âYes. Here.' There was a Bible. Alison had even asked for it once. But not lately.
Gracie was talking on the telephone to someone who was presumably Ludwig Leferrier. âDarling, I can't â I'll ring you again about eleven â We don't know, but probably â Yes, I hope so â'
âWhat number is that psalm, Pinkie, can you remember?'
âI think I really must go,' said the doctor.
â
Please
stay,' said Charlotte. âHave another drink.'
Someone was ringing the front door bell.
âThat'll be Mr Enstone,' said George.
Charlotte went. It was the man next door asking if anyone visiting the house had left their car blocking his garage. Charlotte said no. He asked after Mrs Ledgard and Charlotte said she was as usual. She looked over his head at the beautiful, perky, ordinary, selfish, material world of motor-cars and evening appointments as she closed the door. She had been surprised to see the darkness outside.
âGracie, do go in and see grandma,' said Clara, âwhile papa is finding the psalm.'
âI'll go in with all of you,' said Gracie. âShe doesn't want to see me alone. We never know what to talk about.'
âShe can't talk now anyway.'
âThen it's even more pointless.'
âHere it is,' said George.
âCome, Char, please.'
âI really must go,' said the doctor.
âPlease stay, something may happen.'
âI'm sorry, Miss Ledgard. There should be no more complications. Everything will be quite plainsailing from now on.'
âCan the nurse â ?'
âEverything that's necessary. There is no need to telephone me until tomorrow morning.'
âYou mean whatever happens? Well, thank you, doctor.'
âNot at all. Goodnight, goodnight.'
âCome, Char. Come, Gracie.'
The doors of the shrine were opened and they all went in. The nurse drew back. Clara turned on another lamp.
Alison was regarding them with that terrible urgent one-eyed stare, so meaningful yet so ambiguous, divorced in its extremity from the ordinary conventions of the human face. Did this travailing look express entreaty, question, fear, anger, surprise, grief? The liquid eye bulged with will. The limp hands crawled slightly, the lips moved. Yesterday there had been a little communication. Today there was none, only that look and that murmur. But the huge caged power of the personality, still dreadfully alive, stirred in its prison.
âDearest mama,' said Clara. âGeorge is going to read to you. Just you rest now.'
She sat down beside the bed and George drew up a chair on the other side. Clara, better for her whisky, captured one of the creeping hands and held it firmly. Charlotte and the nurse stood by the fireplace. Gracie, looking both scared and embarrassed, stood just inside the door.
George said âMy dear!' and then began to read. âThe Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul . . .'
Charlotte turned her back to the room and closed her eyes. In some appalling way George and Clara had been right, as so often in some appalling way they were. The old words, whatever they meant, were filled with an irresistible authority. The words were at home in this scene. They had been here before. Gently they took charge, silencing all voices but their own, soothing the place into something ancient and formal and calm, making of it the temple of a mystery, the perennial mystery which was about to be enacted. Charlotte looked back at them all now and saw how each face had become stilled and blank. Tears were welling out of Clara's eyes. Only Alison, still trying to utter her sound, seemed separate from them all, raised like a god above the offered litany.
Someone was ringing the front door bell.
George stopped reading. Clara mopped her eyes.
âPerhaps that's Mr Enstone now,' said Clara.
Charlotte went to the door.
It was Mr Enstone.
âI am so sorry,' said Mr Enstone. âI was at the Youth Club, it's ping-pong night, and somebody came over with a rather garbled message. Did Mrs Ledgard want to see me?'
âShe is at the end,' said Charlotte. It was an odd phrase, but Mr Enstone understood and changed his expression.
âI am very sorry. Can I help, talk to her?'
âShe can't talk,' said Charlotte.
âWe think that she asked for a minister,' said George, who had come out followed by Clara. âWe were just reading to her from the Bible.'
âWell, do please go on,' said Mr Enstone.
âNo, I think you should do that,' said George, holding out the Bible.
