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diff --git a/old/13292-8.txt b/old/13292-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ca9b1a8 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/13292-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6619 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Romantic, by May Sinclair + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Romantic + +Author: May Sinclair + +Release Date: August 25, 2004 [EBook #13292] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ROMANTIC *** + + + + +Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Mary Meehan and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + + THE ROMANTIC + + BY MAY SINCLAIR + + 1920 + + + + +_Every kind and beautiful thing on earth has been made so by some +cruelty_. + +Saying of the Romantic + + + + +CONTENTS + +BOOK ONE Charlotte Redhead + +BOOK TWO John Roden Conway + + + + +THE ROMANTIC + + + + +BOOK ONE + +CHARLOTTE REDHEAD + + + + +I + + +They turned again at the end of the platform. + +The tail of her long, averted stare was conscious of him, of his big, +tweed-suited body and its behaviour, squaring and swelling and tightening +in its dignity, of its heavy swing to her shoulder as they turned. + +She could stave off the worst by not looking at him, by looking at other +things, impersonal, innocent things; the bright, yellow, sharp gabled +station; the black girders of the bridge; the white signal post beside it +holding out a stiff, black-banded arm; the two rails curving there, with +the flat white glitter and sweep of scythes; pointed blades coming +together, buried in the bend of the cutting. + +Small three-cornered fields, clean edged like the pieces of a puzzle, red +brown and pure bright green, dovetailed under the high black bar of the +bridge. She supposed you could paint that. + +Turn. + +Clear stillness after the rain. She caught herself smiling at the noise +her boots made clanking on the tiles with the harsh, joyous candour that +he hated. He walked noiselessly, with a jerk of bluff knickerbockered +hips, raising himself on his toes like a cat. + +She could see him moving about in her room, like that, in the half +darkness, feeling for his things, with shamed, helpless gestures. She +could see him tiptoeing down her staircase, furtive, afraid. Always +afraid they would be found out. + +That would have ruined him. + +Oh well--why should he have ruined himself for her? Why? But she had +wanted, wanted to ruin herself for him, to stand, superb and reckless, +facing the world with him. If that could have been the way of it. + +Turn. + +That road over the hill--under the yellow painted canopy sticking out +from the goods station--it would be the Cirencester road, the Fosse Way. +She would tramp along it when he was gone. + +Turn. + +He must have seen her looking at the clock. Three minutes more. + +Suddenly, round the bend, under the bridge, the train. + +He was carrying it off fairly well, with his tight red face and his stare +over her head when she looked at him, his straight smile when she said +"Good-bye and Good-luck!" + +And her silly hand clutching the window ledge. She let go, quick, afraid +he would turn sentimental at the end. But no; he was settling down +heavily in his corner, blinking and puffing over his cigar. + +That was her knapsack lying on the seat there. She picked it up and slung +it over her shoulder. + +Cirencester? Or back to Stow-on-the-Wold? If only he hadn't come there +last night. If only he had let her alone. + +She meditated. She would have to wire to Gwinnie Denning to meet her at +Cirencester. She wondered whether Gwinnie's mother's lumbago would last +over the week-end. It was Friday. Perhaps Gwinnie had started. Perhaps +there would be a wire from her at the hotel. + +Going on to Cirencester when you wanted to be in Stow-on-the-Wold, what +_was_ it but a cowardly retreat? Driven out of Stow-on-the-Wold by +Gibson? Not she! + +Dusk at ten o'clock in the morning under the trees on the mile-long hill. +You climbed up and up a steep green tunnel. The sun would be blazing at +its mouth on the top. Nothing would matter. Certainly not this affair +with Gibson Herbert. She could see clearly her immense, unique passion +thus diminished. Surprising what a lot of it you could forget. Clean +forget. She supposed you forgot because you couldn't bear to remember. + +But there were days that stood out; hours; little minutes that thrilled +you even now and stung. + +This time, two years ago, that hot August. The day in the office when +everything went wrong all at once and the clicking of her typewriter +maddened him and he sent her out of his room. + +The day when he kept her over-time. The others had gone and they were +there by themselves, the big man in his big room and she in her den, the +door open between. Suddenly she saw him standing in the doorway, looking +at her. She knew then. She could feel the blood rushing in her brain; the +stabbing click of the typewriter set up little whirling currents that +swamped her thoughts. + +Her wet fingers kept slipping from the keys. He came and took her in his +arms. She lay back in his arms, crying. Crying because she was happy, +because she knew. + +She remembered now what he had said then. "You must have known. You must +have thought of me. You must have wanted me to take you in my arms." And +her answer. "No. I didn't. I didn't think of it." + +And his smile. His unbelieving smile. He thought she was lying. He always +thought people were lying. Women. He thought women always lied about what +they wanted. + +The first time. In her Bloomsbury room, one evening, and the compact they +made then, sitting on the edge of the sofa, like children, holding each +other's hands and swearing never to go back on it, never to go back on +themselves or on each other. If it ever had to end, a clean cut. No going +back on that either. + +The first night, in the big, gloomy bedroom of the hotel in Glasgow. The +thick, grey daylight oozing in at the window out of the black street; and +Gibson lying on his back, beside her, sleeping, the sheet dragged +sideways across his great chest. His innocent eyelids. + +And the morning after; the happiness. All day the queer, exalted feeling +that she was herself, Charlotte Redhead, at last, undeceived and +undeceiving. + +The day his wife came into the office. Her unhappy eyes and small, +sharp-pointed face, shrinking into her furs. Her name was Effie. + +He had told her in the beginning that he had left off caring for his +wife. They couldn't hurt her; she didn't care enough. She never had +cared. There was another fellow. Effie would be all right. + +Yet, after she had seen Effie it had never been the same thing. She +couldn't remember, quite, how it had been. + +She could remember the ecstasy, how it would come swinging through you, +making you blind and deaf to impersonal, innocent things while it +lasted. Even then there was always something beyond it, something you +looked for and missed, something you thought would come that never came. +There was something he did. She couldn't remember. That would be one of +the things you wanted to forget. She saw his thick fingers at dessert, +peeling the peaches. + +Perhaps his way of calling her "Poor Sharlie?" Things he let out--"I +never thought I could have loved a girl with bobbed hair. A white and +black girl." There must have been other girls then. A regular procession. +Before he married Effie. + +She could see them. Pink and gold girls, fluffy and fat; girls with red +hair; brown haired girls with wide slippery mouths. Then Effie. Then +herself, with her thick bobbed mane and white face. And the beautiful +mouth he praised so. + +Was it the disgust of knowing that you were only one of a procession? Or +was it that Effie's sad, sharp face slipped between? + +And the end of it. The break-down, when Effie was ill. + +His hysterical cries. "My wife, Sharlie, my wife. We oughtn't to have +done it.... + +"... I can't forgive myself, Sharlie. I've been a brute, a beast, a +stupid animal.... + +"... When I think of what we've done to her--the little innocent +thing--the awful unhappiness--I could kill myself." + +"Do you mean she knows?" + +"She thinks. That's bad enough. If she knew, it would kill her." + +"You said she wouldn't care. You said there was another man." + +"There wasn't." + +"You lied, then?" + +"Of course I lied. You wouldn't have come to me if I hadn't." + +"You told me you didn't care for her." + +He had met that with his "Well--what did you want?" + +She went over and over it, turning it round and round to see if there was +any sort of light it would look a bit better in. She had been going to +give him up so beautifully. The end of it was to have been wonderful, +quiet, like a heavenly death, so that you would get a thrill out of that +beauty when you remembered. All the beauty of it from the beginning, +taken up and held together, safe at the end. You wouldn't remember +anything else. And he had killed it, with his conscience, suddenly sick, +whining, slobbering, vomiting remorse--Turning on her. + +"I can't think what you wanted with me. Why couldn't you have let +me alone!" + +Her own voice, steady and hard. "If you feel dirty, go and wash yourself +outside. Don't try and rub it off on me. I want to keep clean." + +"Isn't it a bit too late?" + +"Not if you clear out at once. This minute." He called her "a cruel +little devil." + +She could forgive him for that. She could forgive him ending it in any +beastly way he liked, provided he did end it. But not last night. To come +crawling back, three months after, wanting to begin again. Thinking it +was possible. + +There had been nothing worse than that. Except that one dreadful minute +last year when he had wanted to raise her salary--afterwards--and she had +said "What _for_?" And their faces had turned from each other, flaming +with the fire of her refusal. + +What had he really thought of her? Did he think she wanted to get +anything out of their passion? What could you want to get out of it, or +give, but joy? Pure joy. Beauty. + +At the bend of the road the trees parted. A slender blue channel of sky +flowed overhead between the green tops. + +If not joy, then truth; reality. The clear reality of yourself, Charlotte +Redhead. Of Gibson Herbert. Even now it would be all right so long as you +knew what it was and didn't lie about it. + +That evening in the office when he came to her--she could remember the +feeling that shot up suddenly and ran over her and shook her brain, +making her want him to take her in his arms. It was that. It had never +been anything but that. She _had_ wanted him to take her, and he knew +it. Only, if he hadn't come to her and looked at her she wouldn't have +thought of it; she would have gone on working for him without +thinking. That was what he didn't know, what he wouldn't have believed +if you had told him. + +She had come to the top of the hill. At the crossroads she saw the grey +front of her inn, the bow window jutting, small black shining panes +picked out with the clean white paint of the frame-work. + +Upstairs their breakfast table stood in the window bow as they had left +it. Bread he had broken on the greasy plate. His cup with the coffee he +couldn't drink. Pathetic, if you hadn't remembered. + +"You might as well. If it isn't you, it'll be another woman, Sharlie. If +it isn't me, it'll be another man." + +That was what he had thought her. + +It didn't matter. + + + + +II + + +She stood at the five roads, swinging her stick, undecided. + +The long line of the beeches drew her, their heads bowed to the north as +the south wind had driven them. The blue-white road drew her, rising, +dipping and rising; between broad green borders under grey walls. + +She walked. She could feel joy breaking loose in her again, beating up +and up, provoked and appeased by the strong, quick movement of her body. +The joy she had gone to her lover for, the pure joy he couldn't give her, +coming back out of the time before she knew him. + +Nothing mattered when your body was light and hard and you could feel the +ripple and thrill of the muscles in your stride. + +She wouldn't have to think of him again. She wouldn't have to think of +any other man. She didn't want any more of that again, ever. She could go +on and on like this, by herself, without even Gwinnie; not caring a damn. + +If she had been cruel--if she had wanted to hurt Effie. She hadn't meant +to hurt her. + +She thought of things. Places she had been happy in. She loved the high +open country. Fancy sitting with Gibson in his stuffy office, day after +day, for five years. Fancy going to Glasgow with him. Glasgow-- + +No. No. + +She thought: "I can pretend it didn't happen. Nothing's happened. I'm +myself. The same me I was before." + +Suddenly she stood still. On the top of the ridge the whole sky opened, +throbbing with light, immense as the sky above a plain. Hills--thousands +of hills. Thousands of smooth curves joining and parting, overlapping, +rolling together. + +What did you want? What did you want? How could you want anything but +this for ever? + +Across the green field she saw the farm. Tall, long-skirted elms standing +up in a row before the sallow ricks and long grey barns. Under the loaded +droop of green a grey sharp-pointed gable, topped by a stone ball. Four +Scotch firs beside it, slender and strange. + +She stood leaning over the white gate, looking and thinking. + +Funny things, colts grazing. Short bodies that stopped at their +shoulders; long, long necks hanging down like tails, pushing their heads +along the ground. She could hear their nostrils breathing and the +scrinch, scrinch of their teeth tearing the grass. + +You could be happy living on a farm, looking after the animals. + +You could learn farming. People paid. + +Suddenly she knew what she would do. She would do _that_. It wasn't +reasonable to go on sitting in a stuffy office doing work you hated when +you could pack up and go. She couldn't have stuck to it for five years if +it hadn't been for Gibson--falling in love with him, the most +unreasonable thing of all. She didn't care if you had to pay to learn +farming. You had to pay for everything you learned. There were the two +hundred pounds poor dear Daddy left, doing nothing. She could pay. + +She would go down to the farm now, this minute, and see if they +would take her. + +As she crossed the field she heard the farmyard gate open and shut. + +The man came up towards her in the narrow path. He was looking at her as +he came, tilting his head back to get her clear into his eyes under the +shade of his slouched hat. + +She called to him. "Is this your farm?" And he halted. + +He smiled; the narrow smile of small, fine lips, with a queer, winged +movement of the moustache, a flutter of dark down. She saw his eyes, hard +and keen, dark blue, like the blade of a new knife. + +"No. I wish it was my farm. Why?" + +She could see now it wasn't. He was out tramping. The corner of a +knapsack bulged over his right shoulder. Rough greenish coat and +stockings--dust-coloured riding breeches-- + +But there was something about him. Something tall and distant; slender +and strange, like the fir-trees. + +"Because whoever's farm it is I want to see him." + +"You won't see him. There isn't anybody there." + +"Oh." + +He lingered. + +"Do you know who he is?" she said. + +"No. I don't know anything. I don't even know where I am. But I hope it's +Bourton-on-the-Hill." + +"I'm afraid it isn't. It's Stow-on-the-Wold." + +He laughed and shifted his knapsack to his left shoulder, and held up his +chin. His eyes slewed round, raking the horizon. + +"It's all right," she said. "You can get to Bourton-on-the-Hill. I'll +show you." She pointed. "You see where that clump of trees is--like a +battleship, sailing over a green hill. That's about where it is." + +"Thanks. I've been trying to get there all afternoon." + +"Where have you come from?" + +"Stanway. The other side of that ridge." + +"You should have kept along the top. You've come miles out of your way." + +"I like going out of my way. I did it for fun. For the adventure." + +You could see he was innocent and happy, like a child. She turned and +went with him up the field. + +She wouldn't go to Bourton-on-the-Hill. She would go back to the hotel +and see whether there was a wire for her from Gwinnie.... He liked going +out of his way. + +"I suppose," he said, "there's _something_ the other side of that gate." + +"I hate to tell you. There's a road there. It's your way. The end of the +adventure." + +He laughed again, showing small white teeth this time. The gate fell to +with a thud and a click. + +"What do I do now?" + +"You go north. Straight ahead. Turn down the fifth or sixth lane on your +right--you'll see the sign-post. Then the first lane on your left. +That'll bring you out at the top of the hill." + +"Thanks. Thanks most awfully." He raised his hat, backing from her, +holding her in his eyes till he turned. + +He would be out of sight now at the pace he was going; his young, +slender, skimming stride. + +She stood on the top of the rise and looked round. He was halting down +there at the bend by the grey cone of the lime kiln under the ash-tree. +He had turned and had his face towards her. Above his head the battleship +sailed on its green field. + +He began to come back, slowly, as if he were looking for something +dropped on his path; then suddenly he stopped, turned again and was gone. + +There was no wire from Gwinnie. She had waited a week now. She +wondered how long it would be before Gwinnie's mother's lumbago gave +in and let her go. + + * * * * * + +She knew it by heart now, the long, narrow coffee-room of the hotel. The +draped chimney piece and little oblong gilt-framed mirror at one end; at +the other the bowed window looking west on to the ash-tree and the +fields; the two straight windows between, looking south on to the street. + +To-night the long table down the middle was set with a white cloth. The +family from Birmingham had come. Father and mother, absurd pouter-pigeons +swelling and strutting; two putty-faced unmarried daughters, sulking; one +married one, pink and proper, and the son-in-law, sharp eyed and +bald-headed. From their table in the centre they stared at her where she +dined by herself at her table in the bow. + +Two days. She didn't think she could bear it one day more. + +She could see herself as she came down the room; her knitted silk sport's +coat, bright petunia, flaming; thick black squares of her bobbed hair +hanging over eyebrows and ears. And behind, the four women's heads +turning on fat necks to look at her, reflected. + +Gwinnie's letter was there, stuck up on the mantel-piece. Gwinnie could +come at the week-end; she implored her to hang on for five days longer, +not to leave Stow-on-the-Wold till they could see it together. A letter +from Gibson, repeating himself. + +The family from Birmingham were going through the door; fat faces +straining furtively. If they knew--if they only knew. She stood, reading. + +She heard the door shut. She could look in the glass now and amuse +herself by the sight they had stared at. The white face raised on the +strong neck and shoulders. Soft white nose, too thick at the nuzzling +tip. Brown eyes straight and wide open. Deep-grooved, clear-cut eyelids, +heavy lashes. Mouth--clear-cut arches, moulded corners, brooding. Her +eyes and her mouth. She could see they were strange. She could see they +were beautiful. + +And herself, her mysterious, her secret self, Charlotte Redhead. It had +been secret and mysterious to itself once, before she knew. + +She didn't want to be secret and mysterious. Of all things she hated +secrecy and mystery. She would tell Gwinnie about Gibson Herbert when she +came. She would have to tell her. + +Down at the end of the looking-glass picture, behind her, the bow window +and the slender back of a man standing there. + + * * * * * + +She had got him clear by this time. If he went to-morrow he would +stay, moving about forever in your mind. The young body, alert and +energetic; slender gestures of hands. The small imperious head carried +high. The spare, oval face with the straight-jutting, pointed chin. +Honey-white face, thin dusk and bistre of eyelids and hollow temples +and the roots of the hair. Its look of being winged, lifted up, ready +to start off on an adventure. Hair brushed back in two sleek, dark +wings. The straight slender nose, with the close upward wings of its +nostrils (it wasn't Roman after all). Under it the winged flutter of +his mouth when he smiled. + +Black eyebrows almost meeting, the outer ends curling up queerly, like +little moustaches. And always the hard, blue knife-blade eyes. + +She knew his name the first day. He had told her. Conway. John +Roden Conway. + +The family from Birmingham had frightened him. So he sat at her table in +the bow. They talked. About places--places. Places they had seen and +hadn't seen; places they wanted to see, and the ways you could get to +places. He trusted to luck; he risked things; he was out, he said, for +risk. She steered by the sun, by instinct, by the map in her head. She +remembered. But you could buy maps. He bought one the next day. + +They went for long walks together. She found out the field paths. And +they talked. Long, innocent conversations. He told her about himself. He +came from Coventry. His father was a motor car manufacturer; that was why +_he_ liked tramping. + +She told him she was going to learn farming. You could be happy all day +long looking after animals. Swinging up on the big bare backs of cart +horses and riding them to water; milking cows and feeding calves. And +lambs. When their mothers were dead. They would run to you then, and +climb into your lap and sit there--sucking your fingers. + +As they came in and went out together the family from Birmingham +glared at them. + +"Did you see how they glared?" + +"Do you mind?" he said. + +"Not a bit." + +"No more do I. It doesn't matter what people like that do. Their souls +are horrible. They leave a glairy trail everywhere they go. If they were +dead--stretched out on their death beds--you'd see their souls, like +long, fat white slugs stretched out too, glued to their bodies.... You +know what they think? They think we met each other on purpose. They think +we're engaged." + +"I don't care," she said. "It doesn't matter what they think." + +They laughed at the silliness of the family from Birmingham. He had been +there five days. + + * * * * * + +"I--, sa-ay--" + +Gwinnie's voice drawled in slow meditative surprise. + +The brooding curiosity had gone out of her face. Gwinnie's face, soft and +schoolgirlish between the fawn gold bands and plaited ear bosses of her +hair, the pink, pushed out mouth, the little routing nose, the thick grey +eyes, suddenly turned on you, staring. + +Gwinnie had climbed up on to the bed to hear about it. She sat hunched up +with her arms round her knees rocking herself on the end of her spine; +and though she stared she still rocked. She was happy and excited because +of her holiday. + +"It can't make any difference, Gwin. I'm the same Charlotte. Don't tell +me you didn't know I was like that." + +"Of course I knew it. I know a jolly lot more than you think, kid." + +"I'm not a kid--if you _are_ two years older." + +"Why--you're not twenty-four yet.... It's the silliness of it beats me. +Going off like that, with the first silly cuckoo that turns up." + +"He wasn't the first that turned up, I mean. He was the third that +counted. There was poor Binky, the man I was engaged to. And Dicky +Raikes; he wanted me to go to Mexico with him. Just for a lark, and I +wouldn't. And George Corfield. _He_ wanted me to marry him. And I +wouldn't." + +"Why didn't you?" + +"Because Dicky's always funny when you want to be serious and George is +always serious when you want to be funny. Besides, he's so good. His +goodness would have been too much for me altogether. Fancy _beginning_ +with George." + +"This seems to have been a pretty rotten beginning, anyway." + +"The beginning was all right. It's the end that's rotten. The really +awful thing was Effie." + +"Look here--" Gwinnie left off rocking and swung herself to the edge of +the bed. Her face looked suddenly mature and full of wisdom. "I don't +believe in that Effie business. You want to think you stopped it because +of Effie; but you didn't. You've got to see it straight.... It was his +lying and funking that finished you. He fixed on the two things you +can't stand." + +The two things. The two things. + +"I know what you want. You want to kill him in my mind, so that I shan't +think of him any more. I'm not thinking. I only wanted you to know." + +"Does anybody else know?" + +She shook her head. + +"Well--don't you let them." + +Gwinnie slid to her feet and went to the looking-glass. She stood there a +minute, pinning closer the crushed bosses of her hair. Then she turned. + +"What are you going to do with that walking-tour johnnie?" + +"John--Conway? You couldn't do anything with him if you tried. He's miles +beyond all that." + +"All _what_?" + +"The rotten things people do. The rotten things they think. You're safe +with him, Gwinnie. Safe. Safe. You've only to look at him." + +"I _have_ looked at him. Whatever you do, don't _tell_ him, Sharlie." + + + + +III + + +Charlotte sat on the top of the slope in the field below Barrow Farm. +John Conway lay at her feet. The tall beeches stood round them in an +unclosed ring. + +Through the opening she could see the farmhouse, three ball-topped +gables, the middle one advancing, the front built out there in a huge +door-place that carried a cross windowed room under its roof. + +Low heavy-browed mullions; the panes, black shining slits in the grey and +gold of the stone. All their rooms. Hers and Gwinnie's under the near +gable by the fir-trees, Mr. and Mrs. Burton's under the far gable by the +elms, John's by itself in the middle, jutting out. + +She could see the shallow garden dammed up to the house out of the green +field by its wall, spilling trails of mauve campanula, brimming with pink +phlox and white phlox, the blue spires of the lupins piercing up through +the froth. + +Sunday evening half an hour before milking-time. From September +nineteen-thirteen to December--to March nineteen-fourteen, to June--she +had been at the farm nine months. June--May--April. This time three +months ago John had come. + +In the bottom of the field, at the corner by the yard-gate, under the +elms, she could see Gwinnie astride over the tilted bucket, feeding the +calves. It was Gwinnie's turn. + +She heard the house door open and shut. The Burtons came down the flagged +path between the lavender bushes, leaving them to their peace before +milking time. + +Looking down she saw John's eyes blinking up at her through their lashes. +His chest showed a red-brown V in the open neck of his sweater. He had +been quiet a long time. His voice came up out of his quietness, sudden +and queer. + +"Keep your head like that one minute--looking down. I want your +eyelids.... Now I know." + +"What?" + +"What you're like. You're like Jeanne d'Arc.... There's a picture--the +photo of a stone head, I think--in a helmet, looking down, with +big drooped eyelids. If it isn't Jeanne it ought to be. Anyhow it's +you.... That's what's been bothering me. I thought it was just because +you had black hair bobbed like a fifteen century page. But it isn't that. +It's her forehead and her blunt nose, and her innocent, heroic chin. And +the thick, beautiful mouth.... And the look--as if she could see behind +her eyelids--dreadful things going to happen to her. All the butchery." + +"I don't see any dreadful things going to happen to me." + +"No. Her sight was second sight; and your sight is memory. You never +forget things.... I shall call you Jeanne. You ought to wear armour and a +helmet." His voice ceased and began again. "What are you thinking of?" + +"I don't know. I don't think much, ever." + +She was wondering what _he_ would think if he knew. + +She wondered what the farm would be like without him. Would it be what it +was last autumn and winter and in the spring before he came? But she had +been happy all that time without him, even in the hard, frost-biting +winter. When you had gone through that you knew the worst of Barrow Farm. +It made your face coarse, though. + +Joan of Arc was a peasant. No wonder she was beginning to look like her. +If John went-- + +"John, shall you stay on here?" + +"I don't know. I shall stick to farming if that's what you mean. Though +it isn't what I wanted." + +"What did you want?" + +"To go into the Army." + +"Why didn't you then?" + +"They wouldn't have me. There's something wrong with my eyes.... So the +land's got me instead." + +"Me too. We ought to have been doing this all our lives." + +"We'll jolly well have to. We shall never be any good indoors again." + +"Has old Burton said anything?" + +"I'm getting on. I can drive as straight a furrow as any man in +Gloucestershire. I've told my father that. He detests me; but he'd say +you ought to work up from the plough-tail, if you _must_ farm. He turned +all of us through his workshops before he took us into the business. He +liked to see us soaked in dirt and oil, crawling on our stomachs under +his engines. He'd simply love to see me here standing up to my knees in +wet cow-dung." + +"He won't mind your leaving him?" + +"Not if I make a good thing out of this. Anyhow he knows he can't keep me +off it. If I can't fight I'll farm. It's in my blood and nerves and +memory. He sits there selling motor cars, but his people were fighting +men. They fought to get land; they fought to keep it. My mother's people, +the Rodens, were yeoman farmers. That's why my furrow's so straight." + +"And that's why you came here?" + +"No. That isn't why." + +"Aren't you glad you came? Did you ever feel anything like the +peace of it?" + +"It's not the peace of it I want, Charlotte,--Jeanne, I mean. It's +the fight. Fighting with things that would kill you if you didn't. +Wounding the earth to sow in it and make it feed you. Ploughing, +Charlotte--Jeanne. Feeling the thrust and the drive through, and the +thing listing over on the slope. Seeing the steel blade shine, and the +long wounds coming in rows, hundreds of wounds, wet and shining." + +"What makes you think of wounds?" + +"I don't know. I see it like that. Cutting through." + +"I don't see it like that one bit. The earth's so kind, so beautiful. And +the hills--look at them, the clean, quiet backs, smoothed with light. You +could stroke them. And the fields, those lovely coloured fans opening and +shutting." + +"They're lovely because of what's been done to them. If those hills had +been left to themselves there'd have been nothing on them but trees. +Think of the big fight with the trees, the hacking through, the cutting. +The trunks staggering and falling. You'd begin with a little hole in the +forest like that gap in the belt on the sky-line, and you'd go on hacking +and cutting. You'd go on.... If you didn't those damned trees would come +up round you and jam you between their trunks and crush you to red +pulp.... Supposing this belt of beeches drew in and got tighter and +tighter--No. There's nothing really kind and beautiful on this earth. +Except your face. And even your face--" + +"My face?--" + +"_Could_ be cruel. But it never will be. Something's happened to it. Some +cruelty. Some damnable cruelty." + +"What makes you think so?" + +"Every kind and beautiful thing on earth, Jeanne, has been made so by +some cruelty." + +"That's all rot. Utter rot. You don't know what you're talking +about.... It's milking time. There's Gwinnie semaphoring. Do you know old +Burton's going to keep us on? He'll pay us wages from this quarter. He +says we were worth our keep from the third day." + +"Do you want to stay on here?" + +"Rather." + +"Very well then, so do I. That settles it." + +"Get up," she said, "and come along. Gwinnie's frantic." + +He sat up, bowed forwards, his hands hanging loose over his knees. +She stood and looked down at him, at the arch of his long, slender +back dropping to the narrow hips. She could feel the sudden crush of +her breath in her chest and the sighing throb in her throat and her +lips parting. + +He grasped the hands she stretched out to him at arms' length. She set +her teeth and pressed her feet to the ground, and leaned back, her weight +against his weight, tugging. + +He came up to his feet, alert, laughing at the heavy strength of her +pull. As they ran down the field he still held, loosely, like a thing +forgotten, her right hand. + + * * * * * + +Through the long June night on her bed in the room under the gable--the +hot room that smelt of plaster and of the apples stored in the loft +behind it--she lay thinking. + +Gwinnie had turned her back, burrowing into her pillow with a final shrug +of her hips. She was asleep now in her corner. + +"If I were you I wouldn't think about him, Sharlie"--She knew what +Gwinnie meant. But thinking was one thing and caring was another. +Thinking was the antidote to caring. If she had let her mind play freely +over Gibson Herbert in the beginning--But Gibson stopped her thinking, +and John Conway made her think. That was the difference. + +There was nothing about John that was like Gibson. Not a look, not a +gesture, not the least thought in his mind. His mind was like his +body, clean and cold and beautiful. Set on fire only by dreams; loving +you in a dream, a dream that burned him up and left him cold to you. +Cold and clean. + +There were things she laid up against him, the poor dear; a secret hoard +of grievances now clear to her in the darkness; she found herself turning +them over and over, as if positively her mind owed his romantic apathy a +grudge. Little things she remembered. Three things. + +Yesterday in the hayfield, John pitching hay on to the cart, and she +standing on the top of the load, flattening down the piles as he swung +them up. Gwinnie came with a big fork, swanking, for fun, trying to pitch +a whole haycock. In the dark of the room she could see Gwinnie's little +body straining back from the waist, her legs stiffening, her face pink +and swollen; and John's face looking at Gwinnie. + +She shouted down at him, "Why can't you _take_ the damned thing? She'll +break her back with it." And he shouted up, "That's her look-out." (But +he took it.) He didn't like Gwinnie. + +That time. And the time Cowslip calved, the darling choosing the one +night old Burton was away and Jim down with flu. She had to hold the +lantern. Straw littered in the half-lighted shed. Cowslip swinging her +bald-faced head round to you, her humble, sorrowful eyes imploring, +between her groans and the convulsive heavings of her flanks. A noise +between a groan and a bellow, a supreme convulsion. The dark wall, the +white funnel of light from the lantern, and John's face in the flash.... + +But he had been sorry for Cowslip. Going out with the lantern afterwards +she had found him in the yard, by the wall, bent double, shivering and +retching. And she had sung out to him "Buck up, John. She's licked it +clean. It's the dearest little calf you ever saw." + +Pity. Pity could drag your face tight and hard, like Burton's when his +mare, Jenny, died of colic. + +But before that--the night they went to Stow Fair together; crossing +the street at the sharp turn by the church gate, something happened. +They hadn't heard the motor car coming; it was down on them before they +could see it, swerving round her side of the street. He had had his +hand tight on her arm to steer her through the crowd. When the car +came ... when the car came ... he let go and jumped clean to the curb. +She could feel the splash-board graze her thigh, as she sprang clear of +it, quick, like a dog. + +She was sure he jumped first. She was sure he hadn't let her go before +the car came. She could see the blaze of the lamps and feel his grip +slacken on her arm. + +She wasn't sure. He couldn't have jumped. He couldn't have let go. Of +course he hadn't. She had imagined it. She imagined all sorts of things. +If she could make them bad enough she would stop thinking about him; she +would stop caring. She didn't want to care. + + * * * * * + +"Charlotte--when I die, that's where I'd like to be buried." + +Coming back from Bourton market they had turned into the churchyard on +the top of Stow-hill. The long path went straight between the stiff yew +cones through the green field set with graves. + +"On the top, so high up you could almost breathe in your coffin here." + +"I don't want to breathe in my coffin. When I'm dead I'm dead, and when +I'm alive I'm alive. Don't talk about dying." + +"Why not? Think of the gorgeous risk of it--the supreme toss up. After +all, death's the most thrilling thing that happens." + +"Whose death?" + +"My death." + +"Don't _talk_ about it." + +"Your death then." + +"Oh, mine--" + +"Our death, Jeanne." + +He turned to her in the path. His mouth was hard now, but his eyes shone +at her, smiling, suddenly warm, suddenly tender. + +She knew herself then; she knew there was one cruelty, one brutality +beyond bearing, John's death. + + + + +IV + + +John had gone away for a week. + +If she could tire herself out, and not dream. In the slack days between +hay-time and harvest she was never tired enough. She lay awake, teased by +the rucking of the coarse hot sheet under her back, and the sweat that +kept on sliding between her skin and her night gown. And she dreamed. + +She was waiting in the beech ring on the top of the field. Inside the +belt of the tree trunks a belt of stones grew up, like the wall of the +garden. It went higher and higher and a hole opened in it, a long slit. +She stuck her head through the hole to look out over the hills. + +This was the watch-tower. She knew, as if she remembered it, that John +had told her to go up and wait for him there; she was keeping watch for +him on the tower. + +Grey mist flowed over the field like water. He was down there in the +field. If she went to him he would take her in his arms. + +She was walking now on the highway to Bourton-on-the-Hill. At the dip +after the turn shallow water came out of the grass borders and ran +across the road, cold to her naked feet. She knew that something was +happening to John. He had gone away and she had got to find him and +bring him back. She had got to find the clear hill where the battleship +sailed over the field. + +Instead of the ship she found the Barrow Farm beeches. They stood in a +thick ring round a clearing of grey grass and grey light. John was +standing there with a woman. She turned and showed her sharp face, the +colour of white clay, her long evil nose, her eyes tilted corner and the +thin tail of her mouth, writhing. That was Miss Lister who had been in +Gibson's office. She had John now. + +Forms without faces, shrouded white women, larvae slipped from the black +grooves of the beech trunks; they made a ring round him with their +bodies, drew it in tighter and tighter. The grey light beat like a pulse +with the mounting horror. + +She cried out his name, and her voice sounded tragic and immense; sharp +like a blade of lightning screaming up to the top of the sky. A black +iron curtain crashed down before her and cut off the dream. + +Gwinnie looked up over the crook of her knee from the boot she was +lacing. + +"You made no end of a row in your sleep, Sharlie." + + * * * * * + +She had dreamed about him again, the next night. He was walking with her +on the road from the town to the Farm. By the lime kiln at the turn he +disappeared. He had never been there, really. + +She had gone out to look for him. The road kept on curling round like a +snake, bringing her back and back to the white gate of the Farm. + +When she got through the gate she stepped off the field on to the low +bridge over a black canal. The long, sharp-pointed road cut straight as a +dyke through the flat fields, between two lines of slender trees, tall +poles with tufted tops. + +She knew she was awake now because the light whitened and the wind moved +in the tree tufts and the road felt hard under her feet. When she came to +the village, to the long grey walls with narrow shutters, she knew John +was there. He came down the street towards the canal bridge. A group of +women and children walked with him, dressed in black. Dutch women. Dutch +babies. She could see their overalls and high caps and large, upturned +shoes very black and distinct in the white light. This was real. + +They pointed their fingers and stared at her with secretive, inimical +faces. Terror crept in over the street, subtle, drifting and penetrating +like an odour. + +John's face was happy and excited; that was how she knew him. His face +was real, its happiness and excitement were real. But as he passed her it +changed; it turned on her with a look she didn't know. Eyes of hatred, +eyes that repudiated and betrayed her. + + * * * * * + +The third night; the third dream. + +She had lost John and was looking for him; walking a long time through a +country she could no longer see or remember. She came out of blank space +to the river bridge and the red town. She could see the road +switchbacking over the bridge and turning sharp and slanting up the river +bank to the ramparts. + +Red fortresses above the ramparts, a high red town above the fortresses, +a thin red tower above the town. The whole thing looked dangerous and +unsteady, as if any minute it would topple over. She knew John was there. +Something awful was happening to him, and he wanted her. + +When she stepped on the bridge the river swelled and humped itself up to +the arch. It flooded. The bridge walls made a channel for the gush. It +curled over the bank and came curving down the slant road from the +ramparts, heavy and clear, like melted glass. + +She climbed up and up through the water and round behind the fortress to +the street at the top. She could see the thin tower break and lean +forward like a red crane above the houses. She had to get to the top +before the street fell down. John was shut up in the last house. She ran +under the tower as it fell. + +The house stood still, straight and tall. John was lying in the dark room +behind the closed shutters. He wanted her. She could hear him calling to +her "Jeanne! Jeanne!" She couldn't see in. She couldn't open the door. + +"Jeanne!" + +The wall split off and leaned forward. + +She woke suddenly to the tapping and splashing of the rain. + + + + +V + + +Feeding time and milking time were done; in his jutting room over the +door-place John was washing and dressing for Sunday evening. He called +out to her through his window, "Go up to our seat and wait for me there." + +He had come back again, suddenly, that morning, a day before they had +expected him. + +Charlotte came out of the hot field into the cool room of the beech ring. +She sniffed up the clean, sharp smell of sap from the rough seat that she +and John had put up there, sawing and hacking and hammering all Sunday +afternoon. Every evening when the farm work was done they would sit there +together, inside the round screen of the beeches. + +The farm people wouldn't disturb them; not even Mr. Burton, now, looking +in, smiling the fat, benevolent smile that blessed them, and going away; +the very calves were so well used to them that they had left off pushing +their noses through the tree trunks and staring. + +John's window faced her where she sat; she could see his head passing and +passing across the black window space. To her sharp, waiting soul Barrow +Farm took on a sudden poignant and foreign beauty. The house was yellow +where the rain had soaked it, gold yellow like a sun-struck southern +house, under the black plume of the firs, a yellow that made the sky's +blue solid and thick. The grass, bright green after the rain, stretched +with the tight smoothness of velvet over the slopes and ridges of the +field. A stripe of darker green, where their feet had trodden down the +blades, led straight as a sheep's track from the garden gate to the +opening of the ring. + +To think that she had dreamed bad dreams in a place like this. She +thought: "There must be something wrong about me, anyhow, to dream bad +dreams about John." + +John was coming up the field, walking slowly, his hands thrust in his +pockets, his eyes fixed steadily on a point in front of him that his mind +didn't see, drawn back in some intense contemplation. He strolled into +the ring so slowly that she had time to note the meditative gestures of +his shoulders and chin. He stood beside her, very straight and tall, not +speaking, still hiding his hands in his pockets, keeping up to the last +minute his pose of indestructible tranquillity. He was so close that she +could hear his breathing and feel his coat brushing her shoulder. + +He seated himself, slowly, without a break in the silence of his +meditation. + +She knew that something wonderful and beautiful was going to happen. It +had happened; it was happening now, growing more certain and more real +with every minute that she waited for John to say something. If nothing +changed, if this minute that she was living now prolonged itself, if it +went on for ever and ever, that would be happiness enough. + +If she could keep still like this for ever--Any movement would be +dangerous. She was afraid almost to breathe. + +Then she remembered. Of course, she would have to _tell_ him. + +She could feel the jerk and throb in John's breathing, measuring off the +moments of his silence. Her thoughts came and went. "When he says he +cares for me I shall have to tell him"--"This is going on for ever. If he +cared for me he would have said it before now."--"It doesn't matter. He +can care or not as he likes. Nothing can stop my caring." + +Then she was aware of her will, breaking through her peace, going out +towards him, fastening on his mind to make him care; to make him say he +cared, now, this minute. She was aware of her hands, clenched and +unclenched, pressing the sharp edge of the seat into their palms as she +dragged back her will. + +She was quiet now. + +John was looking at his own loose clasped hands and smiling. "Yes," he +said, "yes. Yes." It was as if he had said, "This will go on. Nothing +more than this can ever happen. But as long as we live it will go on." + +She had a sense almost of relief. + +"Charlotte--" + +"John--" + +"You asked me why I came here. You must have known why." + +"I didn't. I don't." + +"Can't you think?" + +"No, John. I've left off thinking. _My_ thinking's never any use." + +"If you _did_ think you'd know it was you." + +"_Me_?" + +"If it wasn't you just at first it was your face. There are faces that do +things to you, that hurt you when they're not there. Faces of people you +don't know in the least. You see them once and they never let you alone +till you've seen them again. They draw you after them, back and back. +You'd commit any sin just to see them again once.... + +"... You've got that sort of face. When I saw you the first time--Do +you remember? You came towards me over the field. You stopped and +spoke to me." + +"Supposing I hadn't?" + +"It wouldn't have mattered. I'd have followed you just the same. Wherever +you'd gone I'd have gone, too. I very nearly turned back then." + +She remembered. She saw him standing in the road at the turn. + +"I knew I had to see you again. But I waited two days to make sure. Then +I came ... + +"... And when I'd gone I kept on seeing your face. It made me come back +again. And the other day--I tried to get away from you. I didn't mean to +come back; but I had to. I can't stand being away from you. And yet-- + +"... Oh well--there it is. I had to tell you ... I couldn't if I didn't +trust you." + +"You tried to get away from me--You didn't mean to come back." + +"I tell you I _had_ to. It's no use trying." + +"But you didn't want to come back.... _That's_ why I dreamed about you." + +"Did you dream about me?" + +"Yes. Furiously. Three nights running. I dreamed you'd got away and when +I'd found you a black thing came down and cut you off. I dreamed you'd +got away again, and I met you in a foreign village with a lot of foreign +women, and you looked at me and I knew you hated me. You wouldn't know +me. You went by without speaking and left me there." + +"My God--you thought I could do that?" + +"I dreamed it. You don't think in dreams. You feel. You see things." + +"You see things that don't exist, that never can exist, things you've +thought about people. If I thought that about myself, Jeanne, I'd blow my +brains out now, so that it shouldn't happen." + +"That wasn't the worst dream. The third was the worst. You were in a +dreadful, dangerous place. Something awful was happening, and you wanted +me, and I couldn't get to you." + +"No, that wasn't the worst dream. I _did_ want you, and you knew it." + +She thought: "He cares. He doesn't want to care, but he does. And he +trusts me. I shall have to tell him ..." + +"There's something," she said, "I've got to tell you." + + * * * * * + +He must have known. He must have guessed. + +He had listened with a gentle, mute attention, as you listen to a story +about something that you remember, that interests you still, his eyes +fixed on his own hands, his clear, beautiful face dreamy and inert. + +"You see," he said, "you did trust me. You wouldn't tell me all that if +you didn't." + +"Of course I trust you. I told you because you trusted me. I thought--I +thought you ought to know. I daresay you did know--all the time." + +"No. No, I didn't. I shouldn't have believed it was in you." + +"It isn't in me now. It's gone clean out of me. I shall never want that +sort of thing again." + +"I know _that_." He said it almost irritably. "I mean I shouldn't have +thought you could have cared for a brute like that.... But the brutes +women _do_ care for ..." + +"I suppose I did care. But I don't feel as if I'd cared. I don't feel as +if it had ever really happened. I can't believe it did. You see, I've +forgotten such a lot of it. I couldn't have believed that once, that you +could go and do a thing like that and forget about it. You'd have thought +you'd remember it as long as you lived." + +"You couldn't live if you remembered...." + +"Oh, John, do you think it was as horrible as all that?" + +His face moved, flashed into sudden passion. + +"I think _he_ was as horrible as that. He makes it +horrible--inconceivably horrible." + +"But--he wasn't." + +"You've told me. He was cruel to you. And he lied and funked." + +"It wasn't like him--it wasn't _like_ him to lie and funk. It was my +fault. I made the poor thing jumpy. I let him run such whopping risks. +_The_ horrible thing is thinking what I made him." + +"He was a liar and a coward, Charlotte; a swine." + +"I tell you he _wasn't_. Oh, why are we so beastly hard on each other? +Everybody's got their breaking-point. I don't lie about the things he +lied about; I don't funk the things he funked. But when my time comes I +daresay I shall funk and lie." + +"Charlotte--are you sure you don't care for him?" + +"Of course I'm sure. I told you I'd forgotten all about it. _This_ is +what I shall remember all my life. Your being here, my being with you. +It's the _real_ thing." + +"You wouldn't want to go back?" + +"To him?" + +"No. To that sort of thing." + +"You mean with--just anybody?" + +"I mean with--somebody you cared about. Could you do without it and go +on caring?" + +"Yes. If _he_ could. If he could go on. But he wouldn't." + +"'He' wouldn't, Charlotte. But _I_ would.... You know I _do_ care for +you?" + +"I thought you _did_--I mean I thought you were beginning to. That's why +I told you what happened, though I knew you'd loathe me." + +"I don't. I'm glad you told me. I'm glad it happened. I mean I'm glad +you worked it off on him.... You got it over; you've had your +experience; you know all about it; you know how long that sort of thing +lasts and how it ends. The baseness, the cruelty of it ... I'm like you, +Charlotte, I don't want any more of it.... When I say I care for you I +mean I want to be with you, to be with you _always_. I'm not happy when +you're not there.... + +"... I say, I wish you'd leave this place and come away and live with me +somewhere." + +"Where?" + +"There's my farm. My father's going to give me one if I stick to +this job. We could run it together. There are all sorts of jolly +things we could do together.... Would you like to live with me, +Charlotte, on my farm?" + +"Yes." + +"I mean--live with me without _that_." + +"Yes; without that." + +"It isn't that I don't care for you. It's because I care so awfully, so +much more than anybody else could. I want to go on caring, and it's the +only way. People don't know that. They don't know what they're +destroying with their blind rushing together. All the delicate, +exquisite sensations. Charlotte, I can get all the ecstasy I want by +just sitting here and looking at you, hearing your voice, touching +you--like this." His finger-tips brushed the bare skin of her arm. "Even +thinking of you ... + +"... And all that would go. Everything would go.... + +"... But our way--nothing could end it." + +"I can see one thing that would end it. If you found somebody you really +cared about." + +"Oh _that_--You mean if I--It wouldn't happen, and if it did, what +difference would it make?" + +"You mean you'd come back?" + +"I mean I shouldn't have left you." + +"Still, you'd have gone to her. John, I don't think I could bear it." + +"You wouldn't have to bear it long. It wouldn't last." + +"Why shouldn't it?" + +"Because--You don't understand, Charlotte--if I know a woman wants me, it +makes me loathe her." + +"It wouldn't, if you wanted _her_." + +"That would be worse. I should _hate_ her then if she made me go to her." + +"You don't know." + +"Oh, don't I!" + +"You can't, if you feel like that about it." + +"You say you feel like that about it yourself." + +"That's because I've been through it." + +"Do you suppose," he said, "I haven't?" + + + + +BOOK TWO + +JOHN RODEN CONWAY + + + + +VI + + +It was an hour since they had left Newhaven. + +The boat went steadily, inflexibly, without agitation, cutting the small, +crisp waves with a sound like the flowing of stiff silk. For a moment, +after the excited rushing and hooting of the ambulance car, there had +been something not quite real about this motion, till suddenly you caught +the rhythm, the immense throb and tremor of the engines. + +Then she knew. + +She was going out, with John and Gwinnie Denning and a man called Sutton, +Dr. Sutton, to Belgium, to the War. She wondered whether any of them +really knew what it would be like when they got there.--She was vague, +herself. She thought of the war mostly in two pictures: one very distant, +hanging in the air to her right, colourless as an illustration in the +papers, grey figures tumbled in a grey field, white puff-bursts of +shrapnel in a grey sky: and one very near; long lines of stretchers, +wounded men and dead men on stretchers, passing and passing before her. +She saw herself and John carrying a stretcher, John at the head and her +at the foot and Gwinnie and Dr. Sutton with another stretcher. + +Nothing for her and John and Gwinnie but field work; the farm had spoiled +them incurably for life indoors. But it had hardened their muscles and +their nerves, it had fitted them for the things they would have to do. +The things they would have to see. There would be blood; she knew there +would be blood; but she didn't see it; she saw white, very white +bandages, and greyish white, sallow-white faces that had no features that +she knew. She hadn't really thought so very much about the war; there had +been too many other things to think about. Their seven weeks' training at +Coventry, the long days in Roden and Conway's motor works, the long +evenings in the ambulance classes; field practice in the meadow that +John's father had lent to the Red Cross; runs along the Warwickshire +roads with John sitting beside her, teaching her to steer and handle the +heavy ambulance car. An endless preparation. + +And under it all, like a passion, like a hidden illness, their +impatience, their intolerable longing to be out there. + +If there had been nothing else to think about there was John. Always +John. Not that you could think about him without thinking about the war; +he was so thoroughly mixed up with it; you couldn't conceive him as left +out of it or as leaving himself out. It had been an obsession with him, +to get into it, to get into it at once, without waiting. That was why +there was only four of them. He wouldn't wait for more volunteers. They +could get all the volunteers they wanted afterwards; and all the cars, +his father would send out any number. She suspected John of not really +wanting the volunteers, of not even wanting Gwinnie and Dr. Sutton. She +could see he would have liked to have gone with her alone. Queer, that so +long as she had thought he would be going without her, she had been +afraid; she had felt certain he would be killed or die of wounds. The one +unbearable thing was that John should die. But after it had been settled +that she was to go with him as his chauffeur she hadn't been afraid any +more. It was as if she knew that she would keep him safe. Or perhaps all +the time she had been afraid of something else. Of separation. She had +had visions of John without her in another country; they were coloured, +vaguely, with the horror of her dreams. It had been just that. Anyhow, +she hadn't thought any more about John's dying. + +It was the old man, his father, who had made her think of it now. + +She could see him, the grey, kind, silent man, at the last minute, +standing on the quay and looking at John with a queer, tight look as +though he were sorry about something--oh, but unbearably sorry about +something he'd thought or said or done. He was keeping it all in, it was +a thing he couldn't speak about, but you could see it made him think John +wasn't coming back again. + +He had got it into his head that she was going out because of John. +She remembered, before that, his kind, funny look at her when he said +to John, "Mind you take care of her," and John's "No fear," and her +own "That's not what he's going out for." She had a slight pang when +she thought of John's father. He had been good to Gwinnie and to her +at Coventry. + +But as for going out because of John, whether he went or not she would +have had to go, so keen that she hated those seven weeks at Coventry, +although John had been there. + +With every thud of the engines her impatience was appeased. + +And all the time she could hear Gwinnie's light, cool voice explaining to +Dr. Sutton that the British Red Cross wouldn't look at them and their +field ambulance, but the Belgians, poor things, you know, weren't in a +position to refuse. They would have taken almost anything. + +Her mind turned to them: to Gwinnie, dressed in their uniform, khaki +tunic and breeches and puttees, her fawn-coloured overcoat belted close +round her to hide her knees. Gwinnie looked stolid and good, with her +face, the face of an innocent, intelligent routing animal, stuck out +between the close wings of her motor cap and the turned-up collar of her +coat. She would go through it all right. Gwinnie was a little plodder. + +She would plod through the war as she had plodded through her training, +without any fear of tests. + +And Dr. Sutton. From time to time she caught him looking at her across +the deck. When Gwinnie's talk dropped he made no effort to revive it, but +stood brooding; a square, thick-set man. His head leaned forward a little +from his heavy shoulders in a perpetual short-sighted endeavour to look +closer; you could see his eyes, large and clear under the watery wash of +his glasses. His features, slightly flattened, were laid quietly back on +his composed, candid face; the dab of docked moustache rising up in it +like a strange note of wonder, of surprise. + +There, he was looking at her again. But whether he looked or listened, or +stood brooding, his face kept still all the time, still and sad. His +mouth hardly moved as he spoke to Gwinnie. + +She turned from him to the contemplation of their fellow passengers. The +two Belgian boy scouts in capes and tilted caps with tassels bobbing over +their foreheads; they tramped the decks, seizing attention by their gay, +excited gestures. You could see that they were happy. + +The group, close by her in the stern, establishing itself there apart, +with an air of righteous possession: five, six, seven men, three young, +four middle-aged, rather shy and awkward, on its fringe. In its centre +two women in slender tailor-made suits and motor veils, looking like +bored uninterested travellers used to the adventure. + +They were talking to a little man in shabby tweeds and an olive-green +velvet hat too small for his head. His smooth, innocent pink face carried +its moustache like an accident, a mistake. Once, when he turned, she met +the arched stare of small china-blue eyes; it passed over her without +seeing, cold, dreamy, indifferent. + +She glanced again at his women. The tall one drew you every time by her +raking eyes, her handsome, arrogant face, the gesture of her small head, +alert and at the same time set, the predatory poise of an enormous bird. +But the other one was--rather charming. Her features had a curious, sweet +bluntness; her eyes were decorations, deep-set blue in the flushed gold +of her sunburn. The little man straddled as he talked to them, bobbing +forward now and then, with a queer jerking movement from his hips. + +She wondered what they were and decided that they were part of the +Commission for Relief in Belgium, bound for Ostend. + +All those people had the look that John had, of having found what they +had wanted, of being satisfied, appeased. Even Sutton had it, lying on +the top of his sadness, like a light. They felt precisely as she was +feeling--all those people. + +And through her wonder she remained aware of John Conway as he walked the +deck, passing and passing in front of her. + +She got up and walked with him. + +The two women stared at them as they passed. One, the tall one, whispered +something to the other. + +"John--do my knees show awfully as I walk?" + +"No. Of course they don't. Gwinnie's do. She doesn't know what to do +with them." + +He looked down at her and smiled. + +"I like you. I like you in that cap. You look as if you were sailing fast +against a head wind, as if you could cut through anything." + +Their turn brought them again under the women's eyes. He took her arm and +drew her aside to the rail of the boat's stern. They stood there, +watching the wake boiling and breaking and thinning, a white lace of +froth on the glassy green. Sutton passed them. + +"What's the matter with him?" she said. + +"The War. He's got it on his mind. It's no use taking it like that, +Jeanne, as one consummate tragedy ... How are _you_ feeling about it?" + +"I don't think I'm feeling anything--except wanting to get there. And +wanting--wanting frightfully--to help." + +"Unless you can go into it as if it was some tremendous, happy +adventure--That's the only way to take it. I shouldn't be any good if I +didn't feel it was the most _romantic_ thing that ever happened to +me.... To have let everything go, to know that nothing matters, that it +doesn't matter if you're killed, or mutilated ... Of course I want to +help, but that would be nothing without the gamble. The danger." + +He stopped suddenly in his turning and held her with his shining, +excited eyes. + +"War's the most romantic thing that ever happened ... False romance, my +father calls it. Jolly little romance about _him_. He'll simply make pots +of money out of the war, selling motors to the Government." + +"It's rather--romantic of him to give us those two ambulances, and +pay for us." + +"_Is_ it? Think of the kudos he gets out of it, and the advertisement for +Roden and Conway, the stinking paragraphs he'll put in the papers about +himself: 'His second son, Mr. John Roden Conway, is taking out two Roden +field ambulance cars which he will drive himself--'Mr. John Roden Conway +and his field ambulance car. A Roden, 30 horse power.' He makes me sick." + +She saw again, with a renewal of her pang, the old man, the poor, kind +man. Perhaps he wouldn't put the paragraphs in the papers. + +"False romance. He lied. There's no such thing as false romance. Romance +is a state of mind. A state of mind can't be false or true. It simply +exists. It hasn't any relation to reality. It _is_ reality, the most real +part of us. When it's dead we're dead." + +"Yes." + +But it was funny to _talk_ about it. About romance and danger. It made +her hot and shy. She supposed that was because she couldn't take things +in. Her fatheadedness. It was easy not to say things if you didn't feel +them. The more John felt them the more he had to say them. Besides, he +never said them to anybody but her. It was really saying them to himself, +a quiet, secret thinking. + +He stood close, close in front of her, tall and strong and handsome in +his tunic, knee breeches and puttees. She could feel the vibration of his +intense, ardent life, of his excitement. And suddenly, before his young +manhood, she had it again, the old feeling, shooting up and running over +her, swamping her brain. She wondered with a sort of terror whether he +would see it in her face, whether if she spoke he would hear it +thickening her throat. He would loathe her if he knew. She would loathe +herself if she thought she was going into the war because of that, +because of him. Women did. She remembered Gibson Herbert. Glasgow.... But +this was different. The sea was in it, magic was in it and romance. And +if she had to choose between John and her wounded it should not be John. +She had sworn that before they started. Standing there close beside him +she swore again, secretly to herself, that it should not be John. + +John glanced at Sutton as he passed them. + +"I'd give my soul to be a surgeon," he said. "That's what I wanted." + +"You wanted to be a soldier." + +"It would have been the next best thing.... Did you notice in the lists +the number of Army Medical men killed and missing? Out of all proportion. +That means that they're as much exposed as the combatants. More, +really.... + +"... Jeanne--do you realise that if we've any luck, any luck at all, we +shall take the same risks?" + +"It's all very well for us. If it was only being killed--But +there's killing." + +"Of course there's killing. If a man's willing to be killed he's jolly +well earned his right to kill. It's the same for the other johnnie. If +your life doesn't matter a hang, his doesn't either. He's got his +feeling. He's got his romance. If he hasn't--" + +"Yes--if he hasn't?" + +"He's better dead." + +"Oh no; he might simply go slogging on without feeling anything, from a +sense of duty. That would be beautiful; it would be _the_ most +beautiful thing." + +"There you are, then. His duty's his romance. You can't get away from +it." + +"No." + +But she thought: Supposing he went, loathing it, shivering, sick? +Frightened. Well, of course it would be there too, simply because he +_went_; only you would feel it, not he. + +Supposing he didn't go, supposing he stuck, and had to be pushed on, by +bayonets, from behind? It didn't bear thinking of. + +John hadn't thought of it. He wouldn't. He couldn't see that some people +were like that. + +"I don't envy," he said, "the chaps who come out to soft jobs in +this war." + +They had found the little man in tweeds asleep behind the engine house, +his chin sunk on his chest, his hands folded on his stomach. He had taken +off his green velvet hat, and a crest of greyish hair rose up from his +bald forehead, light and fine. + + * * * * * + +The sun was setting now. The foam of the wake had the pink tinge of red +wine spilt on a white cloth; a highway of gold and rose, edged with +purple, went straight from it to the sun. + +After the sunset, land, the sunk lines of the Flemish coast. + +There was a stir among the passengers; they plunged into the cabins and +presently returned, carrying things. The groups sorted themselves, the +Commission people standing apart with their air of arrogance and +distinction. The little man in tweeds had waked up from his sleep behind +the engine house, and strolled with a sort of dreamy swagger to his place +at their head. Everybody moved over to the starboard side. + +They stood there in silence watching the white walls and domes and towers +of Ostend. Charlotte and Conway had moved close to each other. She looked +up into his face, searching his thoughts there. Suddenly from somewhere +in the bows a song spurted and dropped and spurted again and shot up in +the stillness, slender and clear, like a rod oft white water. The Belgian +boys were singing the Marseillaise. On the deck their feet beat out the +thud of the march. + +Charlotte looked away. + + + + +VII + + +"Nothing," Charlotte said, "is going to be worse than this." + +It seemed to her that they had waited hours in the huge grey hall of the +Hotel-Hospital, she and Sutton and Gwinnie, while John talked to the +President of the Red Cross in his bureau. Everybody looked at them: the +door-keeper, the lift orderly; the ward men and nurses hurrying past; +wide stares and sharp glances falling on her and Gwinnie, slanting +downward to their breeches and puttees, then darting upwards to their +English faces. + +Sutton moved, putting his broad body between them and the batteries of +amused and interested eyes. + +They stood close together at the foot of the staircase. Above them the +gigantic Flora leaned forward, holding out her flowers to preoccupied +people who wouldn't look at her; she smiled foolishly; too stupid to know +that the Flandria was no longer an hotel but a military hospital. + +John came out of the President's bureau. He looked disgusted and +depressed. + +"They can put us up," he said; "but I've got to break it to you that +we're not the only Field Ambulance in Ghent." + +Charlotte said, "Oh, well, we'd no business to suppose we were." + +"We've got to share our quarters with the other one.... It calls itself +the McClane Corps." + +"Shall we have to sleep with it?" Sutton said. + +"We shall have to have it in our messroom. I believe it's up there now." + +"Well, that won't hurt us." + +"What'll hurt us is this. It'll be sent out before we are. McClane was +here hours ago. He's been to Head Quarters." + +Sutton's gloom deepened. "How do you know?" + +"President says so." + +They went, following the matron, up the grey, tessellated stairs; at each +landing the long, grey corridors were tunnels for the passage of strange +smells, ether and iodine and carbolic and the faint odour of drains, +seeking their outlet at the well of the staircase. + +On the third floor, at the turn of the corridor, a small vestibule +between two glass doors led to a room flooded with a blond light from the +south. Beyond the glass doors, their figures softened by the deep, +doubled shimmer of the panes, they saw the little man in shabby tweeds, +the two women, and the seven other men. This, Madame explained, was Dr. +Donald McClane's Field Ambulance Corps. You could see it had thought it +was the only one. As they entered they met the swoop of two beautiful, +indignant eyes, a slow turning and abrupt stiffening of shoulders; the +movement of the group was palpable, a tremor of hostility and resentment. + +It lasted with no abatement while Madame, standing there in her gaunt +Flemish graciousness, murmured names. "Mrs. Rankin--" Mrs. Rankin nodded +insolently and turned away. "Miss Bartrum--" Miss Bartrum, the rather +charming one, bowed, drawing the shadow of grave eyebrows over sweet +eyes. "Dr. Donald McClane--" As he bowed the Commandant's stare arched up +at them, then dropped, suddenly innocent, suddenly indifferent. + +They looked around. Madame and her graciousness had gone. Nobody made a +place for them at the two long tables set together in the middle of the +room. The McClane Corps had spread itself over all the chairs and +benches, in obstinate possession. They passed out through the open French +windows on to the balcony. + +It looked south over the railway towards the country where they thought +the fighting must be. They could see the lines where the troop trains +ran, going northwest and southeast, and the railway station and post +office all in one long red-brick building that had a flat roof with a +crenellated parapet. Grass grew on the roof. And beyond the black railway +lines miles upon miles of flat open country, green fields, rows of +poplars standing up in them very straight; little woods; here and there a +low rise bristling and dark with trees. The fighting must be over there. +Under the balcony the white street ran southeastward, and scouting cars +and ammunition wagons and long lines of troops were all going that way. + +While they talked they remained aware of the others. They could see +McClane rubbing his hands; they heard his brief laugh that had no +amusement in it, and his voice saying, "Anyhow, we've got in first." + +When they came back into the room they found the tables drawn apart with +a wide space between. The Belgian orderlies were removing plates and cups +from one to the other, establishing under the Commandant's directions a +separate mess. By tea-time two chauffeurs had added themselves to the +McClane Corps. + +Twelve to four. And they would have to live together nobody knew how +long: as long as the war lasted. + + * * * * * + +That evening, in the bedroom that John shared with Sutton, they sat on +two beds, discussing their prospects. Gwinnie was voluble. + +"They've driven us out of our messroom with their beastliness. We shall +have to sit in our bedrooms all the time." + +"We'd better let the office know we're here," said Sutton, "in case we're +sent for." + +"Anyhow," said Charlotte, "_I'm_ not going to bed." + +John smiled. A struggling, dejected smile. + +"My dear child, I've told you they're not going to send us out first." + +"I don't know--" said Gwinnie. + +"I _do_ know. We shall be lucky if we get a look in when McClane's cars +break down." + +"That's it. Have you seen their cars? I overhauled them this morning, in +the yard. They're nothing but old lorries, converted. And one of 'em's +got solid tyres." + +"Well?" + +"Well--You wait." + +They waited. Even the McClane Corps had to wait. + + * * * * * + +"I don't care," said Charlotte, "how beastly they are to me, provided +they leave John alone." + +"What can they do?" he said. "They don't matter." + +"There's such a lot of them," said Gwinnie. "It's when they're all +together they're so poisonous." + +"It's when they're _separate_," Charlotte said. "I think Mrs. Rankin +_does_ things. And there's McClane swearing he'll get us out of Belgium. +But he won't!" + +She didn't care. She had got used to it as she had got used to the +messroom and its furnishings, the basket chairs and backless benches, the +two long tables covered with white marbled American leather, the +photographs of the King and Queen of the Belgians above the chimney +piece. The atmosphere of hostility was thick and penetrating, something +that you breathed in with the smells of ether and iodine and +disinfectant, that hung about the grey, leeking