughed again.
"My dear Clea," he said, "it
would be everyone's dream to take you to bed, and I must confess that in a
corner of my mind I have often allowed the thought to wander but ... dearest
angel, you have spoilt everything. This
is no way to enjoy you, and no way for you to enjoy yourself. Forgive my laughing! You have effectively spoiled my dream. Offering yourself this way, without wanting
me, is such an insult to my male vanity that I simply would not be able to
comply with your demand. It is, I
suppose, a compliment that you chose me rather than someone else - but my vanity
is larger than that! In fact your
request is like a pailful of slops emptied over my
head! I shall always treasure the
compliment and regret the refusal but ... if only you had chosen some other way
to do it, how glad I would have been to oblige! Why did you have to let me see that you really
did not care for me?"
'He blew
his nose gravely in a corner of the sheet, took my glasses and placed them on
his own nose to examine himself in the mirror.
Then he came and stared at me until the comedy overflowed again and we
both started laughing. I felt an awful
sense of relief. And when I had repaired
my damaged make-up in the mirror, he allowed me to take him to dinner to discuss
the problem of paint with magnificent, generous honesty. The poor man listened with such patience to
my rigmarole! He said: "I can only
tell you what I know, and it isn't much.
First you have to know and understand intellectually what you want to do
- then you have to sleepwalk a little to reach
it. The real obstacle is oneself. I believe that artists are composed of
vanity, indolence and self-regard.
Work-blocks are caused by the swelling-up of the ego on one or all of
these fronts. You get a bit scared about
the imaginary importance of what you are doing!
Mirror-worship.
My solution would be to slap a poultice on the inflamed parts - tell
your ego to go to hell and not make a misery of what should be essentially fun,
joy." He said many other
things that evening, but I have forgotten the rest; but the funny thing was that
just talking to him, just being talked to, seemed to clear the way ahead
again. Next day he sent me a page of
oracular notes about art. I started work
again, clear as a bell, the next morning.
Perhaps in a funny sort of way he did dépuceler
me? I regretted not being able to reward
him as he deserved, but I realized that he was right. I would have to wait for a tide to turn. And this did not happen until later, in
Syria. There was something bitter and
definitive about it when it came, and I made the usual mistakes one makes from
inexperience and paid for them. Shall I
tell you?'
I: 'Only if you wish.'
She: 'I found myself suddenly and hopelessly entangled
with someone I had admired some years before but never quite imagined in the
context of a lover. Chance brought us
together for a few short months. I think
that neither of us had foreseen this sudden coup de foudre. We both caught fire, as if somewhere an
invisible burning glass had been playing on us without our being aware. It is curious that an experience so wounding
can also be recognized as good, as positively nourishing. I suppose I was even a bit eager to be
wounded - or I would not have made the mistakes I did. He was somebody already committed to someone
else, so there was never, from the beginning, any pretence of permanence in our
liaison. Yet (and here comes the famous
stupidity again) I very much wanted to have a child by him. A moment's thought would have shown me that
it would have been impossible; but the moment's thought only supervened when I
was already pregnant. I did not, I
thought, care that he must go away, marry someone else. I would at least have his child! But when I confessed it - at the very moment
the words left my lips - I suddenly woke up and realized that this would be to
perpetuate a link with him to which I had no right. To put it plainly I should be taking
advantage of him, creating a responsibility which would shackle him throughout
his marriage. It came to me in a flash,
and I swallowed my tongue. By the
greatest luck he had not heard my words.
He was lying like you are now, half asleep, and had not caught my
whisper. "What did you say?"
he said. I substituted another remark,
made up on the spur of the moment. A
month later he left Syria. It was a
sunny day full of the sound of bees. I
knew I should have to destroy the child.
I bitterly regretted it, but there seemed no other honourable course to
take in the matter. You will probably
think I was wrong, but even now I am glad I took the course I did, for it would
have perpetuated something which had no right to exist outside the span of
these few golden months. Apart from that
I had nothing to regret. I had been
immeasurably grown-up by the experience.