âNo, please,' said Mr Enstone.
âPerhaps you could talk to her a little,' said Clara. âYou do know my husband, don't you, Mr Enstone?'
âYes, indeed, how do you do.'
That dolt cannot speak about ultimate things, thought Charlotte. Better to go on reading. To go on and on and on.
âI'm afraid I don't know her very well,' said Mr Enstone. âBut I will if you think that's what she wants.'
They all trooped back into the bedroom. The nurse jumped up again. Gracie was standing at the bottom of the bed.
âShe keeps trying to say something,' said Gracie.
âYou know our daughter Gracie.'
âHow do you do.'
âDo sit here, Mr Enstone.'
âMrs Ledgard, forgive me, I know that I am half a stranger to you, but your children have asked me to come here in case there are any words of comfort which I can utter. Can you understand me, Mrs Ledgard, may I take your hand? At this time we know, what we ought always to know, that we are mortal beings with but a short span of days and that our end as our beginning belongs to God. We see the vanity of earthly things, the hollowness of selfish wishes, we see now that nothing matters or is truly real except God, that sun of Goodness which has shone, however clouded by sin, upon our lives, which at our best we have loved, and which at our end we know to be the only thing which is worthy of our desire. Let humble desire for God and knowledge of His reality and His love fill your heart, Mrs Ledgard, and do not resist the Power which draws you now to Himself. In moving towards God we move from shadow to light, from false to true, from sham to real, and into that great peace which passeth all understanding. Now will you all please join me in prayer â'
âShe's saying that word again,' said Gracie. âI think it's “lease”.'
âIs it not “peace”?' said Mr Enstone.
â“Lease”?' said Clara. âShe must mean the lease of the house.'
âWhere is the lease of the house?' said George.
âI'm not sure,' said Charlotte. âIt used to be in the drawing-room bureau. Shall I look?'
âI'll come too,' said Clara. The two sisters left the room.
âI can't see it.'
âDoes it matter if it's lost?'
âI wonder if there's some snag.'
âOh God, you mean legally â'
âHave you found it?' said George from the door.
âChar thinks there's some legal snag.'
âHave you ever seen the lease?'
âNo, but â Here it is.'
âLet me look.'
âNo, let George look.'
âSupposing there's some snag?'
âHow long has it got to run?'
âBetter give it to her.'
âBut she's in no state to â'
âYou give it to her, Char.'
âPerhaps she wants to show us â'
âGod, I hope it's sound.'
âBetter open it out so she can â'
âI'm so sorry, Mr Enstone,' said George. âI don't think she wanted a priest after all. But we're very glad you came. Please don't go.'
âHere, mother,' said Charlotte. âThe lease. The lease of the Villa. Was that what you wanted?' She put the unfolded document onto the bed, working it in under the palm of the limp hand. But Alison did not look at it and made no attempt to grasp it and in a moment it fell to the floor. George picked it up and began to examine it eagerly.
Alison Ledgard stared up at her eldest daughter. Visibly concentrating all her power she whispered and at last Charlotte understood. What Alison was saying was âTreece'. Treece was the family solicitor. Oh God, thought Charlotte, she wants to change her will. She hates me, she has always hated me, she will disinherit me. Could she, would she, at this last hour, do so? Yes. Hatred was pure now. Charlotte hesitated.
âI can't understand what she's saying, can you?' said Clara. âIt can't have been â'
âShe's saying “Treece”,' said Charlotte.
âOf course that's it!' said George.
âWhat is that?' said Mr Enstone.
âOur solicitor,' said George.
âI'll telephone him at once,' said Charlotte. She turned to go. Then she turned back. âDon't worry, mother. I'll get Treece. He'll come at once. I'm sure he will. Don't you worry, dear.'
The great staring eye closed and tears suddenly washed down Alison's cheek.
