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'Seen her home?' echoed Mark in astonishment. 'Has the drink or the night air gone to your head? She probably lives miles away. You really must cure yourself of these old-fas.h.i.+oned ideas.'
'Yes, of course, one's apt to forget that women consider themselves our equals now. But just occasionally one remembers that men were once the stronger s.e.x,' said Digby almost sadly.
'Of course, if she really wants Tom,' said Mark, his eyes brightening as they did when there was the prospect of some interesting piece of gossip, ' there's no reason why she shouldn't get him. Did you notice how he seemed rather interested this evening? A few obstacles in the way will only make it more worth while for her.'
They had come to a crescent of once beautiful houses, now decayed and shabby, in one of which they shared a flat with an African student. The sound of his typewriter greeted them as they opened their front door. The kitchen was full of was.h.i.+ng-up and there was no milk left for breakfast. Mr. Ephraim Olo liked to drink Ovaltine while he composed articles of a seditious tone for his African newspaper.
CHAPTER SEVEN.
Once Deirdre had recovered from the shock of learning that Tom and Catherine were living together she began to feel quite cheerful again. At nineteen one's hopes do not remain blighted for very long and Deirdre was soon able to find a good deal in the situation to encourage her. Mark and Digby had not seemed to think that Tom and Catherine would marry and certainly they had not appeared to be very much in love, though it was a little difficult to know how they could have shown this at a party when they were busy looking after their guests. Anyway, Catherine was neither particularly beautiful nor even young, and it was quite likely that Tom was beginning to grow tired of her, expecially if she was not an anthropologist and therefore unable to take an intelligent interest in his work. This last was terribly important, Deirdre felt; it was really a privilege to have the opportunity, especially when the work was difficult and unrewarding in itself. Not that she wanted to deprive Catherine of Tom's love, for she had taken a liking to her in the way that a younger woman often does admire an older one who appears to have an interesting and enviable life. For Catherine seemed to Deirdre rather a splendid person-her Bohemian flat and way of living, and her writing were all very different from the suburban background which Deirdre found so stifling and from which she now felt herself struggling to break free.
The day on which Catherine and Tom were coming to tea was Whitsunday. At breakfast the question of churchgoing was discussed. Mrs. Swan was grieved that Deirdre had not been with them at Early Service. The vicar called it Low Ma.s.s, but she could not yet bring herself to adopt this unfamiliar and somehow rather shocking terminology.
'Malcolm and Mr. Dulke took the collection,' she said. It was such a nice service -I wish you'd come, dear.'
'I didn't feel like it,' said Deirdre evasively. 'I don't really know that I believe in it all any more.'
There was silence at the table. Malcolm pa.s.sed up his cup for more coffee. Rhoda took another piece of toast. Nothing was said, but Deirdre began to feel that her remark had been rather childish and in bad taste.
'What was that thing the organist played when we went up?' Malcolm asked. 'Rather a nice tune, I thought.'
'It sounded like Hiawatha's wedding feast,' said Rhoda in a worried tone, 'Coleridge Taylor, you know. But I don't think it could have been that.'
'Mr. Lewis was improvising,' said Mrs. Swan. 'There were nearly a hundred communicants, I should think, and I dare say his thoughts wandered. I suppose the music wasn't really so very unsuitable, in a way; many Indians are Christians, aren't they?'
'These were Kid Indians, surely,' said Malcolm.
They seemed to be getting into rather deep water, so Mabel changed the subject by mentioning that there was to be a procession at the eleven o'clock service.
'I might come to that,' said Deirdre. 'I suppose it will be quite an interesting spectacle.'
Mabel wisely made no comment and was glad to see that Deirdre was ready to go with Rhoda and Malcolm when the time came. She herself was staying behind to cook the Sunday joint, a fing fillet of veal.
If only I lived by myself in a flat like Catherine's, thought Deirdre. as she sat in their usual pew between her brother and aunt, then I shouldn't have to worry about family peace and hurting people's feelings.
