Read The Present and the Past Online

Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett

The Present and the Past (15 page)

‘No, I can take it myself,' said Cassius, revealing the nature of the last one. ‘I am going back to the library.'

Ainger returned with a firm step to his place.

‘The master would carry the bottles himself,' he said, smiling. ‘I did not want to be spared.'

‘Well, you had what you wanted,' said Halliday.

Ainger gave him an absent smile and relapsed into thought.

‘Are we allowed to disturb Mr Ainger's reflections?' said Madge.

‘Yes,' said Ainger, looking at her kindly, ‘I am not so enamoured of them.'

‘Being to do with the family?' said Kate.

‘Yes. The master did his best to give a natural impression. But I see that the heart is beneath.'

‘I have never seen him when he did not give one,' said Madge.

‘No,' said Ainger, looking at her in gentle acquiescence.

‘You think he would not show himself to me?'

‘Now why should he, Madge?'

‘I should certainly be flattered by it.'

‘Yes,' said Ainger, looking into space. ‘One does feel that at first. But feelings supervene.'

‘You get your experience of life at second-hand,' said Halliday.

‘Yes. Yes,' said Ainger, spacing his words and just raising his brows. ‘It does amount to that. I find I can identify myself. But you, if I may say so, do not get any at all.'

‘May you say so like that?' said Mrs Frost.

‘The real thing or nothing for me,' said Halliday. ‘Do you not agree, Mrs Frost?'

‘Do you mean that I have nothing?'

‘The appreciation of all of us,' said Ainger, in a full tone reminiscent of his master. ‘Is that quite nothing? And I will tell you one thing, Mrs Frost; and I don't often commit myself like this. If there was anyone I could find myself regarding as a mother, it would be you.'

‘Be a good son to me,' said Mrs Frost.

‘Is the first Mrs Clare still in the house?' said Kate.

‘No,' said Ainger, a smile playing on his lips. ‘I have attended her to the door.'

‘What is the jest?' said Halliday. ‘Is there some second meaning?'

‘In a sense it was twofold,' said Ainger, still smiling. ‘You showed her out when the moment came.'

‘That may be said of me. There is the ground.'

‘In some double sense?'

‘In one, if you like,' said Ainger, yielding to a broader smile.

‘Did you exchange any words?' said Kate.

‘We stood in converse for some minutes. But exchange was hardly the term. I felt it was for me to stand silent.'

‘Did she ask after your welfare through all these years?'

‘She did not fail to, Kate. And I answered her briefly, feeling that brevity was in place.'

‘We know more about you than we did,' said Halliday.

‘It is often possible to live with someone and not know much about him, Halliday.'

‘Especially if he forgets to tell us,' said Madge.

‘You none of you know what life implies,' said Ainger.

‘I don't think you have known very long,' said Madge.

‘Of course we know,' said Halliday. ‘Birth and death have come to us all.'

‘Birth has come to me,' said Mrs Frost.

‘It is the space between that comprises matters,' said Kate.

‘As I think the former mistress felt,' said Ainger. ‘Indeed it was tacit between us.'

‘Well, I must admit to a sense of disappointment.'

‘Ah, you wanted to hear of incidents, Kate.'

‘It would have been nice,' said Madge.

‘But I should have been called upon to witness them. And that would not have been so. To see people of calibre fall from their level! But I was to be spared.'

‘I hoped to be called upon to hear of them,' said Madge. ‘I wish they had something common done or mean, upon that memorable scene.'

‘The words apply, Madge,' said Ainger.

‘Who was it who did nothing common or mean?' said Simon.

‘It was only once that it was anyone,' said Mrs Frost.

‘Someone who was to be beheaded,' said Kate. ‘It would be hard to be oneself then.'

‘Anyhow for long,' said Mrs. Frost.

‘It was Charles the First of England,' said Ainger; ‘Charles, our Royalist king.'

Chapter 9

Flavia left her home and went on foot to the house of the Scropes. She walked as though she wished to meet no one, but would not avoid doing so, as though her errand were not surreptitious but her own. She was taken to Catherine and began at once to speak, as if she knew her words by heart. The words seemed to have an echo of the other in them.

