Time of Hope

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by C. P. Snow


  ‘I’m about as good as she is,’ she said. ‘I’m no good at tennis. But I can run quite fast.’

  She spoke with a secret pleasure, far away, as though she were gazing at herself in a mirror, as though she were admiring her reflection in a pool. I looked at her – and, in the crowded park, for me we were alone, under the milk-blue sky.

  Then I told her that I was leaving the office. She smiled at me, a friendly, sarcastic smile.

  ‘Gentleman of leisure, are you?’ she said.

  ‘Not quite,’ I said.

  ‘What in the world will you do with yourself? Even you can’t work all day.’

  I could not leave it, I could not bear that she was not impressed. I told her, I exaggerated, the difference it ought to make to my chances.

  ‘You’ll do well anyway,’ she said lightly.

  ‘It’s not quite as easy as all that.’

  ‘It is for you.’ She smiled again. ‘But I still don’t see what you’re going to do with yourself all day. I’m sure you’re not good at doing nothing. I’m much better at that than you are. I’m quite good at sitting in the sun.’

  She shut her eyes. She looked so beautiful that my heart turned over.

  Still I could not leave it. My tongue ran away, and I said that it was a transformation, it was a new beginning. She looked at me; her smile was still friendly, sarcastic, and cool.

  ‘You’re very excited about it, aren’t you?’

  ‘Yes, I am.’

  ‘Then so am I,’ she said.

  But she responded in a different tone to another story that I told her, as we sat there in the sun. It concerned a piece of trouble of Jack’s, which had sprung up almost overnight. It arose because Jack, not for the first time, had evoked an infatuation; but this time he was guiltless, and ironically this was the only time that might do him an injury. For the one who loved him was not a young woman, but a boy of fifteen. The boy’s passion had sprung up that summer, it was glowing and innocent, but the more extravagant because it was so innocent. He had just given Jack an expensive present, a silver cigarette case; and by accident his family had intercepted a letter of devotion that was coming with it. There were all kinds of practical repercussions, which worried us and against which we were trying to act: Jack’s future in his firm was threatened; there were other consequences for him, and, in the long run, most of all for George, who had thrown himself, with the whole strength of a man, into Jack’s support.

  Sheila listened with her eyes alight. She was not interested in the consequences, she brushed them impatiently aside. To her the core of the story, its entire significance, lay in the emotion of the boy himself.

  ‘It must be wonderful to be swept away. He must have felt that he had no control over himself at all. I wonder what it was like,’ she said. She was deeply moved, and our eyes met.

  ‘He won’t regret it.’ She added, gently, ‘I wish it had happened to me at his age.’

  We fell into silence: a silence so charged that I could hear my heart beating. Between her fingers a cigarette was smouldering blue into the still air.

  ‘Who is he, Lewis?’ she said.

  I hesitated for a fraction of a second. She was very quick. ‘Tell me. If I know him, I might help. I shall go and say that I envy him.’

  ‘He’s a boy called Roy Calvert,’ I said.

  I had only met him for a few minutes in the middle of this crisis. What struck me most was that he seemed quite unembarrassed and direct. He was more natural and at ease than the rest of us, five years older and more, who questioned him.

  Sheila shook her head, as though she were disappointed.

  ‘He must be a cousin of your friend Olive, mustn’t he?’ (Olive was a member of the group.)

  I told her yes, and that Olive was involved in the trouble.

  ‘I can’t get on with her,’ said Sheila. ‘She pretends not to think much of herself. It isn’t true.’

  Suddenly Sheila’s mood had changed. Talking of Roy, she had been gentle, delicate, self-forgetful. Now, at the mention of Olive, whom she scarcely knew, but who mixed gaily and could forget herself in any company, Sheila turned angry and constrained.

  ‘I once went to a dance at Olive’s,’ she said. ‘We didn’t stay long. We went by ourselves to the palais. That was a lot better.’

  For the first time, I was learning the language of a beloved. I was learning the tension, the hyperaesthesia, with which one listens to the tone of every word, And I was learning too, in the calm of that September afternoon, the first stab of jealousy. That ‘we’, said so clearly, that reiterated ‘we’: was it deliberate, was her companion a casual acquaintance, was she threatening me with someone for whom she cared?

