The Return of the Soldier

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by Rebecca West


  When there had descended on them a night as brilliant as the day he drew her out into the darkness, which was sweet with the scent of walnut-leaves, and they went across the lawn, bending beneath the chestnut-boughs, not to the wild part of the island, but to a circle of smooth turf divided from it by a railing of wrought iron. On this stood a small Greek temple, looking very lovely in the moonlight. He had never brought Margaret here before, because Mr Allington had once told him, spatulate forefinger at his nose, that it had been built for the “dook” for his excesses, and it was in the quality of his love for her that he could not bear to think of her in association with anything base. But tonight there was nothing anywhere but beauty. He lifted her in his arms and carried her within the columns, and made her stand in a niche above the altar. A strong stream of moonlight rushed upon her there; by its light he could not tell if her hair was white as silver or yellow as gold, and again he was filled with exaltation because he knew that it would not have mattered if it had been white. His love was changeless. Lifting her down from the niche, he told her so.

  And as he spoke, her warm body melted to nothingness in his arms. The columns that had stood so hard and black against the quivering tide of moonlight and starlight seemed to totter and dissolve. He was lying in a hateful world where barbed-wire entanglements showed impish knots against a livid sky full of blooming noise and splashes of fire and wails for water, and his back was hurting intolerably.

  Chris fell to blowing out the candles, and I, perhaps because the egotistical part of me was looking for something to say that would make him feel me devoted and intimate, could not speak.

  Suddenly he desisted, stared at a candle-flame, and said:

  “If you had seen the way she rested her cheek against the glass and looked into the little room you ‘d understand that I can’t say, ‘Yes, Kitty’s my wife, and Margaret somehow just nothing at all.’”

  “Of course you can’t,” I murmured sympathetically. We gripped hands, and he brought down on our conversation the finality of darkness.

  CHAPTER IV

  NEXT morning it appeared that the chauffeur had taken the car up to town to get a part replaced, and Margaret could not be brought from Wealdstone till the afternoon. It fell to me to fetch her. “At least,” Kitty had said, “I might be spared that humiliation.” Before I started I went to the pond on the hill’s edge. It is a place where autumn lives for half the year, for even when the spring lights tongues of green fire in the undergrowth, and the valley shows sunlit between the tree-trunks, here the pond is fringed with yellow bracken and tinted bramble, and the water flows amber over last winter’s leaves.

  Through this brown gloom, darkened now by a surly sky, Chris was taking the skiff, standing in the stern and using his oar like a gondolier. He had come down here soon after breakfast, driven from the house by the strangeness of all but the outer walls, and discontented with the grounds because everything but this wet, intractable spot bore the marks of Kitty’s genius. After lunch there had been another attempt to settle down, but with a grim glare at a knot of late Christmas roses bright in a copse that fifteen years ago had been dark he went back to the russet-caved boat-house and this play with the skiff. It was a boy’s sport, and it was dreadful to see him turn a middle-aged face as he brought the boat inshore.

  “I’m just going down to fetch Margaret,” I said. He thanked me for it.

  “But, Chris, I must tell you. I’ve seen Margaret. She came up here, so kind and sweet, to tell us you were wounded. She’s the greatest dear in the world, but she’s not as you think of her. She’s old, Chris. She isn’t beautiful any longer. She’s drearily married. She’s seamed and scored and ravaged by squalid circumstances. You can’t love her when you see her.”

  “Didn’t I tell you last night,” he said, “that that doesn’t matter?” He dipped his oar to a stroke that sent him away from me. “Bring her soon. I shall wait for her down here.”

  Wealdstone is not, in its way, a bad place; it lies in the lap of open country, and at the end of every street rise the green hills of Harrow and the spires of Harrow School. But all the streets are long and red and freely articulated with railway arches, and factories spoil the skyline with red, angular chimneys, and in front of the shops stood little women with backs ridged by cheap stays, who tapped their upper lips with their forefingers and made other feeble, doubtful gestures, as though they wanted to buy something and knew that if they did they would have to starve some other appetite. When we asked them the way they turned to us faces sour with thrift. It was a town of people who could not do as they liked.