Tears came to Charlotte too. She went out and began to dial Treece's number. The number started ringing but there was no reply. She heard it ring and ring as she turned her head about, trying to toss the flooding tears from her. There was a strange sound from the bedroom like the cry of an unfamiliar bird.
âThere's no answer,' said Charlotte.
She returned to the doorway. Alison was lying sideways now, her head drooping towards the edge of the bed, the eye open and fixed in a kind of surprise. Clara was sobbing. Gracie pushed past Charlotte into the hall. âShe is with God,' said Mr Enstone.
Austin Gibson Grey put the telephone down. Ludwig had just rung to say that old Mrs Ledgard had died and that he and Mitzi would be waiting up for Austin with a bottle of whisky. Austin felt no regret about old Mrs Ledgard. Clara once, thinking he would not mind, had gaily told him âMama says you're a buffoon!' He did mind. So the old woman was gone. Good. Charlotte would be rich and would lend him money. Charlotte had a feeling for him, one always knew. And Ludwig and Mitzi were waiting. And the whisky. That was good too.
Then he recalled with pain that Ludwig was now engaged to Gracie. Why had just that had to happen to just those two? Everyone was going away from him and entering into a conspiracy with everyone else against him. It was always like that in the end, he could never keep anybody. Betty. And Mavis had taken Dorina, everybody had taken her. Ludwig had been his shield against more things than could be told. Gracie he had always adored. She was the only being he had loved simply from childhood. Only now of course it was not so simple, now that he could sense so sweetly in her eyes, in her whole maidenly body, her intimate knowledge of his desire. That was his secret with her. To Ludwig he had entrusted everything in the sure faith not only that nothing would be judged, but that nothing would be understood. There were sometimes wonderful people of whom one could be sure in this way. But now Ludwig and Gracie would discuss him. There would be complicity and betrayal.
He stood alone in the middle of the sitting-room panting a little. It would be an asthma night. It was late now, after eleven o'clock. Two cases which he had packed stood by the door. He would get a taxi. He would go to Mitzi for whisky and a kiss. My life is on the change, he thought, what will be? Whatever will be I must survive it and go on believing in the other side where everything will be all right. The flat was full of toy-like knick-knacks which he had bought to please Dorina, she was so easy to please, any little thing delighted her. At one time he had brought her home a present every day, a china cat, an electric torch, anything. The pureness of these pleasures sometimes amazed him, they smelt of spring, of all that had once seemed lost. Dorina was renewal of life, his innocence, his youth. And yet she was also something old, ghost-haunted, touched with sadness, touched with doom. Or was that doom just his own sense of the impossiblity, after all, of being saved by her?
As he had not yet found a tenant there was no need for him to move, but now that he had made his plans he wanted to get out, to run quickly onward all alone towards the future. The flat was already beginning to feel weird and quiet, like a revisited place, afloat in time and streaked with hallucinations. Betty was there, poor dead Betty in a place she had never known and where all his thoughts about her had been secret. He had opened a drawer and found another photograph. He had always hidden these relics from Dorina. Poor Bet. Smiling, young, dim, far off and dead. Sometimes at night he thought about her mortal remains. Once he tried to find her grave, but there were only stretches of mown grass. He had never raised a memorial. While he lived Betty's story was not yet over, and when he died it could not be told.
He must put off seeing Dorina until he had found a job. He would send Ludwig with a present. The funny thing was that he and Dorina understood each other perfectly in spite of all the people who crowded in between them. That was a secret which the others would never know. Some pure ray, perhaps even simply of pity, from that girl came uncontaminated to his heart. She alone truly divined his inward collapse, and yet she knew not what she knew. He had always been surrounded with women who wanted to run him. Dorina had never wanted that. Her compassion was part of her own helplessness. He thought, from her and from her alone I can accept pity. The thought made him feel humble and good. That was what women were for, to make a man feel good in spite of everything, but why had it never really worked for him? Dorina should have been the perfect rescuer. Yet somehow big Mitzi's mushy affection relaxed his nerves more than Dorina's pure love.