corridors and floated in +the blond light of the room. She could feel a secret threat in it, as if +at any minute it might work up to some pitch still more malignant, some +supreme disaster. There were moments when she wondered whether McClane +had prejudiced the authorities against them. At first she had regarded +the little man as negligible; it was the women who had fascinated her, as +if they had or might come to have for her some profound importance and +significance. She didn't like McClane. He straddled too much. But you +couldn't go on ignoring him. His dreamy, innocent full face with its +arching eyes was a mask, the mask of dangerous, inimical intentions; his +profile was rough cut, brutal, energetic, you guessed the upper lip thin +and hard under the hanging moustache; the lower one stuck out like a +sucker. That was his real face. It showed an adhesive, exhausting will +that squeezed and sucked till it had got what it wanted out of people. He +could work things. So could Mrs. Rankin. She had dined with the Colonel. + +Charlotte didn't care. She _liked_ that beastliness, that hostility of +theirs. It was something you could put your back against; it braced her +to defiance. It brought her closer to John, to John and Gwinnie, and +shut them in together more securely. Sutton she was not quite so sure +about. Through all their depression he seemed to stand apart somehow by +himself in a profounder discontent. "There are only four of us," he +said; "we can't call ourselves a corps." You could see the way his mind +was working. + +Then suddenly the atmosphere lifted at one point. Mrs. Rankin changed her +attitude to John. You could see her beautiful hawk's eyes pursuing him +about the room. When she found him in the corridors or on the stairs she +stopped him and chattered; under her breath because of the hushed wards. + +He told Charlotte about it. + +"That Mrs. Rankin seems inclined to be a bit too friendly." + +"I haven't noticed it." + +"Not with you. With Sutton and--and me." + +"Well--" + +"Well, I can't answer for Sutton, but I don't like it. That isn't what +we're out here for." + +They were going into the messroom together towards dinner time. Mrs. +Rankin and Alice Bartrum were there alone, seated at their tables, ready. +Mrs. Rankin called out in her stressed, vibrating voice across the room: + +"Mr. _Conway_, you people ought to come in with us." + +"Why?" + +"_Because_ there are only four of you and we're twelve. Sixteen's the +proper number for a unit. Alice, didn't I say, the minute I saw Mr. +Conway with that car of his, didn't I _say_ we ought to have him?" + +"You did." + +"Thanks. I'd rather take my orders from the Colonel." + +"And _I'd_ rather take _mine_ from you than from McClane. Fancy coming +out at the head of a Field Ambulance looking like that. Tell you what, +Mr. Conway, if you'll join up with us I'll get the Colonel to make you +our commandant." + +Alice Bartrum opened her shadowed eyes. "Trixie--you _can't_." + +"Can't I? I can make the old boy do anything I like." + +John stiffened. "You can't make me do anything you like, Mrs. Rankin. +You'd much better stick to McClane." + +"What do any of us know about McClane?" + +"What do you know about me?" + +You could see how he hated her. + +"I know you mean business." + +"Doesn't he?" + +"Don't ask me what he _means_." + +She shrugged her shoulders violently. "Come over here and sit by me. I +want to talk to you. Seriously." + +She had shifted her seat and made a place for him beside her on the +bench. Her flushed, handsome face covered him with its smile. You could +see she was used to being obeyed when she smiled like that; when she sent +that light out of her eyes men did what she wanted. All her life the men +she knew had obeyed her, all except McClane. She didn't know John. + +He raised his head and looked at her with cool, concentrated dislike. + +"I'd rather stay where I am if you don't mind. I want to talk to +Miss Redhead." + +"Oh--" Mrs. Rankin's flush went out like a blown flame. Her lips made +one pale, tight thread above the set square of her chin. All her light +was in her eyes. They stared before her at the glass door where McClane +was entering. + +He came swaggering and slipped into his place between her and Alice +Bartrum with his air of not seeing Mrs. Rankin, of not seeing Charlotte +and John, of not seeing anything he didn't want to see. Presently he +bobbed round in his seat so as to see Sutton, and began talking to him +excitedly. + +At the end of it Charlotte and Sutton found themselves alone, smiling +into each other's faces. + +"Do you like him?" she said. + +"I'm not sure. All the same that isn't a bad idea of Mrs. Rankin's." + +It was Sutton who tried to work it the next morning, sounding McClane. + +Charlotte was in the space between the glass doors, arranging their +stores in their own cupboard. McClane's stores had overflowed into it on +the lower shelves. She could hear the two men talking in the room, +Sutton's low, persuasive voice; she couldn't hear what he was saying. + +Suddenly McClane brought his fist down on the table. + +"I'll take you. And I'll take your women. And I'll take your ambulances. +I could do with two more ambulances. But I won't take Conway." + +"You can't tell him that." + +"Can't I!" + +"What can you say?" + +"I can say--" + +She pushed open the glass door and went in. McClane was whispering +furtively. She saw Sutton stop him with a look. They turned to her and +Sutton spoke. + +"Come in, Miss Redhead. This concerns you. Dr. McClane wants you and Miss +Denning and me to join his corps." + +"And how about Mr. Conway?" + +"Well--" McClane was trying to look innocent. "Mr. Conway's just the +difficulty. There can't be two commandants in one corps and he says he +won't take orders from me." + +(Mrs. Rankin must have talked about it, then.) + +"Is that what you told Dr. Sutton?" + +"Yes." + +His cold, innocent blue eyes supported him. He was lying; she knew he was +lying; that was not what he had said when he had whispered. + +"You don't suppose," she said, "I should leave Mr. Conway? And if I stick +to him Gwinnie'll stick." + +"And Dr. Sutton?" + +"He can please himself." + +"If Miss Redhead stays I shall stay." + +"John will let you off like a shot, if you don't want to." + +She turned to go and McClane called after her, "My offer remains open to +you three." + +Through the glass door she heard Sutton saying, "If you're right, +McClane, I can't very well leave her with him, can I?" + +Sutton was stupid. He didn't understand. Lying on her bed that night +Charlotte made it out. + +"Gwinnie--you know why McClane won't have John?" + +"I suppose because Mrs. Rankin's keen on him." + +"McClane isn't keen on Mrs. Rankin.... Can't you see he's trying to hoof +John out of Belgium, because he wants all the glory to himself? We +wouldn't do that to one of them, even if we were mean enough not to want +them in it." + +"He wanted Sutton." + +"Oh, Sutton--He wasn't afraid of _him_.... When you think of the war--and +think of people being like that. Jealous. Hating each other--" + + * * * * * + +You mightn't like Mrs. Rankin, Mrs. Rankin and McClane; but you couldn't +say they weren't splendid. + +Five days had passed. On the third day the McClane Corps had been sent +out. (Mrs. Rankin had not dined with the Colonel for nothing.) + +It went again and again. By the fifth day they knew that it had +distinguished itself at Alost and Termonde and Quatrecht. The names +sounded in their brains like a song with an exciting, maddening refrain. +October stretched before them, golden and blank, a volume of tense, +vibrating time. + +Nothing for it but to wait and wait. The summons might come any minute. +Charlotte and Gwinnie had begun by sitting on their drivers' seats in the +ambulances standing in the yard, ready to start the very instant it came. +Their orders were to hold themselves in readiness. They held themselves +in readiness and saw McClane's cars swing out from the rubbered sweep in +front of the Hospital three and four times a day. They stood on their +balcony and watched them rush along the road that led to the battlefields +southeast of the city. The sight of the flat Flemish land and the sadness +of lovely days oppressed them. She felt that it must be partly that. The +incredible loveliness of the days. They sat brooding over the map of +Belgium, marking down the names of the places, Alost, Termonde and +Quatrecht, that McClane had gone to, that he would talk about on his +return, when an awful interest would impel them to listen. He and Mrs. +Rankin would come in about tea-time, swaggering and excited, telling +everybody that they had been in the line of fire; and Alice Bartrum would +move about the room, quiet and sweet, cutting bread and butter and +pretending to be unconcerned in the narration. And in the evening, after +dinner, the discussion went on and on in John's bedroom. He raged against +his infernal luck. If they thought he was going to take it lying down-- + +"McClane can keep me out of my messroom, but he can't keep me out of my +job. There's room in 'the line of fire' for both of us." + +"How are you going to get into it?" said Sutton. + +"Same way as McClane. If he can go to Head Quarters, so can I." + +"I wouldn't," Sutton said. "It might give a bad impression. Our turn'll +come before long." + +Gwinnie laughed. "It won't--unless Charlotte dines with the Colonel." + +"It certainly _mayn't_," said Charlotte. "They may commandeer our cars +and give them to McClane." + +"They can't," said Gwinnie. "We're volunteers." + +"They can do anything they choose. Military necessity." + +Gwinnie was thoughtful. + +"John," she said, "can I have one of the cars to-morrow afternoon?" + +"What for?" + +"Never mind. Can I?" + +"You can have both the damned things if you like; they're no good to me." + +The next afternoon they looked on while Gwinnie, who wore a look of great +wisdom and mystery, slipped her car out of the yard into a side street +and headed for the town. She came back at tea-time, bright-eyed and +faintly flushed. + +"You'll find we shall be sent out to-morrow." + +"Oh, shall we!" John said. + +"Yes. I've worked it for you." + +"You?" + +"Me. They've seen my car." + +"Who have?" + +"The whole lot of them. General Staff. First of all I paraded it all +round the blessed town. Then I turned into the Place d'Armes. I kept it +standing two solid hours outside the Hotel de la Poste where the blooming +brass hats all hang out. In five minutes it collected a small crowd. +First it was only refugees and war correspondents. Then the Colonel came +out and stuck his head in at the back. He got quite excited when he saw +we could take five stretcher cases. + +"I showed him our tyres and the electric light, and I ran the stretchers +in and out for him. He'd never seen them with wheels before.... He said +it was 'magnifique'... The old bird wanted to take me into the hotel and +stand me tea." + +"Didn't you let him?" + +"No. I said I had to stay with my car. And I took jolly good care to let +him know it hadn't been out yet." + +"Whatever made you think of it?" + +"I don't know. It just sort of came to me." + +Next afternoon John had orders to go to Berlaere to fetch wounded. + + + + +VIII + + +At the turn of the road they heard the guns: a solemn Boom--Boom coming +up out of hushed spaces; they saw white puffs of smoke rising in the blue +sky. The French guns somewhere back of them. The German guns in front +southwards beyond the river. + +Charlotte looked at John; he was brilliantly happy. They smiled at each +other as if they said "_Now_ it's beginning." + +Outside the village of Berlaere they were held up by two sentries with +rifles. (Thrilling, that.) Their Belgian guide leaned out and whispered +the password; John showed their passports and they slipped through. + +Where the road turned on their left into the street they saw a group of +soldiers standing at the door of a house. Three of them, a Belgian +lieutenant and two non-commissioned officers, advanced hurriedly and +stopped the car. The lieutenant forbade them to go on. + +"But," John said, "we've got orders to go on." + +A shrug intimated that their orders were not the lieutenant's affair. +They couldn't go on. + +"But we _must_ go on. We've got to fetch some wounded." + +"There aren't any wounded," said the lieutenant. + +Charlotte had an inspiration. "You tell us that tale every time," she +said, "and there are always wounded." + +The Belgian guide and the lieutenant exchanged glances. + +"I've told you there aren't any," the lieutenant said. "You must go +back." + +"Here--You explain." + +But instead of explaining the little Belgian backed up the lieutenant by +a refusal on his own part to go on. + +"He can please himself. _We're_ going on." + +"You don't imagine," Charlotte said, "by any chance that we're _afraid_?" + +The lieutenant smiled, a smile that lifted his ferocious, upturned +moustache: first sign that he was yielding. He looked at the sergeant and +the corporal, and they nodded. + +John had his foot on the clutch. "We're due," he said, "at the dressing +station by three o'clock." + +She thought: He's magnificent. She could see that the lieutenant and the +soldiers thought he was magnificent. Supposing she had gone out with some +meek fool who would have gone back when they told him! + +The lieutenant skipped aside before the advancing car. "You can go," he +said, "to the dressing-station." + +"They always do that as a matter of form--sort of warning us that it's +our own risk. They won't be responsible." + +She didn't answer. She was thinking that when they turned John's driving +place would be towards the German guns. + +"I wish you'd let me drive. You know I like driving." + +"Not this time." + +At the dressing-station, a deserted store, they found a Belgian Army +Medical officer engaged with a tired and flushed and dirty soldier. He +was bandaging his left hand which had made a trail of blood splashes from +the street to the counter. The right hand hung straight down from a nick +in the dropped wrist where a tendon had been severed. He told them that +they had grasped the situation. Seven men waited there for transport. + +The best thing--perhaps--He looked doubtfully at Charlotte--would be for +them to take these men back at once. (The tired soldier murmured +something: a protest or an entreaty.) Though they were not exactly urgent +cases. They could wait. + +Charlotte suspected a serious reservation. "You mean you have others +more urgent?" + +The soldier got in his word. "Much more." His lips and eyes moved +excitedly in the flush and grime. + +"Well yes," the doctor admitted that they had. Not in the village, but in +a hamlet about a mile outside of it. An outpost. This man and three +others had been holding it with two machine guns. He had had a finger +shot away and his wrist cut open by a shell-burst; the other three were +left there, badly wounded. + +"All right, we'll go and fetch them." + +"Monsieur, the place is being shelled. You have no orders." + +"We've no orders not to." + +The doctor spread out helpless palms, palms that disclaimed +responsibility. + +"If you go, you go at your own risk. I will not send you." + +"That's all right." + +"Oh well--But certainly Mademoiselle must be left behind." + +"Mademoiselle is much too useful." + +Frantic gestures of eyebrows and palms. + +"You must not stay there more than three minutes. _Three minutes_." + +He turned to the cut tendon with an air of integrity, his conscience +appeased by laying down this time limit. + +John released the clutch, and the soldier shouted out something, they +couldn't make out what, that ended with "mitrailleuses." + +As they ran down the street the solemn Boom--Boom came right and left; +they were now straight between the two batteries. + +"Are you all right, Sharlie?" + +"Rather." + +The little Belgian by her side muttered, protesting. + +"We're not really in any danger. It's all going on over our heads." + +"Do you suppose," she said, "they'll get our range?" + +"Rather not. Why should they? They've got their range and they'll +stick to it." + +The firing on their right ceased. + +"They're quiet enough now," she said. + +The little Belgian informed her that if they were quiet so much the +worse. They were finding their range. + +She thought: We were safe enough before, but-- + +"Supposing," she said, "they alter their range?" + +"They won't alter it just for the fun of killing us. They haven't +spotted the batteries yet. It's the batteries they're trying for, not +the street." + +But the little Belgian went on protesting. + +"What's the matter with him?" + +"He's getting a bit jumpy," she said, "that's all." + +"Tell him to buck up. Tell him it's all right." + +She translated. The little Belgian shook his head, mournfully persistent. +"Monsieur," he said, "didn't know." + +"Oh yes, he does know." + +It was absurd of the little man to suppose you didn't know, when +the noise of the French guns told them how near they were to the +enemy's target. + +She tried not to listen to him. His mutterings broke up the queer +stillness that held her after she had heard the guns. It was only by +keeping still that you felt, wave by wave, the rising thrill of the +adventure. Only by keeping still she was aware of what was passing in +John's mind. He knew. He knew. They were one in the almost palpable +excitement that they shared; locked close, closer than their bodies could +have joined them, in the strange and poignant ecstasy of danger. + +There was the sound of an explosion somewhere in front of them beyond +the houses. + +"Did you hear that, Mademoiselle?" + +"I did." + +"Miles away," said John. + +She knew it wasn't. She thought: He doesn't want me to know. He thinks +I'll be frightened. I mustn't tell him. + +But the Belgian had none of John's scruples. The shell was near, he said; +very near. It had fallen in the place they were going to. + +"But that's the place where the wounded men are." + +He admitted that it was the place where the wounded men were. + +They were out of the village now. Their road ran through flat open +country, a causeway raised a little above the level of the fields. No +cover anywhere from the fire if it came. The Belgian had begun again. + +"What's that he's saying now?" + +"He says we shall give away the position of the road." + +"It's the one they told us to take. We've got to go on it. He's in a +beastly funk. That's what's the matter with him." + +The Belgian shrugged his shoulders as much as to say he had done his duty +and things might now take their course, and they were mistaken if for one +minute they supposed he was afraid. But they had not gone fifty yards +before he begged to be put down. He said it was absolutely necessary that +he should go back to the village and collect the wounded there and have +them ready for the ambulance on its return. + +They let him go. Charlotte looked round the corner of the hood and saw +him running with brief, jerky strides. + +"He's got a nerve," said John, "to be able to do it." + +"What excuse do you think he'll make?" + +"Oh, he'll say we sent him." + +The straight dyke of the road went on and on. Seen from the sunk German +lines the heavy ambulance car would look like a house on wheels running +along a wall. She thought again of John on his exposed seat. If only he +had let her drive--But that was absurd. Of course he wouldn't let her. If +you were to keep on thinking of the things that might happen to +John--Meanwhile nothing could take from them the delight of this +dangerous run across the open. She had to remind herself that the +adventure, the romance of it was not what mattered most; it was not the +real thing, the thing they had gone out for. + +When they came to the wounded, when they came to the wounded, then it +would begin. + +The hamlet began to show now; it sat on one side of the road, low and +alone in the flat land, an open field in front of it, and at the bottom +of the field the river and a line of willows, and behind the willows the +Germans, hidden. White smoke curled among the branches. You could see it +was an outpost, one of the points at which the Germans, if they broke +through, would come into the village. They supposed that the house where +the wounded men were would be the last of the short row. + +Here on their right there were no houses, only the long, high flank of a +barn. The parts that had been built out into the field were shelled away, +but the outer wall by the roadside still held. It was all that stood +between them and the German guns. They drew up the car under its shelter +and got down. + +They could see all the houses of the hamlet at once on their left; +whitewashed walls; slender grey doors and shutters. The three that +looked out on to the barn were untouched. A few yards ahead a small, +empty wine-shop faced the open field; its doorstep and the path in front +of its windows glittered with glass dust, with spikes and splinters, and +heaped shale of glass that slid and cracked under your feet. Beyond it, +a house with its door and all its windows and the front slope of its +roof blown in. A broken shutter sagged from the wall. Then the shell of +the last house; it pricked up one plastered gable, white and hard +against the blue. + +They found the men in the last house but one, the house with the broken +shutter. They went, carrying their stretchers and the haversack of +dressings, under the slanted lintel into the room. The air in there was +hot and stifling and thickened with a grey powdery swarm. Their feet sank +through a layer of pinkish, greyish dust. + +The three wounded men lay stretched out on this floor, among brickbats +and broken panes and slabs of dropped plaster. A thin grey powder had +settled on them all. And by the side of each man the dust was stiffened +into a red cake with a glairy pool in the middle of it, fed from the raw +wound; and where two men lay together their pools had joined and +overflowed in a thin red stream. + +John put down his stretcher and stood still. His face was very white, and +his upper lip showed in-drawn and dry, and tightened as though it were +glued to his teeth. + +"John, you _aren't_ going to faint or be sick or anything?" + +"I'm all right." + +He went forward, clenching his fists; moving in a curious drawn way, like +a sleep walker. + +They were kneeling in the dust now, looking for the wounds. + +"We must do this chap with the arm first. He'll want a tourniquet." + +He spoke in a husky whisper as if he were half asleep.... + +The wounded head stuck to the floor. They scraped round it, digging with +their hands; it came up wearing a crust of powdered lime. A pad and a +bandage. They couldn't do anything more for that ... The third man, with +the fractured shin-bone and the big flesh-wound in his thigh, must have +splints and a dressing. + +She wondered how John would set about his work. But his queer, hypnotised +actions were effectual and clean. + +Between them they had fixed the tourniquet. + +Through all her preoccupation and the quick, dexterous movement of her +hands she could feel her pity tightening her throat: pity that hurt like +love, that was delicious and exquisite like love. Nothing mattered, +nothing existed in her mind but the three wounded men. John didn't +matter. John didn't exist. He was nothing but a pair of hands working +quickly and dexterously with her own.... She looked up. John's mouth kept +its hard, glued look; his eyes were feverish behind a glaze of water, and +red-rimmed. + +She thought: It's awful for him. He minds too much. It hurt her to see +how he minded. After all, he did matter. Deep inside her he mattered more +than the wounded men; he mattered more than anything on earth. Only there +wasn't time, there wasn't _time_ to think of him. + +She turned to the next man and caught sight of the two machine guns with +their tilted muzzles standing in the corner of the room by the chimney. +They must remember to bring away the guns. + +John's hypnotic whisper came again. "You might get those splints, +Charlotte." + +As she crossed the road a shell fell in the open field beyond, and burst, +throwing up a great splash and spray of brown earth. She stiffened +herself in an abrupt gesture of defiance. Her mind retorted: "You've +missed, that time. You needn't think I'm going to put myself out for +_you_." To show that she wasn't putting herself out (in case they should +be looking) she strolled with dignity to her car, selected carefully the +kind of splint she needed, and returned. She thought: Oh well--supposing +they _do_ hit. We must get those men out before another comes. + +John looked up as she came to him. His face glistened with pinheads of +sweat; he panted in the choking air. + +"Where did that shell burst?" + +"Miles away." + +"Are you certain?" + +"Rather." + +She lied. Why not? John had been lying all the time. Lying was part of +their defiance, a denial that the enemy's effort had succeeded. Nothing +mattered but the fixing of the splints and the carrying of the men.... + +John was cranking up the engine when she turned back into the house. + +"I _say_, what are you doing?" + +"Going for the guns." + +There was, she noticed, a certain longish interval between shells. John +and the wounded men would be safe from shrapnel under the shelter of the +wall. She brought out the first gun and stowed it at the back of the car. +Then she went in for the other. It stood on the seat between them with +its muzzle pointing down the road. Charlotte put her arm round it to +steady it. + +On the way back to the dressing-station she sat silent, thinking of +the three wounded men in there, behind, rocked and shaken by the +jolting of the car on the uneven causeway. John was silent, too, +absorbed by his steering. + +But as they ran into Ghent the romance of it, the romance of it, came +back to her. It wasn't over yet. They would have to go out again for the +wounded they had had to leave behind at Berlaere. + +"John--John--It's like nothing else on earth." + +"I told you it would be." + +Slowly realization came to her. They had brought in their wounded under +the enemy's fire. And they had saved the guns. + + * * * * * + +"Do you mind," John said, "if Sutton goes instead of me He hasn't +been out yet?" + +"N-no. Not if I can go too." + +"Do you want to?" + +"Awfully." + +She had drawn up the ambulance in the Square before the Hospital and sat +in her driver's seat, waiting. Sutton came to her there. When he saw her +he stood still. + +"_You_ going?" + +"Rather. Do you mind?" + +Sutton didn't answer. All the way out to Berlaere he sat stolid and +silent, not looking at anything they passed and taking no more notice of +the firing than if he hadn't heard it. As the car swung into Berlaere she +was aware of his voice, low under the noise of the engine. + +"What did you say?" + +"Conway told me it was you who saved the guns." + +Suddenly she was humbled. + +"It was the men who saved them. We just brought them away." + +"Conway told me what you did," he said quietly. + +Going out with Sutton was a quiet affair. + +"You know," he said presently, "it was against the Hague Convention." + +"Good heavens, so it was! I never thought of it." + +"You must think of it. You gave the Germans the right to fire on all our +ambulances.... You see, this isn't just a romantic adventure; it's a +disagreeable, necessary, rather dangerous job." + +"I didn't do it for swank. I knew the guns were wanted, and I couldn't +bear to leave them." + +"I know, it would have been splendid if you'd been a combatant. But," he +said sadly, "this is a field ambulance, not an armoured car." + + + + +IX + + +She was glad they had been sent out with the McClane Corps to Melle. She +wanted McClane to see the stuff that John was made of. She knew what had +been going on in the commandant's mind. He had been trying to persuade +himself that John was no good, because, from the minute he had seen him +with his ambulance on the wharf at Ostend, from the minute he had known +his destination, he had been jealous of him and afraid. Why, he must have +raced them all the way from Ostend, to get in first. Afraid and jealous, +afraid of John's youth with its secret of triumph and of courage; jealous +of John's face and body that men and women turned back to look at as they +passed; even the soldiers going up to the battlefields, going up to +wounds and death, turned to look at this creature of superb and brilliant +life. Even on the boat he must have had a dreadful wonder whether John +was bound for Ghent; he must have known from the beginning that wherever +Conway placed himself he would stand out and make other men look small +and insignificant. If he wasn't jealous and afraid of Sutton she supposed +it was because John had had that rather diminishing effect on poor Billy. + +If Billy Sutton distinguished himself that would open McClane's eyes a +little wider, too. + +She wondered why Billy kept on saying that McClane was a great +psychologist. If it was true that would be very awful for McClane; he +would see everything going on inside people, then, all the things he +didn't want to see; he wouldn't miss anything, and he would know all the +time what John was like. The little man was wilfully shutting his eyes +because he was so mean that he couldn't bear to see John as he really +was. Now he would have to see. + +The thought of McClane's illumination consoled her for her own inferior +place in the adventure. This time the chauffeurs would have to stay at +the end of the village with their cars. The three were drawn up at the +street side, close under the house walls, McClane's first. Then Sutton's, +with Gwinnie. Then hers; behind it the short straight road where the +firing would come down. + +John stood in the roadway waiting for the others. He had his hand beside +her hand, grasping the arm of the driver's seat. + +"I wish you could take me with you," she said. + +"Can't. The orders are, all chauffeurs to stand by the cars." + +... His eyebrows knotted and twitched in sudden anxiety. + +"You know, Sharlie, you'll be fired on." + +"I know. I don't mind, John, I don't really. I shall be all right." + +"Yes. You'll be all right." But by the way he kept on glancing up and +down the road she could see he was uneasy. "If you could have stood in +front of those cars. _You're_ in the most dangerous place here." + +"Somebody's got to be in it." + +He looked at her and smiled. "Jeanne," he said, "in her armour." + +"Rot." + +And they were silent. + +"I say, John--my car _does_ cover Gwinnie's a bit, doesn't it?" + +"Yes," he said abruptly. + +"_That's_ all right. You must go now. They're coming for the stretchers." + +His face quivered. He thrust out his hand quickly, and as she took it she +thought: He thinks he isn't coming back. She was aware of Mrs. Rankin and +two of the McClane men with stretchers, passing; she could see Mrs. +Rankin looking at them as she came on, smiling over her shoulder, drawing +the men's attention to their leave-taking. + +She thought: _They_ don't shake hands when they're going out. They don't +think whether they're coming back or not.... They don't think at all. But +then, none of them were lovers as she and John were lovers. + +"John, you'd better go and carry Mrs. Rankin's stretcher for her." + +He went. + +She watched them as they walked together up the short straight road to +the battlefield at the top. Sutton followed with Alice Bartrum; then the +McClane men; they nodded to her and smiled. Then McClane, late, running, +trying to overtake John and Mrs. Rankin, to get to the head of his unit. +Perhaps he was afraid that John, in his khaki, would be mistaken for the +commandant. + +How childish he was with his fear and jealousy. Childish. She thought of +his petulant refusal to let John come in with them. As if he could really +keep him out. When it came to action they _were_ one corps; they couldn't +very well be divided, since McClane had more men than stretchers and John +had more stretchers than men. They would all be infinitely happier, +working together like that, instead of standing stupidly apart, glaring +and hating. + +Yet she knew what McClane and Mrs. Rankin had been playing for. McClane, +if he could, would have taken their fine Roden cars from them; he would +have taken Sutton. She knew that Mrs. Rankin would have taken John from +her, Charlotte Redhead, if she could. + +And when she thought of the beautiful, arrogant woman, marching up to the +battlefield with John, she wondered whether, after all, she didn't hate +her.... No. No. It was horrible to hate a woman who at any minute might +be killed. They said McClane didn't look after his women. He didn't +care how they exposed themselves to the firing; he took them into +unnecessary danger. He didn't care. He was utterly cold, utterly +indifferent to everybody and everything except his work of getting in the +wounded.... Well, perhaps, if he had been decent to John, she wouldn't +have believed a word of it, and anyhow they hadn't come out there to be +protected. + +She had a vision of John and McClane carrying Mrs. Rankin between them on +a stretcher. That was what would happen if you hated. Hate could kill. + +Then John and she were safe. They were lovers. Lovers. Neither of them +had ever said a word, but they owned the wonderful, immaterial fact in +secret to each other; the thought of it moved in secret behind all their +other thoughts. From the moment, just passed, when they held each other's +hands she knew that John loved her, not in a dream, not in coldness, but +with a queer unearthly ardour. He had her in his incredible, immaterial +way, a way that none of them would understand. + +From the Barrow Hill Farm time? Or from yesterday? She didn't know. +Perhaps it had gone on all the time; but it would be only since yesterday +that he really knew it. + +A line of soldiers marched by, going up to the battlefield. They looked +at her and smiled, a flashing of bright eyes and teeth all down the line. +When they had passed the street was deserted. + +... That rattle on the stones was the firing. It had come at last. She +saw Gwinnie looking back round the corner of the hood to see what it was +like. She called to her, "Don't stick your head out, you silly cuckoo. +You'll be hit." She said to herself, If I think about it I shall feel +quite jumpy. It was one thing to go tearing along between two booming +batteries, in excitement, with an end in view, and quite another thing to +sit tight and still on a motionless car, to be fired on. A bit trying to +the nerves, she thought, if it went on long. She was glad that her car +stood next to the line of fire, sheltering Gwinnie's, and she wondered +how John was getting on up there. + +The hands of the ambulance clock pointed to half-past three. They had +been waiting forty minutes, then. She got down to see if any of the +stretcher bearers were in sight. + + * * * * * + +They were coming back. Straggling, lurching forms. White bandages. The +wounded who could walk came first. Then the stretchers. + +Alice Bartrum stopped as she passed Charlotte. The red had gone from her +sunburn, but her face was undisturbed. + +"You've got to wait here," she said, "for Mr. Conway and Sutty. And +Trixie and Mac. They mayn't be back for ages. They've gone miles up +the field." + +She waited. + +The front cars had been loaded, had driven off and returned three times. +It was six o'clock before John appeared with Mrs. Rankin. + +She heard Mrs. Rankin calling sharply to her to get down and give a hand +with the stretcher. + +John and Mrs. Rankin were disputing. + +_"Can't_ you shove it in at the bottom?" he was saying. + +_"No._ The first cases _must_ go on top." + +Her mouth snapped like a clamp. Her eyes were blazing. She was struggling +with the head of the stretcher while John heaved at the foot. He +staggered as he moved, and his face was sallow-white and drawn and +glistening. When Charlotte took the shafts from him they were slippery +with his sweat. + +"Is he hurt?" she whispered. + +"Very badly hurt," said Mrs. Rankin. + +"John, I mean." + +Mrs. Rankin snorted. "You'd better ask him." + +John was slouching round to the front of the car, anxious to get out of +the sight and sound of her. He went with an uneven dropping movement of +one hip. Charlotte followed him. + +"Get into your seat, Sharlie. We've got to wait for Billy and McClane." + +He dragged himself awkwardly into the place beside her. + +"John," she said, "are you hurt?" + +"No. But I think I've strained something. That's why I couldn't lift that +damned stretcher." + + * * * * * + +The windows stood wide open to the sweet, sharp air. She heard Mrs. +Rankin and Sutton talking on the balcony. In that dreadful messroom you +heard everything. + +"What do you suppose it was then?" Mrs. Rankin said. + +And Sutton, "Oh, I don't know. Something upset him." + +"If he's going to be upset _like that_ every time he'd better go home." + +They were talking--she knew they were talking about John. + +"Hallo, Charlotte, we haven't left you much tea." + +"It doesn't matter." + +Her hunger left her suddenly. She stared with disgust at the remains of +the tea the McClane Corps had eaten. + +Sutton went on. "He hasn't been sleeping properly. I've made him +go to bed." + +"If you can keep him in bed for the duration of the war--" + +"Are you talking about John?" + +"We are." + +"I don't know what you're driving at; but I suppose he was sick on +that beastly battlefield. It's all very well for you two; you're a +trained nurse and Billy's a surgeon.... You aren't taken that way when +you see blood." + +"Blood?" said Mrs. Rankin. + +"Yes. Blood. He was perfectly all right yesterday." + +Mrs. Rankin laughed. "Yesterday he couldn't see