‘I have come to say one thing to you. That I withdraw what I have said. It is as if I had not said it. You shall see your sons when you wish, as you wish, as often as you wish; at any hour or moment, in the day or in the night. I want to do my best for them, and this is my best. I should have known it, but for the moment I did not know. I have to do a mother's duty to them, and that is to give them to their own mother. I did not find it easy, and that may show they belong to you. Take them and do your part by them. I could not give up my own children. I will not ask you to give up yours.'

‘I know you would not. I felt it in you. I saw it in your eyes. That is why I dared to ask everything from you, dared to hope for it when it was denied. That is why I can accept it from you, as a thing you have a right to give and I to take. I take it fully and gratefully as my right and yours. There are people from whom we can take. I shall remain in your debt willingly. I shall be willing to be unable to repay. I could not say it to everyone. I say it to you.'

‘I hope you will say anything to me, that you will ask me, tell me, anything you have to ask or tell. It is my wish to help you, answer you, take your help.'

‘I acknowledge my good fortune. I know it for what it is. It is a light across the darkness of my life, a break across its waste. I can see it in another light. And it is a relief to escape from bitterness. There is an especial sadness in self-pity.'

‘It is strange that we should be blamed for it,' said Flavia, in another tone. ‘As if we should feel it without cause, or desire to
have cause for it. And we are allowed to feel pity for other people, even enjoined to. There is one rule for us and another for them. Self-love, self-pity, self-esteem are all terms of reproach. The only thing we may do is respect ourselves, and that seems to be compulsory.'

‘Well, the rules would have to be strict,' said another voice, as a figure rose from the hearth and moved into view. ‘My sister and I are at home in talk of this kind. We were frightened by the other. We are afraid of the truth.'

‘And you are right,' said Flavia. ‘It is a thing to be afraid of.'

‘But it is a mistake to be prepared for it. We never know when preparation may come in.'

‘Have you been there all the time?' said Catherine.

‘We are always there,' said her sister. ‘In summer or winter, by a warm hearth or a cold. I expect we are like crickets.'

‘You should not forget to chirp. That is your work in life. You have not met Mrs Clare.'

‘We could hardly do that,' said Elton, shaking hands. ‘But I have observed her from a distance and thought of her leading a life that was too much for you.'

‘That is the way to think of her. A someone who can do what is beyond other people.'

‘We have seen the nobler side of human nature,' said Ursula. ‘And it is so much nobler; I had no idea of it. I am greatly softened. I hope it is wholesome discomfort.'

‘We can be cynics no longer,' said her brother, ‘even though people will not think we are so clever. We must be true to our new knowledge.'

‘Do people think you are clever?' said Catherine.

‘I think they must, when we have tried to make them. No real effort is wasted, and this was a real one. And perhaps we are, compared with them.'

‘Do we all regard ourselves as above the average?'

‘Well, think what the average is.'

‘That hardly matters,' said Flavia, ‘as everyone seems to be above it. Can you think of an average person?'

‘Well, I would rather not think of one,' said Ursula.

‘Most people must be average,' said Catherine, ‘or there would not be such a thing.'

‘Well, let us hope there is not,' said her sister.

‘I find them pleasant to look at, pleasant to listen to, pleasant in themselves.'

‘I am sure they are. But I do not find them so.'

‘There must have been times in your youth when you felt you were average or below. They come to us all.'

‘Do they? I did not know.'

‘Catherine, I hope you are not average,' said Elton.

‘I am the last person to object to being so.'

‘Then you are not, or you would object to it.'

‘Is there any meaning in anything we say?'

‘Yes,' said Ursula, ‘a dreadful, simple meaning. We look down on our fellow-creatures, and you are proud of not doing so.'

‘And do they look down on you?'

‘Well, I don't see how they can.'

‘They may think you are eccentric and unlike other people.'

‘Well, I hope they think that.'

‘So you are sensitive to their opinion?'

‘Yes, it is so high. I value it very much.'

‘You know you are quite inconsistent?'

‘Yes, I know.'

‘You see very little of them.'

