Read The Book and the Brotherhood Online

Authors: Iris Murdoch

Tags: #Philosophy, #Classics

The Book and the Brotherhood (53 page)

The stone wall suddenly ceased and Jean’s gaze, still fixed ahead upon what was about to happen, took in a five-barred gate. She turned the wheel. She missed the gate, but the car crashed through a thick hedge and turned over on its side upon grass. The lights went out. There was a distant screech, then silence, an amazing silence. Darkness and silence.

Jean breathed for a while. She could breathe. She thought about her body and moved parts of it about a little. The car was lying on its left side. Her seat belt was still holding her suspended. She could not, in the black dark, make out what space she was in. She fumbled for the clasp of the seat belt. It seemed to snap and she jolted against the side of the passenger seat which had been propelled forward. Drawing up her knees she rested, holding the steering wheel with one hand. Her head was hurting, and her right foot was hurting, perhaps, even as she hurtled through the hedge, she had been pressing down the accelerator. Her whole body felt battered. She concentrated on breathing.

A light appeared, a wandering light. The door of the car above her, beyond the wheel, began to rattle. Someone was trying to open it. It opened. It’s like a box after all, she thought, and someone has opened the lid. The light of the torch shone into the car revealing her knees, the displaced seat, the shattered windscreen, a kind of snow everywhere which she realised was broken glass. Looking at her knees she noticed her stockings, dark brown stockings which she had selected, had
chosen
to wear, when she rose at midnight. Earlier, Crimond had told her to sleep and she had actually slept, though that had seemed impossible. She remembered now that she had forgotten to ask Crimond whether he had slept. She made a guttural sound to discover if she could still speak, then said in a strange voice, ‘I’m all right – I think.’

‘Get yourself out,’ another voice said.

Can I? she wondered. Her body felt so weak, so beaten, and somehow entangled into the interior of the car limply like a dead snake. Bracing one foot against the dashboard and pulling at the steering wheel she began to arch herself upward. She crawled upward, now holding the wheel with one hand and placing the other on the side of the open door. But her arms were strengthless and she was unable to pull herself up. Her head, her head which felt so hurt and strange, she must aim it at the opening and not think about the pain in her foot. Getting past the steering wheel would be the difficulty. At one moment she felt she was kneeling, then, finding a foothold somewhere, perhaps in the passenger seat, she managed to extend her left leg and moved upward displacing the driver’s seat which suddenly gave way and fell back. Her head and then her arms emerged through the battered hole of the open door, which the torch light was now revealing to her. Her arms took her weight for a second while her left foot found another quick perch, probably on the steering wheel, and she achieved a sitting position on the edge of the opening and very slowly, using her hands to lift them, pulled first one leg and then the other out of the car.

Crimond, not helping her, was standing a little distance away shining the torch upon her. He said, ‘Can you walk?’

Jean half fell to the ground, steadied herself against the car, her hand questing over the twisted red metal so brightly revealed by the light. She thought, I
must
walk. She took one or two paces. Her right foot was hurting but it was serviceable. The pain in her head, absent while she was scrambling out, had returned. She said, ‘Yes.’

‘Walk then.’ The beam of the torch turned away towards the road and Crimond’s figure receded.

Jean, who had been absorbed in nursing herself back to life, cried out, ‘Oh wait, wait for me, please help me!’ She hobbled after him. She could now see, in the ray of the torch, the brown thorny leafless hedge, the gap torn in the hedge, the tarmac beyond, and, as she took another step or two, the lights of
Crimond’s car revealing the five-barred gate and the end of the stone wall. He had turned his car to come back.

Crimond had leapt through the gap and was standing on the road. He said, ‘I am going now. You may do as you please. I shall not see you again.’

Jean screamed. She cried, ‘No, no – Crimond, don’t leave me – take me with you, forgive me – I couldn’t kill you, I love you, I’d die for you, but I couldn’t kill you – oh take me home, take me home, you can’t go away without me –’

‘I mean what I say. You are nothing to me now. Go away, go to hell, it’s finished.’

‘You didn’t mean us to die, you can’t have done. I know you didn’t, it was just a test, I did what I thought you wanted!’

Crimond began to walk towards his car, visible now in its headlights.