there was any danger. You +could tell that by the idiotic things he said." + +"I saw it. And if I could he could." + +"Funny kid. You'd better get on with your tea. You'll be sent out again +before you know where you are." + +Charlotte settled down. Sutton was standing beside her now, cutting bread +and butter. + +"Hold on," he said. "That tea's all stewed and cold. I'll make you +some of mine." + +She drank the hot, fragrant China tea he brought her. + +Presently she stood up. "I think I'll take John some of this." + +"Best thing you can give him," Sutton said. He got up and opened the +doors for her, the glass doors and the door of the bedroom. + +She sat down beside John's bed and watched him while he drank +Sutton's tea. He said he was all right now. No. He hadn't ruptured +anything; he only thought he had; but Sutton had overhauled him and +said he was all right. + +And all the time his face was still vexed and drawn. Something must have +happened out there; something that hurt him to think of. + +"John," she said, "I wish I'd gone with you instead of Mrs. Rankin." + +"I wish to God you had. Everything's all right when you're with me, and +everything's all wrong when you're not." + +"How do you mean, wrong?" + +He shook his head, frowning slightly, as a sign for her to stop. Sutton +had come into the room. + +"You needn't go," he said, "I've only come for my coat and my case. I've +got to help with the operations." + +He slipped into the white linen coat. There were thin smears of blood on +the sleeves and breast. He groped about the room, peering short-sightedly +for his case of instruments. + +"John, was Mrs. Rankin any good?" she asked presently. + +John lay back and closed his eyes as if to shut out the sight of +Mrs. Rankin. + +"Don't talk to me," he said, "about that horrible woman." + +Sutton had turned abruptly from his search. + +"Good?" he said. "She was magnificent. So was Miss Bartrum. So was +McClane." + +John opened his eyes. "So was Charlotte." + +"I quite agree with you." Sutton had found his case. His face was hidden +by the raised lid as he peered, examining his instruments. He spoke +abstractly. "Magnificent." + +When he left the room Charlotte followed him. + +"Billy--" + +"Well--" + +He stopped in his noiseless course down the corridor. + +"What was it?" she said. "What happened?" + +He didn't pretend not to understand her. + +"Oh, nothing. Conway and Mrs. Rankin didn't hit it off very well +together." + +They spoke in low, rapid tones, conscious, always, of the wards behind +the shut doors. Her feet went fast and noiseless beside his as he hurried +to the operating theatre. They came out on to the wide landing and waited +there by the brass lattice of the lift. + +"How do you mean, hit it off?" + +"Oh well, she thought he didn't come up quick enough with a stretcher, +and she pitched into him." + +"But he was dead beat. Done. Couldn't she see that?" + +"No. I don't suppose she could. She was a bit excited." + +"She was horrible." Now that Mrs. Rankin was back safe she hated her. She +knew she hated her. + +"A bit cruel, perhaps. All the same," he said, "she was magnif--" + +The lift had come hissing and wailing up behind him. The orderly stood in +it, staring at Sutton's back, obsequious, yet impatient. She thought of +the wounded men in the theatre downstairs. + +"You mustn't keep them waiting," she said. + +He stepped back into the lift. It lowered him rapidly. His chin was on a +level with the floor when his mouth tried again and succeeded: +"Magnificent." + +And she knew that she had followed him out to near him say that John had +been magnificent, too. + +Gwinnie was looking in at the messroom door and saying "Do you know where +Charlotte is?" Mrs. Rankin's voice called out, "I think you'll find her +in _Mr. Conway's_ bedroom." One of the chauffeurs laughed. Charlotte knew +what they were thinking. + +Gwinnie failed to retort. She was excited, shaken out of her stolidity. + +"Oh, there you are! I've got something ripping to tell you. Not in here." + +They slouched, with their arms slung affectionately round each other's +waists, into their own room. Behind the shut door Gwinnie began. + +"The Colonel's most frightfully pleased about Berlaere." + +"Does he think they'll hold it?" + +"It isn't that. He's pleased about you." + +"Me?" + +"You and John. What you did there. And your bringing back the guns." + +"Who told you that?" + +"Mac. The old boy was going on to him like anything about you last +night. It means you'll be sent out every time. Every time there's +anything big on." + +"Oh-h! Let's go and tell John.... I suppose," she added, "that's what was +the matter with Mrs. Rankin." + +She wondered whether it had been the matter with Billy Sutton too; if he +too were jealous and afraid. + +That night Mrs. Rankin told her what the Colonel really had said: "'C'est +magnifique, mais ce n'est pas--la Croix Rouge.' If you're all sent home +to-morrow it'll serve you jolly well right," she said. + +But somehow she couldn't make it sound as if he had been angry. + + + + +X + + +She waited. + +John had told her to stay there with the wounded man up the turn of the +stable yard while he went for the stretcher. His car, packed with +wounded, stood a little way up the street, headed for Ghent. Sutton's +car, with one of McClane's chauffeurs, was in front of it, ready; she +could hear the engine purring. + +Instead of going at once for the stretcher John had followed Sutton into +the house opposite, the house with the narrow grey shutters. And he had +called to her again across the road to wait for him. + +Behind her in the yard the wounded man sat on the cobblestones, his back +propped against the stable wall. He was safe there, safer than he would +have been outside in the ambulance. + +It was awful to think that he would have been left behind if they had not +found him at the last minute among the straw. + +She went and stood by the yard entrance to see whether John were coming +with the stretcher. A soldier came out of the house with the narrow +shutters, wounded, limping, his foot bound to a splint. Then Sutton came, +hurrying to help him. He shouted to her, "Come on, Charlotte, hurry up!" +and she called back, "I've got to wait here for John." + +She watched them go on slowly up the road to Sutton's car; she saw them +get in; she saw the car draw out and rush away. + +Then she saw John come out of the door of the house and stand there, +looking up and down the street. Once she saw him glance back over his +shoulder at something behind him in the room. The same instant she heard +the explosion and saw the shell burst in the middle of the street, not +fifty yards from the ambulance. Half a minute after she saw John dash +from the doorway and run, run at an incredible pace, towards his car. She +heard him crank up the engine. + +She supposed that he was going to back towards the yard, and she wondered +whether she could lift up the Belgian and carry him out. She stooped over +him, put her hands under his armpits, raising him and wondering. Better +not. He had a bad wound. Better wait for the stretcher. + +She turned, suddenly, arrested. The noise she heard was not the grating +noise of a car backing, it was the scream of a car getting away; it +dropped to a heavy whirr and diminished. + +She looked out. Up the road she saw John's car rushing furiously +towards Ghent. + +The Belgian had heard it. His eyes moved. Black hare's eyes, terrified. +It was not possible, he said, that they had been left behind? + +No, it was not possible. John had forgotten them; but he would +remember; he would come back. In five minutes. Seven minutes. She had +waited fifteen. + +The Belgian was muttering something. He complained of being left there. +He said he was not anxious about himself, but about Mademoiselle. +Mademoiselle ought not to have been left. She was sitting on the ground +now, beside him. + +"It'll be all right," she said. "He'll come back." When he remembered he +would come back. + +She had waited half an hour. + +Another shell. It had burst over there at the backs of the houses, beyond +the stable. + +She wondered whether it would be safer to drag her man across the street +under the wall of the Town Hall. They would be sure to aim at it and miss +it, whereas any minute they might hit the stable. + +At the moment while she wondered there was a third tremendous explosion, +the crash and roar of brickwork falling like coal down an enormous chute. +It came from the other side of the street a little way down. It couldn't +be far from the Town Hall. That settled it. Much better stay where they +were. The Belgian had put his arm round her, drawing her to him, away +from the noise and shock of the shell. + +It was clear now that John was not coming back. He had forgotten them. + +The Belgian's hold slackened; he dozed, falling against her and +recovering himself with a jerk and begging her pardon. She drew down his +head on to her shoulder and let it rest there. Her mind was soaked in the +smell of his rank breath, of the warm sweat that oozed through his tunic, +the hot, fetid smell that came through his unlaced boots. She didn't +care; she was too sorry for him. She could feel nothing but the helpless +pressure of his body against hers, nothing but her pity that hurt her and +was exquisite like love. Yesterday she had thought it would be good to +die with John. Now she thought it would be good to die with the wounded +Belgian, since John had left her there to die. + +And again, she had a vehement desire for life, a horror of the unjust +death John was bringing on them. + +But of course there wouldn't be any death. If nobody came she would walk +back to Ghent and bring out the ambulance. + +If only he had shouted to her to carry the wounded man and come. In the +minute between the concussion of the shell and the cranking of the +engine. But she could see him rushing. If only she knew _why_ he had left +them.... She wanted to get back to Ghent, to see John, to know. To know +if John--if John really _was_--Nothing could be worse than not knowing. + +It didn't matter so much his forgetting her. The awful thing was his +forgetting the wounded man. How could you forget a wounded man? When she +remembered the Belgian's terrified hare's eyes she hated John. + +And, as she sat there supporting his head with her shoulder, she thought +again. There must have been a wounded man in the house John had come out +of. Was it possible that he had forgotten him, too?... He hadn't +forgotten. She could see him looking back over his shoulder; looking at +something that was lying there, that couldn't be anything but a wounded +man. Or a dead man. Whatever it was, it had been the last thing he had +seen; the last thing he had thought of before he made his dash. It +wasn't possible that he had left a wounded man in there, alive. It was +not possible. + +And all the time while she kept on telling herself that it was not +possible she saw a wounded man in the room John had left; she saw his +head turning to the doorway, and his eyes, frightened; she felt his +anguish in the moment that he knew himself abandoned. Not forgotten. +Abandoned. + +She would have to go over to the house and see. She must know whether the +man was there or not there. She raised the Belgian's head, gently, from +her shoulder. She would have to wake him and tell him what she was going +to do, so that he mightn't think she had left him and be frightened. + +But the Belgian roused himself to a sudden virile determination. +Mademoiselle must _not_ cross the road. It was too dangerous. +Mademoiselle would be hit. He played on her pity with an innocent, +cunning cajolery. "Mademoiselle must not leave me. I do not want +to be left." + +"Only for one minute. One little minute. I think there's a wounded man, +like you, Monsieur, in that house." + +"Ah--h--A wounded man?" He seemed to acknowledge the integrity of her +purpose. "If only I were not wounded, if only I could crawl an inch, I +would go instead of Mademoiselle." + + * * * * * + +The wounded man lay on the floor of the room in his corner by the +fireplace where John had left him. His coat was rolled up under his head +for a pillow. He lay on his side, with humped hips and knees drawn up, +and one hand, half clenched, half relaxed, on his breast under the +drooped chin; so that at first she thought he was alive, sleeping. She +knelt down beside him and clasped his wrist; she unbuttoned his tunic +and put in her hand under his shirt above the point of his heart. He was +certainly dead. No pulse; no beat; no sign of breathing. Yet his body +was warm still, and limp as if with sleep. He couldn't have been dead +very long. + +And he was young. A boy. Not more than sixteen. John couldn't have left +him. + +She wasn't certain. She was no nearer certainty so long as she didn't +know when the boy had died. If only she knew-- + +They hadn't unfastened his tunic and shirt to feel over his heart if he +were dead. So he couldn't have been dead when they left him.... But there +was Sutton. Billy wouldn't have left him unless he had been dead. Her +mind worked rapidly, jumping from point to point, trying to find some +endurable resting place.... He was so young, so small, so light. Light. +It wouldn't take two to carry him. She could have picked him up and +carried him herself. Billy had had the lame man to look after. He had +left the boy to John. She saw John looking back over his shoulder. + +She got up and went through the house, through all the rooms, to see if +there were any more of them that John had left there. She felt tired out +and weak, sick with her belief, her fear of what John had done. The dead +boy was alone in the house. She covered his face with her handkerchief +and went back. + +The Belgian waited for her at the entrance to the yard. He had +dragged himself there, crawling on his hands and knees. He smiled +when he saw her. + +"I was coming to look for you, Mademoiselle." + +She had him safe beside her against the stable wall. He let his head rest +on her shoulder now, glad of the protecting contact. She tried not to +think about John. Something closed down between them. Black. Black; +shutting him off, closing her heart against him, leaving her heart hard +and sick. The light went slowly out of the street, out of the sky. The +dark came, the dark sounding with the "Boom--Boom" of the guns, lit with +spiked diamond flashes like falling stars. + +The Belgian had gone to sleep again when she heard the ambulance coming +down the street. + + * * * * * + +"Is that you, Charlotte?" + +"Billy--! What made you come?" + +"Conway. He's in a frantic funk. Said he'd lost you. He thought you'd +gone on with me." + +How awful it would be if Billy knew. + +"It was my fault," she lied. "He told me to go on with you." She could +hear him telling her to wait for him in the stable yard. + +"I'd have come before only I didn't see him soon enough. I had an +operation.... Is that a wounded man you've got there? I suppose he lost +him, too?" + +"He didn't know he was here." + +"I see." + +Then she remembered. Billy would know. Billy would tell her. + +"Billy--was that boy dead when you left him! The boy in the house +over there." + +He was stooping to the Belgian, examining his bandages, and he didn't +answer all at once. He seemed to be meditating. + +"Was he?" she repeated. + +It struck her that Billy was surprised. + +"Because--" She stopped there. She couldn't say to him, "I want to know +whether John left him dead or alive." + +"He was dead all right." Sutton's voice came up slow and muffled out of +his meditation. + +It was all right. She might have known. She might have known. Vaguely for +a moment she wondered why Billy had come for her and not John; then she +was frightened. + +"Billy--John isn't hurt, is he?" + +"No. Rather not. A bit done up. I made him go and lie down.... Look here, +we must get out of this." + + * * * * * + +The McClane Corps were gathered on their side of the messroom. They +greeted her with shouts of joy, but their eyes looked at her queerly, as +if they knew something dreadful had happened to her. + +"You should have stood in with us, Charlotte," Mrs. Rankin was saying. +"Then you wouldn't get mislaid among the shells." She was whispering. +"Dr. McClane, if you took Charlotte out among the shells, would you run +away and leave her there?" + +"I'd try not to." + +Oh yes. He wouldn't run away and leave her. But he wouldn't care where he +took her. He wouldn't care whether a shell got her or not. But John +cared. If only she knew _why_.... Their queer faces sobered her and +suddenly she knew. She saw Sutton coming out of the house with the narrow +shutters; she heard him shouting to her, "Come on, Charlotte, hurry up!" + +John must have heard him. He must really have thought that she had +gone with him. + +But he must have known, too, that she wouldn't go. He must have known +that if he told her to wait for him she would wait. So that-- + +The voices of the McClane women ceased abruptly. One of them turned +round. Charlotte saw John standing between the glasses of the two doors. +He came in and she heard Mrs. Rankin calling out in her hard, insolent +voice, "Well, Mr. Conway, so you've got in safe." + +She was always like that, hard and insolent, with her damned courage. As +if courage were ever anything more than just being decent, and as if +other people couldn't be decent too. She hated John because she couldn't +make him come to her, couldn't make him look with pleasure at her +beautiful, arrogant face. She disliked Sutton and McClane for the same +reason, but she hated John. He treated her face with a hardness and +insolence like her own. You could see her waiting for her revenge, +watching every minute for a chance to stick her blade into him. He was +pretending that he hadn't heard her. + +His hair stood up in pointed tufts, rumpled from his pillow. His eyes had +a dazed, stupid look as if he were not perfectly awake. But at the sound +of the rasping voice his mouth had tightened; it was pinched and sharp +with pain. He didn't look at Mrs. Rankin. He came to her, Charlotte +Redhead, straight; straight as if she had drawn him from his sleep. + +The McClane people got up, one after another, and went out. + +"Charlotte," he said, "did you really think I'd left you?" + +"I thought you'd left me. But I knew you hadn't." + +"You _knew_ it wasn't possible?" + +"Yes. Inside me I knew." + +"I'm awfully sorry. Sutton told me you were going on with him, and I +thought you'd gone." + + + + +XI + + +She would remember for ever the talk they had on the balcony that day +while Antwerp was falling. + +They were standing there, she and John Conway and Sutton, looking over +the station and the railway lines to the open country beyond: the fields, +the tall slender trees, the low mounds of the little hills, bristling and +dark. Round the corner of the balcony they could see into the _Place_ +below; it was filled with a thick black crowd of refugees. Antwerp was +falling. Presently the ambulance train would come in and they would have +to go over there to the station with their stretchers and carry out the +wounded. Meanwhile they waited. + +John brooded. His face was heavy and sombre with discontent. "No," he +said. "No. It isn't good enough." + +"What isn't?" + +"What we're doing here. Going to all those little tin-pot places. The +real fighting isn't down there. They ought to send us to Antwerp." + +"I suppose they send us where they think we're most wanted." + +"I don't believe they do. We were fools not to have insisted on going +to Antwerp, instead of letting ourselves be stuck here in a rotten +side show." + +"We've had enough to do, anyhow," said Sutton. + +"And there isn't anybody but us and Mac to do it," Charlotte said. + +John's eyebrows twisted. "Yes; but we're not _in_ it. I want to be in it. +In the big thing; the big dangerous thing." + +Sutton sighed and got up and left them. John waited for the closing +of the door. + +"Does it strike you," he said, "that Billy isn't very keen?" + +"No. It doesn't. What do you mean?" + +"I notice that he's jolly glad when he can get an indoor job." + +"That's because they're short of surgeons. He only wants to do what's +most useful." + +"I didn't say he had cold feet." + +"Of course he hasn't. Billy would go to Antwerp like a shot if they'd +let him. He feels just as we do about it. That's why he got up and +went away." + +"He'd go. But he wouldn't enjoy it." + +"Oh, don't talk about 'enjoying.'" + +"Sharlie, you don't mean to say that _you're_ not keen?" + +"No. It's only that I don't care as much as I did about what you call the +romance of it; and I do care more about the solid work. It seems to me +that it doesn't matter who does it so long as it's done." + +"I'd very much rather I did it than McClane. So would you." + +"Yes. I would. But I'd be sorry if poor little Mac didn't get any of it. +And all the time I know it doesn't matter which of us it is. It doesn't +matter whether we're in danger or out of danger, or whether we're in the +big thing or a little one." + +"Don't you want to be in the big thing?" + +"Yes. I _want_. But I know my wanting doesn't matter. I don't matter. +None of us matters." + +That was how she felt about it now that it had come to defeat, now that +Antwerp was falling. Yesterday they, she and John, had been vivid +entities, intensely real, living and moving in the war as in a +containing space that was real enough, since it was there, but real like +hell or heaven or God, not to be grasped or felt in its reality; only +the stretch of it that they covered was real, the roads round Ghent, the +burning villages, the places where they served, Berlaere and Melle, +Quatrecht and Zele; the wounded men. Yesterday her thoughts about John +had mattered, her doubt and fear of him and her pain; her agony of +desire that he should be, should be always, what she loved him for +being; and her final certainty had been the one important, the one real +thing. To-day she had difficulty in remembering all that, as if _they_ +hadn't really been. To-day they were unimportant to themselves and to +each other; small, not quite real existences, enveloped by an immense +reality that closed in on them; alive; black, palpitating defeat. It +made nothing of them, of their bodies nothing but the parts they worked +with: feet and hands. Nothing mattered, nothing existed but the war, and +the armies, the Belgian army, beaten. + +Antwerp was falling. And afterwards it would be Ghent, and then Ostend. +And then there would be no more Belgium. + +But John wouldn't hear of it. Ghent wouldn't fall. + +"It won't fall because it isn't a fortified city," she objected. "But +it'll surrender. It'll have to." + +"It won't. If the Germans come anywhere near we shall drive them back." + +"They _are_ near. They're all round in a ring with only a little narrow +opening up _there_. And the ring's getting closer." + +"It's easier to push back a narrow ring than a wide one." + +"It's easier to break through a thin ring than a thick one, and who's +going to push?" + +"We are. The British. We'll come pouring in, hundreds of thousands of us, +through that little narrow opening up there." + +"If we only would--" + +"Of course we shall. If I thought we wouldn't, if I thought we were going +to let the Belgians down, if we _betrayed_ them--My God! I'd kill +myself.... No. No, I wouldn't. That wouldn't hurt enough. I'd give up my +damned country and be a naturalized Belgian. Why, they trust us. They +_trust_ us to save Antwerp." + +"If we don't, that wouldn't be betrayal." + +"It would. The worst kind. It would be like betraying a wounded man; or a +woman. Like me betraying you, Jeanne. You needn't look like that. It's so +bad that it can't happen." + +Through the enveloping sadness she felt a prick of joy, seeing him so +valiant, so unbeaten in his soul. It supported her certainty. His soul +was so big that nothing could satisfy it but the big thing, the big +dangerous thing. He wouldn't even believe that Antwerp was falling. + + * * * * * + +She knew. She knew. There was not the smallest doubt about it any more. +She saw it happen. + +It happened in the village near Lokeren, the village whose name she +couldn't remember. The Germans had taken Lokeren that morning; they were +_in_ Lokeren. At any minute they might be in the village. + +You had to pass through a little town to get to it. And there they had +been told that they must not go on. And they had gone on. And in the +village they were told that they must go back and they had not gone back. +They had been given five minutes to get in their wounded and they had +been there three-quarters of an hour, she and John working together, and +Trixie Rankin with McClane and two of his men. + +Charlotte had been sorry for Sutton and Gwinnie and the rest of McClane's +corps who had not come out with them to this new place, but had been sent +back again to Melle where things had been so quiet all morning that they +hadn't filled their ambulances, and half of them had hung about doing +nothing. She had fretted at the stupidity which had sent them where they +were not wanted. But here there were not enough hands for the stretchers, +and Charlotte was wanted every second of the time. From the first minute +you could see what you were in for. + +The retreat. + +And for an instant, in the blind rush and confusion of it, she had lost +sight of John. She had turned the car round and left it with its nose +pointing towards Ghent. Trixie Rankin and the McClane men were at the +front cars taking out the stretchers; John and McClane were going up the +road. She had got out her own stretcher and was following them when the +battery came tearing down the road and cut them off. It tore headlong, +swerving and careening with great rattling and crashing noises. She could +see the faces of the men, thrown back, swaying; there was no terror in +them, only a sort of sullen anger and resentment. + +She stood on the narrow sandy track beside the causeway to let it pass, +and when a gap came in the train she dashed through to get to John. And +John was not there. When all the artillery had passed he was not there; +only McClane, going on up the middle of the street by himself. + +She ran after him and asked him what had happened to John. He turned, +dreamy and deliberate, utterly unperturbed. John, he said, had gone on to +look for a wounded man who was said to have been taken into one of those +houses there, on the right, in the lane. She went down the lane with her +stretcher and McClane waited for them at the top. The doors of the houses +were open; Flemish women stood outside, looking up to the street. There +was one house with a shut door, a tall green door; she thought that would +be the one that John had gone into. She rapped and he opened the door and +came striding out, holding his head high. He shut the door quietly and +looked at her, an odd look, piercing and grave. + +"Dead," he said. + +And when McClane met them he said it again, "Dead." + +The wounded were being brought down from Lokeren in trams that ran on to +a siding behind a little fir plantation outside the village. At the wide +top of the street a table of boards and trestles stood by the foot track, +and the stretchers were laid on it as they came in, and the wounded had +their first bandaging and dressings there. McClane took up his place by +this table, and the stretcher bearers went backwards and forwards between +the village and the plantation. + +Beyond the plantation the flagged road stretched flat and grey, then bent +in a deep curve, and on the wider sweep of the curve a row of tall, +slender trees stood up like a screen. + +It would be round the turn of the road under the trees that the Germans +would come when they came. You couldn't lose this sense of them, coming +on behind there, not yet seen, but behind, coming on, pursuing the +retreat of the batteries. Every now and then they found themselves +looking up towards the turn. The grey, bending sweep and the screen of +tall trees had a fascination for them, a glamour; and above the movements +of their hands and feet their minds watched, intent, excited, but without +fear. There was no fear in the village. The women came out of their +houses carrying cups of water for the men's thirst; they seemed to be +concerned, not with the coming of the Germans, but with the bringing in +of the wounded and the presence of the English ambulance in their street. + +And the four stretcher bearers came and went, from house to house and +between the village and the plantation, working, working steadily. Yet +they were aware, all the time, of the pursuing terror, behind the turn of +the road; they were held still in their intentness. Over all of them was +a quiet, fixed serenity. McClane's body had lost its eager, bustling +energy and was still; his face was grave, preoccupied and still; only +Trixie Rankin went rushing, and calling out to her quiet man in a fierce, +dominating excitement. + +And in John's face and in his alert body there was happiness, happiness +that was almost ecstasy; it ran through and shone from him, firm and +still, like a flame that couldn't go out. It penetrated her and made her +happy and satisfied and sure of him. She had seen it leap up in him as he +swung himself into the seat beside her when they started. He was +restless, restless every day until they were sent out; he couldn't wait +in peace before they had set off on the adventure, as if he were afraid +that at the last minute something would happen to dash his chance from +him. She couldn't find this passionate uneasiness in herself; she waited +with a stolid trust in the event; but she had something of his feeling. +After all, it was there, the romance, the fascination, the glamour; you +couldn't deny it any more than you could deny the beating of the blood in +your veins. It was their life. + +They had been in the village three quarters of an hour. John and +Charlotte waited while McClane at his table was putting the last bandage +on the last wound. In another minute they would be gone. It was then that +the Belgian Red Cross man came running to them. Had they taken a man with +a wound in his back? A bad wound? As big as that? No? Then he was still +here, and he had got to take him to the ambulance. No, he didn't know +where he was. He might be in one of those houses where they took in the +wounded, or he might be up there by the tramway in the plantation. Would +they take a stretcher and find him? _He_ had to go back to the tramway. +The last tram was coming in from Lokeren. He ran back, fussy and a little +frightened. + +John shouted out, "Hold on, McClane, there's another tram coming," and +set off up the street. They had taken all the men out of the houses; +therefore the man with the bad wound must have been left somewhere by the +plantation. They went there, carrying their stretcher, going, going up to +the last minute, in delight, in the undying thrill of the danger. + +The wounded man was not in the plantation. As they looked for him the +tram from Lokeren slid in, Red Cross men on the steps, clinging. The +doors were flung open and the wounded men came out, stumbling, falling, +pushing each other. Somebody cried, "No stretchers! Damned bad +management. With the Germans on our backs." A Red Cross man, with a +puffed white face, stood staring at John and Charlotte, stupefied. + +"Are they coming?" John said. + +"Coming? They'll be here in ten minutes--five minutes." He snarled, a +terrified animal. + +He had caught sight of their stretcher and snatched at it, thrusting out +his face, the face of a terrified animal, open mouth, and round, +palpitating eyes. He lifted his hand as though he would have struck at +Charlotte, but John pushed him back. He was brutalized, made savage and +cruel by terror; he had a lust to hurt. + +"You can't have our stretcher," Charlotte said. + +She could see they didn't want it. This was the last tram. The serious +cases had been sent on first. All these men could walk or hobble along +somehow with help. But they were the last in the retreat of the wounded; +they were the men who had been nearest to the enemy, and they had known +the extremity of fear. + +"You can't have it. It's wanted for a badly wounded man." + +"Where is he?" + +"We don't know. We're looking for him." + +"Ah, pah! We can't wait till you find him. Do you think we're going to +stand here to be taken?