‘Possibly it was,’ he added a trifle stiffly. Then, ashamed of his feeling towards his imaginative cousin, he changed his manner quickly. He went up and stood behind him by the open window. ‘Tony, old boy, we’re together somehow in this thing,’ he began impulsively; ‘I’m sure of it.’ Then the words stuck. ‘If ever I want your help — —’
‘Rather, Tom,’ said the other with enthusiasm, yet puzzled, turning with an earnest expression in his frank blue eyes. In another moment, like two boys swearing eternal friendship, they would have shaken hands. Tom again felt the impulse to make the confidences that desire for sympathy prompted, and again realised that it was difficult, yet that he would accomplish it. Indeed, he was on the point of doing so, relieving his mind of the childhood story, the accumulated details of Wave and Whiff and Sound and Eyes, the singular Montreux meeting, the strange medley of joy and uneasiness as well, all in fact without reserve — when a voice from the lawn came floating into the room and broke the spell. It lifted him sharply to another plane. He felt glad suddenly that he had not spoken — afterwards, he felt very glad. It was not right in regard to her, he realised.
‘You’re never ready, you boys,’ their hostess was saying, ‘and Miss Monnigan declares that men always wait to be fetched. The lunch-baskets are all in, and the motor’s waiting.’
‘We didn’t want to be in the way,’ cried Tony gaily, ever ready with an answer first. ‘We’re both so big and clumsy. But we’ll make the fire in the woods and do the work that requires mere strength without skill all right.’ He leaped out of the window to join them, while Tom went by the door to fetch his cap and overcoat. Turning an instant he saw the three figures on the lawn standing in the sunlight, Madame Jaretzka with a loose, rough motor-coat over her white dress, a rose at her throat and the long blue veil he loved wound round her hair and face. He saw her eyes look up at Tony and heard her chiding him. ‘You’ve been talking mischief in there together,’ she was saying laughingly, giving him a searching glance in play, though the tone had meaning in it. ‘We were talking of you,’ swore Tony, ‘and you,’ he added, turning by way of polite after-thought to the girl. And one of his big hands he laid for a moment upon Madame Jaretzka’s arm.
Tom turned sharply and hurried on into the hall. The first thought in his mind was how tender and gentle Madame Jaretzka looked standing in the sunshine, her eyes turned up at Tony. His second thought was vaguer: he felt glad that Tony admired and liked her so. The third was vaguer still: Tony didn’t really care for the girl a bit and was only amusing himself with her, but Madame Jaretzka would protect her and see that no harm came of it. She could protect the whole world. That was her genius.
In a moment these three thoughts flashed through him, but while the last two vanished as quickly as they came, the first lingered like sunlight in him. It remained and grew and filled his heart, and all that day it kept close by him — her love, her comfort, her mothering compassion.
And Tom felt glad for some reason that his confidences to Tony after all had been interrupted and prevented. They remained thus interrupted and prevented until the end, even when the ‘other’ came upon the scene, and above all while that ‘other’ stayed. It all seemed curiously inevitable.
CHAPTER XII.
The last few weeks of September they were much alone together, for Mrs. Haughstone had gone back to her husband’s tiny house at Kew, Molly to the Dresden school, and Tony somewhere into space — northern Russia, he said, to watch the birds beginning to leave.
Meanwhile, with deepening of friendship, and experiences whose ordinariness was raised into significance because this woman shared them with him, Tom saw the summer fade in England and usher in the longer evenings. Light and heat waned from the sighing year; winds, charged with the memory of roses, took the paling skies; the swallows whispered together of the southern tour. New stars swam into their autumnal places, and the Milky Way came majestically to its own. He watched the curve of it on moonless nights, pouring its grand river across the heavens. And in the heart of its soft brilliance he saw Cygnus, cruciform and shining, immersed in the white foam of the arching wave.
He noticed these things now, as once long ago in early boyhood, because a time of separation was at hand. His yearning now was akin to his yearning then — it left a chasm in his soul that beauty alone could help to fill. At fifteen he was thirty-five, as now at thirty-five he was fifteen again.