Jean got to the hedge but could not manage to get through it. She limped to the gate, but was unable to open it.

Crimond was opening the door of his car.

‘Wait for me, oh my darling, wait, wait, don’t leave me!’

‘You have left me. I have no more use for you. Don’t come crawling after me and force me to kick you. It’s finished, it’s over. Can’t you understand that I mean what I say?’

‘Crimond, I love you, you love me, we said our love was forever!’

‘It would have been forever. Now it cannot be. Am I not suffering too? You have taken from me the only thing which I desired and which only you could have given me. This failure ends our pact.’

‘I’ll come with you, I’ll come to you tomorrow, there’s nothing in the world for me, only you!’

‘Don’t come near me again, now or tomorrow or in any future time. You are nothing to me now, nothing. Go away, take your freedom,
take your chance.
We have already said goodbye, don’t you remember? It is finished, you have-chosen your way of finishing it. We could have killed each other but you have just succeeded in killing our love. That’s what has died. Now go away from me, go anywhere you please, only
don’t come near me ever again. We are strangers forever, I never want to see you again.’

Crimond got into the car and switched on the engine.

Crying ‘No! No!’ Jean struggled with the gate.

The car shot off back up the hill, then braked and began to turn. Jean, wailing, was fumbling with a ring and a chain.

The car returned down the hill gathering speed and disappeared into the dip. She saw its rear lights again on the hill crest, then nothing. The darkness and the silence resumed, and the moon and the stars reappeared.

Jean had opened the gate and stood upon the road. She stood a while; opening her mouth wide, throwing back her head, screaming and crying, tearing at her clothes and her hair and uttering sounds like a wild animal. Then she began to walk. She must get to London, a car would pick her up, Crimond would come back. She became aware of bodily pain and intense cold. Walking was difficult, was more difficult. She wept now, drooping her head, ready at every moment to fall on her knees. She stopped, still sobbing, to stand and look about her. The countryside was dark. No, it was not entirely dark, there was a light, the window of a house, a little way from the road. There was a path. She began to limp along the path. Only when she was quite close to it did she realise that the house was Boyars.

Rose Curtland was asleep. She was dreaming that she and Sinclair were at the Vatican playing three-handed bridge with the Pope. The Pope was uneasy because a fourth person who was expected had failed to come. At last a bell began to ring and they all ran toward the door, only there was a very heavy tapestry covering it which they had to get past. They struggled, almost suffocating, with the tapestry, and then crawled underneath it. They found themselves in a long completely white hall, at the far end of which, in a white robe and wearing a white wig like a judge, Jenkin Riderhood was
sitting on a throne. As she and Sinclair walked slowly and solemnly towards him Rose felt very frightened.

The ringing went on. Rose woke up and realised that the telephone was ringing. She remembered the dream and her fear and felt a new fear now because of the telephone. She switched on her lamp. It was nearly six o’clock. She got out of bed and ran to the telephone in the hallway, picking it up in the dark.

‘Hello.’

‘Miss Rose – it’s Annushka – Mrs Cambus is here.’

‘What?’

‘I’m very sorry to disturb you. Mrs Cambus is here and she wants to speak to you.’

‘What’s happened?’

After a moment Rose could hear Jean speaking, or rather she could hear Jean sobbing and trying to speak.

‘Jean, my darling, dear, dear Jean, what is it – oh don’t grieve so – what is it, my dear heart – what’s happened?’

Jean said at last, ‘I want you to go – to see if Crimond – is all right –’

‘Of course I will. But you – are
you
all right? Dear, dear Jean, don’t cry so, I can’t bear it.’

Jean said, trying to control her voice. ‘I’m all right. I’m here – Annushka has been so kind – and the doctor –’

‘The
doctor
?’

‘I’m perfectly all right – but I’m afraid – that Crimond may have killed himself –’

‘You’ve left him,’ said Rose.

‘He’s left me. But he could kill himself. He could shoot himself. Could you go round –’

‘Yes, of course I will, at once. I’m sure he hasn’t killed himself, he’s not the sort – but I’ll go, and then I’ll telephone you. But, Jean, you’re hurt, the doctor –?’

‘I’ve hurt my foot, it’s nothing.’