--For one man!" + +They went on through the plantation, stumbling and growling, dragging the +wounded out into the road. + +"If," Charlotte said, "we only knew where he was." + +John stood there silent; his head was turned towards the far end of the +wood, the Lokeren end. The terror of the wood held him. He seemed to be +listening; listening, but only half awake. + +Here, where the line stopped, a narrow track led downwards out of the +wood. Charlotte started to go along it. "Come on," she said. She saw him +coming, quickly, but with drawn, sleep-walking feet. The track led into a +muddy alley at the back of the village. + +There was a house there and a woman stood at the door, beckoning. She ran +up to them. "He's here," she whispered, "he's here." + +He lay on his side on the flagged floor of the kitchen. His shirt was +ripped open, and in his white back, below the shoulder blade, there was a +deep red wound, like a pit, with a wide mouth, gaping. He was ugly, a +Flamand; he had a puffed face with pushed out lips and a scrub of red +beard; but Charlotte loved him. + +They carried him out through the wood on to the road. He lay inert, +humped up, heavy. They had to go slowly, so slowly that they could +see the wounded and the Red Cross men going on far before them, down +the street. + +The flagged road swayed and swung with the swinging bulge of the +stretcher as they staggered. The shafts kept on slipping and slipping; +her grasp closed, tighter and tighter; her arms ached in their sockets; +but her fingers and the palms of her hands were firm and dry; they could +keep their hold. + +They had only gone a few yards along the road when suddenly John +stopped and sank his end of the stretcher, compelling Charlotte to +lower hers too. + +"What did you do that for?" + +"We can't, Charlotte. He's too damned heavy." + +"If I can, you can." + +He didn't move. He stood there, staring with his queer, hypnotised eyes, +at the man lying in the middle of the road, at the red pit in the white +back, at the wide, ragged lips of the wound, gaping. + +"For goodness' sake pick him up. It isn't the moment for resting." + +"Look here--it isn't good enough. We can't get him there in time." + +"You're--you're _not_ going to leave him!" + +"We've got to leave him. We can't let the whole lot be taken just +for one man." + +"We'll be taken if you stand here talking." + +He went on a step or two, slouching; then stood still, waiting for her, +ashamed. He was changed from himself, seized and driven by the fear that +had possessed the men in the plantation. She could see it in his +retreating eyes. + +She cried out--her voice sounded sharp and strange--"John--! You _can't_ +leave him." + +The wounded man who had lain inert, thinking that they were only resting, +now turned his head at her cry. She saw his eyes shaking, palpitating +with terror. + +"You've frightened him," she said. "I won't have him frightened." + +She didn't really believe that John was going. He went slowly, still +ashamed, and stopped again and waited for her. + +"Come back," she said, "this minute, and pick up that stretcher +and get on." + +"I tell you it isn't good enough." + +"Oh, go then, if you're such a damned coward, and send Mac to me. +Or Trixie." + +"They'll have gone." + +He was walking backwards, his face set towards the turn of the road. + +"Come on, you little fool. You can't carry him." + +"I can. And I shall, if Mac doesn't come." + +"You'll be taken," he shouted. + +"I don't care. If I'm taken, I'm taken. I shall carry him on my back." + +While John still went backwards she thought: It's all right. If he sees +I'm not coming he won't go. He'll come back to the stretcher. + +But John had turned and was running. + +Even then she didn't realise that he was running away, that she was left +there with the wounded man. Things didn't happen like that. People ran +away all of a sudden, in panics, because they couldn't help it; they +didn't begin by going slowly and stopping to argue and turning round and +walking backwards; they were gone before they knew where they were. She +believed that he was going for the ambulance. One moment she believed it +and the next she knew better. As she waited in the road (conscious of the +turn, the turn with its curving screen of tall trees) her knowledge, her +dreadful knowledge, came to her, dark and evil, creeping up and up. John +wasn't coming back. He would no more come back than he had come back the +other day. Sutton had come. The other day had been like to-day. John was +like that. + +Her mind stood still in amazement, seeing, seeing clearly, what John was +like. For a moment she forgot about the Germans. + +She thought: I don't believe Mac's gone. He wouldn't go until he'd got +them all in. Mac would come. + +Then she thought about the Germans again. All this was making it much +more dangerous for Mac and everybody, with the Germans coming round the +corner any minute; she had no business to stand there thinking; she must +pick that man up on her back and go on. + +She stooped down and turned him over on his chest. Then, with great +difficulty, she got him up on to his feet; she took him by the wrists +and, stooping again, swung him on to her shoulder. These acts, requiring +attention and drawing on all her energy, dulled the pain of her +knowledge. When she stood up with him she saw John and McClane coming to +her. She lowered her man gently back on to the stretcher. + +The Flamand, thinking that she had given it up and that he was now +abandoned to the Germans, groaned. + +"It's all right," she said. "He's coming." + +She saw McClane holding John by the arm, and in her pain there was a +sharper pang. She had the illusion of his being dragged back unwillingly. + +McClane smiled as he came to her. He glanced at the Flamand lying heaped +on his stretcher. + +"He's been too much for you, has he?" + +"Too much--? Yes." + +Instantly she saw that John had lied, and instantly she backed his lie. +She hated McClane thinking she had failed; but anything was better than +his knowing the truth. + +John and McClane picked up the stretcher and went on quickly. Charlotte +walked beside the Flamand with her hand on his shoulder to comfort him. +Again her pity was like love. + +From the top of the village she could see the opening of the lane. Down +there was the house with the tall green door where the dead man was. John +had _said_ he was dead. + +Supposing he wasn't? Or supposing he was still warm and limp like the boy +at Melle? She must know; it was a thing she must know for certain, or she +would never have any peace. And when the Flamand was laid out on +McClane's table, while McClane dressed his wound, she slipped down the +lane and opened the green door. + +The man lay on a row of packing cases with his feet parted. She put one +hand over his heart and the other on his forehead under the lock of +bloodstained hair. He was dead: stiff dead and cold. His tunic and shirt +had been unbuttoned to ease his last breathing. She had a queer baffled +feeling of surprise and incompleteness, as if some awful sense in her +would have been satisfied if she had seen that he had been living when +John had said that he was dead. To-day would then have been linked on +firmly to the other day. + +John stood at the top of the lane. He scowled at her as she came. + +"What do you think you're doing!" he said. + +"I went to that house--to see if the man was dead." + +"You'd no business to. I told you he was dead." + +"I wanted to make sure." + + * * * * * + +That evening she had just gone to her room when somebody knocked at her +door. McClane stood outside, straddling, his way when he had got +something important on hand. He asked if he might come in and speak to +her for a minute. + +She sat down on the edge of her bed and he sat on Gwinnie's, elbows +crooked out, hands planted on wide parted knees; he leaned forward, +looking at her, his face innocent and yet astute; his thick, +expressionless eyes clear now and penetrating. He seemed to be fairly +humming with activity left over from the excitement of the day. He was +always either dreamy and withdrawn, or bursting, bursting with energy, +and at odd moments he would drop off suddenly to sleep with his chin +doubled on his breast, recovering from his energy. Perhaps he had just +waked up now to this freshness. + +"Look here," he said. "You didn't break down. That man wasn't too +heavy for you." + +"He was. He was an awful weight. I couldn't have carried him a yard." + +"That won't do, Charlotte. I _saw_ you take him on your back." + +She could feel the blood rising up in her face before him. He was hurting +her with shame. + +He persisted, merciless. "It was Conway who broke down." + +She had tears now. + +"Nobody knows," he said gently, "but you and me.... I want to talk to +you about him. He must be got away from the Front. He must be got out +of Belgium." + +"You always wanted to get him away." + +"Only because I saw he would break down." + +"How could you tell?" + +"I'm a psychotherapist. It's my business to tell." + +But she was still on the defensive. + +"You never liked him." + +"I neither like nor dislike him. To me Conway is simply a sick man. If I +could cure him--" + +"Can't you?" + +"Not as you think. I can't turn his cowardice into courage. I might turn +it into something else but not that. That's why I say he ought to go +home. You must tell him." + +"I can't. Couldn't Billy tell him?" + +"Well, hardly. He's his commandant." + +"Can't _you_?" + +"Not I. You know what he thinks about me." + +"What?" + +"That I've got a grudge against him. That I'm jealous of him. You thought +it yourself." + +"Did I?" + +"You did. Look here, I say--I wanted to take you three into my corps. And +you'd have been sent home after the Berlaere affair if I hadn't spoken +for you. So much for my jealousy." + +"I only thought you were jealous of John." + +"Why, it was I who got him sent out that first day." + +"_Was_ it?" + +"Yes. I wanted to give him his chance. And," he added meditatively, "I +wanted to know whether I was right. I wanted to see what he would do." + +"I don't think it now," she said, reverting. + +"_That's_ all right." + +He laughed his brief, mirthless laugh, the assent of his egoism. But his +satisfaction had nothing personal in it. He was pleased because justice, +abstract justice, had been done. But she suspected his sincerity. He did +things for you, not because he liked you, but for some other reason; and +he would be so carried away by doing them that he would behave as though +he liked you when he didn't, when all the time you couldn't for one +minute rouse him from his immense indifference. She knew he liked her for +sticking to her post and for taking the wounded man on her back, because +that was the sort of thing he would have done himself. And he had only +helped John because he wanted to see what he would do. Therefore she +suspected his sincerity. + +But, no; he wasn't jealous. + +"And now," he went on, "you must get him to go home at once, or he'll +have a bad break-down. You've got to tell him, Charlotte." + +She stood up, ready. "Where is he?" + +"By himself. In his room." + +She went to him there. + +He was sitting at his little table. He had been trying to write a letter, +but he had pushed it from him and left it. You could see he was absorbed +in some bitter meditation. She seated herself at the head of his bed, on +his pillow, where she could look down at him. + +"John," she said, "you can't go on like this--" + +"Like what?" + +He held his head high; but the excited, happy light had gone out of his +eyes; they stared, not as though they saw anything, but withdrawn, as +though he were contemplating the fearful memory of his fear. + +And she was sorry for him, so sorry that she couldn't bear it. She bit +her lip lest she should sob out with pain. + +"Oh--" she said, and her pain stopped her. + +"I don't know what you're talking about--'going on like this.' +I'm--going--on." + +"What's the good? You've had enough. If I were you I should go home. You +know you can't stand it." + +"What? Go and leave my cars to Sutton?" + +"McClane could take them." + +"I don't know how long McClane signed on for. _I_ signed on for the +duration of the war." + +"There wasn't any signing on." + +"Well, if you like, I swore I wouldn't go back till it was over." + +"Yes, and supposing it happens again." + +"What _should_ happen again?" + +"What happened this afternoon.... And it wasn't the first time." + +"Do you _know_ what happened?" + +"I _saw_ what happened. You simply went to pieces." + +"My dear Charlotte, _you_ went to pieces, if you like." + +"I know that's what you told Mac. And _he_ knows how true it is." + +"Does he? Well--he shan't have my ambulances. You don't suppose I'm +going to let McClane fire me out of Belgium?... I suppose he put you up +to this...." + +He stood up as a sign to her to leave him. "I don't see that there's +anything more to be said." + +"There's one thing." (She slid to her feet.) "_You_ swore you'd stick +till the war's over. _I_ swore, if I had to choose between you and the +wounded, it shouldn't be you." + +"You haven't got to choose. You've only got to obey orders...." + +His face stiffened. He looked like some hard commander imposing an +unanswerable will. + +"... The next time," he said, "you'll be good enough to remember that I +settle what risks are to be taken, not you." + +Her soul stiffened, too, and was hard. She stood up against him with her +shoulder to the door. + +"It sounds all right," she said. "But the _next time_ I'll carry him on +my back all the way." + + * * * * * + +She went to bed with her knowledge. He funked and lied. The two things +she couldn't stand. His funk and his lying were a real part of him. And +it was as if she had always known it, as if all the movements of her mind +had been an effort to escape her knowledge. + +She opened her eyes. Something hurt them. Gwinnie, coming late to bed, +had turned on the electric light. And as she rolled over, turning her +back to the light and to Gwinnie, her mind shifted. It saw suddenly the +flame leaping in John's face. His delight in danger, that happiness he +felt when he went out to meet it, happiness springing up bright and new +every day; that was a real part of him. She couldn't doubt it. She knew. +And she was left with her queer, baffled sense of surprise and +incompleteness. She couldn't see the nature of the bond between these two +realities. + +That was his secret, his mystery. + + + + +XII + + +She woke very early in the morning with one clear image in her mind: what +John had done yesterday. + +Her mind seemed to have watched all night behind her sleep to attack her +with it in the first moment of waking. She had got to come to a clear +decision about that. If Billy Sutton had done it, or one of McClane's +chauffeurs, her decision would have been very clear. She would have said +he was a filthy coward and dismissed him from her mind. But John couldn't +be dismissed. His funk wasn't like other people's funk. Coupled with his +ecstatic love of danger it had an unreal, fantastic quality. Somehow she +couldn't regard his love of danger as an unreal, fantastic thing. It had +come too near her; it had moved her too profoundly and too long; she had +shared it as she might have shared his passion. + +So that, even in the sharp, waking day she felt his fear as a secret, +mysterious thing. She couldn't account for it. She didn't, considering +the circumstances, she didn't judge the imminence of the Germans to be a +sufficient explanation. It was as incomprehensible to-day as it had been +yesterday. + +But there was fear and fear. There was the cruel, animal fear of the +Belgians in the plantation, fear that was dark to itself and had no +sadness in it; and there was John's fear that knew itself and was sad. +The unbearable, inconsolable sadness of John's fear! After all, you could +think of him as a gentle thing, caught unaware in a trap and tortured. +And who was she to judge him? She in her "armour" and he in his coat of +nerves. His knowledge and his memory of his fear would be like a raw open +wound in his mind; and her knowledge of it would be a perpetual irritant, +rubbing against it and keeping up the sore. Last night she hadn't done +anything to heal him; she had only hurt.... And if she gave John up his +wound would never heal. She owed a sort of duty to the wound. + +Of course, like John, she would go on remembering what had happened +yesterday. She would never get over it any more than he would. Yet, +after all, yesterday was only one day out of his life. There might never +be another like it. And to set against yesterday there was their first +day at Berlaere and the day afterwards at Melle; there was yesterday +morning and there was that other day at Melle. She had no business to +suppose that he had done then what he did yesterday. They had settled +that once for all at the time, when he said Billy Sutton had told him +she was going back with him. It all hung on that. If that was right, the +rest was right.... + +Supposing Billy hadn't told him anything of the sort, though? She would +never know that. She couldn't say to Billy: "_Did_ you tell John I was +going back with you? Because; if you didn't--" She would have to leave +that as it was, not quite certain.... And she couldn't be quite certain +whether the boy had been dead or alive. And ... No. She couldn't get over +it, John's cowardice. It had destroyed the unique, beautiful happiness +she had had with him. + +For it was no use saying that courage, physical courage, didn't count. +She could remember a long conversation she had had with George Corfield, +the man who wanted to marry her, about that. He had said courage was the +least thing you could have. That only meant that, whatever else you +hadn't, you must have that. It was a sort of trust. You were trusted not +to betray defenceless things. A coward was a person who betrayed +defenceless things. George had said that the world's adoration of courage +was the world's cowardice, its fear of betrayal. That was a question for +cowards to settle among themselves. The obligation not to betray +defenceless things remained. It was so simple and obvious that people +took it for granted; they didn't talk about it. They didn't talk about it +because it was so deep and sacred, like honour and like love; so that, +when John had talked about it she had always felt that he was her lover, +saying the things that other men might not say, things he couldn't have +said to any other woman. + +It was inconceivable that he--It couldn't have happened. As he had said +of the defeat of Belgium, it was so bad that it couldn't happen. Odd, +that the other day she had accepted at once a thing she didn't know for +certain, while now she fought fiercely against a thing she knew; and +always the memory of it, returning, beat her down. + +She had to make up her mind on what terms she would live with it and +whether she would live with it at all. Supposing it happened again? +Supposing you had always to go in fear of its happening?... It mightn't +happen. Funk might be a thing that attacked you like an illness, or like +drink, in fits, with long, calm intervals between. She wondered what it +would feel like to be subject to attacks. Perhaps you would recover; you +would be on the look-out, and when you felt another fit coming on you +could stave it off or fight it down. And the first time wouldn't count +because you had had no warning. It wouldn't be fair to give him up +because of the first time. + +He would have given her up, he would have left her to the Germans--Yes; +but if she broke with him now she would never get beyond that thought, +she would never get beyond yesterday; she would always see it, the +flagged road swinging with the swinging bulge of the stretcher, the +sudden stopping, the Flamand with his wound, the shafts of the stretcher, +suddenly naked, sticking out; and then all the fantastic, incredible +movements of John's flight. Her mind would separate from him on that, +closing everything down, making his act eternal. + +And, after all, the Germans hadn't come round the corner. Perhaps he +wouldn't have left her if they had really come. How did she know what he +wouldn't have done? + +No. That was thin. Thin. She couldn't take herself in quite in that way. +It was the way she had tried with Gibson Herbert. When he did anything +she loathed she used to pretend he hadn't done it. But with John, if she +didn't give him up, her eyes must always be open. Perhaps they would get +beyond yesterday. Perhaps she would see other things, go on with him to +something new, forgetting. Her unique, beautiful happiness was smashed. +Still, there might be some other happiness, beautiful, though not with +the same beauty. + +If John had got the better of his fear--She thought of all the men she +had ever heard of who had done that, coming out in the end heroic, +triumphant. + + * * * * * + +Three things, three little things that happened that morning, that showed +the way his mind was working. Things that she couldn't get over, that she +would never forget. + +John standing on the hospital steps, watching Trixie Rankin and Alice +Bartrum as they started with the ambulances; the fierce fling of his +body, turning away. + +His voice saying, "I loathe those women. There's Alice Bartrum--I saw her +making eyes at Sutton over a spouting artery. As for Mrs. Rankin they +ought to intern her. She oughtn't to be allowed within ten miles of any +army. That's one thing I like about McClane. He can't stand that sort of +thing any more than I can." + +"How about Gwinnie and me?" + +"Gwinnie hangs her beastly legs about all over the place. So do you." + +John standing at the foot of the stairs, looking at the Antwerp men. +Their heads and faces were covered with a white mask of cotton wool like +a diver's helmet, three small holes in each white mask for mouth and +eyes. They were the men whose faces had been burned by fire at Antwerp. + +"Come away," she said. But he still stood, fascinated, hypnotised by the +white masks. + +"If I were to stick there, doing nothing, looking at the wounded, I +should go off my head." + +"My God! So should I. Those everlasting wounds. They make you dream +about them. Disgusting dreams. I never really see the wound, but I'm +just going to see it. I know it's going to be more horrible than any +wound I've ever seen. And then I wake.... That's why I don't look at +them more than I can help." + +"You're looking at them now," she said. + +"Oh, them. That's nothing. Cotton wool." + +And she, putting her hand on his arm to draw him up the stairs, away. +John shaking her hands off and his queer voice rising. "I wish you +wouldn't do that, Charlotte. You know I hate it." + +He had never said anything to her like that before. It hadn't struck her +before that, changed to himself, he would change to her. He hadn't got +over last night. She had hurt him; her knowledge of his cowardice hurt +him; and this was how he showed his pain. + +She thought: Here's Antwerp falling and Belgium beaten. And all those +wounded. And the dead.... And here am I, bothering about these little +things, as if they mattered. Three little things. + + * * * * * + +The fire from the battlefield had raked the village street as they came +in; but it had ceased now. The curé had been through it all, going up and +down, helping with the stretchers. John was down there in the wine-shop, +where the soldiers were, looking for more wounded. + +They had found five in the stable yard, waiting to be taken away; they +had moved four of them into the ambulance. The fifth, shot through the +back of his head, still lay on the ground on a stretcher that dripped +blood. Charlotte stood beside him. + +The curé came to her there. He was slender and lean in his black cassock. +He had a Red Cross brassard on his sleeve, and in one hand he carried his +missal and in the other the Host and the holy oils in a little bag of +purple silk. He looked down at the stretcher and he looked at Charlotte, +smiling faintly. + +"Where is Monsieur?" he said. + +"In the wine-shop, looking for wounded." + +She thought: He isn't looking, for them. He's skulking there, out of the +firing. He'll always be like that. + +It had begun again. The bullets whistled in the air and rapped on the +stone causeway, and ceased. The curé glanced down the street towards the +place they had come from and smiled again. + +She liked his lean dark face and the long lines that came in it when it +smiled. It despised the firing, it despised death, it despised everything +that could be done to him there. And it was utterly compassionate. + +"Then," he said, "it is for you and me to carry him, Mademoiselle." He +stooped to the stretcher. + +Between them they lifted him very slowly and gently into the ambulance. + +"There, Monsieur, at the bottom." + +At the bottom because of the steady drip, drip, that no bandaging could +staunch. He lay straight and stiff, utterly unconcerned, and his feet in +their enormous boots, slightly parted, stuck out beyond the stretcher. +The four others sat in a row down one side of the car and stared at him. + +The curé climbed in after him, carrying the Host. He knelt there, +where the blood from the smashed head oozed through the bandages and +through the canvas of the stretchers to the floor and to the skirts of +his cassock. + +The Last Sacrament. Charlotte waited till it was over, standing stolidly +by the tail of the car. She could have cried then because of the sheer +beauty of the curé's act, even while she wondered whether perhaps the +wafer on his tongue might not choke the dying man. + +The curé hovered on the edge of the car, stooping with a certain +awkwardness; she took from him his missal and his purple bag as he +gathered his cassock about him and came down. + +"Can I do anything, Monsieur?" + +"No, Mademoiselle. It _is_ done." + +His eyes smiled at her; but his lips were quivering as he took again +his missal and his purple bag. She watched him going on slowly down the +street till he turned into the wine-shop. She wondered: Had he seen? +Did he know why John was there? In another minute John came out, +hurrying to the car. + +He glanced down at the blood stains by the back step; then he looked in; +and when he saw the man lying on the stretcher he turned on her in fury. + +"What are you thinking of? I told you you weren't to take him." + +"I had to. I couldn't leave him there. I thought--" + +"You've no business to think." + +"Well, but the curé--" + +"The curé doesn't know anything about it." + +"I don't care. If he's in a clean bed--if they take his boots off--" + +"I told you they can't spare clean beds for corpses. He'll be dead before +you can get him there." + +"Not if we're quick." + +"Nonsense. We must get him out of that." + +He seized the handle of the stretcher and began pulling; she hung on to +his arm and stopped that. + +"No. No," she said. "You shan't touch him." + +He flung her arm off and turned. "You fool," he said. "You fool." + +She looked at him steadily, a long look that remembered, that made +him remember. + +"There isn't time," she said. "They'll begin _firing_ in another minute." + +"Damn you." But he had turned, slinking round the corner of the hood to +the engine. While he cranked it up she thought of the kit that one of the +men had left there in the yard. She made a dash and fetched it, and as +she threw it on the floor the car started. She snatched at the rope and +swung herself up on to the step. The dying man lay behind her, straight +and stiff; his feet in their heavy boots stuck out close under her hand. + +The four men nodded and grinned at her. They protected her. They +understood. + +If only she could get him into a clean bed. If only she had had time +to take his boots off. It would be all right if only she could bring +him in alive. + +He was still alive when they got into Ghent. + +She had forgotten John and it was not until they came to take out the +stretcher that she was again aware of him. They had drawn up before the +steps of the hospital; he had got down and was leaning sideways, staring +under the stretcher. + +"What is it?" + +"You can see what it is. Blood." + +From the hole in the man's head, through the soaked bandages, it still +dripped, dripped with a light sound; it had made a glairy pool on the +floor of the ambulance. + +"Don't look at it," she said. "It'll make you sick. You know you can't +stand it." + +"Oh. I can't _stand_ it, can't I?" + +He straightened himself. He threw back his head; his upper lip lifted, +stretched tight and thin above the clean white teeth. His eyes looked +down at her, narrowed, bright slits under dropped lids. + +"John--I want to get him in before he dies." + +"All right. Get in under there. Take his head." + +"Hadn't I better take his feet?" + +"You'd better take what you're told to." + +She stiffened to the weight, heaved up her shoulder. Two men came running +down the steps to help her as John pulled. + +"They'll be glad," he said, "to see him." + + * * * * * + +She was in the yard of the hospital, swabbing out the car, when John +came to her. + +The back and side of the hospital, the long barracks of the annex and the +wall at the bottom enclosed a waste place of ochreish clay. A long wooden +shed, straw-white and new, was built out under the red brick of the +annex. She thought it was a garage. John came out of the door of the +shed. He beckoned to her as he came. + +"Come here," he said. "I want to show you something." + +They went close together, John gripping her arm, in the old way, to steer +her. As they came to the long wall of the shed his eyes slewed round and +looked at her out of their corners. She had seen that sidelong, attentive +look once before, when she was a little girl, in the eyes of a schoolboy +who had taken her away and told her something horrid. The door of the +shed stood ajar. John half led, half pushed her in. + +"Look there--" he said. + +The dead men were laid out in a row, on their backs; greyish-white, +sallow-white faces upturned; bodies straight and stiff on a thin litter +of straw. Pale grey light hovered, filtered through dust. + +It came from some clearer place of glass beyond that might have been a +carpenter's shop, partitioned off. She couldn't see what was going on +there. She didn't see anything but the dead bodies, the dead faces, and +John's living face. + +He leaned against the wall; his head was thrown back, his eyes moved +glistening under the calm lids; the corners of his mouth and the wings of +his nostrils were lifted as he laughed: a soft, thin laugh breathed out +between the edges of his teeth. He pointed. + +"There's your man. Shows how much they wanted him, doesn't it?" + +He lay there, the last comer, in his uniform and bloody bandages, his +stiff, peaked mouth open, his legs stretched apart as they had sprung in +his last agony. + +"Oh, John--" + +She cried out in her fright and put her hands over her eyes. She had +always been afraid of the dead bodies. She didn't want to know where they +put them, and nobody told her. + +John gripped her wrists so that he hurt her and dragged down her hands. +He looked into her eyes, still laughing. + +"I thought you weren't afraid of anything," he said. + +"I'm not afraid when we're out there. I'm only afraid of _seeing_ them. +You know I am." + +She turned, but he had put himself between her and the door. She wrenched +at the latch, sobbing. + +"How could you be so _cruel?_ What did you do it for? What did you +_do_ it for?" + +"I wanted you to see what they've done with him. There's his clean bed. +They haven't even taken his boots off." + +"You brute. You _utter_ brute!" + +A steely sound like a dropped hammer came from behind the glass +partition; then the sliding of a latch. John opened the door a little way +and she slipped out past him. + +"_Next time_," he said, "perhaps you'll do as you're told." + +She wanted to get away by herself. Not into her own room, where Gwinnie, +who had been unloading ambulance trains half the night, now rested. The +McClane Corps was crowding into the messroom for tea. She passed through +without looking at any of them and out to the balcony, closing the French +window behind her. She could hide there beyond the window where the wall +was blank. + +She leaned back, flattening herself against the wall.... + +Something would have to be done. They couldn't go on like this.... Her +mind went to and fro, quickly, with short jerky movements, distressed; it +had to do so much thinking in so short a time. + +She would always have to reckon with John's fear. And John's fear was not +what she had thought it, a sad, helpless, fatal thing, sad because it +knew itself doom-like and helpless. It was cruel, with a sort of mental +violence in it, worse than the cruel animal fear of the men in the +plantation. She could see that his cowardice had something to do with his +cruelty and that his cruelty was somehow linked up with his cowardice; +but she couldn't for the life of her imagine the secret of the bond. She +only felt that it would be something secret and horrible; something that +she would rather not know about. + +And she knew that since yesterday he had left off caring for her. His +love had died a sudden, cruel and violent death. His cowardice had done +that too.... And he had left off caring for the wounded. It was almost as +if he hated them, because they lay so still, keeping him back, keeping +him out under the fire. + +Queer, but all those other cowardly things that he had done had seemed to +her unreal even when she had seen him doing them; and afterwards when she +thought about them they were unreal, as if they hadn't happened, as if +she had just imagined them. Incredible, and yet the sort of thing you +_could_ imagine if you tried. But that last devilish thing he did, it had +a hard, absolute reality. Just because it was inconceivable, because you +couldn't have imagined it, you couldn't doubt that it had happened. + +It was happening now. As long as she lived it would go on happening in +her mind. She would never get away from it. + +There were things that men did, bestial things, cruel things, things they +did to women. But not things like this. They _didn't_ think of them, +because this thing wasn't thinkable. + +Why had John done it? Why? She supposed he wanted to hurt her and +frighten her because he had been hurt, because he had been frightened. +And because he knew she loved her wounded men. Perhaps he wanted to make +her hate him and have done with it. + +Well, she did hate him. Oh, yes, she hated him. + +She heard the window open and shut and a woman's footsteps swishing on +the stone floor. Trixie Rankin came to her, with her quick look that fell +on you like a bird swooping. She stood facing her, upright and stiff in +her sharp beauty; her lips were pressed together as though they had just +closed on some biting utterance; but her eyes were soft and intent. + +"What's he done this time?" she said. + +"He hasn't done anything." + +"Oh yes, he has. He's done something perfectly beastly." + +It was no use lying to Trixie. She knew what he was like, even if she +didn't know about yesterday, even if she didn't know what he had done +now. Nobody could know that. She looked straight at Trixie, with broad, +open eyes that defied her to know. + +"What makes you think so?" + +"Your face." + +"Damn my face. It's got nothing to do with you, Trixie." + +"Yes it has. If it gives the show away I can't help seeing, can I?" + +"You can help talking." + +"Yes, I can help talking." + +The arrogance had gone out of her face. It could change in a minute from +the face of a bird of prey to the face of a watching angel. It looked at +her as it looked at wounded men: tender and protective. But Trixie +couldn't see that you didn't want any tenderness and protection just +then, or any recognition of your wound. + +"You rum little blighter," she said. "Come along. Nobody's going to +talk." + +There was a stir as Charlotte went in; people shifting their places to +make room for her; McClane calling out to her to come and sit by him; +Alice Bartrum making sweet eyes; the men getting up and cutting bread and +butter and reaching for her cup to give it her. She could see they were +all determined to be nice, to show her what they thought of her; they had +sent Trixie to bring her in. There was something a little deliberate +about it and exaggerated. They were getting it up--a demonstration in her +favour, a demonstration against John Conway. + +She talked; but her thoughts ran by themselves on a line separate from +her speech. + +"We got in six wounded." ... "That curé was there again. He was +splendid." ... They didn't know anything. They condemned him on the +evidence of her face, the face she had brought back to them, coming +straight from John. Her face had the mark of what he had done to +her.... "Much firing? Not so very much." ... She remembered what he had +said to her about her face. "Something's happened to it. Some cruelty. +Some damnable cruelty...." + +"We'll have to go out there again." + +They were all listening, and Alice Bartrum had made fresh tea for her; +McClane was setting down her cup. She was thirsty; she longed for the +fresh, fragrant tea; she was soothed by the kind, listening faces. +Suddenly they drew away; they weren't listening any more. John had come +into the room. + +It flashed on her that all these people thought that John was her lover, +her lover in the way they understood love. They were looking at him as if +they hated him. But John's face was quiet and composed and somehow +triumphant; it held itself up against all the hostile faces; it fronted +McClane and his men as their equal; it was the face of a man who has +satisfied a lust. His whole body had a look of assurance and +accomplishment, as if his cruelty had given him power. + +And with it all he kept his dreadful beauty. It hurt her to look at him. + +She rose, leaving her tea untasted, and went out of the room. She +couldn't sit there with him. She had given him up. Her horror of him was +pure, absolute. It would never return on itself to know pity or remorse. + + + + +XIII + + +And the next day, as if nothing had happened, he was excited and eager to +set out. He could sleep off his funk in the night, like drink, and get up +in the morning as if it had never been. He was more immune from memory +than any drunkard. He woke to his romance as a child wakes to the renewed +wonder of the world. It was so real to him that, however hardly you +judged him, you couldn't think of him as a humbug or a hypocrite.... No. +He was not that. He was not that. His mind truly lived in a glorious +state for which none of his disgraceful deeds were ever done. It created +a sort of innocence for him. She could forgive him (even after +yesterday), she could almost believe in him again when she saw him coming +down the hall to the ambulance with his head raised and his eyes shining, +gallant and keen. + +They were to go to Berlaere. Trixie Rankin had gone on before them with +Gurney, McClane's best chauffeur. McClane and Sutton were at Melle. + +They had not been to Berlaere since that day, the first time they had +gone out together. That time at least had been perfect; it remained +secure; nothing could ever spoil it; she could remember the delight of +it, their strange communion of ecstasy, without doubt, without misgiving. +You could never forget. It might have been better if you could, instead +of knowing that it would exist in you forever, to torment you by its +unlikeness to the days, the awful, incredible days that had come +afterwards. There was no way of thinking that John had been more real +that day than he had been yesterday. She was simply left with the +inscrutable mystery of him on her hands. But she could see clearly that +he was more real to himself. Yesterday and the day before had ceased to +exist for him. He was back in his old self. + +There was only one sign of memory that he gave. He was no longer her +lover; he no longer recognised her even as his comrade. He was her +commandant. It was his place to command, and hers to be commanded. He +looked at her, when he looked at her at all, with a stern coldness. She +was a woman who had committed some grave fault, whom he no longer +trusted. So masterly was his playing of this part, so great, in a way, +was still his power over her, that there were moments when she almost +believed in the illusion he created. She had committed some grave fault. +She was not worthy of his trust. Somewhere, at some time forgotten, in +some obscure and secret way, she had betrayed him. + +She had so mixed her hidden self with his in love that even now, with all +her knowledge of him, she couldn't help feeling the thing as he felt it +and seeing as he saw. Her mind kept on passing in and out of the illusion +with little shocks of astonishment. + +And yet all the time she was acutely aware of the difference. When she +went out with him she felt that she was going with something dangerous +and uncertain. She knew what fear was now. She was afraid all the time of +what he would do next, of what he would not do. Her wounded were not safe +with him. Nothing was safe. + +She wished that she could have gone out with Billy; with Billy there +wouldn't be any excitement, but neither would there be this abominable +fear. On the other hand you couldn't let anybody else take the risk of +John; and you couldn't, you simply couldn't let him go alone. Conceive +him going alone--the things that might happen; she could at least see +that some things didn't. + +It was odd, but John had never shown the smallest desire to go without +her. If he hadn't liked it he could easily have taken Sutton or Gwinnie +or one of the McClane men. It was as if, in spite of his hostility, he +still felt, as he had said, that where she was everything would be right. + +And it looked as if this time nothing could go wrong. When they came into +the village the firing had stopped; it was concentrating further east +towards Zele. Trixie's ambulance was packed, and Trixie was excited and +triumphant. + +Her gestures waved them back as useless, much too late; without them she +had got in all the wounded. But in the end they took over two of them, +slight cases that Trixie resigned without a pang. She had had to turn +them out to make room for poor Gurney, the chauffeur, who had hurt +himself, ruptured something, slipping on a muddy bank with his stretcher. + +Mr. Conway, she said, could drive her back to Ghent and Charlotte could +follow with the two men. She had settled it all, in her bright, +domineering way, in a second, and now swung herself up on the back step +of her car. + +They had got round the turn of the village and Charlotte was starting to +follow them when she heard them draw up. In another minute John appeared, +walking back slowly down the street with a young Belgian lieutenant. They +were talking earnestly together. So soon as Charlotte saw the lieutenant +she had a sense of something