  She looked at me. At the sight of my face, her tone changed again.

  ‘I’m glad you told me about Roy,’ she said.

  ‘Why are you glad?’

  ‘I don’t know.’

  ‘Sheila, why are you glad?’

  ‘If I knew, I shouldn’t tell you.’ Her voice was high. Then she smiled, and said with all simplicity and purity: ‘No, I should tell you. I should want to. It would mean I had found something important, wouldn’t it?’

  20: In the Rain

  When she was not there, I was happy in my thoughts. They were pierced, it is true, by the first thrusts of jealousy, the sound of that clear ‘we’ in the calm air, not so much a memory but as though the sound stayed in my ears. They were troubled by the diffidence of my love, so that I could not always think of her alone in her room, without needing some sign of love to calm me. But the rapture was so strong, it swept back after those intrusions; she existed, she walked the same earth, and I should see her in three days’ time.

  Once, meeting her after a week’s absence, I felt incredulous, all the excitement deflated, all the enchantment dead. Her face seemed, at the first glance, not different in kind from other faces – pale, frigid, beaky, ill-tempered. Her voice was brittle, and grated on my nerves. Everything she thought was staccato. There was no flow or warmth about her, or about anything she said or did. I was, for a few minutes, nothing but bored. Nothing deeper than that, just bored. Then she gazed at me – not with a smile, but with her eyes steady and her face quite still; on the instant, the dead minutes were annihilated and I was once more possessed.

  Later that day, I happened to tell her that the group were spending the following weekend out at the farm. She always took a curious, half-envious, half-mocking interest in the group’s affairs. That afternoon she was speculating, like one left outside a party, about how we should pass the weekend. I knew her house was only two or three miles from the farm, and I begged her to drop in.

  ‘I can’t stand crowds,’ she said. Then, as though covering herself, she retorted: ‘Why shouldn’t you come and see me? It’s no further one way than the other.’

  I was overjoyed.

  She added: ‘You’ll have to meet my parents. You can study them, if you like.’

  We arranged that I should walk over for tea on the Saturday afternoon. That Saturday, in the middle of October, was my last day in the office; and I was thinking of the afternoon as I said all my goodbyes. Mr Vesey reminded me that I was under his control until one o’clock; he told me three times not to be careless about leaving my papers in order, then he shook my hand, and said that he had not yet been provided with my successor, and that some people had never realized his difficulties. How could he be expected to run his section well if his one good clerk went and left him? Why did he never get a chance himself? ‘Never mind, Eliot,’ he said bravely, shaking my hand again. ‘I don’t expect to be in the limelight. I just carry on.’

  I was thinking of the afternoon; but, stepping out of the office on to the wet pavement, leaving for the last time a place which for years had been a prison, I felt an ache of nostalgia, of loss, and of regret.

  George and I went out by bus, through a steady drizzle, At half past three, when I started out from the farm, the rain was heavier; I was getting
wet as I cut across the fields, down the country lanes, to Sheila’s house. I was happy and apprehensive, happy because she had asked me, apprehensive because I was sensible enough to know that I could not possibly be welcome. She had asked me in innocence: that I took for granted. She would not care what her parents thought, if she wanted to see me. Through her actions there shone so often a wild and wilful innocence. And I, far more realistic than she in all other ways, had for her and with her the innocence of romantic love. So that, tramping through the mud that afternoon, I was happy whatever awaited me. I wanted nothing but the sight of her; I knew it, she knew it, and in that state of love there were no others.

  But I assumed that her parents would see it differently. I might not have given a conscious thought to marrying her – and that, strange as it later seemed, was true, Her parents would never believe it. To them, I must appear as a suitor – possibly a suitor with an extremely dim outside chance, but nevertheless a suitor, and a most undesirable one. For they were rich, Sheila had both looks and brains; they were bound to expect her to make a brilliant marriage. They were not likely to encourage me. I had nothing whatever with which to mollify them. Some parents might have endured me because I was not a fool, but I guessed that even my wits were suspect. Sheila was capable of recounting my opinions, and then saying that she shared them. I did not know how I was going to carry it off. Yet I was joyful, walking those two miles through the rain.