So as to make sure of their favourite seat they had arrived rather too early, and there was nothing to do but look around the church which, like so many suburban churches, had been built at the beginning of the present century and had no ancient monuments or outstanding architectural features. Everything that could be was beautifully polished, from the altar candlesticks and lectern to the memorial tablets to late vicars, Ernest Hugh la Motte Spofford, George William Brandon, and James Edward Ferguson Law. The present inc.u.mbent, Laurence Folkes Tulliver, could not expect to be immortalized in bra.s.s for some years to come, for he was a man in vigorous early middle age who had introduced into the services many features which were new and startling to his congregation. He had been wise enough to do this gradually, so that by the time the church had won the right to have the mysterious letters DSCR after its name in Mowbray's Church Guide, most of the congregation were rather proud of themselves for having become High Church almost without knowing it. Only some of the older members still found the bells and incense a little alarming, for as Father Tulliver put it, rather aptly where Asperges was concerned, the young people had taken to the ritual like ducks to water.
Of course if you had to go to church at all, Deirdre told herself, this kind of service was much the most interesting and worthy to be compared with the religious ceremonies of the peoples she read about in her anthropological studies. Strangers often carne to the church, which had never happened in the old days when Mr. Law was vicar. Even now a stranger was walking up the aisle looking for a seat, for Father Tulliver had done away with the old system of cards in the pews to mark the sittings of the regular wors.h.i.+ppers and subscribers to church finances. Usually Mr. Diprose, the verger, showed strangers to a suitable pew, but this one seemed to have evaded him and when the footsteps came past Deirdre she saw that it was Jean-Pierre le Rossignol, dressed all in pale grey and carrying a pair of yellow gloves. He deliberated for a moment and then walked into a pew near the front, which he must have judged likely to command a good view of the proceedings.
'That man's in the Dulkes' pew,' whispered Malcolm to Deirdre. 'I wonder if I ought to ask him to move?'
But before he could do anything the Dulkes themselves had approached and were seen to hesitate in the aisle at the sight of the stranger. There are few things more disconcerting or even upsetting for a regular wors.h.i.+pper at a church which is not normally very full than to find his usual seat occupied by somebody else. Perhaps such a thing had never happened to the Dulkes in all their forty years at the church. There was indeed an empty pew in front and another behind, but that was not quite the same thing. Their pew was exactly opposite that spot where in winter the hottest blasts of air came up out of the grating set in the encaustic tiles. Today it was summer, but that was irrelevant.
What will they do?' whispered Rhoda to Deirdre.
For a moment there was real tension in the air, then Mrs. Dulke seemed to recover herself and made as if to enter the pew. Jean-Pierre, with a charming smile, moved up to make room and then unhooked a kneeler for Mrs. Dulke with a courteous gesture. She removed her gloves and fox fur, and knelt for a moment in fl.u.s.tered prayer. Mr. Dulke hardly even attempted this for at that moment the tinkling of a little bell was heard, the organist started to play some indefinite music and the procession came in.
As it was a Festival the servers were in their lace-trimmed cottas and Father Tulliver was wearing a particularly splendid cope. Jean-Pierre could hardly have chosen a better occasion to visit the church and he appeared to be following the proceedings intently. There was no sermon as such, that is, Father Tulliver did not actually enter the pulpit, but stood in the chancel and said a few words, touching on the significance of the Festival with a note on the meaning of the word 'Paraclete'. The service was beautifully conducted and there was perhaps n.o.body who did not feel in some way the better for having been present at it.
Deirdre had been worrying a little about Jean-Pierre, remembering her rash invitation or half-invitation to Sunday lunch when they had been talking at the party. She had never imagined that he would really turn up. Perhaps he would just slip quietly away now and there need be no embarra.s.sment, but they all seemed to come out of church together and it was impossible to avoid talking to him.
'So you came after all,' she said lamely. 'Did you like the service?'
'I found it enchanting,' Jean-Pierre bowed.