happening, something fatal, that would +change Trixie's safe, easy programme. John as he came on looked perturbed +and thoughtful. They stopped. The lieutenant was saying something final. +John nodded assent and saluted. The lieutenant sketched a salute and +hurried away in the opposite direction. + +John waited till he was well out of sight before he came to her. (She +noticed that.) He had the look at first of being up to something, as if +the devil of yesterday was with him still. + +It passed. His voice had no devil in it. "I say, I've got a job for you, +Charlotte. Something you'll like." + +There was no devil in his voice, but he stared away from her as he spoke. + +"I don't want you to go to Ghent. I want you to go on to Zele." + +"Zele? Do I know the way?" + +"It's quite easy. You turn round and go the way we went that first +day--you remember? It's the shortest cut from here." + +"Pretty bad going though. Hadn't we better go on and strike the +main road?" + +"Yes, if you want to go miles round and get held up by the transport." + +"All right--if we can get through." + +"You'll get through all right." His voice had the tone of finality. + +"I'm to go by myself then?" + +"Well--if I've got to drive Mrs. Rankin--" + +She thought: It's going to be dangerous. + +"By the way, I haven't told her I'm sending you. You don't want her +butting in and going with you." + +"No. I certainly don't want Trixie.... And look here, I don't +particularly want those men. Much better leave them here where they're +safe and send in again for them." + +"I don't know that I _can_ send in again. We're supposed to have finished +this job. The cars may be wanted for anything. _They'll_ be all right." + +"I don't _like_ taking them." + +"You're making difficulties," he said. He was irritable and hurried; he +had kept on turning and looking up the street as though he thought the +lieutenant might appear again at any minute. + +"When _will_ you learn that you've simply got to obey orders?" + +"All right." + +She hadn't a chance with him. Whatever she said and did he could always +bring it round to that, her orders. She thought she knew what _his_ +orders had been. + +He cranked up the engine. She could see him stooping and rising to it, a +rhythmic, elastic movement; he was cranking energetically, with a sort of +furious, flushed enjoyment of his power. + +She backed and turned and he ran forward with her as she started. He +shouted "Don't think about the main road. Get through.... And hurry _up_. +You haven't got too much time." + +She knew. It was going to be dangerous and he funked it. He hadn't got to +drive Trixie into Ghent. When the worst came to the worst Trixie could +drive herself. She thought: He didn't tell her because he daren't. He +knew she wouldn't let him send me by myself. She'd _make_ him go. She'd +stand over him and bully him till he had to. + +Still, she could do it. She could get through. Going by herself was +better than going with a man who funked it. Only she would have liked it +better without the two wounded men. She thought of them, jostled, falling +against each other, falling forward and recovering, shaken by the jolting +of the car, and perhaps brought back into danger. She suspected that not +having too much time might be the essence of the risk. + +Everything was quiet as they ran along the open road from the village to +the hamlet that sat low and humble on the edge of the fields. A few +houses and the long wall of the barn still stood; but by this time the +house she had brought the guns from had the whole of its roof knocked in, +and the stripped gable at the end of the row no longer pricked up its +point against the sky; the front of the hollow shell had fallen forward +and flung itself across the road. + +For a moment she thought the way was blocked. She thought: If I can't get +round I must get over. She backed, charged, and the car, rocking a +little, struggled through. And there, where the road swerved slightly, +the high wall of a barn, undermined, bulged forward, toppling. It +answered the vibration of the car with a visible tremor. So soon as she +passed it fell with a great crash and rumbling and sprawled in a smoky +heap that blocked her way behind her. + +After that they went through quiet country for a time, but further east, +near the town, the shelling began. The road here was opened up into great +holes with ragged, hollow edges; she had to skirt them carefully, and +sometimes there would not be enough clear ground to move in, and one +wheel of the car would go unsupported, hanging over space. + +Yet she had got through. + +As she came into Zele she met the last straggling line of the refugees. +They cried out to her not to go on. She thought: I must get those men +before the retreat begins. + + * * * * * + +Returning with her heavy load of wounded, on the pitch-black road, +half way to Ghent she was halted. She had come up with the tail end of +the retreat. + + * * * * * + +Trixie Rankin stood on the hospital steps looking out. The car turned in +and swung up the rubber incline, but instead of stopping before the porch +it ran on towards the downward slope. Charlotte jammed on the brakes with +a hard jerk and backed to the level. + +She couldn't think how she had let the car do that. She couldn't think +why she was slipping from the edge of it into Trixie's arms. And +stumbling in that ignominious way on the steps with Trixie holding her up +on one side.... It didn't last. After she had drunk the hot black coffee +that Alice Bartrum gave her she was all right. + +The men had gone out of the messroom, leaving them alone. + +"I'm all right, Trixie, only a bit tired." + +"Tired? I should think you _were_ tired. That Conway man's a perfect +devil. Fancy scooting back himself on a safe trip and sending you out to +Zele. _Zele_!" + +"McClane doesn't care much where he sends _you_." + +"Oh, Mac--As if he could stop us. But he'd draw the line at Zele, with +the Germans coming into it." + +"Rot. They weren't coming in for hours and hours." + +"Well, anyhow he thought they were." + +"He didn't think anything about it. I wanted to go and I went. He--he +couldn't stop me." + +"It's no good lying to me, Charlotte. I know too much. I know he had +orders to go to Zele himself and the damned coward funked it. I've a good +mind to report him to Head Quarters." + +"No. You won't do that. You wouldn't be such a putrid beast." + +"If I don't, Charlotte, it's because I like you. You're the pluckiest +little blighter in the world. But I'll tell you what I _shall_ do. Next +time your Mr. Conway's ordered on a job he doesn't fancy I'll go with him +and hold his nose down to it by the scruff of his neck. If he was _my_ +man I'd bloody well tell him what I thought of him." + +"It doesn't matter what you think of him. You were pretty well gone on +him yourself once." + +"When? When?" + +"When you wanted to turn Mac out and make him commandant." + +"Oh, _then_--I was a jolly fool to be taken in by him. So were you." + +She stopped on her way to the door. "I admit he _looks_ everything he +isn't. But that only shows what a beastly humbug the man is." + +"No. He isn't a humbug. He really likes going out even if he can't stand +it when he gets there." + +"I've no use for that sort of courage." + +"It isn't courage. But it isn't humbug." + +"I've no use for your fine distinctions either." + +She heard Alice Bartrum's voice calling to Trixie as she went out, "It's +jolly decent of her not to go back on him." + +The voice went on. "You needn't mind what Trixie says about cold +feet. She's said it about everybody. About Sutton and Mac, and all +our men, and me." + +She thought: What's the good of lying when they all know? Still, there +were things they wouldn't know if she kept on lying, things they would +never guess. + +"Trixie doesn't know anything about him," she said. "No more do you. You +don't know what he _was_." + +"Whatever he _is_, whatever he's done, Charlotte, you mustn't let it hurt +you. It hasn't anything to do with you. We all know what _you_ are." + +"Me? I'm not bothering about myself. I tell you it's not what _you_ think +about him, it's what _I_ think." + +"Yes," said Alice Bartrum. Then Gwinnie Denning and John Conway came in +and she left them. + +John carried himself very straight, and again Charlotte saw about him +that odd look of accomplishment and satisfaction. + +"So you got through?" he said. + +"Yes. I got through." They kept their eyes from each other as they spoke. + +Gwinnie struck in, "Are you all right?" + +"Yes, rather.... The little Belgian Army doctor was there. He was +adorable, sticking on, working away with his wounded, in a sort of +heavenly peace, with the Germans just outside." + +"How many did you get?" + +"Eleven--Thirteen." + +"Oh good.... I've the rottenest luck. I'd have given my head to have gone +with you." + +"I'm glad you didn't. It wasn't what you'd call a lady's tea-party." + +"Who wants a lady's tea-party? I ought to have gone in with the Mac +Corps. Then I'd have had a chance." + +"Not this time. Mac draws the line somewhere.... Look here, Gwinnie, I +wish you'd clear out a minute and let me talk to John." + +Gwinnie went, grumbling. + +For a moment silence came down between them. John was drinking coffee +with an air of being alone in the room, pretending that he hadn't heard +and didn't see her. + +"John--I didn't mind driving that car. I knew I could do it and I did it. +I won't say I didn't mind the shelling, because I did. Still, shelling's +all in the day's work. And I didn't mind your sending me, because I'd +rather have gone myself than let you go. I don't want you to be killed. +Somehow that's still the one thing I couldn't bear. But if you'd sent +Gwinnie I'd have killed you." + +"I didn't send Gwinnie. I gave you your chance. I knew you wanted to cut +Mrs. Rankin out." + +"I? I never thought of such a rotten thing." + +"Well, you talked about danger as if you liked it." + +"So did you." + +"Oh--_go_ to hell." + +"I've just come from there." + +"Oh--so you were frightened, were you?" + +"Yes, I was horribly frightened. I had thirteen wounded men with me. What +do you suppose it feels like, driving a heavy ambulance car by yourself? +You can't sit in front and steer and look after thirteen wounded men at +the same time. I had to keep hopping in and out. That isn't nice when +there's shells about. I shall never forgive you for not coming to give a +hand with those men. There's funk you can forgive and--" + +She thought: "It's John--John--I'm saying these disgusting things to. +I'm as bad as Trixie, telling him what I bloody well think of him, going +back on him." + +"And there's funk--" + +"You'd better take care, Charlotte. Do you know I could get you fired out +of Belgium to-morrow?" + +"Not after to-night, I think." (It was horrible.) + +He got up and opened the door. "Anyhow, you'll clear out of this room +now, damn you." + +"I wish you'd heard that Army doctor damning _you_." + +"Why didn't he go back with you himself, then?" + +"_He_ couldn't leave his wounded." + +He slammed the door hard behind her. + +That was just like him. Wounded men everywhere, trying to sleep, and he +slammed doors. He didn't care. + +She would have to go on lying. She had made up her mind to that. So long +as it would keep the others from knowing, so long as John's awfulness +went beyond their knowledge, so long as it would do any good to John, she +would lie. + +Her time had come. She remembered saying that. She could hear herself +talking to John at Barrow Hill Farm: "Everybody's got their breaking +point.... I daresay when my time comes I shall funk and lie." + +Well, didn't she? Funk--the everlasting funk of wondering what John would +do next; and lying, lying at every turn to save him. _He_ was her +breaking point. + +She had lied, the first time they went out, about the firing. She +wondered whether she had done it because then, even then, she had been +afraid of his fear. Hadn't she always somehow, in secret, been afraid? +She could see the car coming round the corner by the Church in the narrow +street at Stow, she could feel it grazing her thigh, and John letting her +go, jumping safe to the curb. She had pretended that it hadn't happened. + +But that first day--No. He had been brave then. She had only lied because +she was afraid he would worry about her.... Brave then. Could war tire +you and wear you down, and change you from yourself? In two weeks? Change +him so that she had to hate him! + +Half the night she lay awake wondering: Do I hate him because he doesn't +care about me? Or because he doesn't care about the wounded? She could +see all their faces: the face of the wounded man at Melle (_he_ had +crawled out on his hands and knees to look for her); the face of the dead +boy who hadn't died when John left him; the Flamand they brought from +Lokeren, lying in the road; the face of the dead man in the shed--And +John's face. + +How could you care for a thing like that? How could you want a thing like +that to care for you? + +And she? She didn't matter. Nothing mattered in all the world but Them. + + + + +XIV + + +It was Saturday, the tenth of October, the day after the fall of Antwerp. +The Germans were pressing closer round Ghent; they might march in any +day. She had been in Belgium a hundred years; she had lived a hundred +years under this doom. + +But at last she was free of John. Utterly free. His mind would have no +power over her any more. Nor yet his body. She was glad that he had not +been her lover. Supposing her body had been bound to him so that it +couldn't get away? The struggle had been hard enough when her first flash +came to her; and when she had fought against her knowledge and denied it, +unable to face the truth that did violence to her passion; and when she +had given him up and was left with just that, the beauty of his body, and +it had hurt her to look at him. + +Oh well, nothing could hurt her now. And anyhow she would get through +to-day without being afraid of what might happen. John couldn't do +anything awful; he had been ordered on an absolutely safe expedition, +taking medical stores to the convent hospital at Bruges and convoying +Gurney, the sick chauffeur, to Ostend for England. Charlotte was to go +out with Sutton, and Gwinnie was to take poor Gurney's place. She was +glad she was going with Billy. Whatever happened Billy would go through +it without caring, his mind fixed on the solid work. + +And John, for an hour before he started, had been going about in gloom, +talking of death. _His_ death. + +They were looking over the last letter from his father which he had asked +her to answer for him. It seemed that John had told him the chances were +he would be killed and had asked him whether in this case he would allow +the Roden ambulances to be handed over to McClane. And the old man had +given his consent. + +"Isn't it a pity to frighten him?" she said. + +"He's no business to be frightened. It's _my_ death. If I can face it, he +can. I'm simply making necessary arrangements." + +She could see that. At the same time it struck her that he wanted you to +see that he exposed himself to all the risks of death, to see how he +faced it. She had no patience with that talk about death; that pitiful +bolstering up of his romance. + +"If McClane says much more you can tell him." + +He was counting on this transfer of the ambulances to get credit with +McClane; to silence him. + +There were other letters which he had told her to answer. As soon as he +had started she went into his room to look for them. If they were not on +the chimneypiece they would be in the drawer with his razors and +pockethandkerchiefs. + +It was John's room, after she had gone through it, that showed her what +he was doing. + +Sutton looked in before she had finished. She called to him, "Billy, you +might come here a minute." + +He came in, eyebrows lifted at the inquisition. + +"What's up?" + +"I'm afraid John isn't coming back." + +"Not coming back? Of course he's coming back." + +"No. I think he's--got off." + +"You mean he's--" + +"Yes. Bolted." + +"What on earth makes you think that?" + +"He's taken all sorts of things--pyjamas, razors, all his +pockethandkerchiefs... I _had_ to look through his drawers to find those +letters he told me to answer." + +Sutton had gone through into the slip of white tiled lavatory beyond. She +followed him. + +"My God," he said, "yes. He's taken his toothbrush and his sleeping +draught.... You know he tried to get leave yesterday and they wouldn't +give it him?" + +"No. That makes it simply awful." + +"Pretty awful." + +"Billy--we must get him back." + +"I--I don't know about that. He isn't much good, is he? I think we'd +better let him go." + +"Don't you see how awful it'll be for the Corps?" + +"The Corps? Does that matter? McClane would take us all on to-morrow." + +"I mean for _us_. You and me and Gwinnie. He's our Corps, and we're it." + +"Sharlie--with the Germans coming into Ghent do you honestly believe +anybody'll remember what he did or didn't do?" + +"Yes. We're going to stick on with the Belgian Army. It'll be remembered +against _us_. Besides, it'll kill his father." + +"He'll do that any way. He's rotten through and through." + +"No. He was splendid in the beginning. He might be splendid some day +again. But if we let him go off and do this he's done for." + +"He's done for anyhow. Isn't it better to recognize that he's rotten? +McClane wouldn't have him. He saw what he was." + +"He didn't see him at Berlaere. He _was_ splendid there." + +"My dear child, don't you know why? He didn't see there was any danger. +He was too stupid to see it." + +"I saw it." + +"You're not stupid." + +"He did see it at the end." + +"At the end, yes--When he let you go back for the guns." + +She remembered. She remembered his face, the little beads of sweat +glittering. He couldn't help that. + +"Look here, from the time he realised the danger, did he go out or did he +stay under cover?" + +She didn't answer. + +"There," he said, "you see." + +"Oh, Billy, won't you leave him one shred?" + +"No. Not one shred." + +Yet, even now, if he could only be splendid--If he could only be it! Why +shouldn't Billy leave him one shred? After all, he didn't know all the +awful things John had done; and she would never tell him.... He did know +two things, the two things she didn't know. She had got to know them. The +desire that urged her to the completion of her knowledge pursued her now. +She would possess him in her mind if in no other way. + +"Billy--do you remember that day at Melle, when John lost me? Did you +tell him I was going back with you?" + +"No. I didn't." + +Then he _had_ left her. And he had lied to both of them. + +"Was the boy dead or alive when he left him?" + +"He was alive all right. We could have saved him." + +He had died--he had died of fright, then. + +"You _said_ he was dead." + +"I know I did. I lied." + +"... And before that--when he was with you and Trixie on that +battlefield--Did he--" + +"Yes. Then, too ... You see there aren't any shreds. The only thing you +can say is he can't help it. Nobody'd have been hard on him if he hadn't +gassed so much about danger." + +"That's the part you can't understand.... But, Billy, why did you lie +about him?" + +"Because I didn't want you to know, then. I knew it would hurt you, I +knew it would hurt you more than anything else." + +"That was rather wonderful of you." + +"Wasn't wonderful at all. I knew because what _you_ think, what _you_ +feel, matters more to me than anything else. Except perhaps my job. I +have to keep that separate." + +Her mind slid over that, not caring, returning to the object of +its interest. + +"Look here, Billy, you may be right. It probably doesn't matter to us. +But it'll be perfectly awful for him." + +"They can't do anything to him, Sharlie." + +"It's what he'll do to himself." + +"Suicide? Not he." + +"I don't mean that. Can't you see that when he gets away to England, +safe, and the funk settles down he'll start romancing all over again. +He'll see the whole war again like that; and then he'll remember what +he's done. He'll have to live all his life remembering...." + +"He won't. _You'll_ remember--_You'll_ suffer. You're feeling the shame +he ought to feel and doesn't." + +"Well, somebody's got to feel it.... And he'll feel it too. He won't be +let off. As long as he lives he'll remember.... I don't want him to have +that suffering." + +"He's brought it on himself, Sharlie." + +"I don't care. I don't want him to have it. I couldn't bear it if he +got away." + +"Of course, if you're going to be unhappy about it--" + +"The only thing is, can we go after him? Can we spare a car?" + +"Well yes, I can manage that all right. The fact is, the Germans may +really be in to-morrow or Monday, and we're thinking of evacuating all +the British wounded to-day. There are some men here that we ought to take +to Ostend. I've been talking to the President about it." + +And in the end they went with their wounded, less than an hour after John +had started. + +"I don't say I'll bring him back," said Sutton. "But at any rate we can +find out what he's up to." He meditated.... "We mayn't have to bring him. +I shouldn't wonder if he came back on his own. He's like that. He can't +stand danger yet he keeps on coming back to it. Can't leave it alone." + +"I know. He isn't quite an ordinary coward." + +"I'm not sure. I've known chaps like that. Can't keep away from +the thing." + +But she stuck to it. John's cowardice was not like other people's +cowardice. Other cowards going into danger had the imagination of horror. +He had nothing but the imagination of romantic delight. It was the +reality that became too much for him. He was either too stupid, or too +securely wrapped up in his dream to reckon with reality. It surprised him +every time. And he had no imaginative fear of fear. His fear must have +surprised him. + +"He'll have got away from Bruges," she said. + +"I don't think so. He'll have to put up at the Convent for a bit, to let +Gurney rest." + +They had missed the Convent and were running down a narrow street towards +the Market Place when they found John. He came on across a white bridge +over a canal at the bottom. He was escorted by some Belgian women, +dressed in black; they were talking and pointing up the street. + +He said he had been to lunch in the town and had lost himself there and +they were showing him the way back to the Convent. + +She had seen all that before somewhere, John coming over the Canal bridge +with the women in black.... She remembered. That was in one of her three +dreams. Only what she saw now was incomplete. There had been something +more in the dream. Something had happened. + +It happened half an hour later when she went out to find John in the +Convent garden where he was walking with the nuns. The garden shimmered +in a silver mist from the canal, the broad grass plots, the clipped +hedges, the cones and spikes of yew, the tall, feathery chrysanthemums, +the trailing bowers and arches, were netted and laced and webbed with the +silver mist. Down at the bottom of the path the forms of John and the +three women showed blurred and insubstantial and still. + +Presently they emerged, solid and clear; the nuns in their black habits +and the raking white caps like wings that set them sailing along. They +were showing John their garden, taking a shy, gentle, absorbed +possession of him. + +And as she came towards him John passed her without speaking. But his +face had turned to her with the look she had seen before. Eyes of hatred, +eyes that repudiated and betrayed her. + +The nuns had stopped, courteously, to greet her; she fell behind with one +of them; the two others had overtaken John who had walked on, keeping up +his stiff, repudiating air. + +The air, the turn of the head, the look that she had dreamed. Only in the +dream it had hurt her, and now she was hard and had no pain. + + * * * * * + +It was in the Convent garden that they played it out, in one final, +astounding conversation. + +The nuns had brought two chairs out on to the flagged terrace and set a +small table there covered with a white cloth. Thus invited, John had no +choice but to take his place beside her. Still he retained his mood. + +(The nuns had left them. Sutton was in one of the wards, helping with an +operation.) + +"I thought," he said, "that I was going to have peace...." + +It seemed to her that they had peace. They had been so much at the mercy +of chance moments that this secure hour given to them in the closed +garden seemed, in its quietness, immense. + +"... But first it's Sutton, then it's you." + +"We needn't say anything unless you like. There isn't much to be said." + +"Oh, isn't there!" + +"Not," she said, "if you're coming back." + +"Of course I'm coming back.... Look here, Charlotte. You didn't suppose I +was really going to bolt, did you?" + +"Were you going to change into your pyjamas at Ostend?" + +"My pyjamas? I brought them for Gurney." + +"And your sleeping draught was for Gurney?" + +"Of course it was." + +"And your razors and your toothbrush, too. Oh, John, what's the good of +lying? You forgot that I helped Alice Bartrum to pack Gurney's things. +You forget that Billy knows." + +"Do I? I shan't forget your going back on me; your betraying me," he +said. + +And for the first time she realised how alone he was; how horribly alone. +He had nobody but her. + +"Who have I betrayed you to?" + +"To Sutton. To McClane. To everybody you talked to." + +"No. No." + +"Yes. And you betrayed me in your thoughts. That's worse. People don't +always mean what they say. It's what they think." + +"What was I to think?" + +"Why, that all the damnable things you said about me weren't true." + +"I didn't say anything." + +"You've betrayed me by the things you didn't say." + +"Why should I have betrayed you?" + +"You know why. When a woman betrays a man it's always for one reason." + +He threw his head back to strike at her with his eyes, hard and keen, +dark blue like the blade of a new knife ... "Because he hasn't given her +what she wants." + +"Oh, what I want--I thought we'd settled that long ago." + +"You've never settled it. It isn't in you to settle it." + +"I can't talk to you about that. You're too horrible. But I didn't +betray you." + +"You listened to people who betrayed me. If you cared for me in any +decent way you'd have stood by me." + +"I _have_ stood by you through thick and thin. I've lied your lies. There +isn't one of your lies I haven't backed. I've done everything I could +think of to keep people from knowing about you." + +"Yet you go and tell Sutton that I've bolted. That I'm a deserter." + +"Yes, when it was all over. If you'd got away everybody'd have known. As +it is, only Billy and I know; and he's safe." + +"You insist that I was trying to get away? I own I thought of it. But one +doesn't do everything one thinks of.... No.... Don't imagine I was sick +of the war, or sick of Belgium. It's you I'm sick of." + +"Me?" + +"Yes, you. You had your warning. I told you what would happen if you let +me see you wanted me." + +"You think you've seen that?" + +"I've seen nothing else." + +"Once, perhaps. Twice. Once when you came to me on Barrow Hill. And when +we were crossing; once. And each time you never saw it." + +"Anybody can see. It's in your face. In your eyes and mouth. You can't +hide your lust." + +"My--'lust.' Don't you know I only cared for you because I'd done +with that?" + +They stopped. The nuns were back again, bringing great cups of hot black +coffee, coming quietly, and going quietly away. It was wonderful, all +that beauty and gentleness and peace existing in the horror of the war, +and through this horror within horror that John had made. + +They drank their coffee, slowly, greedily, prolonging this distraction +from their torment. Charlotte finished first. + +"You say I want you. I own I did once. But I don't now. Why, I care +more for the scrubbiest little Belgian with a smashed finger than I +do for you." + +"I suppose you can satisfy your erotic susceptibilities that way." + +"I haven't any, I tell you. I only cared for you because I thought you +were clean. I thought your mind was beautiful. And you aren't clean. And +your mind's the ugliest thing I know. And the cruelest.... Let's get it +right, John. I can forgive your funking. If your nerves are jumpy they're +jumpy. I daresay _I_ shall be jumpy if the Germans come into Ghent before +I'm out of it. I can forgive everything you've done to _me_. I can +forgive your lying. I see there's nothing left for you but to lie.... But +I can't forgive your not caring for the wounded. That's cruel.... You +didn't care for that boy at Melle--" + +John's mouth opened as if he were going to say something. He +seemed to gasp. + +"--No, you didn't or you wouldn't have left him. Whatever your funk was +like, you couldn't have left him if you'd cared, any more than I could +have left _you_." + +"He was dead when I left him." + +"He was still warm when I found him. Billy thought you were bringing him +away. He says he wasn't dead." + +"He lies, then. But you'll take his word against mine." + +"Yes," she said simply. "And he says he _didn't_ tell you I was going +on with him. You don't care for _me_. If you'd cared you couldn't +have left me." + +"I thought you said if it was a toss up between you and a wounded man--? +There were wounded men in that car." + +"There was a wounded man with me. You left _him_.... Don't imagine I +cared about myself, whether I lived or died. It was because I cared about +you. I cared so awfully." + +He jerked out a laugh. One light, short sound of dismissal and contempt. + + + + +XV + + +That light sound he made had ended it. + +She remembered it afterwards, not as a thing that hurt her, but as an +unpleasant incident of the day, like the rudeness of a stranger, and yet +not to be forgotten. It had the importance of extreme finality; his +answer to everything, unanswerable. + +She didn't care. She had ended it herself and with so clean a cut that +she could afford to let him have that inarticulate last word. She had +left him nothing to do but keep up his pretence that there had never been +so much as a beginning. He gave no sign of anything having been between +them, unless his attitude to Sutton was a sign. + +It showed the next day, the terrible Sunday that was ending everything. +Yesterday he had given orders that Charlotte should drive Sutton while he +drove by himself. To-day he had changed all that. Gwinnie was to drive +Sutton and Charlotte was to go out alone. And he had offered himself to +McClane. To McClane. That gave her the measure of his resentment. She +could see that he coupled her with Sutton while he yet tried to keep them +apart. He was not going to have more to do with either of them than he +could help. + +So that she had hardly seen or heard of him that day. And when the solid +work began she found that she could turn him out of her mind as if he had +never been there. The intolerable burden of him slipped from her; all +morning she had a sense of cold clearness and lightness; and she judged +that her deliverance was complete. + + * * * * * + +She had waited a long time with her car drawn up close under the house +wall in the long street at Melle. McClane's car stood in front of her, +waiting for John. He was up there on the battlefield, with Sutton and +McClane. McClane had kept him off it all day; he had come to her when +they started and told her not to worry. Conway would be all right. He +would see that he didn't get into places where he--well, unsuitable +places. He would keep him driving. But in the end one of the stretcher +bearers had given in, and John had to take his turn. + +He had been keen to go. Keen. She could see him swinging along up the +road to the battlefield and McClane with him, running to keep up with his +tall stride. + +She had taken her turn too and she knew what it was like up there. +Endless turnip fields; turnips thrown up as if they had been pulled, +livid roots that rotted, and the wounded and the dead men lying out among +them. You went stumbling; the turnips rolled and slipped under your feet. +Seeing things. + +Her mind looked the other way, frightened. She was tired out, finished; +she could have gone to sleep now, sitting up there on the car. It would +be disgraceful if she went to sleep.... + +She mustn't think about the battlefield. She couldn't think; she could +only look on at things coming up in her mind. Hoeing turnips at Barrow +Hill Farm. Supposing you found dead men lying out on the fields at +Stow? You would mind that more; it would be more horrible.... She saw +herself coming over the fields carrying a lamb that she had taken from +its dead mother. Then she saw John coming up the field to their seat in +the beech ring. _That_ hurt her; she couldn't bear it; she mustn't +think about that. + +John was all right; he wasn't shirking. They had been away so long now +that she knew they must have gone far down the battlefield, deep into it; +the edges and all the nearer places had been gleaned. It would be dark +before they came back. + +It was getting dark now, and she was afraid that when the light went she +would go to sleep. If only she wasn't so tired. + +She was so drowsy that at first she didn't hear McClane speaking, she +hadn't seen him come to the step of the car. + +McClane's voice sounded soft and unnatural and a little mysterious. + +"I'm afraid something's--happened." + +"Who to?" + +"We-ell--" + +The muffled drawl irritated her. Why couldn't he speak out? + +"Is John hurt?" + +"I'm afraid so." + +"Is he killed?" + +"Well--I don't know that he can live. A German's put a bullet into him." + +"Where is he?" + +She jumped down off the car. + +McClane laid his hand on her arm. "Don't. We shall bring him in--" + +"He's dead then?" + +"I think so--You'd better not go to him." + +"Of course I'm going to him. Where _is_ he?" + +He steered her very quickly and carefully across the street, then led her +with his arm in hers, pressing her back to the dark shelter of the +houses. They heard the barking of machine guns from the battlefield at +the top and the rattle of the bullets on the causeway. These sounds +seemed to her to have no significance. As if they had existed only in +some unique relation to John Conway, his death robbed them of vitality. + +The door of the house opened a little way; they slipped into the long +narrow room lighted by a few oil lamps at one end. At the other John's +body lay on a stretcher set up on a trestle table, his feet turned +outwards to the door, ready. The corners at this end were so dark that +the body seemed to stretch across the whole width of the room. A soldier +came forward with a lighted candle and gave it to McClane. And she saw +John's face; the bridge of his nose, with its winged nostrils lifted. His +head was tilted upwards at the chin; that gave it a noble look. His mouth +was open, ever so slightly open ... McClane shifted the light so that it +fell on his forehead.... Black eyebrows curling up like little +moustaches.... The half-dropped eyelids guarded the dead eyes. + +She thought of how he used to dream. All his dream was in his dead face; +his dead face was cold and beautiful like his dream. + +As she looked at him her breast closed down on her heart as though it +would never lift again; her breath shuddered there under her tightened +throat. She could feel McClane's hand pressing heavily on her shoulder. +She had no strength to shake it off; she was even glad of it. She felt +small and weak and afraid; afraid, not of the beautiful thing that lay +there, but of something terrible and secret that it hid, something that +any minute she would have to know about. + +"Where was he hit?" + +"In the back." + +She trembled and McClane's hand pressed closer. "The bullet passed clean +through his heart. He didn't suffer." + +"He was getting in Germans?" + +"I don't--quite--know--" McClane measured his words out one by one, +"what--he was doing. Sutton was with him. He knows." + +"Where _is_ Billy?" + +"Over there. Do you want him?" + +"Not yet." + +A soldier brought a chair for her. She sat down with her back to the +trestle table. At the lighted end of the room she saw Sutton stooping +over a young Belgian captain, buttoning his tunic under the sling he had +adjusted. The captain's face showed pure and handsome, like a girl's, +like a young nun's, bound round and chin-wrapped in the white bandages. +He sat on the floor in front of Sutton's table with his legs stretched +out flat. His back was propped against the thigh of a Belgian soldier +seated on an upturned barrel. Her hurt eyes saw them very plain and with +detail in the light of Sutton's lamp. + +That part of the room was full of soldiers. She noticed that they kept +clear of the trestle table as they went in and out. Only one of them, the +soldier who supported the young captain, kept on looking, raising his +head and looking there as if he couldn't turn his eyes away. He faced +her. His rifle stood steadied by his knees, the bayonet pointing up +between his eyes. + +She found herself thinking. It was Sutton's back that made her think. +John must have been stooping over the German like that. John's wound +was in his back. But if he was stooping it couldn't have come that +way. The bullet would have gone through his chest.... Perhaps he had +turned to pick up his stretcher. Billy was there. He would tell her +how it had happened. + +She thought: No. I've had enough. I shall give it up. I won't ask him. +But she knew that she would ask him. Once started, having gone so far, +flash by flash and step by step, she couldn't give it up; she would go +on, even now, till her knowledge