‘It would be a risk to see too much,' said Elton. ‘Suppose they thought we resembled them!'

‘So you work at maintaining the difference?'

‘Yes, our life is a braver struggle than many that are more recognized.'

‘People do not suspect it,' said Ursula. They are too generous.'

‘Would you like anyone you had brought up, to turn out like this?' said Catherine, smiling at Flavia. ‘It is time their sister returned to them.'

‘It is time for you to do so much. And I am to help you where I can. I am to work for your children under you.'

‘I say the same to you. I use the selfsame words.'

‘We have had the subject changed,' said Elton to Ursula. ‘Could they have thought it was not a necessary one?'

‘I wish I could say some noble thing. I feel them rising up within me, but I never know what they are. And I might be embarrassed if I did. What about our influence over the boys, if we see them?'

‘I trust you,' said Catherine, in a sudden tone. ‘Trust people, and they will be worthy of trust.'

‘So they are not worthy of it anyhow,' said Ursula. ‘I wonder how far the principle works.'

‘Not very far,' said her brother. ‘Distrust and watch people, and they will be worthy of it.'

‘I do not take that view,' said Catherine. ‘I will not take it.'

‘I fear it has its truth,' said Flavia. ‘For example, we used to think people would pay their debts, and now we refuse to lend.'

‘We give what we can,' said Catherine.

‘So your trust has quite gone,' said her sister.

‘We have to learn to give.'

‘It seems that we do,' said Elton.

‘You are both honest,' said Catherine.

‘Well, we like facing the worst. We recognize the hopelessness of things.'

‘And you appreciate it,' said Flavia.

‘Yes, other people cannot be too fortunate.'

‘It is something to feel that,' said Ursula, ‘but I am afraid they can.'

‘Afraid is a very honest word,' said Elton. ‘I am afraid some people are rich.'

‘Riches do not bring happiness. But I am afraid they do.'

‘And some have happy temperaments. There seems no end to it.'

‘Do you think that is true? Should we not sometimes meet them?'

‘Believe it or not,' said Catherine, ‘I had one when I was young.'

‘It is hard to believe,' said her sister.

‘Have you not happy temperaments yourselves?'

‘Catherine, how can you?' said Elton. ‘Have you not looked into our eyes? We know they have their own melancholy, when we give it to them.'

‘What of your temperament?' said Catherine to Flavia.

‘I have lost sight of it. It has long been overlaid.'

‘Perhaps ours have,' said Elton. ‘I daresay that is it.'

‘I see mine has,' said Catherine. ‘I must try to recover it. It is no longer only my own concern. That is a thing I have longed to say.'

‘Things do put you at such an advantage,' said her sister. ‘We are never shown at our best. We hardly know what it is, and I don't think anyone else even suspects.'

‘I believe I know,' said Elton.

‘What is the good of an impulse to rise to heights, if it has to be wasted?'

‘You want to do something noble?' said Flavia.

‘It is not as bad as that. We only want to be known to have done it. Why should it be known about other people and not about us, when hardly anything is noble really?'

‘You will tell me when I shall see you,' said Flavia to Catherine, as she took her leave, ‘or if you wish to come without my doing so. It will be for you to say.'

The two women went into the hall and talked for some time before they parted.

‘So we ought to have left them,' said Ursula, ‘but I am glad we did not. Virtue is its own reward, and we wanted another.'

‘Catherine is no longer a tragic figure,' said Elton. ‘It seems unworthy of her. It is so ordinary for things to go well, though that is odd, when it is so unusual.'

Chapter 10

‘Well, this is a nice position for a man,' said Cassius. ‘Alone in the morning, alone at noon, alone until night! What is the good of a wife, when you never see or hear her? What is the good of
having two wives, when they neutralize each other? I wonder there is a law against it, if it recoils on a man's head.'

Other books

Busted by Karin Slaughter
Furies by D. L. Johnstone
Serpent Never Sleeps by Scott O'Dell
Miles de Millones by Carl Sagan
Dead Water by Victoria Houston
My Best Friend by Ancelli
Skin Walkers: Monroe by Bliler, Susan


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024