Hardly the right word, Deirdre felt, though she saw what he meant.
'Of course I felt almost at home, though there were some interesting differences in the ritual.'
'You are a Roman Catholic, then, Mr. er...' Rhoda looked appealingly at Deirdre who had not so far introduced the good-looking young man.
Deirdre always forgot introductions or did them the wrong way round, but eventually it was made clear who Jean-Pierre was, and there was a perceptible brightening in Rhoda's manner.
'You must stay and have lunch with us,' she said. 'We are always so glad to meet Deirdre's friends. My sister, Deirdre's mother, that is, will be delighted. She is at home cooking the meal-of course things are not as they were,' she added obscurely.
Deirdre supposed that she must be remembering the old days when they would have had a cook.
'There has been quite a social revolution in England, I believe,' said Jean-Pierre politely. 'The dynamics of culture change.'
'Such a pity,' said Rhoda, puzzling over the end of his sentence. 'In some ways, that is. Of course one does want things to be shared more equally, that is good ...'
'Provided one gets the larger share oneself,' said Jean-Pierre, rus.h.i.+ng forward to open the gate. 'What a delightful house!'
'It is detached, of course,' said Rhoda, 'which is an advantage.'
'Yes, detachment is a good thing. But one can be too detached, perhaps?'
'How about a drink?' Malcolm suggested, and Rhoda was a little relieved when the 'young people', as she thought of them, carried their gins and tonics into the garden. She herself hurried to the kitchen to break the news to her sister.
'I knew you wouldn't mind my asking him to lunch,' she said. 'It looked such a large piece of veal, and we do want to encourage Deirdre's friends here, don't we. Of course he is a Frenchman and he does seem to be rather foreign, those yellow gloves, but he speaks English perfectly and seems very charming. Now, have we done enough vegetables, do you think?' she went on rather fussily. 'I'd better see about laying the table. He sat in the Dulkes' pew by mistake, but he moved up when they came in, so it was all right. He unhooked a kneeler for Mrs. Dulke -I don't suppose you'd find an Englishman doing that. It's still only twenty past twelve-what a good thing Father Tulliver didn't give us a proper sermon, just a little talk about the meaning of Pentecost.'
'What is the meaning?' asked Mabel, who had been sitting at the kitchen table, listening to the happy sound of the meat sizzling in the oven. 'I've often wondered.'
'Oh, it is Jewish or Greek in origin,' said Rhoda in a fl.u.s.tered tone, 'and Paraclete, that is Greek too. Come thou Holy Paraclete, you know the hymn. I think we'd better have the lace mats, don't you?'
'By all means.' Mabel was thinking that Rhoda, after her morning in church, seemed more of a Martha than she herself who had spent the morning quiedy in the kitchen. It was nice for Deirdre to have a friend to lunch, but she hoped her sister wouldn't make too much of it. Deirdre had been so moody and difficult lately, they would have to be very tactful.
The meal was highly successful and everyone liked Jean-Pierre, who put his questions about English suburban life so charmingly that n.o.body could possibly have taken offence. After they had finished eating Mabel and Rhoda went to wash up while the others took coffee into the garden. It was a hot afternoon and the Sunday quiet was broken only by the sound of a distant lawnmower.
'I must not keep you from your sleeping,' said Jean-Pierre politely. 'I suppose it will be outside in the summer?'
Malcolm leaned back in his deck-chair. 'It's only elderly and middle-aged people who sleep after lunch,' he explained. 'I usually go along to the club for a game of tennis.'
'Are you going today?' Deirdre asked, wondering how she was going to sustain a conversation if she were left alone with Jean-Pierre.
'Yes, I expect I'll go along about three o'clock. Perhaps you'd like to come?' He turned to Jean-Pierre.
'Alas, I am not the type for outdoor sport,' he said simply. 'And I have another engagement at three o'clock. There is a meeting in Bayswater, a message from the Other Side. I could perhaps take a bus from here?'
'Oh, yes, of course,' said Deirdre. 'I'll show you.'