was complete. Then she was aware again +of the soldier's eyes. + +They were very large and bright and black in his smooth boy's face; he +had a small innocent boy's mouth that seemed to move, restless and +fascinated, like his eyes. Presently she saw that he was looking at her, +that his eyes returned to her again and again, as if he were aware of +some connection between her and the thing that fascinated him, as if _he_ +were somehow connected. + +He was listening to her now as Sutton spoke to her. + +"We must get him away quick." + +"Yes. Do let's get him away." + +Sutton shook his head. He was thinking of the wounded captain. + +"We can't yet. I'll come back for him." + +"Then I'll wait with him here." + +"Oh no--I think--" + +"I can't leave him." + +"It isn't safe. The place may be taken." + +"I won't leave him." Sutton hesitated. "I won't, Billy." + +"McClane, she says she won't leave him." + +"Then," McClane said, "we must take him now. We'll have to make +room somehow." + +(To make room for him--somehow.) + +Sutton and the soldier carried the captain out and came back for John's +body. The Belgian sprang forward with eager, subservient alacrity to put +himself at the head of the stretcher, but Sutton thrust him aside. + +The Belgian shrugged his shoulders and picked up his rifle with an air of +exaggerated unconcern. Sutton and McClane carried out the stretcher. + +Charlotte was following them when the soldier stopped her. + +"Mademoiselle--" + +He had propped his rifle against the trestles and stood there, groping in +his pocket. A dirty handkerchief, dragged up by his fumbling, hung out by +its corner. All along the sharp crease there was a slender smear of +blood. He looked down at it and pushed it back out of her sight. + +He had taken something out of his pocket. + +"I will give you this. I found it on the battlefield." + +He handed her a small leather pocketbook that was John's. It had her +photograph in it and his, taken together. + + * * * * * + +They were putting him out of sight, under the hood of the ambulance, and +she waited there when the war correspondent came up. + +"_Can_ you tell me the name of the volunteer who's been killed?" + +"Conway. John Roden Conway." + +"What? _That_ man? The man who raced the Germans into Zele?" + +"Yes," she said, "that man." + + * * * * * + +She was in John's room, packing, gathering together the things she would +have to take to his father. Sutton came to her there. + +They had orders to be ready for the retreat any time that night. + +Billy had brought her John's wrist watch and cigarette case. + +"Billy," she said, "that soldier gave me this." + +She showed him the pocketbook. + +"What soldier?" + +"The one who was with the captain." + +"_He_ gave it you?" + +"Yes. He said he found it on the battlefield. It must have dropped out of +John's pocket." + +"It couldn't have dropped.... I wonder why he kept that." + +"But he didn't keep it. He gave it to me." + +"He was going to keep it, or he'd have handed it over to me with the +other things." + +"Does it matter?" + +"Well--" + +She thought: "Why can't he leave it alone? They _had_ all his things, his +poor things." + +But Sutton was still thoughtful. "I wonder why he gave it you." + +"I think he was sorry." + +"_Was_ he!" + +"Sorry for me, I mean." + +Sutton said nothing. He was absorbed in contemplating the photograph. +They had been taken standing by the hurdle of the sheepfold, she with the +young lamb in her arms and John looking down at her. + +"That was taken at Barrow Hill Farm," she said, "where we were together. +He looked just like that.... Oh, Billy, do you think the past's really +past?... Isn't there some way he could go on being what he _was_?" + +"I don't know, Sharlie, I don't know." + +"Why couldn't he have stayed there! Then he'd always have been like that. +We should never have known." + +"You're not going to be unhappy about him?" + +"No. I think I'm glad. It's a sort of relief. I shan't ever have that +awful feeling of wondering what he'll do next.... Billy--you were with +him, weren't you?" + +"Yes." + +"Was he all right?" + +"Would it make you happier to think that he was or to know that he +wasn't?" + +"Oh--just to _know_." + +"Well, I'm afraid he wasn't, quite.... He paid for it, Sharlie. If he +hadn't turned his back he wouldn't have been shot." + +She nodded. + +"What? You knew?" + +"No. No. I wasn't sure." + +She was possessed of this craving to know, to know everything. Short of +that she would be still bound to him; she could never get free. + +"Billy--what did happen, really? Did he _leave_ the German?" + +"The German?" + +"Yes. Was that why he shot him?" + +"The German didn't shoot him. He was too far gone, poor devil, to shoot +anybody.... It was the Belgian captain that he left.... He was lying +there, horribly wounded. His servant was with him; they were calling out +to Conway--" + +"_Calling_ to him?" + +"Yes. And he was going all right when some shrapnel fell--a regular +shower bath, quite near, like it did with you and me. That scared him and +he just turned and ran. The servant shouted to him to stop, and when he +wouldn't he went after him and put a bullet through his back." + +"That Belgian boy?" + +"Yes. I couldn't do anything. I had the German. It was all over in a +second.... When I got there I found the Belgian standing up over him, +wiping his bayonet with his pockethandkerchief. He _said_ his rifle went +off by accident." + +"Couldn't it? Rifles do." + +"Bayonets don't.... I suppose I could get him court martialed if I tried. +But I shan't. After all, it was his captain. I don't blame him, +Charlotte." + +"No.... It was really you and me, Billy. We brought him back to be +killed." + +"I don't know that we did bring him--that he wasn't coming by himself. He +couldn't keep off it. Even if we did, you wouldn't be sorry for that, +would you?" + +"No. It was the best thing we could do for him." + +But at night, lying awake in her bed, she cried. For then she +remembered what he had been. On Barrow Hill, on their seat in the beech +ring, through the Sunday evenings, when feeding time and milking time +were done. + + * * * * * + +At four o'clock in the morning she was waked by Sutton, standing beside +her bed. The orders had come through to evacuate the hospital. Three +hours later the ambulances had joined the great retreat. + + + + +XVI + + +They had halted in Bruges, and there their wounded had been taken into +the Convent wards to rest. + +Charlotte and Sutton were sitting out, alone together on the flagged +terrace in the closed garden. The nuns had brought out the two chairs +again, and set again the little table, covered with the white cloth. +Again the silver mist was in the garden, but thinned now to the clearness +of still water. + +They had been silent after the nuns had left them. Sutton's sad, +short-sighted eyes stared out at the garden without seeing it. He was +lost in melancholy. Presently he came to himself with a long sigh-- + +"Charlotte, what are we going to do now? Do you know?" + +"_I_ know. I'm going into Mac's corps." + +"So am I. That isn't what I meant." + +For a moment she didn't stop to wonder what he did mean. She was too full +of what she was going to do. + +"Is that wise? I don't altogether trust old Mac. He'll use you till you +drop. He'll wear you to the last shred of your nerves." + +"I want to be used till I drop. I want to be worn. Besides, I know I'm +safe with Mac." + +His cold, hard indifference made her feel safe. She wasn't really safe +with Billy. His goodness might disarm her any minute, his sadness might +conceivably move her to a tender weakness. But for McClane she would +never have any personal feeling, never any fiery affection, any exalted +devotion. Neither need she be afraid of any profound betrayal. Small +betrayals perhaps, superficial disasters to her vanity, while his egoism +rode over it in triumph. He didn't want affection or anything fiery, +anything that John had had. He would leave her in her hardness; he would +never ask anything but hard, steel-cold loyalty and a willingness to +share his risks. + +"What else can I do? I should have come out if John hadn't. Of course I +was glad we could go together, but you mustn't suppose I only went +because of him." + +"I don't. I only thought perhaps you wouldn't want to stay on now +he's dead." + +"More than ever now he's dead. Even if I didn't want to stay I should +have to now. To make up." + +"For what?" + +"For what he did. All those awful things. And for what he didn't do. His +dreams. I've got to do what he dreamed. But more than anything I must pay +his debt to Belgium. To all those wounded men." + +"You're not responsible for his debts, Charlotte." + +"No? Sometimes I feel as if I were. As if he and I were tied up +together. I could get away from him when he was alive. But now he's dead +he's got me." + +"It doesn't make him different." + +"It makes _me_ different. I tell you, I can't get away from him. And I +want to. I want to cut myself loose; and this is the way." + +"Isn't it the way to tie yourself tighter?" + +"No. Not when it's _done_, Billy." + +"I can see a much better way.... If you married me." + +She turned to him, astonished and a little anxious, as though she thought +something odd and dangerous had happened to him. + +"Oh, Billy, I--I couldn't do that.... What made you think of it?" + +"I've been thinking of it all the time." + +"All the time?" + +"Well, most of the time, anyhow. But I've loved you all the time. You +know I loved you. That was why I stuck to Conway. I couldn't leave you to +him. I wouldn't even leave you to McClane." + +"I didn't know." + +"I should have thought it was pretty, obvious." + +"It wasn't. I'd have tried to stop it if I'd known." + +"You couldn't have stopped it." + +"I'm sorry." + +"What about?" + +"That. It isn't any good. It really isn't." + +"Why isn't it? I know I'm rather a queer chap. And I've got an +ugly face--" + +"I love your _face_...." + +She loved it, with its composure and its candour, its slightly flattened +features, laid back; its little surprised moustache, its short-sighted +eyes and its sadness. + +"It's the dearest face. But--" + +"I suppose," he said, "it sounds a bit startling and sudden. But if you'd +been bottling it up as long as I have--Why, I loved you the first time I +saw you. On the boat.... So you see, it's you. It isn't just anything +you've done." + +"If you knew what I _have_ done, my dear. If you only knew. You wouldn't +want to marry me." + +She would have to tell him. That would put him off. That would stop +him. If she had loved him she would have had to tell him, as she had +told John. + +"I'm going to tell you...." + + * * * * * + +She wondered whether he had really listened. A queer smile played +about his mouth. He looked as if he had been thinking of something +else all the time. + +"What are you smiling at?" + +"Your supposing that that would make any difference." + +"Doesn't it?" + +"Not a bit. Not a little bit.... Besides I knew it." + +"Who--who told you?" + +"The only other person who knew about it, I suppose--Conway." + +"He betrayed me?" + +"He betrayed you. Is there any vile thing he didn't do?" + +And it was as it had been before. The nuns came out again, bringing the +great cups of hot black coffee, coming and going gently. Only this time +she couldn't drink. + +"It's awful of us," she said, "to talk about him this way when +he's dead." + +"He isn't dead as long as he makes you feel like that. As long as he +keeps you from me." + +A long pause. And then, "Billy--he wasn't my lover." + +"I know that," he said fiercely. "He took good care to tell me." + +"I brought it all on myself. I ought to have given him up instead of +hanging on to him that way. Platonic love--It's all wrong. People aren't +really made like that. It was every bit as bad as going to Gibson +Herbert.... Worse. That was honest. This was all lying. Lying about +myself. Lying about him. Lying about--love." + +"Then," he said, "you don't really know what it is." + +"I know John's sort. And I know Gibson's sort. And I know there's a +heavenly sort, Billy, in between. But I'm spoiled for it. I think I could +have cared for you if it hadn't been for John.... I shan't ever get away +from him." + +"Yes. If you can see it--" + +"Of course I see it. I can see everything now. All that war-romancing. I +see how awful it was. When I think how we went out and got thrills. Fancy +getting thrills out of this horror." + +"Oh well--I think you earned your thrill." + +"You can't earn anything in this war. At least _I_ can't. It's paying, +paying all the time. And I've got more things than John to pay for. There +was little Effie." + +"Effie?" + +"Gibson's wife. I didn't _want_ to hurt her.... Billy, are you sure it +makes no difference? What I did." + +"I've told you it doesn't.... You mustn't go on thinking about it." + +"No. But I can't get over his betraying me. You see, that's the worst +thing he did to _me_. The other things--well, he was mad with fright, and +he was afraid of me, because I knew. I can't think why he did this." + +"Same reason. You knew. He was degraded by your knowing, so you had to be +degraded. At least I suppose that's how it was." + +She shook her head. He was darker to her than ever and she was no nearer +to her peace. She knew everything and she understood nothing. And that +was worse than not knowing. + +"If only I could understand. Then, I believe, I could bear it. I wouldn't +care how bad it was as long as I understood." + +"Ask McClane, then. He could explain it to you. It's beyond me." + +"McClane?" + +"He's a psychotherapist. He knows more about people's souls than I know +about their bodies. He probably knows all about Conway's soul." + +Silence drifted between them, dim and silvery like the garden mist. + +"Charlotte--are we never to get away from him? Is he always to stick +between us? That dead man." + +"It isn't that." + +"What is it, then?" + +"All _this_.... I'd give anything to care for you, Billy dear, but I +don't care. I _can't_. I can't care for anything but the war." + +"The war won't last for ever. And afterwards?" + +"I can't see any afterwards." + +Sutton smiled. + +"And yet," he said, "there will be one." + + + + +XVII + + +The boat went steadily, cutting the waves with its sound like the flowing +of stiff silk. + +Charlotte and Sutton and McClane, stranded at Dunkirk on their way to +England, had been taken on board the naval transport _Victoria_. They +were the only passengers besides some young soldiers, and these had left +them a clear space on the deck. Charlotte was sitting by herself under +the lee of a cabin when McClane came to her there. + +He was straddling and rubbing his hands. Something had pleased him. + +"I knew," he said, "that some day I should get you three. And that I +should get those ambulances." + +She couldn't tell whether he meant that he always got what he wanted +or that he had foreseen John Conway's fate which would ultimately +give it him. + +"The ambulances--Yes. You always wanted them." + +"Not more than I wanted you and Sutton." + +He seemed aware of her secret antagonism, yet without resentment, +waiting till it had died down before he spoke again. He was sitting +beside her now. + +"What are you going to do about Conway?" + +"Nothing. Except lie about him to his father." + +"That's all right as long as you don't lie about him to yourself." + +"I've lied about him to other people. Never to myself. I was in love with +him, if that's what you mean. But he finished that. What's finished is +finished. I haven't a scrap of feeling for him left." + +"Are you quite sure?" + +"Quite. I'm not even sorry he's dead." + +"You've forgiven him?" + +"I'm not always sure about that. But I'm trying to forget him." + +McClane looked away. + +"Do you ever dream about him, Charlotte?" + +"Never. Not now. I used to. I dreamed about him once three nights +running." + +He looked at her sharply. "Could you tell me what you dreamed?" + +She told him her three dreams. + +"You don't suppose they meant anything?" she said. + +"I do. They meant that part of you was kicking. It knew all the time what +he was like and was trying to warn you." + +"To keep me off him?" + +"To keep you off him." + +"I see.... The middle one was funny. It _happened_. The day we were in +Bruges. But I can't make out the first one with that awful woman in it." + +"You may have been dreaming something out of his past. Something he +remembered." + +"Well anyhow I don't understand the last one." + +"_I_ do." + +"But I dreamed he wanted me. Frightfully. And he didn't." + +"He did. He wanted you--'frightfully'--all the time. He went to pieces if +you weren't there. Don't you know why he took you out with him +everywhere? Because if he hadn't he couldn't have driven half a mile out +of Ghent." + +"That's one of the things I'm trying to forget." + +"It's one of the things you should try to remember." + +He grasped her arm. + +"And, Charlotte, look here. I want you to forgive him. For your +own sake." + +She stiffened under his touch, his look, his voice of firm, intimate +authority. His insincerity repelled her. + +"Why should you? You don't care about him. You don't care about me. If I +was blown to bits to-morrow you wouldn't care." + +He laughed his mirthless, assenting laugh. + +"You don't care about people at all. You only care about their diseases +and their minds and things." + +"I think I care a little about the wounded." + +"You don't really. Not about _them_. You care about getting in more of +them and quicker than any other field ambulance on the front. I can't +think why you're bothering about me now." + +"That's why. If I'm to get in more wounded I can't have anybody in my +corps who isn't fit." + +"_I'm_ fit. What's the matter with me?" + +"Not much. Your body's all right. And your mind _was_ all right till +Conway upset it. Now it's unbalanced." + +"Unbalanced?" + +"Just the least little bit. There's a fight going on in it between your +feeling for Conway and your knowledge of him." + +"I've told you I haven't any feeling." + +"Your memory of your feeling then. Same thing. You know he was cruel and +a liar and a coward. And you loved him. With you those two states are +incompatible. They struggle. And that's bad for you. If it goes on you'll +break down. If it stops you'll be all right.... The way to stop it is to +know the _truth_ about Conway. The truth won't clash with your feeling." + +"Don't I know it?" + +"Not all. Not the part that matters most. You know he was all wrong +morally. You don't know _why_.... Conway was an out and out degenerate. +He couldn't help _that_. He suffered from some physical disability. It +went through everything. It made him so that he couldn't live a man's +life. He was afraid to enter a profession. He was afraid of women." + +"He wasn't afraid of me. Not in the beginning." + +"Because he felt your strength. You're very strong, Charlotte. You gave +him your strength. And he could _feel_ passion, mind you, though he +couldn't act it.... I suppose he could feel courage, too, only somehow he +couldn't make it work. Have you got it clear?" + +She nodded. So clear that it seemed to her he was talking about a thing +she had known once and had forgotten. All the time she had known John's +secret. She knew what would come next: McClane's voice saying, "Well +then, think--think," and his excited gestures, bobbing forward suddenly +from the hips. He went on. + +"The balance had to be righted somehow. His whole life must have been a +struggle to right it. Unconscious, of course. Instinctive. His platonics +were just a glorifying of his disability. All that romancing was a +gorgeous transformation of his funk.... So that his very lying was a sort +of truth. I mean it was part of the whole desperate effort after +completion. He jumped at everything that helped him to get compensation, +to get power. He jumped at your feeling for him because it gave him +power. He jumped at the war because the thrill he got out of it gave him +the sense of power. He sucked manhood out of you. He sucked it out of +everything--out of blood and wounds.... He'd have been faithful to you +forever, Charlotte, if you hadn't found him out. _That_ upset all his +delicate adjustments. The war upset him. I think the sight of blood and +wounds whipped up the naked savage in him." + +"But--no. He was afraid of that." + +"He was afraid of himself. Of what was in him. That fear of his was his +protection, like his fear of women. The war broke it down. Then he was +cruel to you." + +"Yes. He was cruel." Her voice sounded flat and hard, without feeling. +She had no feeling; she had exhausted all the emotions of her suffering. +And her knowledge of his cruelty was absolute. To McClane's assertion of +the fact she had no response beyond that toneless acquiescence. + +"Taking you into that shed--" + +He had roused her. + +"How on earth did you know that? I've never told a single soul." + +"It was known in the hospital. One of the carpenters saw the whole thing. +He told one of our orderlies who told my chauffeur Gurney who told me." + +"It doesn't matter what he did to _me_. I can't get over his not caring +for the wounded." + +"He was jealous of them, because you cared for them." + +"Oh no. He'd left off caring for me by then." + +"_Had_ he?" He gave a little soft, wise laugh. "What makes you think so?" + +"That. His cruelty." + +"Love can be very cruel." + +"Not as cruel as that," she said. + +"Yes. As cruel as that.... Remember, it was at the bottom of the whole +business. Of his dreams. In a sense, the real John Conway was the man +who dreamed." + +"If you're right he was the man who was cruel, too. And it's his +cruelty I hate." + +"Don't hate it. Don't hate it. I want you to understand his cruelty. It +wasn't just savagery. It was something subtler. A supreme effort to get +power. Remember, he couldn't help it. He _had_ to right himself. +Supposing his funk extinguished something in him that could only be +revived through cruelty? You'll say he could help betraying you--" + +"To you, too?" + +"To me, too. When you lost faith in him you cut off his main source of +power. You had to be discredited so that it shouldn't count. You mustn't +imagine that he did anything on purpose. He was driven. It sounds +horrible, but I want you to see it was just his way of saving his soul, +the only way open to him. You mustn't think of it as a bad way. Or a good +way. It wasn't even _his_ way. It was the way of something bigger than he +was, bigger than anything he could ever be. Bigger than badness or +goodness." + +"Did 'it' do cowardly things to 'save' itself?" + +"No. If Conway could have played the man 'it' would have been satisfied. +It was always urging him." ... "Try," he said, and she knew that now at +any rate he was sincere; he really wanted to help her; he was giving her +his best. His voice was very quiet now, his excited gestures had ceased. +"Try and think of it as something more real, more important and necessary +than he was; or you and I. Something that is always struggling to be, to +go on being. Something that degeneracy is always trying to keep +under.... Power. A power in retreat, fighting to get back its lost +ground." + +Then what she had loved was not John Conway. What she had hated was not +he. He was this Something, tremendous and necessary, that escaped your +judgment. You couldn't hurt it with your loving or hating or your ceasing +to love and hate. Something that tortured you and betrayed you because +that was the only way it knew to save itself. + +Something that couldn't save itself altogether--that clung to you and +called to you to save it. + +But that _was_ what she had loved. Nothing could touch it. + +For a moment while McClane was talking she saw, in the flash he gave +her, that it was real. And when the flash went it slipped back into +her darkness. + +But on the deck in front of her she could see John walking up and down. +She could see the wide road of gold and purple that stretched from the +boat's stern to the sun. John's head was thrown back; he looked at her +with his shining, adventurous eyes. He was happy and excited, going out +to the war. + +And she saw them again: the batteries, the cars and the wagons. Dust like +blown smoke, and passing in it the long lines of beaten men, reeling +slowly to the footway, passing slowly, endlessly, regiment by regiment, +in retreat. + + +THE END + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Romantic, by May Sinclair + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ROMANTIC *** + +***** This file should be named 13292-8.txt or 13292-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/3/2/9/13292/ + +Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Mary Meehan and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + diff --git a/old/13292-8.zip b/old/13292-8.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9884412 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/13292-8.zip diff --git a/old/13292.txt b/old/13292.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..896f85e --- /dev/null +++ b/old/13292.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6619 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Romantic, by May Sinclair + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Romantic + +Author: May Sinclair + +Release Date: August 25, 2004 [EBook #13292] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ROMANTIC *** + + + + +Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Mary Meehan and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + + THE ROMANTIC + + BY MAY SINCLAIR + + 1920 + + + + +_Every kind and beautiful thing on earth has been made so by some +cruelty_. + +Saying of the Romantic + + + + +CONTENTS + +BOOK ONE Charlotte Redhead + +BOOK TWO John Roden Conway + + + + +THE ROMANTIC + + + + +BOOK ONE + +CHARLOTTE REDHEAD + + + + +I + + +They turned again at the end of the platform. + +The tail of her long, averted stare was conscious of him, of his big, +tweed-suited body and its behaviour, squaring and swelling and tightening +in its dignity, of its heavy swing to her shoulder as they turned. + +She could stave off the worst by not looking at him, by looking at other +things, impersonal, innocent things; the bright, yellow, sharp gabled +station; the black girders of the bridge; the white signal post beside it +holding out a stiff, black-banded arm; the two rails curving there, with +the flat white glitter and sweep of scythes; pointed blades coming +together, buried in the bend of the cutting. + +Small three-cornered fields, clean edged like the pieces of a puzzle, red +brown and pure bright green, dovetailed under the high black bar of the +bridge. She supposed you could paint that. + +Turn. + +Clear stillness after the rain. She caught herself smiling at the noise +her boots made clanking on the tiles with the harsh, joyous candour that +he hated. He walked noiselessly, with a jerk of bluff knickerbockered +hips, raising himself on his toes like a cat. + +She could see him moving about in her room, like that, in the half +darkness, feeling for his things, with shamed, helpless gestures. She +could see him tiptoeing down her staircase, furtive, afraid. Always +afraid they would be found out. + +That would have ruined him. + +Oh well--why should he have ruined himself for her? Why? But she had +wanted, wanted to ruin herself for him, to stand, superb and reckless, +facing the world with him. If that could have been the way of it. + +Turn. + +That road over the hill--under the yellow painted canopy sticking out +from the goods station--it would be the Cirencester road, the Fosse Way. +She would tramp along it when he was gone. + +Turn. + +He must have seen her looking at the clock. Three minutes more. + +Suddenly, round the bend, under the bridge, the train. + +He was carrying it off fairly well, with his tight red face and his stare +over her head when she looked at him, his straight smile when she said +"Good-bye and Good-luck!" + +And her silly hand clutching the window ledge. She let go, quick, afraid +he would turn sentimental at the end. But no; he was settling down +heavily in his corner, blinking and puffing over his cigar. + +That was her knapsack lying on the seat there. She picked it up and slung +it over her shoulder. + +Cirencester? Or back to Stow-on-the-Wold? If only he hadn't come there +last night. If only he had let her alone. + +She meditated. She would have to wire to Gwinnie Denning to meet her at +Cirencester. She wondered whether Gwinnie's mother's lumbago would last +over the week-end. It was Friday. Perhaps Gwinnie had started. Perhaps +there would be a wire from her at the hotel. + +Going on to Cirencester when you wanted to be in Stow-on-the-Wold, what +_was_ it but a cowardly retreat? Driven out of Stow-on-the-Wold by +Gibson? Not she! + +Dusk at ten o'clock in the morning under the trees on the mile-long hill. +You climbed up and up a steep green tunnel. The sun would be blazing at +its mouth on the top. Nothing would matter. Certainly not this affair +with Gibson Herbert. She could see clearly her immense, unique passion +thus diminished. Surprising what a lot of it you could forget. Clean +forget. She supposed you forgot because you couldn't bear to remember. + +But there were days that stood out; hours; little minutes that thrilled +you even now and stung. + +This time, two years ago, that hot August. The day in the office when +everything went wrong all at once and the clicking of her typewriter +maddened him and he sent her out of his room. + +The day when he kept her over-time. The others had gone and they were +there by themselves, the big man in his big room and she in her den, the +door open between. Suddenly she saw him standing in the doorway, looking +at her. She knew then. She could feel the blood rushing in her brain; the +stabbing click of the typewriter set up little whirling currents that +swamped her thoughts. + +Her wet fingers kept slipping from the keys. He came and took her in his +arms. She lay back in his arms, crying. Crying because she was happy, +because she knew. + +She remembered now what he had said then. "You must have known. You must +have thought of me. You must have wanted me to take you in my arms." And +her answer. "No. I didn't. I didn't think of it." + +And his smile. His unbelieving smile. He thought she was lying. He always +thought people were lying. Women. He thought women always lied about what +they wanted. + +The first time. In her Bloomsbury room, one evening, and the compact they +made then, sitting on the edge of the sofa, like children, holding each +other's hands and swearing never to go back on it, never to go back on +themselves or on each other. If it ever had to end, a clean cut. No going +back on that either. + +The first night, in the big, gloomy bedroom of the hotel in Glasgow. The +thick, grey daylight oozing in at the window out of the black street; and +Gibson lying on his back, beside her, sleeping, the sheet dragged +sideways across his great chest. His innocent eyelids. + +And the morning after; the happiness. All day the queer, exalted feeling +that she was herself, Charlotte Redhead, at last, undeceived and +undeceiving. + +The day his wife came into the office. Her unhappy eyes and small, +sharp-pointed face, shrinking into her furs. Her name was Effie. + +He had told her in the beginning that he had left off caring for his +wife. They couldn't hurt her; she didn't care enough. She never had +cared. There was another fellow. Effie would be all right. + +Yet, after she had seen Effie it had never been the same thing. She +couldn't remember, quite, how it had been. + +She could remember the ecstasy, how it would come swinging through you, +making you blind and deaf to impersonal, innocent things while it +lasted. Even then there was always something beyond it, something you +looked for and missed, something you thought would come that never came. +There was something he did. She couldn't remember. That would be one of +the things you wanted to forget. She saw his thick fingers at dessert, +peeling the peaches. + +Perhaps his way of calling her "Poor Sharlie?" Things he let out--"I +never thought I could have loved a girl with bobbed hair. A white and +black girl." There must have been other girls then. A regular procession. +Before he married Effie. + +She could see them. Pink and gold girls, fluffy and fat; girls with red +hair; brown haired girls with wide slippery mouths. Then Effie. Then +herself, with her thick bobbed mane and white face. And the beautiful +mouth he praised so. + +Was it the disgust of knowing that you were only one of a procession? Or +was it that Effie's sad, sharp face slipped between? + +And the end of it. The break-down, when Effie was ill. + +His hysterical cries. "My wife, Sharlie, my wife. We oughtn't to have +done it.... + +"... I can't forgive myself, Sharlie. I've been a brute, a beast, a +stupid animal.... + +"... When I think of what we've done to her--the little innocent +thing--the awful unhappiness--I could kill myself." + +"Do you mean she knows?" + +"She thinks. That's bad enough. If she knew, it would kill her." + +"You said she wouldn't care. You said there was another man." + +"There wasn't." + +"You lied, then?" + +"Of course I lied. You wouldn't have come to me if I hadn't." + +"You told me you didn't care for her." + +He had met that with his "Well--what did you want?" + +She went over and over it, turning it round and round to see if there was +any sort of light it would look a bit better in. She had been going to +give him up so beautifully. The end of it was to have been wonderful, +quiet, like a heavenly death, so that you would get a thrill out of that +beauty when you remembered. All the beauty of it from the beginning, +taken up and held together, safe at the end. You wouldn't remember +anything else. And he had killed it, with his conscience, suddenly sick, +whining, slobbering, vomiting remorse--Turning on her. + +"I can't think what you wanted with me. Why couldn't you have let +me alone!" + +Her own voice, steady and hard. "If you feel dirty, go and wash yourself +outside. Don't try and rub it off on me. I want to keep clean." + +"Isn't it a bit too late?" + +"Not if you clear out at once. This minute." He called her "a cruel +little devil." + +She could forgive him for that. She could forgive him ending it in any +beastly way he liked, provided he did end it. But not last night. To come +crawling back, three months after, wanting to begin again. Thinking it +was possible. + +There had been nothing worse than that. Except that one dreadful minute +last year when he had wanted to raise her salary--afterwards--and she had +said "What _for_?" And their faces had turned from each other, flaming +with the fire of her refusal. + +What had he really thought of her? Did he think she wanted to get +anything out of their passion? What could you want to get out of it, or +give, but joy? Pure joy. Beauty. + +At the bend of the road the trees parted. A slender blue channel of sky +flowed overhead between the green tops. + +If not joy, then truth; reality. The clear reality of yourself, Charlotte +Redhead. Of Gibson Herbert. Even now it would be all right so long as you +knew what it was and didn't lie about it. + +That evening in the office when he came to her--she could remember the +feeling that shot up suddenly and ran over her and shook her brain, +making her want him to take her in his arms. It was that. It had never +been anything but that. She _had_ wanted him to take her, and he knew +it. Only, if he hadn't come to her and looked at her she wouldn't have +thought of it; she would have gone on working for him without +thinking. That was what he didn't know, what he wouldn't have believed +if you had told him. + +She had come to the top of the hill. At the crossroads she saw the grey +front of her inn, the bow window jutting, small black shining panes +picked out with the clean white paint of the frame-work. + +Upstairs their breakfast table stood in the window bow as they had left +it. Bread he had broken on the greasy plate. His cup with the coffee he +couldn't drink. Pathetic, if you hadn't remembered. + +"You might as well. If it isn't you, it'll be another woman, Sharlie. If +it isn't me, it'll be another man." + +That was what he had thought her. + +It didn't matter. + + + + +II + + +She stood at the five roads, swinging her stick, undecided. + +The long line of the beeches drew her, their heads bowed to the north as +the south wind had driven them. The blue-white road drew her, rising, +dipping and rising; between broad green borders under grey walls. + +She walked. She could feel joy breaking loose in her again, beating up +and up, provoked and appeased by the strong, quick movement of her body. +The joy she had gone to her lover for, the pure joy he couldn't give her, +coming back out of the time before she knew him. + +Nothing mattered when your body was light and hard and you could feel the +ripple and thrill of the muscles in your stride. + +She wouldn't have to think of him again. She wouldn't have to think of +any other man. She didn't want any more of that again, ever. She could go +on and on like this, by herself, without even Gwinnie; not caring a damn. + +If she had been cruel--if she had wanted to hurt Effie. She hadn't meant +to hurt her. + +She thought of things. Places she had been happy in. She loved the high +open country. Fancy sitting with Gibson in his stuffy office, day after +day, for five years. Fancy going to Glasgow with him. Glasgow-- + +No. No. + +She thought: "I can pretend it didn't happen. Nothing's happened. I'm +myself. The same me I was before." + +Suddenly she stood still. On the top