  And here Margaret lived in a long road of red-brick boxes, flecked here and there with the pink blur of almond-blossom, which debouched in a flat field where green grass rose up rank through clay mold blackened by coal-dust from the railway. Mariposa, which was the last house in the road, did not even have an almond-tree. In the front garden, which seemed to be imperfectly reclaimed from the greasy field, yellow crocus and some sodden squills just winked, and the back, where a man was handling a spade without mastery, presented the austere appearance of an allotment. And not only did Margaret live in this place; she also belonged to it. When she opened the door she gazed at me with watering eyes, and in perplexity stroked her disordered hair with a floury hand. Her face was sallow with heat, and beads of perspiration glittered in the deep, dragging line between her nostrils and the corners of her mouth. She said:

  “He’s home?”

  I nodded.

  She pulled me inside and slammed the door.

  “Is he well?” she asked.

  “Quite,” I answered.

  Her tense stare relaxed. She rubbed her hands on her overall and said:

  “You’ll excuse me. It’s the girl’s day out. If you’ll step into the parlor—”

  So in her parlor I sat and told her how it was with Chris and how greatly he desired to see her. And as I spoke of his longing I turned my eyes away from her, because she was sitting on a sofa, upholstered in velveteen of a sickish green, which was so low that her knees stuck up in front of her, and she had to clasp them with her seamed, floury hands. I could see that the skin of her face was damp. And my voice failed me as I looked round the room, because I saw just what Margaret had seen that evening fifteen years ago when she had laid her cheek to the parlor window at Monkey Island. There was the enlarged photograph of Margaret’s mother over the mantelpiece, on the walls were the views of Tintern Abbey framed in red plush, between the rickety legs of the china cupboard was the sewing-machine, and tucked into the corner between my chair and the fender were a pair of carpet slippers. All her life long Margaret, who in her time had partaken of the supreme dignity of a requited love, had lived with men who wore carpet slippers in the house. I turned my eyes away again, and this time looked down the garden at the figure that was not so much digging as exhibiting his incapacity to deal with a spade. He was sneezing very frequently, and his sneezes made the unbuckled straps at the back of his waistcoat wag violently. I supposed him to be Mr. William Grey.

  I had finished the statement of our sad case, and I saw that though she had not moved, clasping her knees in a set, hideous attitude, the tears were rolling down her cheeks.

  “Oh, don’t! Oh, don’t!” I exclaimed, standing up. Her tearstained immobility touched the heart. “He’s not so bad; he’ll get quite well.”

  “I know, I know,” she said miserably. “I don’t believe that anything bad could be allowed to happen to Chris for long. And I’m sure,” she said kindly, “you’re looking after him beautifully. But when a thing you had thought had ended fifteen years ago starts all over again, and you’re very tired—” She drew a hand across her tears, her damp skin, her rough, bagging overall. “I’m hot. I’ve been baking. You can’t get a girl nowadays that understands the baking.”’ Her gaze became remote and tender, and she said in a manner that was at once argumentative and narrative, as though she were telling the whole story to a neighbor over the garden wa
ll: “I suppose I ought to say that he isn’t right in his head, and that I’m married, so we ‘d better not meet; but, oh,” she cried, and I felt as though, after much fumbling with damp matches and many doubts as to whether there was any oil in the wick, I had lit the lamp at last, “I want to see him so! It’s wrong, I know it’s wrong, but I am so glad Chris wants to see me, too!”

  “You’ll do him good.” I found myself raising my voice to the pitch she had suddenly attained as though to keep her at it. “Come now!”

  She dipped suddenly to compassion.