I was full of gratitude and still am.
If I am generous now in my love-making it is perhaps I am paying back
the debt, refunding an old love in a new.
I entered a clinic and went through with it. Afterwards the kindly old anaesthetist called
me to the dirty sink to show me the little pale homunculus with its tiny
members. I wept bitterly. It looked like a smashed yoke of an egg. The old man turned it over curiously with a
sort of spatula - as one might turn over a rasher of bacon in a
frying-pan. I could not match his cold
scientific curiosity and felt rather sick.
He smiled and said: "It is all over. How relieved you must feel!" It was true, with my sadness there was a very
real relief at having done what I recognized as the right thing. Also a sense of loss; my heart felt like a
burgled swallow's nest. And so back to the mountains, to the same easel and white canvas. It is funny but I realized that precisely
what wounded me most as a woman nourished me most as an artist. But of course I missed him for a long time:
just a physical being whose presence attaches itself
without one's knowing, like a piece of cigarette paper to the lip. It hurts to pull it away. Bits of the skin come off! But hurt or not, I learned to bear it and
even to cherish it, for it allowed me to come to terms with another
illusion. Or rather to see the link
between body and spirit in a new way - for the physique is only the outer
periphery, the contours of the spirit, its solid part. Through smell, taste, touch we apprehend each
other, ignite each other's minds; information conveyed by the body's odours
after orgasm, breath, tongue-taste - through these one "knows" in
quite primeval fashion. Here was a
perfectly ordinary man with no exceptional gifts but in his elements, so to
speak, how good for me; he gave off the odours of good natural objects: like
newly baked bread, roasting coffee, cordite, sandalwood. In this field of rapport I missed him
like a skipped meal - I know it sounds vulgar!
Paracelsus says that thoughts are acts.
Of them all, I suppose, the sex act is the most important, the one in
which our spirits most divulge themselves.
Yet one feels it a sort of clumsy paraphrase of the poetic, the noetic, thought which shapes itself into a kiss or
an embrace. Sexual love is
knowledge, both in etymology and in cold fact; "he knew her" as the
Bible says! Sex is the joint or coupling
which unites the male and female ends of knowledge merely - a cloud of
unknowing! When a culture goes bad in
its sex all knowledge is impeded. We
women know that. That was when I wrote
to you asking if I should come to visit you in your island. How grateful I am that you did not answer
me! It would have been a wrong move at
the time. Your silence saved me! Ah! my dear, forgive
me if I bore you with my wanderings, for I see that you are looking somewhat
sleepy! But with you it is such a
pleasure to talk away the time between love-making! It is a novelty for me. Apart from you there is only dear Balthazar -
whose rehabilitations, by the way, is going on
apace. But he has told you? He has been inundated with invitations since
the Mountolive banquet, and it seems will have little
difficulty in rebuilding the clinic practice again.'
I: 'But he is far from reconciled to his teeth.'
She: 'I know.
And he is still rather shaken and hysterical - as who would not be. But everything goes forward steadily, and I
think he will not lapse.'
I: 'But what of this sister of Pursewarden's?'
She: 'Liza! I
think you will admire her, though I can't tell if you will like her. She is rather impressive, indeed perhaps just
a little bit frightening. The blindness
does not seem like an incapacity, rather it gives an
expression of double awareness. She
listens to one as if one were music, an extra intentness which makes one
immediately aware of the banality of most of one's utterances. She's unlike him, yet very beautiful though
deathly pale, and her movements are swift and
absolutely certain, unlike most blind people.
I have never seen her miss a doorhandle or
trip on a mat, or pause to get her bearings in a strange place. All the little errors of judgement the blind
make, like talking to a chair which had just been vacated by its owner ... they
are absent. One wonders sometimes if she
really is blind. She came out here to
collect his effects and to gather material about him for a biography.'