  The vicarage was a handsome Georgian house, lying back behind the trees at the end of the village. I was not far wrong about my welcome. But before Mrs Knight could start expressing herself there was a faintly farcical delay. For I arrived wet through. The maid who let me in did not know how to proceed; Sheila and her mother came out into the hall. Mrs Knight at once took charge. She was prepared to greet me coldly, but she became solicitous about my health. She was a heavily built woman, bigger than Sheila, but much more busy and fussy. She took me into the bathroom, sent the maid for some of the vicar’s clothes, arranged to have mine dried. At last I entered the drawing-room dressed in a cricket shirt, grey flannels, pullover, dressing gown, and slippers, all belonging to Sheila’s father, all the clothes much too wide for me and the slippers two sizes too big.

  ‘I hope you won’t take cold,’ Mrs Knight rattled on busily. ‘You ought to have had a good hot bath. I think you ought to have a nice stiff whisky. Yes, that ought to keep off the cold.’

  She had none of her daughter’s fine, chiselled features. She was broad-faced, pug-nosed, with a loud quacking voice; she was coarse-grained and greatly given to moral indignation; yet her eyes were wide open and childlike, and one felt, as with other coarse-grained women, that often she was lost and did not know her way about the world.

  However, she was very far from lost when it came to details of practical administration. I was made to put down a couple of fingers of neat whisky. She decided that I was not wearing enough clothes, and Sheila was sent for one of the vicar’s sports coats.

  ‘He’s upstairs in his study,’ said Mrs Knight, talking of her husband with a rapt, childlike devotion, accentuating the ‘he’ in her worship. ‘He’s just polishing a sermon for tomorrow. He always likes to have them polished. He’ll join us later for his tea, if he finishes in time. I should never think of disturbing him, of course.’

  We sat down by the fire and began our tea, a very good one, for Mrs Knight liked her food. She expected everyone round her to eat as heartily as she did, and scolded Sheila for not getting on with the toast and honey. I watched Sheila, as her mother jockeyed her into eating. It was strangely comfortable to see her so, by the fireside. But she was silent in her mother’s presence – as indeed it was hard not to be, since Mrs Knight talked without interruption and loud enough to fill any room. Yet Sheila’s silence meant more than that; it was not the humorous silence of a looker-on.

  The more I could keep Mrs Knight on the theme of physical comfort, the better, I thought to myself; and so I praised the house, the sight of it from the village, the drawing-room in which we sat. Mrs Knight forcefully agreed.

  ‘It’s perfect for our small family,’ she said. ‘As I was obliged to explain to my neighbour, Mrs Lacy, only yesterday. Do you know what she had been saying, Sheila? I shouldn’t have believed my ears, if I hadn’t heard Doris Lacy talk and talk and talk for the last twenty years. Of course, she’s a great friend of mine and I’m devoted to her and I know she’d say the same of me’ – Mrs Knight put in this explanation for my benefit – ‘but the trouble is that she will talk without thinking. And she can’t have been thinking at all – even she couldn’t have said it if she’d thought for a single moment – she can’t have been thinking at all when she talked about this house. She actually said’ – Mrs Knight’s voice was mounting louder as her indignation grew – ‘that this house wa dark. She said that this house was dark. She who doesn’t get a ray of sun till half past three!’

  She got fairly started on the misdeeds, the preposterous errors of judgement, the dubious gentility and mercenary marriage, of Mrs Lacy. She kept asking Sheila for her support and then rushing off into another burst of indignation. It was some time before she turned on me. She collected herself, regarded me with open eyes, said how gallant it was for me to visit them on such an afternoon. Then, with elaborate diplomacy, she said ‘Of course, it doesn’t feel like living in the country, now Sheila is growing up. She brings people to see us who are doing all kinds of interesting things. Why, it was only the other day we saw one of her friends who they say has a great future in his firm–’

  The knife of jealousy twisted. Then I felt a flood of absolute relief, for Sheila said clearly: ‘He’s dense.’

  ‘I don’t think you can say that, Sheila.’

  ‘I can.’