  “But the young lady?” she asked timidly. “She was upset the last time. I’ve often wondered if I did right in going. Even if Chris has forgotten, he’ll want to do what’s right. He couldn’t bear to hurt her.”

  “That’s true,” I said. “You do know our Chris. He watches her out of the corner of his eye, even when he’s feeling at his worst, to see she isn’t wincing. But she sent me here to-day.”

  “Oh!” cried Margaret, glowing, “she must have a lovely nature!”

  I lost suddenly the thread of the conversation. I could not talk about Kitty. She appeared to me at that moment a faceless figure with flounces, just as most of the servants at Baldry Court appear to me as faceless figures with caps and aprons. There were only two real people in the world, Chris and this woman whose personality was sounding through her squalor like a beautiful voice singing in a darkened room, and I was absorbed in a mental vision of them. You know how the saints and the prophets are depicted in the steel engravings in old Bibles; so they were standing, in flowing white robes on rocks against a pitch-black sky, a strong light beating on their eyes upturned in ecstasy and their hand outstretched to receive the spiritual blessing of which the fierce rays were an emanation. Into that rapt silence I desired to break, and I whispered irrelevantly, “Oh, nothing, nothing is too good for Chris!” while I said to myself, “If she really were like that, solemn and beatified!” and my eyes returned to look despairingly on her ugliness. But she really was like that. She had responded to my irrelevant murmur of adoration by just such a solemn and beatified appearance as I had imagined. Her grave eyes were upturned, her worn hands lay palm upward on her knees, as though to receive the love of which her radiance was an emanation. And then, at a sound in the kitchen, she snatched my exaltation from me by suddenly turning dull.

  “I think that’s Mr. Grey come in from his gardening. You’ll excuse me.”

  Through the open door I heard a voice saying in a way which suggested that its production involved much agitation of a prominent Adam’s apple:

  “Well, dear, seeing you had a friend, I thought I ‘d better slip up and change my gardening trousers.” I do not know what she said to him, but her voice was soft and comforting and occasionally girlish and interrupted by laughter, and I perceived from its sound that with characteristic gravity she had accepted it as her mission to keep loveliness and excitement alive in his life.

  “An old friend of mine has been wounded,” was the only phrase I heard; but when she drew him out into the garden under the window she had evidently explained the situation away, for he listened docilely as she said: “I’ve made some rock-cakes for your tea. And if I’m late for supper, there’s a dish of macaroni cheese you must put in the oven and a tin of tomatoes to eat with it. And there is a little rhubarb and shape.” She told them off on her fingers, and then whisked him round and buckled the wagging straps at the back of his waistcoat. He was a lank man, with curly gray hairs growing from every place where it is inadvisable that hairs should grow,—from the inside of his ears, from his nostrils, on the back of his hands,—but he looked pleased when she touched him, and he said in a devoted way:

  “Very well, dear. Don’t worry about me. I’ll trot along after tea and have a game of draughts with Brown.” She answered:

  “Yes, dear. And now get on with those cabbages. You’re going to keep me in lovely cabbages, just as you did last year, won’t you, darling?” She linked arms with him and took him back to his digging.

  When she came back into the parlor again she was wearing that yellowish raincoat, that hat with hearse plumes nodding over its sticky straw, that gray alpaca skirt. I first defensively clenched my hands. It would have been such agony to the finger-tips to touch any part of her apparel. And then I thought of Chris, to whom a second before I had hoped to bring a serene comforter. I perceived clearly that that ecstatic woman lifting her eyes and her hands to the benediction of love was Margaret as she existed in eternity; but this was Margaret as she existed in time, as the fifteen years between Monkey Island and this damp day in Ladysmith Road had irreparably made her. Well, I had promised to bring her to him.

  She said:

  “I’m ready,” and against that simple view of her condition

  I had no argument. But when she paused by the painted drainpipe in the hall and peered under contracted brows for that unveracious tortoiseshell handle, I said hastily:

  “Oh, don’t trouble about an umbrella.”

