<h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XIV</h2></div>
<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>Mrs. Viveash descended the steps into King
Street, and standing there on the pavement looked
dubiously first to the right and then to the left.
Little and loud, the taxis rolled by on their white wheels,
the long-snouted limousines passed with a sigh. The air
smelt of watered dust, tempered in Mrs. Viveash’s immediate
neighbourhood by those memories of Italian jasmines
which were her perfume. On the opposite pavement, in
the shade, two young men, looking very conscious of their
grey top-hats, marched gravely along.</p>
<p class='c010'>Life, Mrs. Viveash thought, looked a little dim this
morning, in spite of the fine weather. She glanced at her
watch; it was one o’clock. Soon one would have to eat
some lunch. But where, and with whom? Mrs. Viveash
had no engagements. All the world was before her, she
was absolutely free, all day long. Yesterday, when she
declined all those pressing invitations, the prospect had
seemed delightful. Liberty, no complications, no contacts;
a pre-Adamite empty world to do what she liked
in.</p>
<p class='c010'>But to-day, when it came to the point, she hated her
liberty. To come out like this at one o’clock into a vacuum—it
was absurd, it was appalling. The prospect of immeasurable
boredom opened before her. Steppes after
steppes of ennui, horizon beyond horizon, for ever the
same. She looked again to the right and again to the left.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>Finally she decided to go to the left. Slowly, walking
along her private knife-edge between her personal abysses,
she walked towards the left. She remembered suddenly
one shining day like this in the summer of 1917, when she
had walked along this same street, slowly, like this, on the
sunny side, with Tony Lamb. All that day, that night,
it had been one long good-bye. He was going back the
next morning. Less than a week later he was dead. Never
again, never again: there had been a time when she could
make herself cry, simply by saying those two words once or
twice, under her breath. Never again, never again. She
repeated them softly now. But she felt no tears behind
her eyes. Grief doesn’t kill, love doesn’t kill; but time
kills everything, kills desire, kills sorrow, kills in the end the
mind that feels them; wrinkles and softens the body while
it still lives, rots it like a medlar, kills it too at last. Never
again, never again. Instead of crying, she laughed, laughed
aloud. The pigeon-breasted old gentleman who had just
passed her, twirling between his finger and thumb the ends
of a white military moustache, turned round startled.
Could she be laughing at him?</p>
<p class='c010'>“Never again,” murmured Mrs. Viveash.</p>
<p class='c010'>“I beg your pardon?” queried the martial gentleman,
in a rich, port-winey, cigary voice.</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash looked at him with such wide-eyed astonishment
that the old gentleman was quite taken aback. “A
thousand apologies, dear lady. Thought you were addressing ...
H’m, ah’m.” He replaced his hat, squared his
shoulders and went off smartly, left, right, bearing preciously
before him his pigeon-breast. Poor thing, he
thought, poor young thing. Talking to herself. Must be
cracked, must be off her head. Or perhaps she took drugs.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>That was more likely: that was much more likely. Most
of them did nowadays. Vicious young women. Lesbians,
drug-fiends, nymphomaniacs, dipsos—thoroughly vicious,
nowadays, thoroughly vicious. He arrived at his club in
an excellent temper.</p>
<p class='c010'>Never again, never, never again. Mrs. Viveash would
have liked to be able to cry.</p>
<p class='c010'>St. James’s Square opened before her. Romantically
under its trees the statue pranced. The trees gave her an
idea: she might go down into the country for the afternoon,
take a cab and drive out, out, goodness only knew
where! To the top of a hill somewhere. Box Hill, Leith
Hill, Holmbury Hill, Ivinghoe Beacon—any hill where one
could sit and look out over plains. One might do worse
than that with one’s liberty.</p>
<p class='c010'>But not much worse, she reflected.</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash had turned up towards the northern side
of the square and was almost at its north-western corner
when, with a thrill of genuine delight, with a sense of the
most profound relief she saw a familiar figure, running down
the steps of the London Library.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Theodore!” she hallooed faintly but penetratingly,
from her inward death-bed. “Gumbril!” She waved
her parasol.</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril halted, looked round, came smiling to meet her.