'I must say good-bye to your mother and aunt, if I am not disturbing them?'
'I expect they're still in the kitchen was.h.i.+ng-up.'
'I see; the older female relatives work in the kitchen when there are no servants. The mother and the father's sister?'
'No, Aunt Rhoda is my mother's sister.'
'Ah, yes, I understand. Women more closely linked would work better together-they would not fight.'
After he had gone Deirdre settled down in the garden, waiting rather apprehensively for Tom and Catherine to arrive for tea. Mabel and Rhoda were still in the house, either resting in their rooms or getting out the best tea-set. Deirdre's offer of help had been refused and she felt rather sulky. She sat in a deck-chair with an anthropological book and a volume of poetry on her knee, but she opened neither. She lay with her eyes closed thinking about Tom, trying to remember his face. After a few minutes of concentrated meditation, she had recalled all his features separately but had failed to fuse them together so that the result was like a Pica.s.so head, the brilliant grey eyes and the sharp nose appearing in unexpected places. Then she began to have the feeling that somebody was watching her through the hedge which separated the garden from the Lovells' next door. She opened her eyes but was at first too dazzled by the sun to be able to see anything. At last she discerned what were undoubtedly two bright dark eyes peering intently through a small gap in the leaves. She realized that it was one of the Lovells' children, a little girl of about five. For a moment she returned the stare but was forced to turn away before its unwavering intensity. She picked up one of her books and opened it.
'What are you doing?' The words came in a hoa.r.s.e whisper.
'Nothing,' said Deirdre in a dignified tone.
'Why?'
Deirdre could think of no reasonable answer to this that a child of five might appreciate and began to wish that she felt more at ease with children. Wordsworth, she thought, remembering with distaste poems she had read at school, might have made something of this situation, but it was beyond her. She turned the pages of the anthropological book, a slender green volume, rather badly written and with too many footnotes. Not the most congenial kind of reading for a fine Sunday afternoon.
'You were asleepV The voice rose triumphantly now and ended in a gurgle of laughter. 'I saw you!'
'I wasn't asleep. I was thinking,'
'Why?9 This exchange could have gone on all afternoon if Rhoda had not at that moment come out into the garden carrying a wickerwork cakestand.
'I think we could have tea in the garden,' she said. 'I expect your friends would like it,'
'Yes, it would be pleasant. Shall we have it over the other side, under the apple tree?'
'Yes, I think that's the best place,'
Rhoda was glad that Deirdre had suggested it for she had secretly wanted to have tea on Mr. Lydgate's side of the garden which she felt to be more interesting than the Lovells'. Mr. and Mrs. Lovell, the children, Roy, Jenny and Peter, and s...o...b..ll, the old sealyham, were dull and familiar. Who knew what they might hear or see through the hedge on Mr. Lydgate's side?
Catherine, walking with Tom along the road from the bus stop, was delighted with the tranquil beauty of the Sunday afternoon scene, the tree-lined road, the neat colourful front gardens, some empty in the suns.h.i.+ne, others being vigorously tended by men in open-necked s.h.i.+rts or women in cotton dresses and sandals. Through it all came the pleasant sounds of children, dogs, birds, lawnmowers and hedge clippers.
'I suppose this is what you call suburbia,' said Tom. 'It seems rather pleasant.' He had lived in London himself and had occasionally visited his aunts in Kensington and Belgravia, but he was totally ignorant of that territory in which a vast number of people pa.s.s their lives.
'Oh, look!' Catherine cried out. 'This house is called Nirvana!'
'Hush, Catty, they might hear,' said Tom in a low voice. She was in what he thought of as one of her worst moods this afternoon, the kind that he found most difficult to cope with. The less encouragement he gave her, the more wild and frivolous would her fancies become. Now, to his horror, she began to sing, something about lotus flowers and finding Nirvana within his loving arms.
'As the river flows to the ocean, My soul, my soul shall flow to thine!'
she concluded in triumph, clinging on to him affectionately.