  ‘You mustn’t be too hard on your friends,’ said Mrs Knight busily. ‘You’ll be telling me next that Tom Devitt isn’t interesting. He’s a specialist at the infirmary,’ said Mrs Knight to me, and continued with enthusiasm, ‘and they say he’s the coming man. Sheila will be telling us that he’s dense too. Or–’

  The involuntary smile had come to Sheila’s mouth, and on her forehead I could see the lines. The jealous spasm had returned, with Tom Devitt’s name, with the others’ (for Mrs Knight had by no means finished), but it merged, as I watched Sheila, into a storm of something that had no place in romantic love, something so unfamiliar in my feeling for her that I did not recognize it then. It only lasted for a moment, but it left me off my balance for Mrs Knight’s next charge.

  ‘I think I remember Sheila saying that you were kept very busy,’ she remarked. ‘Of course, I know we can’t all choose exactly what we want, can we? Some of us have got to be content–’

  ‘I’ve chosen what I want, Mrs Knight,’ I said, a little too firmly.

  ‘Have you?’ She seemed puzzled.

  ‘I’m a law student. That’s what I’ve chosen to do.’

  ‘In your spare time, I suppose?’

  ‘No,’ I said. ‘I’m reading for the Bar. Full-time. I shan’t do anything else until I’m called.’ It was technically true. It had been true since one o’clock that day. ‘I shan’t earn a penny till I’m called.’

  Mrs Knight was not specially quick in the uptake. She had to pause, so as to readjust her ideas.

  ‘I do my reading in the town,’ I said. ‘Then I go up to my Inn once a term, and get through my dinners in a row. It saves money – and I shall need it until I get a practice going, you know.’

  It was the kind of career talk she was used to hearing; but she was baffled at hearing it from me.

  ‘All the barristers I’ve known’, she said, ‘have eaten their dinners while they were at college. I remember my cousin used to go up when he was at Trinity–’

  ‘Did he ever get through an examination?’ asked Sheila.

  ‘Perhaps he wasn’t clever at his books,’ said Mrs Knight, becoming more cross, ‘but he was a good man, and everyone respected him in the county.’

 
‘My friends at the Inn’, I put in, ‘nearly all come from Cambridge.’ Here I was stretching the truth. I had made one or two friendly acquaintances there, such as Charles March, who were undergraduates, but I often dined with excessively argumentative Indians.

  Mrs Knight was very cross. She did not like being baffled and confused – yet somehow I had automatically to be promoted a step. She had to say, as though Sheila had met me at the house of one of their friends ‘I’ve always heard that a barrister has to wait years for his briefs. Of course, I suppose you don’t mind waiting–’

  I admitted that it would take time. Mrs Knight gave an appeased and comforted sigh, happy to be back on firm ground.

  Soon after, there was a footfall outside the room, a slow footfall. Mrs Knight’s eyes widened. ‘He’s coming!’ she said. ‘He must have finished!’

  Mr Knight entered with an exaggeratedly drooping, an exaggeratedly languid step. He was tall, massive, with a bay window of a stomach that began as far up as his lower chest. He was wearing a lounge suit without a dog collar, and he carried a sheaf of manuscript in his hand. His voice was exaggeratedly faint. He was, at first glance, a good deal of an actor, and he was indicating that the virtue had gone out of him.

  He said faintly to his wife: ‘I’m sorry I had to be late, darling,’ sat in the armchair which had been preserved for him, and half closed his eyes.

  Mrs Knight asked with quacking concern whether he would like a cup of tea. It was plain that she adored him.

  ‘Perhaps a cup,’ he whispered. ‘Perhaps just a cup.’

  The toast had been kept warm on the hotplate, she said anxiously. Or she could have some fresh made in three minutes.

  ‘Ican’t eat it, darling,’ he said. ‘I can’ eat it, I can’t eat anything.’

  The faintness with which he spoke was bogus, Actually his voice was rich, and very flexible in its range of tone. He had a curious trick of repeating a phrase, and at the second turn completely altering the stress. Throughout his entry, which he enjoyed to the full, he had paid no attention to me, had not thrown me an open glance, but as he lay back with heavy lids drawn down he was observing me from the corner of an eye that was disturbingly sly and shrewd.

 

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