“How delightful,” he said, “but how unfortunate.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Why unfortunate?” asked Mrs. Viveash. “Am I of
evil omen?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Unfortunate,” Gumbril explained, “because I’ve got
to catch a train and can’t profit by this meeting.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ah no, Theodore,” said Mrs. Viveash, “you’re not
going to catch a train. You’re going to come and lunch
<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>with me. Providence has decreed it. You can’t say no to
Providence.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“I must,” Gumbril shook his head. “I’ve said yes to
somebody else.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“To whom?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ah!” said Gumbril, with a coy and saucy mysteriousness.</p>
<p class='c010'>“And where are you going in your famous train?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ah again,” Gumbril answered.</p>
<p class='c010'>“How intolerably tiresome and silly you are!” Mrs.
Viveash declared. “One would think you were a sixteen-year-old
schoolboy going out for his first assignation with
a shop girl. At your age, Gumbril!” She shook her head,
smiled agonizingly and with contempt. “Who is she?
What sordid pick-up?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Not sordid in the least,” protested Gumbril.</p>
<p class='c010'>“But decidedly a pick-up. Eh?” A banana-skin was
lying, like a bedraggled starfish, in the gutter, just in front
of where they were standing. Mrs. Viveash stepped
forward and with the point of her parasol lifted it carefully
up and offered it to her companion.</p>
<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Merci</span></i>,” Gumbril bowed.</p>
<p class='c010'>She tossed the skin back again into the gutter. “In any
case,” she said, “the young lady can wait while we have
luncheon.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril shook his head. “I’ve made the arrangement,”
he said. Emily’s letter was in his pocket. She had taken
the loveliest cottage just out of Robertsbridge, in Sussex.
Ah, but the loveliest imaginable. For the whole summer.
He could come and see her there. He had telegraphed
that he would come to-day, this afternoon, by the two
o’clock from Charing Cross.</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>Mrs. Viveash took him by the elbow. “Come along,”
she said. “There’s a post office in that passage going from
Jermyn Street to Piccadilly. You can wire from there your
infinite regrets. These things always improve with a little
keeping. There will be raptures when you <em>do</em> go to-morrow.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril allowed himself to be led along. “What an
insufferable woman you are,” he said, laughing.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Instead of being grateful to me for asking you to
luncheon!”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Oh, I am grateful,” said Gumbril. “And astonished.”</p>
<p class='c010'>He looked at her. Mrs. Viveash smiled and fixed him
for a moment with her pale, untroubled eyes.... She
said nothing.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Still,” Gumbril went on, “I must be at Charing Cross
by two, you know.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“But we’re lunching at Verrey’s.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril shook his head.</p>
<p class='c010'>They were at the corner of Jermyn Street. Mrs. Viveash
halted and delivered her ultimatum, the more impressive
for being spoken in that expiring voice of one who says <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in
articulo</span></i> the final and supremely important things. “We
lunch at Verrey’s, Theodore, or I shall never, never speak
to you again.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“But be reasonable, Myra,” he implored. If only he’d
told her that he had a business appointment.... Imbecile,
to have dropped those stupid hints—in that tone!</p>
<p class='c010'>“I prefer not to be,” said Mrs. Viveash.</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril made a gesture of despair and was silent. He
thought of Emily in her native quiet among the flowers; in
a cottage altogether too cottagey, with honeysuckles and
red ramblers and hollyhocks—though, on second thoughts,
none of them would be blooming yet, would they?—happily,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>in white muslin, extracting from the cottage piano the
easier sections of the Arietta. A little absurd, perhaps,
when you considered her like that; but exquisite, but
adorable, but pure of heart and flawless in her bright
pellucid integrity, complete as a crystal in its faceted perfection.