I: 'Balthazar hinted at some sort of mystery.'
She: 'There is little doubt that David Mountolive is hopelessly in love with her; and from what he
told Balthazar it began in London. It is
certainly an unusual liaison for someone so correct, and it obviously gives
them both a great deal of pain. I often
imagine them, the snow falling in
'Yet when
they arrived back for tea, soaked, he was strangely elated. "We had a little accident," he
called gaily as he retired for a change of clothes. And of course there was no further reference
to the escapade that evening. Later he
asked me if I would undertake a portrait of Liza and
I agreed. I do not know quite why I felt
a sense of misgiving about it. I could
not refuse, yet I have found several ways of delaying the business and would
like to put if off indefinitely if I could.
It is curious to feel as I do, for she would be a splendid subject and
perhaps if she had several sittings we might get to know each other a little and
ease the constraint I feel when I am with her.
Besides, I would really like to do it for his sake, for he has always
been a good friend. But there it is....
I shall be curious to know what she has to ask you about her brother. And curious to see what you
will find to say about him.'
I: 'He seems to change shape so quickly at every turn
of the road that one is forced to revise each idea about him almost as soon as
it is formulated. I'm beginning to wonder about one's right to pronounce in
this fashion on unknown people.'
She: 'I think, my dear, you have a mania for
exactitude and an impatience with partial knowledge
which is ... well, unfair to knowledge itself.
How can it be anything but imperfect?
I don't suppose reality every bears a close resemblance to human truth
as, say, El Scob to Yacoub. Myself I would like
to be content with the poetic symbolism it presents, the shape of nature itself
as it were. Perhaps this was what Pursewarden was trying to convey in those outrageous
attacks upon you - have you come to the passages called "My silent
conversations with Brother Ass"?'
I: 'Not yet.'
She: 'Don't be too wounded by them. You must exonerate the brute with a
good-natured laugh, for after all he is one of us, one of the tribe. Relative size of accomplishment doesn't
matter. As he himself
says: "There is not enough faith, charity or tenderness to furnish this
world with a single ray of hope - yet so long as that strange sad cry rings
over the world, the birth-pangs of an artist - all cannot be lost! This sad little squeak of rebirth tells us
that all still hangs in the balance.
Heed me, reader, for the artist is you, all of us - the statue which
must disengage itself from the dull block of marble which houses it, and start
to live. But when? But when?" And then in another place he says:
"Religion is simply art bastardized out of all recognition" - a
characteristic remark. It was the
central point of his difference with Balthazar and the Cabal. Pursewarden had
turned the whole central proposition upside down.'
I: 'To suit his private ends.'
She: 'No. To
suit his own immortal needs. There was nothing dishonest about it
all. If you are born of the artist tribe
it is a waste of time to try and function as a priest. You have to be faithful to your angle of
vision, and at the same time fully recognize its partiality. There is a kind of perfection to be achieved
in matching oneself to one's capacities - at every level. This must, I imagine, do away with striving, and with illusions too. I myself always admired old Scobie as a thoroughly successful example of this
achievement in his own way. He was quite
successfully himself I thought.'
I: 'Yes, I suppose so.
I was thinking of him today. His
name cropped up at the office in some connection. Clea, imitate him
again. You do it so perfectly that I am
quite dumb with admiration.'
She: 'But you know all his stories.'
I: 'Nonsense.
They were inexhaustible.'
She: 'And I wish I could imitate his expression! That look of
portentous owlishness, the movement of the glass
eye! Very well; but close your eyes and
hear the story of Toby's downfall, one of his many downfalls. Are you ready?'
I: 'Yes.'
She: 'He told it to me in the course of a dinner-party
just before I went to Syria. He said he
had come into some money and insisted on taking me to the Lutetia
in ceremonial fashion where we dined on scampi and Chianti. It began like this in a low confidential
tone. "Now the thing about Toby
that characterized him was a superb effrontery, the fruit of perfect breeding! I told you his father was an M.P.? No?