They walked in silence for a few seconds but then Catherine's attention was again caught by a row of houses whose gateposts were ornamented with stone lions. She stopped in front of them in delight and began to stroke their heads and bodies.
'Poor things,' she said, 'their noses and paws are all worn down, like soap lions might be after the first time of using. You know my favourite Shakespeare sonnet, don't you? Devouring timey blunt thou the lion's paws ... do you think he could have seen a worn stone lion and that gave him the idea? On the gate-post of some n.o.ble house, perhaps?'
'I really don't know,' said Tom impatiently. 'Do hurry up, we mustn't be too late.'
'Of course he didn't really mind about devouring time blunting the lion's paws,' she continued thoughtfully, 'or even about the long-lived phoenix burning in her blood. The point was that time mustn't touch his love's fair brow. Nor put no lines there with thine antique pen ... do you remember that?' She glanced up at him but he did not answer. 'You do seem to have a few little lines that I hadn't noticed before,' she said rather maliciously. 'But then so have I, oh, lots of them! They add character to a face, that's what I always say when I'm writing articles for the over-forties. If your face is smooth you can't really have experienced joy and sorrow and love....'
'I think this must be the house,' said Tom rather coldly. ' Oh, yes, I'm sure it is. How much nicer the houses are at this end of the road, larger and n.o.bler. Do you suppose the late Mr. Swan was a prosperous merchant, something in Mincing Lane, perhaps?'
'Look, there is Deirdre in the front garden,' said Tom quickly.
'And the s...o...b..ll tree you told me about,' said Catherine, hurrying forward to greet her. 'What a lovely tiling it is!'
'I hope you were able to get here without too much fuss,' said Deirdre. ' I always think it's rather a bore having to uproot oneself on a Sunday afternoon.'
'Oh, the bus ride was lovely and Tom was delighted to be dragged away from his thesis writing,' said Catherine gaily. 'He's been moaning about it all day.'
'Poor Tom,' said Deirdre softly.
'Men seem to have so little will-power and concentration at times,' Catherine went on, as they sat in the garden waiting for tea. 'Why is that?'
Deirdre had never given much thought to the problem and she felt that Catherine was being rather disloyal to talk about Tom in this way. She was as yet too young and inexperienced to be quite sure that one can love and criticize at the same time. 'It must be very difficult writing a thesis,' she ventured.
'Of course it is, but he chose to do it. He shouldered the burden of his own accord.'
'Perhaps he needs ...' Deirdre began.
'Somebody who really understands him?' Catherine laughed, flas.h.i.+ng a glance between the two of them.
'Yes, Deirdre, that's exactly what I do need,' said Tom, giving her a rather special look.
'Oh, here are my mother and my aunt,' said Deirdre, jumping up from her chair.
Two middle-aged ladies in neat summer dresses, coming through french windows on to a lawn and carrying trays of tea-things, is a most pleasing and comforting sight, Catherine thought, envying Deirdre who must see it so often.
Introductions were dealt with and they arranged themselves under the apple tree. Mabel began to pour out. The tea fell in a wide arc from the spout of the silver teapot. Rhoda looked on anxiously, for she considered herself to be a better pourer than her sister, but she managed to control her fears and turned to Catherine with a polite question.
*So you write? Stories, Deirdre told us.' Her tone was a little uncertain for she had never met a writer before. She had heard that either they hated you to mention their profession or were offended if you didn't and she could not decide which cla.s.s Catherine was likely to belong to.
'Yes, trite little stories for women, generally with happy endings,' said Catherine, adopting the rather derogatory tone behind which writers sometimes hide from the scorn and mockery of the world. 'I manage to earn my living that way.'
'I'm so glad you write happy endings,' said Mabel. 'After all, life isn't really so unpleasant as some writers make out, is it? she added hopefully.
'No, perhaps not. It's comic and sad and indefinite-dull, sometimes, but seldom really tragic or deliriously happy, except when one's very young.'