She would be waiting for him, expecting him;
and they would walk through the twiddly lanes—or perhaps
there would be a governess cart for hire, with a fat pony
like a tub on legs to pull it—they would look for flowers in
the woods and perhaps he would still remember what sort
of noise a whitethroat makes; or even if he didn’t remember,
he could always magisterially say he did. “That’s a whitethroat,
Emily. Do you hear? The one that goes ‘Tweedly,
weedly, weedledy dee.’”</p>
<p class='c010'>“I’m waiting,” said Mrs. Viveash. “Patiently, however.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril looked at her and found her smiling like a tragic
mask. After all, he reflected, Emily would still be there if
he went down to-morrow. It would be stupid to quarrel
with Myra about something that was really, when he came
to think of it, not of enormous importance. It was stupid
to quarrel with any one about anything; and with Myra
and about this, particularly so. In this white dress patterned
with flowing arabesques of black she looked, he thought,
more than ever enchanting. There had been times in
the past.... The past leads on to the present.... No;
but in any case she was excellent company.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Well,” he said, sighing decisively, “let’s go and send
my wire.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash made no comment, and traversing Jermyn
Street they walked up the narrow passage under the lee of
Wren’s bald barn of St. James’s, to the post office.</p>
<p class='c010'>“I shall pretext a catastrophe,” said Gumbril, as they
<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>entered; and going to the telegraph desk he wrote: “Slight
accident on way to station not serious at all but a little
indisposed come same train to-morrow.” He addressed
the form and handed it in.</p>
<p class='c010'>“A little what?” asked the young lady behind the bars,
as she read it through, prodding each successive word with
the tip of her blunt pencil.</p>
<p class='c010'>“A little indisposed,” said Gumbril, and he felt suddenly
very much ashamed of himself. “A little indisposed,”—no,
really, that was too much. He’d withdraw the telegram,
he’d go after all.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ready?” asked Mrs. Viveash, coming up from the
other end of the counter where she had been buying stamps.</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril pushed a florin under the bars.</p>
<p class='c010'>“A little indisposed,” he said, hooting with laughter, and
he walked towards the door leaning heavily on his stick
and limping. “Slight accident,” he explained.</p>
<p class='c010'>“What is the meaning of this clownery?” Mrs. Viveash
inquired.</p>
<p class='c010'>“What indeed?” Gumbril had limped up to the door
and stood there, holding it open for her. He was taking no
responsibility for himself. It was the clown’s doing, and
the clown, poor creature, was <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">non compos</span></i>, not entirely
there, and couldn’t be called to account for his actions. He
limped after her towards Piccadilly.</p>
<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Giudicato guarabile in cinque giorni</span></i>,” Mrs. Viveash
laughed. “How charming that always is in the Italian
papers. The fickle lady, the jealous lover, the stab, the
<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">colpo di rivoltella</span></i>, the mere Anglo-Saxon black eye—all
judged by the house surgeon at the Misericordia curable
in five days. And you, my poor Gumbril, are you curable
in five days?”</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>“That depends,” said Gumbril. “There may be complications.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash waved her parasol; a taxi came swerving
to the pavement’s edge in front of them. “Meanwhile,”
she said, “you can’t be expected to walk.”</p>
<p class='c010'>At Verrey’s they lunched off lobsters and white wine.
“Fish suppers,” Gumbril quoted jovially from the Restoration,
“fish suppers will make a man hop like a flea.”
Through the whole meal he clowned away in the most
inimitable style. The ghost of a governess cart rolled along
the twiddly lanes of Robertsbridge. But one can refuse
to accept responsibility; a clown cannot be held accountable.
And besides, when the future and the past are
abolished, when it is only the present instant, whether
enchanted or unenchanted, that counts, when there are no
causes or motives, no future consequences to be considered,
how can there be responsibility, even for those who are
not clowns? He drank a great deal of hock, and when the
clock struck two and the train had begun to snort out of
Charing Cross, he could not refrain from proposing the
health of Viscount Lascelles. After that he began telling
Mrs. Viveash about his adventure as a Complete Man.</p>
<p class='c010'>“You should have seen me,” he said, describing his
beard.</p>
<p class='c010'>“I should have been bowled over.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“You shall see me, then,” said Gumbril. “Ah, what a
Don Giovanni. <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">La ci darem la mano, La mi dirai di si,
Vieni, non e lontano, Partiam, ben mio, da qui.</span></i> And they
came, they came. Without hesitation. <span lang="it" xml:lang="it">No ‘<em>vorrei e
non vorrei</em>,’ no ‘<em>mi trema un poco il cor</em>.’</span> Straight away.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Felice, io so, sarei</span></i>,” Mrs. Viveash sang very faintly
under her breath, from a remote bed of agony.</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>Ah, happiness, happiness; a little dull, some one had
wisely said, when you looked at it from outside. An affair
of duets at the cottage piano, of collecting specimens, hand
in hand, for the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">hortus siccus</span></i>. A matter of integrity and