Lettice was not, indeed, at a Finishing School across the Channel, but she was shortly going to Warsaw to spend October with her husband, and in November she was to sail for Egypt from Trieste. Tom was to follow in December, so a separation of three months was close at hand. ‘But a necessary separation,’ she said one evening as they motored home beneath the stars, ‘is always bearable and strengthening; we shall both be occupied with things that must — I mean, things we ought to do. It’s the needless separations that are hard to bear.’ He replied that it would be wonderful meeting again and pretending they were strangers. He tried to share her mood, her point of view with honesty. ‘Yes,’ she answered, ‘only that wouldn’t be quite true, because you and I can never be separated — really. The curve of the earth may hide us from each other’s sight like that,’ — and she pointed to the sinking moon— ‘but we feel the pull just the same.’
They leaned back among the cushions, sharing the mysterious beauty of the night-sky in their hearts. They lowered their voices as though the hush upon the world demanded it. The little things they said seemed suddenly to possess a significance they could not account for quite and yet admitted.
He told her that the Milky Way was at its best these coming months, and that Cygnus would be always visible on clear nights. ‘We’ll look at that and remember,’ he said half playfully. ‘The astronomers say the Milky Way is the very ground-plan of the Universe. So we all come out of it. And you’re Cygnus.’ She called him sentimental, and he admitted that perhaps he was. ‘I don’t like this separation,’ he said bluntly. In his mind he was thinking that the Milky Way had his wave in it, and that its wondrous arch, like his life and hers, rose out of the ‘sea’ below the world. In that sea no separation was possible.
‘But it’s not that that makes you suddenly poetic, Tom. It’s something else.’
‘Is it?’ he answered. A whisper of pain went past him across the night. He felt something coming; he was convinced she felt it too. But he could not name it.
‘The Milky Way is a stream as well as a wave. You say it rises in the autumn —— ?’ She leaned nearer to him a little.
‘But it’s seen at its best a little later — in the winter, I believe.’
‘We shall be in Egypt then,’ she mentioned. He could have sworn she would say those very words.
‘Egypt,’ he repeated slowly. ‘Yes — in Egypt.’
And a little shiver came over him, so slight, so quickly gone again, that he hoped it was imperceptible. Yet she had noticed it.
‘Why, Tom, don’t you like the idea?’
‘I wonder—’ he began, then changed the sentence— ‘I wonder what it will be like. I have a curious desire to see it — I know that.’
He heard her laugh under her breath a little. What came over them both in that moment he couldn’t say. There was a sense of tumult in him somewhere, a hint of pain, of menace too. Her laughter, slight as it was, jarred upon him. She was not feeling quite what he felt — this flashed, then vanished.
‘You don’t sound enthusiastic,’ she said calmly.
‘I am, though. Only — I had a feeling — —’ He broke off. The truth was he couldn’t describe that feeling even to himself.
‘Tom, dear, my dear one—’ she began, then stopped. She also stopped an impulsive movement towards him. She drew back her sentence and her arms. And Tom, aware of a rising passion in him he might be unable to control, turned his face away a moment. Something clutched at his heart as with cruel pincers. A chill followed close upon the shiver. He felt a moment of keen shame, yet knew not ex
actly why he felt it.
‘I am a sentimental ass!’ he exclaimed abruptly with a natural laugh. His voice was tender. He turned again to her. ‘I believe I’ve never properly grown up.’ And before he could restrain himself he drew her towards him, seized her hand and kissed it like a boy. It was that kiss, combined with her blocked sentence and uncompleted gesture, rather than any more passionate expression of their love for one another, that he remembered throughout the empty months to follow.
But there was another reason, too, why he remembered it. For she wore a silk dress, and the arm against his ear produced a momentary rustling that brought back the noise in the Zakopané bedroom when the frozen branch had scraped the outside wall. And with the Sound, absent now so long, the old strange uneasiness revived acutely. For that caressing gesture, that kiss, that phrase of love that blocked its own final utterance brought back the strange rich pain.