Funny, I thought I mentioned it in passing. Yes, he was very highly placed, you might
say. But Toby never boasted of it. In fact, and this shows you, he
actually asked me to treat the matter with discretion and not mention it to his
shipmates. He didn't want any favours,
he said. He didn't want people sucking
up to him neither, just because his father was an M.P. He wanted to go through life incognito, he
said, and make his own career by hard work.
Mind you, he was almost continuously in trouble with the upper
deck. It was his religious convictions
more than anything, I think. He had a
remorseless taste for the cloth did old Toby.
He was vivid. The only career he
wanted was to be a sky-pilot. But
somehow he couldn't get himself ordained.
They said he drank too much.
But he said it was because his vocation was so strong that it
pushed him to excesses. If only they'd
ordain him, he said, everything would be all right. He'd come right off the drink. He told me this many a time when he was on
the Yokohama run. When he was drunk he
was always trying to hold services in Number One hold. Naturally people complained and at Goa the captain made a bishop come aboard to reason with
him. It was no go. 'Scurvy,' he used to say to me, 'Scurvy, I
shall die a martyr to my vocation, that's what.' But there's nothing in life like
determination. Toby had plenty of
it. And I wasn't at all surprised one
day, after many years, to see him come ashore ordained. Just how he'd squeezed into the Church he
would never tell. But one of his mates
said that he got a slightly tainted Chinese Catholic bishop to ordain him on
the sly in Hong Kong. Once the articles
were all signed, sealed and wrapped up there was nothing anyone could do, so
the Church had to put a good face on it, taint and all. After that he became a holy terror, holding
services everywhere and distributing cigarette cards of the saints. The ship he was serving on get fed up and
paid him off. They framed him up; said
he had been seen going ashore carrying a lady's handbag! Toby denied it and said it was something
religious, a chasuble or something that they mistook for a handbag. Anyway he turned up on a passenger-ship next
carrying pilgrims. He said that at last
he had fulfilled himself. Services all day long in 'A' Lounge, and no-one to hinder the word
of the Lord. But I noticed with
alarm that he was drinking more heavily than before and he had a funny cracked
sort of laugh. It wasn't the old
Toby. I wasn't surprised to hear he had
been in trouble again. Apparently he had
been suspected of being drunk on duty and of having made an unflattering
reference to a bishop's posterior. Now
this shows his superb cleverness, for when he came up for court martial he had
the perfect answer ready. I don't quite
know how they do court martials in the Church, but I
suppose this pilgrim boat was full of bishops of something and they did it
drumhead fashion in 'A' Lounge. But Toby
was too fast for them with his effrontery.
There's nothing like breeding to make you quick at answering. His defence was that if anyone had
heard him breathing heavily at Mass it was his asthma; and secondly he hadn't
never mentioned anyone's posterior. He
had talked about a bishop's fox terrier!
Isn't it dazzling? It was the
smartest thing he ever did, old Toby, though I've never known him at a loss for
a clever answer. Well, the bishops were
so staggered that they let him off with a caution and a
thousand Ave Marias as a penance. This was pretty easy for Toby; in fact it was
no trouble at all because he'd bought a little Chinese prayer-wheel which
Budgie had fixed up to say Ave Marias for him. It was a simple little device, brilliantly
adapted to the times as you might say.
One revolution was an Ave Maria or fifty beads. It simplified prayer, he said; in fact one
could go on praying without thinking.
Later someone told on him and it was confiscated by the head bloke. Another caution for poor
Toby. But nowadays he treated
everything with a toss of the head and a scornful laugh. He was riding for a fall, you see. He had got a bit above himself. I couldn't help noticing how much he'd
changed because he touched here nearly every week with these blinking
pilgrims. I think they were Italians visiting
the Holy Places. Back and forth they
went, and with them Toby. But he had
changed. He was always in trouble now,
and seemed to have thrown off all restraint.
