"No, you were always your own self,
unwise and
reckless and with
something in it
kindred to mine, if I may say so without offence."
"You may say anything without offence. But has it never occurred
to your
sagacity that I just, simply, loved you?"
"Just - simply," she
repeated in a
wistful tone.
"You didn't want to trouble your head about it, is that it?"
"My poor head. From your tone one might think you yearned to cut
it off. No, my dear, I have made up my mind not to lose my head."
"You would be astonished to know how little I care for your mind."
"Would I? Come and sit on the couch all the same," she said after
a moment of
hesitation. Then, as I did not move at once, she added
with
indifference: "You may sit as far away as you like, it's big
enough,
goodness knows."
The light was ebbing slowly out of the rotunda and to my bodily
eyes she was
beginning to grow
shadowy. I sat down on the couch
and for a long time no word passed between us. We made no
movement. We did not even turn towards each other. All I was
conscious of was the
softness of the seat which seemed somehow to
cause a relaxation of my stern mood, I won't say against my will
but without any will on my part. Another thing I was
conscious of,
strangely enough, was the
enormous brass bowl for cigarette ends.
Quietly, with the least possible action, Dona Rita moved it to the
other side of her
motionless person. Slowly, the
fantastic women
with butterflies' wings and the slender-limbed youths with the
gorgeous pinions on their shoulders were vanishing into their black
backgrounds with an effect of silent
discretion, leaving us to
ourselves.
I felt suddenly
extremely exhausted,
absolutelyovercome with
fatigue since I had moved; as if to sit on that Pompeiian chair had
been a task almost beyond human strength, a sort of labour that
must end in
collapse. I fought against it for a moment and then my
resistance gave way. Not all at once but as if yielding to an
irresistible
pressure (for I was not
conscious of any irresistible
attraction) I found myself with my head resting, with a weight I
felt must be crushing, on Dona Rita's shoulder which yet did not
give way, did not flinch at all. A faint scent of violets filled
the
tragic emptiness of my head and it seemed impossible to me that
I should not cry from sheer
weakness. But I remained dry-eyed. I
only felt myself slipping lower and lower and I caught her round
the waist clinging to her not from any
intention but
purely by
instinct. All that time she hadn't stirred. There was only the
slight
movement of her breathing that showed her to be alive; and
with closed eyes I imagined her to be lost in thought, removed by
an
incrediblemeditation while I clung to her, to an immense
distance from the earth. The distance must have been immense
because the silence was so perfect, the feeling as if of eternal
stillness. I had a
distinctimpression of being in
contact with an
infinity that had the slightest possible rise and fall, was
pervaded by a warm,
delicate scent of violets and through which
came a hand from somewhere to rest
lightly on my head. Presently
my ear caught the faint and regular pulsation of her heart, firm
and quick,
infinitely" target="_blank" title="ad.无限地;无穷地">
infinitelytouching in its
persistent mystery,
disclosing itself into my very ear - and my
felicity became
complete.
It was a dreamlike state combined with a dreamlike sense of
insecurity. Then in that warm and scented infinity, or eternity,
in which I rested lost in bliss but ready for any
catastrophe, I
heard the distant, hardly
audible, and fit to strike
terror into
the heart, ringing of a bell. At this sound the
greatness of
spaces
departed. I felt the world close about me; the world of
darkened walls, of very deep grey dusk against the panes, and I
asked in a pained voice:
"Why did you ring, Rita?"
There was a bell rope within reach of her hand. I had not felt her
move, but she said very low:
"I rang for the lights."
"You didn't want the lights."
"It was time," she
whispered secretly.
Somewhere within the house a door slammed. I got away from her
feeling small and weak as if the best part of me had been torn away
and irretrievably lost. Rose must have been somewhere near the
door.
"It's abominable," I murmured to the still, idol-like shadow on the
couch.
The answer was a
hurried,
nervouswhisper: "I tell you it was
time. I rang because I had no strength to push you away."
I suffered a moment of giddiness before the door opened, light
streamed in, and Rose entered,
preceding a man in a green baize
apron whom I had never seen, carrying on an
enormous tray three
Argand lamps fitted into vases of Pompeiian form. Rose distributed
them over the room. In the flood of soft light the
winged youths
and the
butterfly women reappeared on the panels, affected,
gorgeous, callously un
conscious of anything having happened during
their
absence. Rose attended to the lamp on the nearest
mantelpiece, then turned about and asked in a
confident undertone.
"Monsieur dine?"
I had lost myself with my elbows on my knees and my head in my
hands, but I heard the words
distinctly. I heard also the silence
which ensued. I sat up and took the
responsibility of the answer
on myself.
"Impossible. I am going to sea this evening."
This was
perfectly true only I had
totally forgotten it till then.
For the last two days my being was no longer
composed of memories
but
exclusively of sensations of the most absorbing, disturbing,
exhausting nature. I was like a man who has been buffeted by the
sea or by a mob till he loses all hold on the world in the misery
of his
helplessness. But now I was recovering. And naturally the
first thing I remembered was the fact that I was going to sea.
"You have heard, Rose," Dona Rita said at last with some
im
patience.
The girl waited a moment longer before she said:
"Oh, yes! There is a man
waiting for Monsieur in the hall. A
seaman."
It could be no one but Dominic. It dawned upon me that since the
evening of our return I had not been near him or the ship, which
was completely
unusual, unheard of, and well calculated to startle
Dominic.
"I have seen him before," continued Rose, "and as he told me he has
been pursuing Monsieur all the afternoon and didn't like to go away
without
seeing Monsieur for a moment, I proposed to him to wait in
the hall till Monsieur was at liberty."
I said: "Very well," and with a sudden resumption of her
extremelybusy, not-a-moment-to-lose manner Rose
departed from the room. I
lingered in an
imaginary world full of tender light, of unheard-of
colours, with a mad riot of flowers and an inconceivable happiness
under the sky
arched above its yawning precipices, while a feeling
of awe enveloped me like its own proper
atmosphere. But everything
vanished at the sound of Dona Rita's loud
whisper full of boundless
dismay, such as to make one's hair stir on one's head.
"Mon Dieu! And what is going to happen now?"
She got down from the couch and walked to a window. When the
lights had been brought into the room all the panes had turned inky
black; for the night had come and the garden was full of tall
bushes and trees screening off the gas lamps of the main alley of
the Prado. Whatever the question meant she was not likely to see
an answer to it outside. But her
whisper had offended me, had hurt
something
infinitely" target="_blank" title="ad.无限地;无穷地">
infinitely deep,
infinitely" target="_blank" title="ad.无限地;无穷地">
infinitely subtle and
infinitely" target="_blank" title="ad.无限地;无穷地">
infinitely clear-
eyed in my nature. I said after her from the couch on which I had
remained, "Don't lose your
composure. You will always have some
sort of bell at hand."
I saw her shrug her uncovered shoulders
impatiently. Her forehead
was against the very
blackness of the panes; pulled
upward from the
beautiful, strong nape of her neck, the twisted mass of her tawny
hair was held high upon her head by the arrow of gold.
"You set up for being unforgiving," she said without anger.