In the act of giving them, even while he felt her touch and held her within his arms — she evaded him and went far away into another place where he could not follow her. And he knew for the first time a singular emotion that seemed like a faint, distant jealousy that stirred in him, yet a spiritual jealousy… as of some one he had never even seen.
They lingered a moment in the garden to enjoy the quiet stars and see the moon go down below the pine-wood. The tense mood of half an hour ago in the motor-car had evaporated of its own accord apparently.
A conversation that followed emphasised this elusive emotion in him, because it somehow increased the remoteness of the part of her he could not claim. She mentioned that she was taking Mrs. Haughstone with her to Egypt in November; it again exasperated him; such unselfishness he could not understand. The invitation came, moreover, upon what Tom felt was a climax of shameless behaviour. For Madame Jaretzka had helped the family with money that, to save their pride, was to be considered lent. The husband had written gushing letters of thanks and promises that — Tom had seen these letters — could hardly have deceived a schoolgirl. Yet a recent legacy, which rendered a part repayment possible, had been purposely concealed, with the result that yet more money had been ‘lent’ to tide them over non-existent or invented difficulties.
And now, on the top of this, Madame Jaretzka not only refused to divulge that the legacy was known to her, but even proposed an expensive two months’ holiday to the woman who was tricking her.
Tom objected strongly for two reasons; he thought it foolish kindness, and he did not want her.
‘You’re too good to the woman, far too good,’ he said. But his annoyance was only increased by the firmness of the attitude that met him. ‘No, Tom; you’re wrong. They’ll find out in time that I know, and see themselves as they are.’
‘You forgive everything to everybody,’ he observed critically. ‘It’s too much.’
She turned round upon him. Her attitude was a rebuke, and feeling rebuked he did not like it. For though she did not quote ‘until seventy times seven,’ she lived it.
‘When she sees herself sly and treacherous like that, she’ll understand,’ came the answer, ‘she’ll get her own forgiveness.’
‘Her own forgiveness!’
‘The only real kind. If I forgive, it doesn’t alter her. But if she understands and feels shame and makes up her mind not to repeat — that’s forgiving herself. She really changes then.’
Tom gasped inwardly. This was a level of behaviour where he found the air somewhat rarified. He saw the truth of it, but had no answer ready.
‘Remorse and regret,’ she went on, ‘only make one ineffective in the present. It’s looking backwards, instead of looking forwards.’
He felt something very big in her as she said it, holding his eyes firmly with her own. To have the love of such a woman was, indeed, a joy and wonder. It was a keen happiness to feel that he, Tom Kelverdon, had obtained it. His admiration for himself, and his deep, admiring love for her rose side by side. He did not recognise the flattery of self in this attitude. The simplicity in her baffled him.
‘I could forgive you anything, Lettice!’ he cried.
‘Could you?’ she said gently. ‘If so, you really love me.’
It was not the doubt in her voice that overwhelmed him then; she never indulged in hints. It was a doubt in himself, not that he loved her, but that his love was not yet big enough, unselfish enough, sufficiently large and deep to be worthy of this exquisite soul beside him. Perhaps it was realising he could not yet possess her spirit that made him seize the precious little body that contained it. Nothing could stop him. He took her in his arms and held her till she became breathless. The passionate moment expressed real spiritual yearning. And she knew it. She did not struggle, yet neither did she respond. They stood upon different levels somehow.
‘There’ll be nothing left to love,’ she gasped, ‘if you do that often!’ She released herself quietly, tidying her hair and putting her hat straight while she smiled at him. Her dark veil had caught in his tie-pin. She disentangled it, her hands touching his mouth as she did so. He kissed them gently, bending his head down with an air of repentance.
‘My God, Lettice — you’re precious to me!’ he stammered.
