âOf course not.' Austin moved round and took the boy's other hand. The hand hung limply and when Austin had taken it it felt weak and small. He had to grip it firmly as there was no answering pressure. It was like holding a dead mouse. Could sickness of the mind deaden the body so?
âYou'll have to pull a bit, sir.' Austin pulled. Ronald walked. Ronald turned a face like a pudding plate up towards Austin and they walked across the road all three.
âOh thank you, sir, you are so kind, thank God you came along, I could have been there half an hour, and I didn't want him half way across dragging his feet with the cars coming.'
âShall I see you home?' said Austin. âWill you be all right?'
âOh yes, it's only that road, and he likes the tube train, poor mite. You see, I get him out of the house when I can, his father shouts so, I used to take him to his auntie weekends, only she's took against him. We're quite all right now and I do thank you so much, sir.'
âGoodnight.'
Austin returned to himself. For several whole minutes he had been thinking about something else. Now the old buzzing cloud swept blindingly about him once again. Matthew had said that he would not go to Valmorana, but Matthew could break his word. What was it that Mavis had said when she had looked up so dreamily from her letter? She had said âMatthew'. The universe said âMatthew'.
Austin walked blindly on. Could he still be rescued by Dorina's love and was the miracle still possible and did Ithaca still exist? When the spirit deadens it takes place so slowly, but there are moments when a man can see himself becoming more callous because he has to survive. A false alarm on the night bell once answered, it cannot be put right again ever. What did Mrs Carberry think about him, he suddenly wondered. Had she seen him climbing over the wall? But then it did not really matter to him or to anybody else what Mrs Carberry thought. If God existed He too would be indifferent to the thoughts of Mrs Carberry.
âHong Kong must be a very interesting city. Yes, thank you, spinach, no potatoes.'
âYes, fascinating.'
âWhy did you decide not to stay in the east?'
âOh well, I didn't really fit in there. I thought I'd better come home. Home is better, after all.'
âYes, of course.'
âOne is more at home.'
âYes.'
Perhaps it's frivolous of me, thought Mavis, but I can't bear his having got so fat, and he's become pompous and sort of oriental and old. He could be my uncle.
âI'm afraid I've put on some weight since we last met,' said Matthew.
âOh no.'
âYou look just the same.'
âI've faded.'
âFading suits you.'
âLike a piece of old chintz.'
âYes, there's no doubt that I've put on weight.'
She is defeated, he thought, tired out by years of a rather dull life. We are both weary, we have not the energy for real communication, we are cautious and afraid of hurts and entanglements. We are saddening and disappointing each other.
âDid you ever try dieting?'
âNo, I've rather taken to the fleshpots in my old age.'
He has become so rotund, she thought, even his head has become fat. And his eyes are a sort of viscous fishy blue but so bloodshot that they look almost purple. He probably drinks too much.
âSo you're thinking of selling Valmorana?'
âYes.' She supposed she was. The nuns were bankrupt and moving house and the local authority wanted impossible things. And she had been putting everything off until she met Matthew. What a desolation she had now prepared for herself. Why had she been so sure that he would be a source of new life? Had he expected this of her? She read disillusion in his eyes.
âIt's quite a good moment for selling house property.'
âIs it? Good.' They say he made a fortune in Hong Kong, I can believe it. âI'll get a flat. Much more convenient.'
âMuch more convenient.'
I'm boring her, he thought. They were having lunch at the Café Royal. Matthew had no servants at the Villa yet. He had thought that food and drink would help. Now they had both eaten and drunk too much in desperation.
The texture of the face matters so, she thought. That flabby ageing surface invited no touch. She had imagined a great magnetic force drawing them together, she had imagined tears of joy. She had recalled him so clearly, smooth-cheeked, clear-eyed, plump and blond. But that image was already fading.
âWill you have cheese or pudding?'
âCheese, please.'
âI'll have the chocolate mousse. Yes, and cream.'
No wonder he is so fat, she thought. Why does he stare so as the waiter pours the cream? His eyes are suddenly glistening with interest.
âAnd I think I'll have some cheese too. Waiter, cheese. And I trust Dorina is well?'
It was odd how tamely these names now came into their conversation. We should be faint with emotion, thought Mavis, but this is a kind of game. It is as if we are dealing with everything, making it safe and ordinary, and then setting it aside. Austin had already been perfunctorily dealt with. The whole past was being sadly folded up and put away. Was it for this that they had met? Perhaps it was. Suddenly it occurred to her, I am no longer attractive; and then that was what it all meant.
âDorina's very well. When Austin gets a job I expect they'll get together again.'
âI expect so.'
It was a mistake to meet like this, he thought. Eating and drinking are so gross. She has got fragments of biscuit all down the front of her dress. We ought to have met at nine o'clock in the morning on a bridge. After all, and though we hoped otherwise, something is utterly lost to us. How could it not be so? We surrendered each other bloodlessly without a fight. Our love was puny, not powerful enough to live on and be changed into anything which could nourish us now. We deserve this fiasco.
âAnd Tokyo must be a very interesting city too.'
âYes, fascinating.'
There is nothing either in the world or out of it which is good without qualification, except a good will.
Bosh, thought Garth, eating baked beans on toast in a Lyons tea shop in the Tottenham Court Road.
Nothing was good without qualification. Will was just ropes and pulleys. Moral conceit was an aspect of mental health. Usefulness mattered, but only in the obvious sense. And not mattering, that mattered too.
He had kissed Dorina. That was important, but only in a momentary separated sort of way. It had no consequences nor even any implications. Had it been an innocent kiss? Yes. But was it her innocence or his which made it so?
Should he go and see Uncle Matthew? If he did it would be artificial and dramatic, the sort of thing he had intended henceforth to eschew. It would also be something important but of a different kind. It would have consequences. Did he after all want somebody's approval? Matthew's? Or somebody's love? Matthew's?