He had gone completely fanciful.
Once he called on me dressed as a cardinal with a red beret and a sort
of lampshade in his hand. 'Cor!' I gasped. 'You
aren't half orchidaceous, Toby!' Later
he got very sharply told off for dressing above his rank, and I could see that
it was only a matter of time before he fell out of the balloon, so to
speak. I did what I could as an old
friend to reason with him, but somehow I couldn't bring him to see the
point. I even tried to get him back on
to beer, but it wasn't any go at all. Nothing but fire water for Toby. Once I had to have him carried back aboard by
the police. He was all figged up in a prelate's costume. I think they call it a shibboleth. And he tried to pronounce an anathema on the
city from 'A' Boat Deck. He was waving
an apse or something. The last thing I
saw of him was a lot of real bishops restraining him. They were nearly as purple as his own borrowed robes.
My, how those Italians carried on!
Then came the crash. They nabbed him in fragrant delicto swigging the sacramental wine. You know it has the Pope's Seal on it, don't
you? You buy it from Cornford's,
the Ecclesiastical Retailers in Bond Street, ready sealed and blessed. Toby had broken the seal. He was finished. I don't know whether they excommunicate or
what, but anyway he was struck off the register properly. The next time I saw him he was a shadow of
his old self and dressed as an ordinary seaman.
He was still drinking heavily but in a different way now, he said. 'Scurvy,' he said. 'Now I simply drink to expiate my sins. I'm drinking as a punishment now, not a
pleasure.' The whole tragedy had made
him very moody and restless. He talked
of going off to Japan and becoming a religious body there. The only thing that prevented him was that
there you have to shave your head and he couldn't bear to part with his hair
which was long, and was justly admired by his friends. 'No,' he said, after discussing the idea,
'no, Scurvy old man, I couldn't bring myself to go about as bald as an egg,
after what I've been through. It would
give me a strangely roofless appearance at my age. Besides, once when I was a nipper I got
ringworm and lost my crowning glory. It
took ages to grow again. It was so slow that
I feared it never would come into bloom again.
Now I couldn't bear to be parted from it. Not for anything.' I saw his dilemma perfectly, but I didn't see
any way out for him. He would always be
a square peg would old Toby, swimming against the stream. Mind you, it was a mark of his originality. For a little while he managed to live by
blackmailing all the bishops who'd been to confession while he was O.C. Early Mass, and twice he got a free holiday
in Italy. But then other troubles came
his way and he shipped to the Far East, working in Seamen's Hostels when he was
ashore, and telling everyone that he was going to make a fortune out of
smuggled diamonds. I see him very rarely
now, perhaps once every three years, and he never writes; but I'll never forget
old Toby. He was always such a gentleman
in spite of his little mishaps, and when his father dies he expects to have a
few hundred a year of his own. Then
we're going to join forces in Horsham with Budgie and put the earth-closet
trade on a real economic basis. Old
Budgie can't keep books and files.
That's a job for me with my police training. At least so old Toby always said. I wonder where he is now?"'
The recital
ended, the laughter suddenly expired and a new expression appeared on Clea's face which I did not remember ever having seen
before. Something
between a doubt and an apprehension which played about the mouth like a shadow. She added with a studied naturalness which
was somehow strained: 'Afterwards he told my fortune. I know you will laugh. He said he could only do it with certain
people and at certain times. Will you
believe me if I tell you that he described with perfect fidelity and in
complete detail the whole Syrian episode?'
She turned her face to the wall with an abrupt movement and to my
surprise I saw her lips trembling. I put
my hand up her warm shoulder and said 'Clea' very softly. 'What is it?'
Suddenly she cried out: 'Oh, leave me alone. Can't you see I want to sleep?'
* *
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