But even as he said it, even while he still felt her soft cheeks against his lips, her frail unresisting figure within his arms, there came this pang of sudden pain that was so acute it frightened him. There was something impersonal in her attitude that alarmed him. What was it? He was helpless to understand it. The excitement in his blood obscured inner perception.… Such tempestuous moments were rare enough between them, and when they came he felt that she endured them rather than responded. He was aware of a touch of shame in himself. But this pain —— ? Even while he held her it seemed again that she escaped him because of the heights she lived on, yet partly, too, because of the innocence which had not yet eaten of the tree of knowledge.… Was that, then, the lack in her? Had she yet to learn that the spiritual dare not be divorced wholly from the physical and that the divine blending of the two in purity of heart alone brings safety?
She slipped from his encircling arms and — rose. He struggled after her. But that air he could not breathe. She was too far above him. She had to stoop to meet the passionate man in him that sought to seize and hold her. She had — the earlier phrase returned — come back to fetch him. He did not really love yet as he ought to love. He loved himself — in her; selfishly somehow, somewhere. But this thought he did not capture wholly. It cast a shadow merely and was gone.
Somewhere, too, there was jealous resentment in him. He could not feel himself indispensable to a woman who occupied a pinnacle.
His cocksureness wavered a little before the sharp attack. Pang after pang stung him shrewdly, stung his pride, his confidence, his vanity, shaking the platform on which he stood till each separate plank trembled and the sense of security grew less.
But the confusion in his heart and mind bewildered him. It was all so strange and incomprehensible; he could not understand it. He knew she was true and loyal, her purity beyond reproach, her elusiveness not calculated or intended, yet that somewhere, somehow she could do without him, and that if he left her she — almost — would have neither remorse nor regret. She would just accept it and — forgive.…
And he thought suddenly with an intense bitterness that amazed him — of the husband. The thought of that ‘other’ who had yet to come afflicted him desperately. When he met those light-blue eyes of the Wave he would surely know them…! He felt again the desire to seek counsel and advice from another, some one of his own sex, a sympathetic and understanding soul like Tony.
The turmoil in him was beyond elucidation: thoughts and emotions of nameless kind combined to produce a fluid state of insecurity he could not explain. As usual, however, there emerged finally the solid fact which seemed now the keynote of his character; at least, he invariably fell back upon it for support against these occasional storms: ‘She has singled me out; she can’t really do without me; we’re necessary to each othe
r; I’m safe.’ The rest he dismissed as half realised only and therefore not quite real. His position with her was unique, of course, something the world could not possibly understand, and, while resenting what he called the ‘impersonal’ attitude in her, he yet knew that it was precisely this impersonal attitude that justified their love. Their love, in fine, was proved spiritual thereby. They were in the ‘sea’ together. Invariably in the end he blamed himself.
The rising Wave, it seemed, was bringing up from day to day new, unexpected qualities from the depths within him, just as it brings up mud and gravel from the ground-bed of the shore. He felt it driving him forward with increasing speed and power. With an irresistible momentum that left him helpless, it was hurrying him along towards the moment when it would lower its crest again towards the earth — and break.
He knew now where the smothering crash would come, where he would finally meet the singular details of his boyhood’s premonition face to face, — the Sound, the Whiff, the other pair of Eyes. They awaited him — in Egypt. In Egypt, at last, he would find the entire series, recognise each item. He would also discover the nature of the wave that was neither of water nor of snow.…
Yet, strange to say, when he actually met the pair of light-blue eyes, he did not recognise them. He encountered the face to which they belonged, but was not warned. While fulfilling its prophecy, the premonition failed, of course, to operate.
For premonitions are a delicate matter, losing their power in the act of justifying themselves. To prevent their fulfilment were to stultify their existence. Between a spiritual warning and its material consummation there is but a friable and gossamer alliance. Had he recognised, he might possibly have prevented; whereas the deeper part of him unconsciously invited and said, Come.
And so, not recognising the arrival of the other pair of eyes, Tom, when he met them, knew himself attracted instead of repelled. Far from being warned, he knew himself drawn towards their owner by natural sympathy, as towards some one whose deep intrusion into his inner life was necessary to its fuller realisation — the tumultuous breaking of the rapidly accumulating Wave.
Collected Works of Algernon Blackwood Page 173