quietness.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ah, but the history of the young woman who was
married four years ago,” exclaimed Gumbril with clownish
rapture, “and remains to this day a virgin—what an episode
in my memoirs!” In the enchanted darkness he had
learned her young body. He looked at his fingers; her
beauty was a part of their knowledge. On the tablecloth
he drummed out the first bars of the Twelfth Sonata of
Mozart. “And even after singing her duet with the Don,”
he continued, “she is still virgin. There are chaste
pleasures, sublimated sensualities. More thrillingly voluptuous,”
with the gesture of a restaurant-keeper who
praises the speciality of the house, he blew a treacly kiss,
“than any of the grosser deliriums.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“What is all this about?” asked Mrs. Viveash.</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril finished off his glass. “I am talking esoterically,”
he said, “for my own pleasure, not yours.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“But tell me more about the beard,” Mrs. Viveash
insisted. “I liked the beard so much.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“All right,” said Gumbril, “let us try to be unworthy
with coherence.”</p>
<p class='c010'>They sat for a long time over their cigarettes; it was half
past three before Mrs. Viveash suggested they should go.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Almost time,” she said, looking at her watch, “to have
tea. One damned meal after another. And never anything
new to eat. And every year one gets bored with
another of the old things. Lobster, for instance, how I
used to adore lobster once! But to-day—well, really,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>it was only your conversation, Theodore, that made it
tolerable.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril put his hand to his heart and bowed. He felt
suddenly extremely depressed.</p>
<p class='c010'>“And wine: I used to think Orvieto so heavenly. But
this spring, when I went to Italy, it was just a bad muddy
sort of Vouvray. And those soft caramels they call Fiats;
I used to eat those till I was sick. I was at the sick stage
before I’d finished one of them, this time in Rome.” Mrs.
Viveash shook her head. “Disillusion after disillusion.”</p>
<p class='c010'>They walked down the dark passage into the street.</p>
<p class='c010'>“We’ll go home,” said Mrs. Viveash. “I really haven’t
the spirit to do anything else this afternoon.” To the
commissionaire who opened the door of the cab she gave
the address of her house in St. James’s.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Will one ever recapture the old thrills?” she asked
rather fatiguedly as they drove slowly through the traffic
of Regent Street.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Not by chasing after them,” said Gumbril, in whom the
clown had quite evaporated. “If one sat still enough they
might perhaps come back of their own accord....” There
would be the faint sound as it were of feet approaching
through the quiet.</p>
<p class='c010'>“It isn’t only food,” said Mrs. Viveash, who had closed
her eyes and was leaning back in her corner.</p>
<p class='c010'>“So I can well believe.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“It’s everything. Nothing’s the same now. I feel it
never will be.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Never more,” croaked Gumbril.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Never again,” Mrs. Viveash echoed. “Never again.”
There were still no tears behind her eyes. “Did you ever
know Tony Lamb?” she asked.</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>“No,” Gumbril answered from his corner. “What
about him?”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash did not answer. What, indeed, about him?
She thought of his very clear blue eyes and the fair, bright
hair that had been lighter than his brown face. Brown
face and neck, red-brown hands; and all the rest of his
skin was as white as milk. “I was very fond of him,” she
said at last. “That’s all. He was killed in 1917, just
about this time of the year. It seems a very long time ago,
don’t you think?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Does it?” Gumbril shrugged his shoulders. “I
don’t know. The past is abolished. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vivamus, mea Lesbia.</span></i>
If I weren’t so horribly depressed, I’d embrace you. That
would be some slight compensation for my”—he tapped
his foot with the end of his walking-stick—“my accident.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“You’re depressed too?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“One should never drink at luncheon,” said Gumbril.
“It wrecks the afternoon. One should also never think of
the past and never for one moment consider the future.
These are treasures of ancient wisdom. But perhaps after
a little tea——” He leaned forward to look at the figures
on the taximeter, for the cab had come to a standstill—“after
a nip of the tannin stimulant”—he threw open the
door—“we may feel rather better.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash smiled excruciatingly. “For me,” she said,
as she stepped out on to the pavement, “even tannin has
lost its virtues now.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash’s drawing-room was tastefully in the movement.
The furniture was upholstered in fabrics designed
by Dufy—racehorses and roses, little tennis players clustering
in the midst of enormous flowers, printed in grey and ochre
on a white ground. There were a couple of lamp-shades
<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>by Balla. On the pale rose-stippled walls hung three
portraits of herself by three different and entirely incongruous
painters, a selection of the usual oranges and lemons,
and a rather forbidding contemporary nude painted in two
tones of green.</p>
<p class='c010'>“And how bored I am with this room and all these
beastly pictures!” exclaimed Mrs. Viveash as she entered.