He had kissed Dorina. Did his father's marriage still exist and could it be salvaged? Was it any business of his?
In the restaurant in Soho where he washed up every night an out-of-work actor called Trevor was making advances to him. Everyone employed there talked about sex the whole time. Garth hated sex. In America he had made experiments and felt ashamed and disgusted. Better to live alone. Why had he never discussed these things with Ludwig?
He was worried about his future and his state of mind. After the excitement of coming home he had felt a failure of energy. He had considered work which he might do and had discussed it with very busy people. The contingent details of choice disturbed him. Everything that was offered him was too particular, too hole and corner and accidental, not significant enough, though at the same time he realized with dazzling clarity that all decent things which human beings do are hole and corner. That was indeed, as he had told himself earlier, the point. But when it came to it he found he could not profit from his own wisdom and because his power had momentarily weakened he felt ordinary things like loneliness.
Meanwhile life was inconvenient, impecunious and tiring. He dashed about most of the day doing voluntary work and discussing jobs. At night he washed up and listened to filth. He had desired the freedom of having nothing to lose, no possessions, no ambitions, no hopes, but this did not feel like it. Into his mind and even into his plans were crowding other matters with which he had not reckoned and which he had proposed to do without. Concern for his father for instance. He had envisaged a cool duty but not this muddying anxiety. People occupied his thoughts and made him feel interest, even curiosity, even the possibility of resentment.
And there were odd compulsions such as this compulsive feeling he now had about going to see Uncle Matthew, as if this had to be done before anything else could happen. What did he want from Matthew? The idea of virtue is a fake-up, he thought, it's like God. When one understands that one can begin to live. Did he imagine he could explain it all to Matthew? Nothing could be more dangerous.
Matthew held in his hand something which was for him one of the most beautiful things in the world. It was a shallow Sung bowl with a design of peonies cut under the glaze. Its colour was a sort of milky ivory, what an angel might conceive of if asked to conceive of white. Its texture was something indescribable, a combination of softness, hardness, smoothness, depth and light.
He placed the bowl on the table next to a Ting cup in the shape of a chrysanthemum. The cup was paler, another unearthly shade, the colour of water, not as we ever see it but as God sees it.
His collection had arrived in several packing cases. He had unpacked some of the things. A history of his life, in a way. Old friends.
He and Mavis had parted almost resentfully. So much for that. I am not what I seemed to her, he thought, and doubtless she is not what she seemed to me, but it is our lot to be irrevocably condemned to seemings and to deserve them too. We were both, when it came to it, determined to be disappointed. We were mean with each other. What in a way saddened him most of all was the sense of having repelled her physically. This brought on a mood of regret for his youth which seemed, after many of his recent emotions, almost pure.
Mavis had been an objective, and now that she had somehow swept fruitlessly past him he felt the problem of what he was to do with himself even more keenly. He had come home because there was nothing else to do, he had come home because of Austin. But Austin was proving another blank. Meanwhile Matthew frequented his club and chatted politics with Charles Odmore and Geoffrey Arbuthnot.
He now felt his worldliness as a kind of galloping sickness. His unoccupied mind craved diversions, detective stories, television, gossip, drink. Once or twice he thought of telephoning Kaoru. But Kaoru hated the telephone and such a conversation would be merely upsetting, unkind, undignified, bad form. What could they say to each other by long distance telephone call? Matthew did not want to lose face with Kaoru by exhibiting bad form. Such miserable dignities were left to him. Perhaps he would end up writing his memoirs after all.
Austin preoccupied him, with a hopeless brooding anxiety which now concerned the past more than the future. He dreamed about Austin almost every night. He re-enacted the scene in the quarry. He dreamed about Betty. He dreamed about Dorina. He did not dream about Mavis. He avoided the Tisbournes. They seemed to make him quite automatically play a part which he found distasteful, that of the successful public man. They gave him cues, they egged him on to ever more playacting, they applauded. He would have quite liked to see Charlotte, and even felt he ought to, but kept putting it off. He would have quite liked to meet Ludwig Leferrier, but was afraid that if he tried to he would end up having tea
tête à tête
with Gracie. He would have quite liked to see Garth, but that was out of the question. He needed occupation, but not of the kind Charles Odmore kept proposing. He tinkered with the house. Now there was his collection to arrange. He had acquired a charwoman and a motor-car and an Irishman to cut the grass. He feared for himself.
Someone was ringing the front door bell. Matthew was in shirt sleeves. He could not find his jacket. After a moment or two he went to the door as he was. Austin was standing on the doorstep.
Matthew's immediate thought, in the midst of his emotion and his surprise, was how young and good-looking his brother still was, with the sun shining on his fair hair.
âCome in, Austin,' said Matthew, as coolly as he could.
Behind Austin, also glowing in the morning sunshine, stood Matthew's new motor-car.
Austin followed him past the packing cases into the drawing-room where on the table and on the mantelpiece vases and bowls stood about still wispy with straw.
âThe famous collection,' said Austin.
Matthew thought, he is a bit drunk. Dutch courage. âYes. I haven't really got space for it here. I may lend some of it to a museum.'
âYou mean until you move into an even larger house?'
âWell, I â I really need some show cases â but they never look quite right in a house â it's a problem â I've never had it all together before â'
âWhat did you do with it when you were out there?'
âOh it was stored in various places. I went on buying new stuff.'
âA sort of compulsion I suppose, like drinking.'
âI suppose so.'
âI can't see it. Not one of my vices. But it seems pretty stupid to own it if you put it in a museum, doesn't it?'
Austin reached out and seized a
famille rose
vase and held it up frowning in front of his face. Instinctively Matthew stepped forward and took it from him.