‘You
stay there
, don’t move, Annushka will look after you, and when I’ve seen Crimond I’ll drive down straightaway. You just stay there and
rest
, I’ll be with you as soon as I can.’

‘Yes – if you don’t mind – I think I’ll stay here – for the moment –’

‘Could I talk to –’

Annushka was already on the line. Annushka spoke slowly and calmly, as she always did. Mrs Cambus had had a car accident. Yes, quite nearby, she had been driving to Boyars. She wasn’t hurt except for a badly sprained ankle, and some concussion. She saw the landing light, which Annushka always kept on when she was alone, and she walked all the way with her bad ankle. Yes, Dr Tallcott had been there, he came at once. Yes, he said concussion and she was just to rest, he strapped up her ankle and gave her some pills. He said he’d come back. She was on the sofa in the drawing room because she couldn’t get up the stairs. They didn’t ring Rose at once because –

‘Just
keep
her there,’ said Rose, ‘don’t whatever you do let her go away, I’ll be ringing up again and I’ll drive down very soon.’

Frantically, turning on all the lights, she dressed, fumbling with her clothes, unable to find her handbag and the car keys, forgetting her overcoat. At last she had found everything, even gloves, and had put on her heaviest coat and a woollen cap and scarf. Leaving the lights on she ran downstairs into the very cold empty lamp-lit street. It was six o’clock. There was no sign of dawn.

In the car she let her fear loose. Terrible things were happening and would happen. She could not yet let herself feel glad that Jean had left Crimond. All this, whatever it was, might be part of one huge catastrophe. Suppose she arrived and found Crimond lying in a pool of blood with his head blown off? She had lied to Jean, of course she thought that Crimond was a person who might commit suicide – in fact, if they had really parted, it was very possible. He had finished the book, he had finished with Jean too. Except that perhaps he hadn’t, perhaps they would be back together again tomorrow. Oh, let him not be dead, Rose prayed. Almost, she was wanting that Jean should be back with him tomorrow, everything else was so terribly
dangerous.
Jean would go mad,
Duncan would go mad, people would die, it would all end in dreadful chaos, the end of all order, the end of the world.

The streets were almost empty of traffic, the street lights lit up empty lonely pavements. As she crossed the Thames she could see lights reflected in the quivering water. The tide was in. Whatever happened
she must not get lost.
Everything in the dark looked so different, so awful. She could not remember the way and kept looking for landmarks. She began to wail with vexation and fear.

At last she was there, and had run the car up onto the pavement outside Crimond’s house. The door was open and there was a light in the hall. Getting out of the car Rose felt her legs weak with fear. The sudden coldness seared her face. She put on her scarf, which she had taken off in the car. She took off her gloves and put her ungloved hand upon the iron railing beside the steps. The railing was frosty and deadly cold and her hand stuck to the metal. She stumbled up into the hall.

The rooms here were dark, she went into each one turning on the light, no one was there. She ran to the stairs leading down to the basement. The stairs were lit and there was another lighted open door down below. She ran down, leaning on the banisters, and hurried into the big basement room.

Crimond was standing at the other end of the room. A centre light was on and a lamp upon the desk at the far end. He was standing so still that Rose, her hand upon the door, had the sudden illusion that actually he was dead, but standing up. He had evidently not noticed her, though she must have made some noise descending the stairs. Then he moved his head slightly, looking towards her with evident surprise, his hand rising to his throat. Rose thought, he thinks I’m Jean. She pulled off her cap and her scarf and undid her coat.

‘Rose!’

His utterance of her name gave her an unpleasant shock. She came down the room. She felt an intense desire to sit down. A chair beside the desk was draped with a woollen shawl. She took off the shawl and dropped it on the floor and sat down. Crimond moved away, facing her across the desk.

‘So you’re all right –’

‘You’ve seen Jean?’

‘I’ve talked to her. She thought you might have shot yourself.’

‘As you see I have not.’

‘And you aren’t going to?’

‘Not in the foreseeable future. Probably not at all.’

‘You’ve really – really parted?’ said Rose. The room was very cold and her speech puffed steaming out of her mouth.

‘Yes.’

‘You will leave her alone now, won’t you, you won’t come after her ever again?’

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