She took off her hat and, standing in front of the mirror
above the mantelpiece, smoothed her coppery hair.</p>
<p class='c010'>“You should take a cottage in the country,” said Gumbril,
“buy a pony and a governess cart and drive along the
twiddly lanes looking for flowers. After tea you open the
cottage piano,” and suiting his action to the words, Gumbril
sat down at the long-tailed Blüthner, “and you play, you
play.” Very slowly and with parodied expressiveness he
played the opening theme of the Arietta. “You wouldn’t
be bored then,” he said, turning round to her, when he
had finished.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ah, wouldn’t I!” said Mrs. Viveash. “And with
whom do you propose that I should share my cottage?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Any one you like,” said Gumbril. His fingers hung, as
though meditating over the keys.</p>
<p class='c010'>“But I don’t like any one,” cried Mrs. Viveash with a
terrible vehemence from her death-bed.... Ah, now it
had been said, the truth. It sounded like a joke. Tony
had been dead five years now. Those bright blue eyes—ah,
never again. All rotted away to nothing.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Then you should try,” said Gumbril, whose hands had
begun to creep softly forward into the Twelfth Sonata.
“You should try.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“But I do try,” said Mrs. Viveash. Her elbows propped
on the mantelpiece, her chin resting on her clasped hands,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>she was looking fixedly at her own image in the glass. Pale
eyes looked unwaveringly into pale eyes. The red mouth
and its reflection exchanged their smiles of pain. She had
tried; it revolted her now to think how often she had tried;
she had tried to like some one, any one, as much as Tony.
She had tried to recapture, to re-evoke, to revivify. And
there had never been anything, really, but a disgust. “I
haven’t succeeded,” she added, after a pause.</p>
<p class='c010'>The music had shifted from F major to D minor; it
mounted in leaping anapæsts to a suspended chord, ran
down again, mounted once more, modulating to C minor,
then, through a passage of trembling notes to A flat major,
to the dominant of D flat, to the dominant of C, to C minor,
and at last, to a new clear theme in the major.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Then I’m sorry for you,” said Gumbril, allowing his
fingers to play on by themselves. He felt sorry, too, for
the subjects of Mrs. Viveash’s desperate experiments. She
mightn’t have succeeded in liking them—for their part,
poor devils, they in general only too agonizingly liked her....
Only too.... He remembered the cold, damp spots on
his pillow, in the darkness. Those hopeless, angry tears.
“You nearly killed me once,” he said.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Only time kills,” said Mrs. Viveash, still looking into
her own pale eyes. “I have never made any one happy,”
she added, after a pause. “Never any one,” she thought,
except Tony, and Tony they had killed, shot him through
the head. Even the bright eyes had rotted, like any other
carrion. She too had been happy then. Never again.</p>
<p class='c010'>A maid came in with the tea-things.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ah, the tannin!” exclaimed Gumbril with enthusiasm,
and broke off his playing. “The one hope of salvation.”
He poured out two cups, and picking up one of them he came
<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>over to the fireplace and stood behind her, sipping slowly
at the pale brewage and looking over her shoulder at their
two reflections in the mirror.</p>
<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">La ci darem</span></i>,” he hummed. “If only I had my beard!”
He stroked his chin and with the tip of his forefinger brushed
up the drooping ends of his moustache. “You’d come
trembling like Zerlina, in under its golden shadow.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mrs. Viveash smiled. “I don’t ask for anything better,”
she said. “What more delightful part! <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Felice, io so,
sarei: Batti, batti, o bel Mazetto.</span></i> Enviable Zerlina!”</p>
<p class='c010'>The servant made another silent entry.</p>
<p class='c010'>“A gentleman,” she said, “called Mr. Shearwater would
like——”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Tell him I’m not at home,” said Mrs. Viveash, without
looking round.</p>
<p class='c010'>There was a silence. With raised eyebrows Gumbril
looked over Mrs. Viveash’s shoulder at her reflection. Her
eyes were calm and without expression, she did not smile
or frown. Gumbril still questioningly looked. In the end
he began to laugh.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />