or eight months was
inexplicable unless on the
assumption that he
was in love with me, - and yet in everything there was an
implication that he couldn't
forgive me my very
existence. I did
ask him whether he didn't think that it was
absurd on his part . .
. "
"Didn't you say that it was
exquisitelyabsurd?" I asked.
"Exquisitely! . . . " Dona Rita was surprised at my question. "No.
Why should I say that?"
"It would have reconciled him to your abruptness. It's their
family expression. It would have come with a familiar sound and
would have been less offensive."
"Offensive," Dona Rita
repeatedearnestly. "I don't think he was
offended; he suffered in another way, but I didn't care for that.
It was I that had become offended in the end, without spite, you
understand, but past
bearing. I didn't spare him. I told him
plainly that to want a woman formed in mind and body,
mistress of
herself, free in her choice, independent in her thoughts; to love
her
apparently for what she is and at the same time to demand from
her the
candour and the
innocence that could be only a shocking
pretence; to know her such as life had made her and at the same
time to
despise her
secretly for every touch with which her life
had fashioned her - that was neither
generous nor high
minded; it
was
positivelyfrantic. He got up and went away to lean against
the mantelpiece, there, on his elbow and with his head in his hand.
You have no idea of the charm and the
distinction of his pose. I
couldn't help admiring him: the expression, the grace, the fatal
suggestion of his immobility. Oh, yes, I am
sensible to aesthetic
impressions, I have been educated to believe that there is a soul
in them."
With that enigmatic, under the eyebrows glance fixed on me she
laughed her deep contralto laugh without mirth but also without
irony, and
profoundly moving by the mere
purity of the sound.
"I
suspect he was never so disgusted and appalled in his life. His
self-command is the most
admirableworldly thing I have ever seen.
What made it beautiful was that one could feel in it a
tragicsuggestion as in a great work of art."
She paused with an inscrutable smile that a great
painter might
have put on the face of some symbolic figure for the speculation
and wonder of many generations. I said:
"I always thought that love for you could work great wonders. And
now I am certain."
"Are you
trying to be ironic?" she said sadly and very much as a
child might have spoken.
"I don't know," I answered in a tone of the same
simplicity. "I
find it very difficult to be
generous."
"I, too," she said with a sort of funny
eagerness. "I didn't treat
him very
generously. Only I didn't say much more. I found I
didn't care what I said - and it would have been like throwing
insults at a beautiful
composition. He was well inspired not to
move. It has spared him some
disagreeable truths and perhaps I
would even have said more than the truth. I am not fair. I am no
more fair than other people. I would have been harsh. My very
admiration was making me more angry. It's
ridiculous to say of a
man got up in correct
tailor clothes, but there was a funereal
grace in his attitude so that he might have been reproduced in
marble on a
monument to some woman in one of those atrocious Campo
Santos: the bourgeois
conception of an
aristocratic mourning
lover. When I came to that
conclusion I became glad that I was
angry or else I would have laughed right out before him."
"I have heard a woman say once, a woman of the people - do you hear
me, Dona Rita? -
therefore deserving your attention, that one
should never laugh at love."
"My dear," she said
gently, "I have been taught to laugh at most
things by a man who never laughed himself; but it's true that he
never spoke of love to me, love as a subject that is. So perhaps .
. . But why?"
"Because (but maybe that old woman was crazy), because, she said,
there was death in the
mockery of love."
Dona Rita moved
slightly her beautiful shoulders and went on:
"I am glad, then, I didn't laugh. And I am also glad I said
nothing more. I was feeling so little
generous that if I had known
something then of his mother's
allusion to 'white geese' I would
have advised him to get one of them and lead it away on a beautiful
blue
ribbon. Mrs. Blunt was wrong, you know, to be so
scornful. A
white goose is exactly what her son wants. But look how badly the
world is arranged. Such white birds cannot be got for nothing and
he has not enough money even to buy a
ribbon. Who knows! Maybe it
was this which gave that
tragic quality to his pose by the
mantelpiece over there. Yes, that was it. Though no doubt I
didn't see it then. As he didn't offer to move after I had done
speaking I became quite unaffectedly sorry and advised him very
gently to
dismiss me from his mind
definitely. He moved forward
then and said to me in his usual voice and with his usual smile
that it would have been excellent advice but
unfortunately I was
one of those women who can't be
dismissed at will. And as I shook
my head he insisted rather
darkly: 'Oh, yes, Dona Rita, it is so.
Cherish no illusions about that fact.' It sounded so threatening
that in my surprise I didn't even
acknowledge his
parting bow. He
went out of that false situation like a wounded man retreating
after a fight. No, I have nothing to
reproach myself with. I did
nothing. I led him into nothing. Whatever illusions have passed
through my head I kept my distance, and he was so loyal to what he
seemed to think the redeeming proprieties of the situation that he
has gone from me for good without so much as kissing the tips of my
fingers. He must have felt like a man who had betrayed himself for
nothing. It's
horrible. It's the fault of that
enormous fortune
of mine, and I wish with all my heart that I could give it to him;
for he couldn't help his
hatred of the thing that is: and as to
his love, which is just as real, well - could I have rushed away
from him to shut myself up in a
convent? Could I? After all I
have a right to my share of daylight."
CHAPTER V
I took my eyes from her face and became aware that dusk was
beginning to steal into the room. How strange it seemed. Except
for the glazed rotunda part its long walls, divided into narrow
panels separated by an order of flat pilasters, presented, depicted
on a black
background and in vivid colours,
slender women with
butterfly wings and lean youths with narrow birds' wings. The
effect was
supposed to be Pompeiian and Rita and I had often
laughed at the delirious fancy of some enriched
shopkeeper. But
still it was a display of fancy, a sign of grace; but at that
moment these figures appeared to me weird and intrusive and
strangely alive in their attenuated grace of unearthly beings
concealing a power to see and hear.
Without words, without gestures, Dona Rita was heard again. "It
may have been as near coming to pass as this." She showed me the
breadth of her little finger nail. "Yes, as near as that. Why?
How? Just like that, for nothing. Because it had come up.
Because a wild notion had entered a practical old woman's head.
Yes. And the best of it is that I have nothing to
complain of.
Had I surrendered I would have been
perfectly safe with these two.
It is they or rather he who couldn't trust me, or rather that
something which I express, which I stand for. Mills would never
tell me what it was. Perhaps he didn't know exactly himself. He
said it was something like
genius. My
genius! Oh, I am not
conscious of it, believe me, I am not
conscious of it. But if I
were I wouldn't pluck it out and cast it away. I am
ashamed of
nothing, of nothing! Don't be
stupid enough to think that I have
the slightest regret. There is no regret. First of all because I
am I - and then because . . . My dear, believe me, I have had a
horrible time of it myself lately."
This seemed to be the last word. Outwardly quiet, all the time, it
was only then that she became
composed enough to light an
enormouscigarette of the same pattern as those made
specially for the king
- por el Rey! After a time, tipping the ash into the bowl on her
left hand, she asked me in a friendly, almost tender, tone:
"What are you thinking of, amigo?"