  “I’ll maybe need it walking home,” she pondered. “But the car will bring you back.”

  “Oh, that will be lovely,” she said, and laughed nervously, looking very plain. “Do you know, I know the way we’re coming together is terrible, but I can’t think of a meeting with Chris as anything but a kind of treat. I’ve got a sort of party feeling now.”

  As she held the gate open for me she looked back at the house.

  “It’s a horrid little house, isn’t it?” she asked. She evidently desired sanction for a long-suppressed discontent.

  “It isn’t very nice,” I agreed.

  “They put cows sometimes into the field at the back,” she went on, as if conscientiously counting her blessings. “I like that; but otherwise it isn’t much.”

  “But it’s got a very pretty name,” I said, laying my hand on the raised metal letters that spelled “Mariposa” across the gate.

  “Ah, isn’t it!” she exclaimed, with the smile of the inveterate romanticist. “It’s Spanish, you know, for butterfly.”

  Once we were in the automobile, she became a little sullen with shyness, because she felt herself so big and clumsy, her clothes so coarse, against the fine upholstery, the silver vase of Christmas roses, and all the deliberate delicacy of Kitty’s car. She was afraid of the chauffeur, as the poor are always afraid of men-servants, and ducked her head when he got out to start the car. To recall her to ease and beauty I told her that though Chris had told me all about their meeting, he knew nothing of their parting, and that I wished very much to hear what had happened.

  In a deep, embarrassed voice she began to tell me about Monkey Island. It was strange how both Chris and she spoke of it as though it were not a place, but a magic state which largely explained the actions performed in it. Strange, too, that both of them should describe meticulously the one white hawthorn that stood among the poplars by the ferry-side. I suppose a thing that one has looked at with some one one loves acquires forever after a special significance. She said that her father had gone there when she was fourteen. After Mrs. Arlington had been taken away by a swift and painful death the cheer of his Windsor hostelry had become intolerable to the man; he regarded the whole world as her grave, and the tipsy sergeants in scarlet, the carter crying for a pint of four-half, and even the mares dipping their mild noses to the trough in the courtyard seemed to be defiling it by their happy, simple appetites. So they went to Monkey Island, the utter difference of which was a healing, and settled down happily in its green silence. All the summer was lovely; quiet, kind people, schoolmasters who fished, men who wrote books, married couples who still loved solitude, used to come and stay in the bright little inn. And all the winter was lovely, too; her temperament could see an adventure in taking up the carpets because the Thames was coming into the coffee-room. That was the tale of her life for four years. With her head on one side, and the air of judging this question by the light of experience, she pronounced that she had then been happy.
r />   Then one April afternoon Chris landed at the island, and by the first clean, quick movement of tying up his boat made her his slave. I could imagine that it would be so. He was wonderful when he was young; he possessed in great measure the loveliness of young men, which is like the loveliness of the spry foal or the sapling, but in him it was vexed into a serious and moving beauty by the inhabiting soul. When the sunlight lay on him, disclosing the gold hairs on his brown head, or when he was subject to any other physical pleasure, there was always reserve in his response to it. From his eyes, which, though gray, were somehow dark with speculation, one perceived that he was distracted by participation in some spiritual drama. To see him was to desire intimacy with him, so that one might intervene between this body, which was formed for happiness, and this soul, which cherished so deep a faith in tragedy. Well, she gave Chris ducks’ eggs for tea. “No one ever had ducks’ eggs like father did. It was his way of feeding them. It didn’t pay, of course, but they were good.” Before the afternoon was out he had snared them all with the silken net of his fine manners; he had talked to father about his poultry and had walked about the runs and shown an intelligent interest, and then, as on many succeeding days, he had laid his charm at the girl’s feet. “But I thought he must be some one royal, and when he kept on coming, I thought it must be for the ducks’ eggs.” Then her damp, dull skin flushed suddenly to a warm glory, and she began to stammer.

 

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