of the ridge the whole sky opened, +throbbing with light, immense as the sky above a plain. Hills--thousands +of hills. Thousands of smooth curves joining and parting, overlapping, +rolling together. + +What did you want? What did you want? How could you want anything but +this for ever? + +Across the green field she saw the farm. Tall, long-skirted elms standing +up in a row before the sallow ricks and long grey barns. Under the loaded +droop of green a grey sharp-pointed gable, topped by a stone ball. Four +Scotch firs beside it, slender and strange. + +She stood leaning over the white gate, looking and thinking. + +Funny things, colts grazing. Short bodies that stopped at their +shoulders; long, long necks hanging down like tails, pushing their heads +along the ground. She could hear their nostrils breathing and the +scrinch, scrinch of their teeth tearing the grass. + +You could be happy living on a farm, looking after the animals. + +You could learn farming. People paid. + +Suddenly she knew what she would do. She would do _that_. It wasn't +reasonable to go on sitting in a stuffy office doing work you hated when +you could pack up and go. She couldn't have stuck to it for five years if +it hadn't been for Gibson--falling in love with him, the most +unreasonable thing of all. She didn't care if you had to pay to learn +farming. You had to pay for everything you learned. There were the two +hundred pounds poor dear Daddy left, doing nothing. She could pay. + +She would go down to the farm now, this minute, and see if they +would take her. + +As she crossed the field she heard the farmyard gate open and shut. + +The man came up towards her in the narrow path. He was looking at her as +he came, tilting his head back to get her clear into his eyes under the +shade of his slouched hat. + +She called to him. "Is this your farm?" And he halted. + +He smiled; the narrow smile of small, fine lips, with a queer, winged +movement of the moustache, a flutter of dark down. She saw his eyes, hard +and keen, dark blue, like the blade of a new knife. + +"No. I wish it was my farm. Why?" + +She could see now it wasn't. He was out tramping. The corner of a +knapsack bulged over his right shoulder. Rough greenish coat and +stockings--dust-coloured riding breeches-- + +But there was something about him. Something tall and distant; slender +and strange, like the fir-trees. + +"Because whoever's farm it is I want to see him." + +"You won't see him. There isn't anybody there." + +"Oh." + +He lingered. + +"Do you know who he is?" she said. + +"No. I don't know anything. I don't even know where I am. But I hope it's +Bourton-on-the-Hill." + +"I'm afraid it isn't. It's Stow-on-the-Wold." + +He laughed and shifted his knapsack to his left shoulder, and held up his +chin. His eyes slewed round, raking the horizon. + +"It's all right," she said. "You can get to Bourton-on-the-Hill. I'll +show you." She pointed. "You see where that clump of trees is--like a +battleship, sailing over a green hill. That's about where it is." + +"Thanks. I've been trying to get there all afternoon." + +"Where have you come from?" + +"Stanway. The other side of that ridge." + +"You should have kept along the top. You've come miles out of your way." + +"I like going out of my way. I did it for fun. For the adventure." + +You could see he was innocent and happy, like a child. She turned and +went with him up the field. + +She wouldn't go to Bourton-on-the-Hill. She would go back to the hotel +and see whether there was a wire for her from Gwinnie.... He liked going +out of his way. + +"I suppose," he said, "there's _something_ the other side of that gate." + +"I hate to tell you. There's a road there. It's your way. The end of the +adventure." + +He laughed again, showing small white teeth this time. The gate fell to +with a thud and a click. + +"What do I do now?" + +"You go north. Straight ahead. Turn down the fifth or sixth lane on your +right--you'll see the sign-post. Then the first lane on your left. +That'll bring you out at the top of the hill." + +"Thanks. Thanks most awfully." He raised his hat, backing from her, +holding her in his eyes till he turned. + +He would be out of sight now at the pace he was going; his young, +slender, skimming stride. + +She stood on the top of the rise and looked round. He was halting down +there at the bend by the grey cone of the lime kiln under the ash-tree. +He had turned and had his face towards her. Above his head the battleship +sailed on its green field. + +He began to come back, slowly, as if he were looking for something +dropped on his path; then suddenly he stopped, turned again and was gone. + +There was no wire from Gwinnie. She had waited a week now. She +wondered how long it would be before Gwinnie's mother's lumbago gave +in and let her go. + + * * * * * + +She knew it by heart now, the long, narrow coffee-room of the hotel. The +draped chimney piece and little oblong gilt-framed mirror at one end; at +the other the bowed window looking west on to the ash-tree and the +fields; the two straight windows between, looking south on to the street. + +To-night the long table down the middle was set with a white cloth. The +family from Birmingham had come. Father and mother, absurd pouter-pigeons +swelling and strutting; two putty-faced unmarried daughters, sulking; one +married one, pink and proper, and the son-in-law, sharp eyed and +bald-headed. From their table in the centre they stared at her where she +dined by herself at her table in the bow. + +Two days. She didn't think she could bear it one day more. + +She could see herself as she came down the room; her knitted silk sport's +coat, bright petunia, flaming; thick black squares of her bobbed hair +hanging over eyebrows and ears. And behind, the four women's heads +turning on fat necks to look at her, reflected. + +Gwinnie's letter was there, stuck up on the mantel-piece. Gwinnie could +come at the week-end; she implored her to hang on for five days longer, +not to leave Stow-on-the-Wold till they could see it together. A letter +from Gibson, repeating himself. + +The family from Birmingham were going through the door; fat faces +straining furtively. If they knew--if they only knew. She stood, reading. + +She heard the door shut. She could look in the glass now and amuse +herself by the sight they had stared at. The white face raised on the +strong neck and shoulders. Soft white nose, too thick at the nuzzling +tip. Brown eyes straight and wide open. Deep-grooved, clear-cut eyelids, +heavy lashes. Mouth--clear-cut arches, moulded corners, brooding. Her +eyes and her mouth. She could see they were strange. She could see they +were beautiful. + +And herself, her mysterious, her secret self, Charlotte Redhead. It had +been secret and mysterious to itself once, before she knew. + +She didn't want to be secret and mysterious. Of all things she hated +secrecy and mystery. She would tell Gwinnie about Gibson Herbert when she +came. She would have to tell her. + +Down at the end of the looking-glass picture, behind her, the bow window +and the slender back of a man standing there. + + * * * * * + +She had got him clear by this time. If he went to-morrow he would +stay, moving about forever in your mind. The young body, alert and +energetic; slender gestures of hands. The small imperious head carried +high. The spare, oval face with the straight-jutting, pointed chin. +Honey-white face, thin dusk and bistre of eyelids and hollow temples +and the roots of the hair. Its look of being winged, lifted up, ready +to start off on an adventure. Hair brushed back in two sleek, dark +wings. The straight slender nose, with the close upward wings of its +nostrils (it wasn't Roman after all). Under it the winged flutter of +his mouth when he smiled. + +Black eyebrows almost meeting, the outer ends curling up queerly, like +little moustaches. And always the hard, blue knife-blade eyes. + +She knew his name the first day. He had told her. Conway. John +Roden Conway. + +The family from Birmingham had frightened him. So he sat at her table in +the bow. They talked. About places--places. Places they had seen and +hadn't seen; places they wanted to see, and the ways you could get to +places. He trusted to luck; he risked things; he was out, he said, for +risk. She steered by the sun, by instinct, by the map in her head. She +remembered. But you could buy maps. He bought one the next day. + +They went for long walks together. She found out the field paths. And +they talked. Long, innocent conversations. He told her about himself. He +came from Coventry. His father was a motor car manufacturer; that was why +_he_ liked tramping. + +She told him she was going to learn farming. You could be happy all day +long looking after animals. Swinging up on the big bare backs of cart +horses and riding them to water; milking cows and feeding calves. And +lambs. When their mothers were dead. They would run to you then, and +climb into your lap and sit there--sucking your fingers. + +As they came in and went out together the family from Birmingham +glared at them. + +"Did you see how they glared?" + +"Do you mind?" he said. + +"Not a bit." + +"No more do I. It doesn't matter what people like that do. Their souls +are horrible. They leave a glairy trail everywhere they go. If they were +dead--stretched out on their death beds--you'd see their souls, like +long, fat white slugs stretched out too, glued to their bodies.... You +know what they think? They think we met each other on purpose. They think +we're engaged." + +"I don't care," she said. "It doesn't matter what they think." + +They laughed at the silliness of the family from Birmingham. He had been +there five days. + + * * * * * + +"I--, sa-ay--" + +Gwinnie's voice drawled in slow meditative surprise. + +The brooding curiosity had gone out of her face. Gwinnie's face, soft and +schoolgirlish between the fawn gold bands and plaited ear bosses of her +hair, the pink, pushed out mouth, the little routing nose, the thick grey +eyes, suddenly turned on you, staring. + +Gwinnie had climbed up on to the bed to hear about it. She sat hunched up +with her arms round her knees rocking herself on the end of her spine; +and though she stared she still rocked. She was happy and excited because +of her holiday. + +"It can't make any difference, Gwin. I'm the same Charlotte. Don't tell +me you didn't know I was like that." + +"Of course I knew it. I know a jolly lot more than you think, kid." + +"I'm not a kid--if you _are_ two years older." + +"Why--you're not twenty-four yet.... It's the silliness of it beats me. +Going off like that, with the first silly cuckoo that turns up." + +"He wasn't the first that turned up, I mean. He was the third that +counted. There was poor Binky, the man I was engaged to. And Dicky +Raikes; he wanted me to go to Mexico with him. Just for a lark, and I +wouldn't. And George Corfield. _He_ wanted me to marry him. And I +wouldn't." + +"Why didn't you?" + +"Because Dicky's always funny when you want to be serious and George is +always serious when you want to be funny. Besides, he's so good. His +goodness would have been too much for me altogether. Fancy _beginning_ +with George." + +"This seems to have been a pretty rotten beginning, anyway." + +"The beginning was all right. It's the end that's rotten. The really +awful thing was Effie." + +"Look here--" Gwinnie left off rocking and swung herself to the edge of +the bed. Her face looked suddenly mature and full of wisdom. "I don't +believe in that Effie business. You want to think you stopped it because +of Effie; but you didn't. You've got to see it straight.... It was his +lying and funking that finished you. He fixed on the two things you +can't stand." + +The two things. The two things. + +"I know what you want. You want to kill him in my mind, so that I shan't +think of him any more. I'm not thinking. I only wanted you to know." + +"Does anybody else know?" + +She shook her head. + +"Well--don't you let them." + +Gwinnie slid to her feet and went to the looking-glass. She stood there a +minute, pinning closer the crushed bosses of her hair. Then she turned. + +"What are you going to do with that walking-tour johnnie?" + +"John--Conway? You couldn't do anything with him if you tried. He's miles +beyond all that." + +"All _what_?" + +"The rotten things people do. The rotten things they think. You're safe +with him, Gwinnie. Safe. Safe. You've only to look at him." + +"I _have_ looked at him. Whatever you do, don't _tell_ him, Sharlie." + + + + +III + + +Charlotte sat on the top of the slope in the field below Barrow Farm. +John Conway lay at her feet. The tall beeches stood round them in an +unclosed ring. + +Through the opening she could see the farmhouse, three ball-topped +gables, the middle one advancing, the front built out there in a huge +door-place that carried a cross windowed room under its roof. + +Low heavy-browed mullions; the panes, black shining slits in the grey and +gold of the stone. All their rooms. Hers and Gwinnie's under the near +gable by the fir-trees, Mr. and Mrs. Burton's under the far gable by the +elms, John's by itself in the middle, jutting out. + +She could see the shallow garden dammed up to the house out of the green +field by its wall, spilling trails of mauve campanula, brimming with pink +phlox and white phlox, the blue spires of the lupins piercing up through +the froth. + +Sunday evening half an hour before milking-time. From September +nineteen-thirteen to December--to March nineteen-fourteen, to June--she +had been at the farm nine months. June--May--April. This time three +months ago John had come. + +In the bottom of the field, at the corner by the yard-gate, under the +elms, she could see Gwinnie astride over the tilted bucket, feeding the +calves. It was Gwinnie's turn. + +She heard the house door open and shut. The Burtons came down the flagged +path between the lavender bushes, leaving them to their peace before +milking time. + +Looking down she saw John's eyes blinking up at her through their lashes. +His chest showed a red-brown V in the open neck of his sweater. He had +been quiet a long time. His voice came up out of his quietness, sudden +and queer. + +"Keep your head like that one minute--looking down. I want your +eyelids.... Now I know." + +"What?" + +"What you're like. You're like Jeanne d'Arc.... There's a picture--the +photo of a stone head, I think--in a helmet, looking down, with +big drooped eyelids. If it isn't Jeanne it ought to be. Anyhow it's +you.... That's what's been bothering me. I thought it was just because +you had black hair bobbed like a fifteen century page. But it isn't that. +It's her forehead and her blunt nose, and her innocent, heroic chin. And +the thick, beautiful mouth.... And the look--as if she could see behind +her eyelids--dreadful things going to happen to her. All the butchery." + +"I don't see any dreadful things going to happen to me." + +"No. Her sight was second sight; and your sight is memory. You never +forget things.... I shall call you Jeanne. You ought to wear armour and a +helmet." His voice ceased and began again. "What are you thinking of?" + +"I don't know. I don't think much, ever." + +She was wondering what _he_ would think if he knew. + +She wondered what the farm would be like without him. Would it be what it +was last autumn and winter and in the spring before he came? But she had +been happy all that time without him, even in the hard, frost-biting +winter. When you had gone through that you knew the worst of Barrow Farm. +It made your face coarse, though. + +Joan of Arc was a peasant. No wonder she was beginning to look like her. +If John went-- + +"John, shall you stay on here?" + +"I don't know. I shall stick to farming if that's what you mean. Though +it isn't what I wanted." + +"What did you want?" + +"To go into the Army." + +"Why didn't you then?" + +"They wouldn't have me. There's something wrong with my eyes.... So the +land's got me instead." + +"Me too. We ought to have been doing this all our lives." + +"We'll jolly well have to. We shall never be any good indoors again." + +"Has old Burton said anything?" + +"I'm getting on. I can drive as straight a furrow as any man in +Gloucestershire. I've told my father that. He detests me; but he'd say +you ought to work up from the plough-tail, if you _must_ farm. He turned +all of us through his workshops before he took us into the business. He +liked to see us soaked in dirt and oil, crawling on our stomachs under +his engines. He'd simply love to see me here standing up to my knees in +wet cow-dung." + +"He won't mind your leaving him?" + +"Not if I make a good thing out of this. Anyhow he knows he can't keep me +off it. If I can't fight I'll farm. It's in my blood and nerves and +memory. He sits there selling motor cars, but his people were fighting +men. They fought to get land; they fought to keep it. My mother's people, +the Rodens, were yeoman farmers. That's why my furrow's so straight." + +"And that's why you came here?" + +"No. That isn't why." + +"Aren't you glad you came? Did you ever feel anything like the +peace of it?" + +"It's not the peace of it I want, Charlotte,--Jeanne, I mean. It's +the fight. Fighting with things that would kill you if you didn't. +Wounding the earth to sow in it and make it feed you. Ploughing, +Charlotte--Jeanne. Feeling the thrust and the drive through, and the +thing listing over on the slope. Seeing the steel blade shine, and the +long wounds coming in rows, hundreds of wounds, wet and shining." + +"What makes you think of wounds?" + +"I don't know. I see it like that. Cutting through." + +"I don't see it like that one bit. The earth's so kind, so beautiful. And +the hills--look at them, the clean, quiet backs, smoothed with light. You +could stroke them. And the fields, those lovely coloured fans opening and +shutting." + +"They're lovely because of what's been done to them. If those hills had +been left to themselves there'd have been nothing on them but trees. +Think of the big fight with the trees, the hacking through, the cutting. +The trunks staggering and falling. You'd begin with a little hole in the +forest like that gap in the belt on the sky-line, and you'd go on hacking +and cutting. You'd go on.... If you didn't those damned trees would come +up round you and jam you between their trunks and crush you to red +pulp.... Supposing this belt of beeches drew in and got tighter and +tighter--No. There's nothing really kind and beautiful on this earth. +Except your face. And even your face--" + +"My face?--" + +"_Could_ be cruel. But it never will be. Something's happened to it. Some +cruelty. Some damnable cruelty." + +"What makes you think so?" + +"Every kind and beautiful thing on earth, Jeanne, has been made so by +some cruelty." + +"That's all rot. Utter rot. You don't know what you're talking +about.... It's milking time. There's Gwinnie semaphoring. Do you know old +Burton's going to keep us on? He'll pay us wages from this quarter. He +says we were worth our keep from the third day." + +"Do you want to stay on here?" + +"Rather." + +"Very well then, so do I. That settles it." + +"Get up," she said, "and come along. Gwinnie's frantic." + +He sat up, bowed forwards, his hands hanging loose over his knees. +She stood and looked down at him, at the arch of his long, slender +back dropping to the narrow hips. She could feel the sudden crush of +her breath in her chest and the sighing throb in her throat and her +lips parting. + +He grasped the hands she stretched out to him at arms' length. She set +her teeth and pressed her feet to the ground, and leaned back, her weight +against his weight, tugging. + +He came up to his feet, alert, laughing at the heavy strength of her +pull. As they ran down the field he still held, loosely, like a thing +forgotten, her right hand. + + * * * * * + +Through the long June night on her bed in the room under the gable--the +hot room that smelt of plaster and of the apples stored in the loft +behind it--she lay thinking. + +Gwinnie had turned her back, burrowing into her pillow with a final shrug +of her hips. She was asleep now in her corner. + +"If I were you I wouldn't think about him, Sharlie"--She knew what +Gwinnie meant. But thinking was one thing and caring was another. +Thinking was the antidote to caring. If she had let her mind play freely +over Gibson Herbert in the beginning--But Gibson stopped her thinking, +and John Conway made her think. That was the difference. + +There was nothing about John that was like Gibson. Not a look, not a +gesture, not the least thought in his mind. His mind was like his +body, clean and cold and beautiful. Set on fire only by dreams; loving +you in a dream, a dream that burned him up and left him cold to you. +Cold and clean. + +There were things she laid up against him, the poor dear; a secret hoard +of grievances now clear to her in the darkness; she found herself turning +them over and over, as if positively her mind owed his romantic apathy a +grudge. Little things she remembered. Three things. + +Yesterday in the hayfield, John pitching hay on to the cart, and she +standing on the top of the load, flattening down the piles as he swung +them up. Gwinnie came with a big fork, swanking, for fun, trying to pitch +a whole haycock. In the dark of the room she could see Gwinnie's little +body straining back from the waist, her legs stiffening, her face pink +and swollen; and John's face looking at Gwinnie. + +She shouted down at him, "Why can't you _take_ the damned thing? She'll +break her back with it." And he shouted up, "That's her look-out." (But +he took it.) He didn't like Gwinnie. + +That time. And the time Cowslip calved, the darling choosing the one +night old Burton was away and Jim down with flu. She had to hold the +lantern. Straw littered in the half-lighted shed. Cowslip swinging her +bald-faced head round to you, her humble, sorrowful eyes imploring, +between her groans and the convulsive heavings of her flanks. A noise +between a groan and a bellow, a supreme convulsion. The dark wall, the +white funnel of light from the lantern, and John's face in the flash.... + +But he had been sorry for Cowslip. Going out with the lantern afterwards +she had found him in the yard, by the wall, bent double, shivering and +retching. And she had sung out to him "Buck up, John. She's licked it +clean. It's the dearest little calf you ever saw." + +Pity. Pity could drag your face tight and hard, like Burton's when his +mare, Jenny, died of colic. + +But before that--the night they went to Stow Fair together; crossing +the street at the sharp turn by the church gate, something happened. +They hadn't heard the motor car coming; it was down on them before they +could see it, swerving round her side of the street. He had had his +hand tight on her arm to steer her through the crowd. When the car +came ... when the car came ... he let go and jumped clean to the curb. +She could feel the splash-board graze her thigh, as she sprang clear of +it, quick, like a dog. + +She was sure he jumped first. She was sure he hadn't let her go before +the car came. She could see the blaze of the lamps and feel his grip +slacken on her arm. + +She wasn't sure. He couldn't have jumped. He couldn't have let go. Of +course he hadn't. She had imagined it. She imagined all sorts of things. +If she could make them bad enough she would stop thinking about him; she +would stop caring. She didn't want to care. + + * * * * * + +"Charlotte--when I die, that's where I'd like to be buried." + +Coming back from Bourton market they had turned into the churchyard on +the top of Stow-hill. The long path went straight between the stiff yew +cones through the green field set with graves. + +"On the top, so high up you could almost breathe in your coffin here." + +"I don't want to breathe in my coffin. When I'm dead I'm dead, and when +I'm alive I'm alive. Don't talk about dying." + +"Why not? Think of the gorgeous risk of it--the supreme toss up. After +all, death's the most thrilling thing that happens." + +"Whose death?" + +"My death." + +"Don't _talk_ about it." + +"Your death then." + +"Oh, mine--" + +"Our death, Jeanne." + +He turned to her in the path. His mouth was hard now, but his eyes shone +at her, smiling, suddenly warm, suddenly tender. + +She knew herself then; she knew there was one cruelty, one brutality +beyond bearing, John's death. + + + + +IV + + +John had gone away for a week. + +If she could tire herself out, and not dream. In the slack days between +hay-time and harvest she was never tired enough. She lay awake, teased by +the rucking of the coarse hot sheet under her back, and the sweat that +kept on sliding between her skin and her night gown. And she dreamed. + +She was waiting in the beech ring on the top of the field. Inside the +belt of the tree trunks a belt of stones grew up, like the wall of the +garden. It went higher and higher and a hole opened in it, a long slit. +She stuck her head through the hole to look out over the hills. + +This was the watch-tower. She knew, as if she remembered it, that John +had told her to go up and wait for him there; she was keeping watch for +him on the tower. + +Grey mist flowed over the field like water. He was down there in the +field. If she went to him he would take her in his arms. + +She was walking now on the highway to Bourton-on-the-Hill. At the dip +after the turn shallow water came out of the grass borders and ran +across the road, cold to her naked feet. She knew that something was +happening to John. He had gone away and she had got to find him and +bring him back. She had got to find the clear hill where the battleship +sailed over the field. + +Instead of the ship she found the Barrow Farm beeches. They stood in a +thick ring round a clearing of grey grass and grey light. John was +standing there with a woman. She turned and showed her sharp face, the +colour of white clay, her long evil nose, her eyes tilted corner and the +thin tail of her mouth, writhing. That was Miss Lister who had been in +Gibson's office. She had John now. + +Forms without faces, shrouded white women, larvae slipped from the black +grooves of the beech trunks; they made a ring round him with their +bodies, drew it in tighter and tighter. The grey light beat like a pulse +with the mounting horror. + +She cried out his name, and her voice sounded tragic and immense; sharp +like a blade of lightning screaming up to the top of the sky. A black +iron curtain crashed down before her and cut off the dream. + +Gwinnie looked up over the crook of her knee from the boot she was +lacing. + +"You made no end of a row in your sleep, Sharlie." + + * * * * * + +She had dreamed about him again, the next night. He was walking with her +on the road from the town to the Farm. By the lime kiln at the turn he +disappeared. He had never been there, really. + +She had gone out to look for him. The road kept on curling round like a +snake, bringing her back and back to the white gate of the Farm. + +When she got through the gate she stepped off the field on to the low +bridge over a black canal. The long, sharp-pointed road cut straight as a +dyke through the flat fields, between two lines of slender trees, tall +poles with tufted tops. + +She knew she was awake now because the light whitened and the wind moved +in the tree tufts and the road felt hard under her feet. When she came to +the village, to the long grey walls with narrow shutters, she knew John +was there. He came down the street towards the canal bridge. A group of +women and children walked with him, dressed in black. Dutch women. Dutch +babies. She could see their overalls and high caps and large, upturned +shoes very black and distinct in the white light. This was real. + +They pointed their fingers and stared at her with secretive, inimical +faces. Terror crept in over the street, subtle, drifting and penetrating +like an odour. + +John's face was happy and excited; that was how she knew him. His face +was real, its happiness and excitement were real. But as he passed her it +changed; it turned on her with a look she didn't know. Eyes of hatred, +eyes that repudiated and betrayed her. + + * * * * * + +The third night; the third dream. + +She had lost John and was looking for him; walking a long time through a +country she could no longer see or remember. She came out of blank space +to the river bridge and the red town. She could see the road +switchbacking over the bridge and turning sharp and slanting up the river +bank to the ramparts. + +Red fortresses above the ramparts, a high red town above the fortresses, +a thin red tower above the town. The whole thing looked dangerous and +unsteady, as if any minute it would topple over. She knew John was there. +Something awful was happening to him, and he wanted her. + +When she stepped on the bridge the river swelled and humped itself up to +the arch. It flooded. The bridge walls made a channel for the gush. It +curled over the bank and came curving down the slant road from the +ramparts, heavy and clear, like melted glass. + +She climbed up and up through the water and round behind the fortress to +the street at the top. She could see the thin tower break and lean +forward like a red crane above the houses. She had to get to the top +before the street fell down. John was shut up in the last house. She ran +under the tower as it fell. + +The house stood still, straight and tall. John was lying in the dark room +behind the closed shutters. He wanted her. She could hear him calling to +her "Jeanne! Jeanne!" She couldn't see in. She couldn't open the door. + +"Jeanne!" + +The wall split off and leaned forward. + +She woke suddenly to the tapping and splashing of the rain. + + + + +V + + +Feeding time and milking time were done; in his jutting room over the +door-place John was washing and dressing for Sunday evening. He called +out to her through his window, "Go up to our seat and wait for me there." + +He had come back again, suddenly, that morning, a day before they had +expected him. + +Charlotte came out of the hot field into the cool room of the beech ring. +She sniffed up the clean, sharp smell of sap from the rough seat that she +and John had put up there, sawing and hacking and hammering all Sunday +afternoon. Every evening when the farm work was done they would sit there +together, inside the round screen of the beeches. + +The farm people wouldn't disturb them; not even Mr. Burton, now, looking +in, smiling the fat, benevolent smile that blessed them, and going away; +the very calves were so well used to them that they had left off pushing +their noses through the tree trunks and staring. + +John's window faced her where she sat; she could see his head passing and +passing across the black window space. To her sharp, waiting soul Barrow +Farm took on a sudden poignant and foreign beauty. The house was yellow +where the rain had soaked it, gold yellow like a sun-struck southern +house, under the black plume of the firs, a yellow that made the sky's +blue solid and thick. The grass, bright green after the rain, stretched +with the tight smoothness of velvet over the slopes and ridges of the +field. A stripe of darker green, where their feet had trodden down the +blades, led straight as a sheep's track from the garden gate to the +opening of the ring. + +To think that she had dreamed bad dreams in a place like this. She +thought: "There must be something wrong about me, anyhow, to dream bad +dreams about John." + +John was coming up the field, walking slowly, his hands thrust in his +pockets, his eyes fixed steadily on a point in front of him that his mind +didn't see, drawn back in some intense contemplation. He strolled into +the ring so slowly that she had time to note the meditative gestures of +his shoulders and chin. He stood beside her, very straight and tall, not +speaking, still hiding his hands in his pockets, keeping up to the last +minute his pose of indestructible tranquillity. He was so close that she +could hear his breathing and feel his coat brushing her shoulder. + +He seated himself, slowly, without a break in the silence of his +meditation. + +She knew that something wonderful and beautiful was going to happen. It +had happened; it was happening now, growing more certain and more real +with every minute that she waited for John to say something. If nothing +changed, if this minute that she was living now prolonged itself, if it +went on for ever and ever, that would be happiness enough. + +If she could keep still like this for ever--Any movement would be +dangerous. She was afraid almost to breathe. + +Then she remembered. Of course, she would have to _tell_ him. + +She could feel the jerk and throb in John's breathing, measuring off the +moments of his silence. Her thoughts came and went. "When he says he +cares for me I shall have to tell him"--"This is going on for ever. If he +cared for me he would have said it before now."--"It doesn't matter. He +can care or not as he likes. Nothing can stop my caring." + +Then she was aware of her will, breaking through her peace, going out +towards him, fastening on his mind to make him care; to make him say he +cared, now, this minute. She was aware of her hands, clenched and +unclenched, pressing the sharp edge of the seat into their palms as she +dragged back her will. + +She was quiet now. + +John was looking at his own loose clasped hands and smiling. "Yes," he +said, "yes. Yes." It was as if he had said, "This will go on. Nothing +more than this can ever happen. But as long as we live it will go on." + +She had a sense almost of relief. + +"Charlotte--" + +"John--" + +"You asked me why I came here. You must have known why." + +"I didn't. I don't." + +"Can't you think?" + +"No, John. I've left off thinking. _My_ thinking's never any use." + +"If you _did_ think you'd know it was you." + +"_Me_?" + +"If it wasn't you just at first it was your face. There are faces that do +things to you, that hurt you when they're not there. Faces of people you +don't know in the least. You see them once and they never let you alone +till you've seen them again. They draw you after them, back and back. +You'd commit any sin just to see them again once.... + +"... You've got that sort of face. When I saw you the first time--Do +you remember? You came towards me over the field. You stopped and +spoke to me." + +"Supposing I hadn't?" + +"It wouldn't have mattered. I'd have followed you just the same. Wherever +you'd gone I'd have gone, too. I very nearly turned back then." + +She remembered. She saw him standing in the road at the turn. + +"I knew I had to see you again. But I waited two days to make sure. Then +I came ... + +"... And when I'd gone I kept on seeing your face. It made me come back +again. And the other day--I tried to get away from you. I didn't mean to +come back; but I had to. I can't stand being away from you. And yet-- + +"... Oh well--there it is. I had to tell you ... I couldn't if I didn't +trust you." + +"You tried to get away from me--You didn't mean to come back." + +"I tell you I _had_ to. It's no use trying." + +"But you didn't want to come back.... _That's_ why I dreamed about you." + +"Did you dream about me?" + +"Yes. Furiously. Three nights running. I dreamed you'd got away and when +I'd found you a black thing came down and cut you off. I dreamed you'd +got away again, and I met you in a foreign village with a lot of foreign +women, and you looked at me and I knew you hated me. You wouldn't know +me. You went by without speaking and left me there." + +"My God--you thought I could do that?" + +"I dreamed it. You don't think in dreams. You feel. You see things." + +"You see things that don't exist, that never can exist, things you've +thought about people. If I thought that about myself, Jeanne, I'd blow my +brains out now, so that it shouldn't happen." + +"That wasn't the worst dream. The third was the worst. You were in a +dreadful, dangerous place. Something awful was happening, and you wanted +me, and I couldn't get to you." + +"No, that wasn't the worst dream. I _did_ want you, and you knew it." + +She thought: "He cares. He doesn't want to care, but he does. And he +trusts me. I shall have to tell him ..." + +"There's something," she said, "I've got to tell you." + + * * * * * + +He must have known. He must have guessed. + +He had listened with a gentle, mute attention, as you listen to a story +about something that you remember, that interests you still, his eyes +fixed on his own hands, his clear, beautiful face dreamy and inert. + +"You see," he said, "you did trust me. You wouldn't tell me all that if +you didn't." + +"Of course I trust you. I told you because you trusted me. I thought--I +thought you ought to know. I daresay you did know--all the time." + +"No. No, I didn't. I shouldn't have believed it was in you." + +"It isn't in me now. It's gone clean out of me. I shall never want that +sort of thing again." + +"I know _that_." He said it almost irritably. "I mean I shouldn't have +thought you could have cared for a brute like that.... But the brutes +women _do_ care for ..." + +"I suppose I did care. But I don't feel as if I'd cared. I don't feel as +if it had ever really happened. I can't believe it did. You see, I've +forgotten such a lot of it. I couldn't have believed that once, that you +could go and do a thing like that and forget about it. You'd have thought +you'd remember it as long as you lived." + +"You couldn't live if you remembered...." + +"Oh, John, do you think it was as horrible as all that?" + +His face moved, flashed into sudden passion. + +"I think _he_ was as horrible as that. He makes it +horrible--inconceivably horrible." + +"But--he wasn't." + +"You've told me. He was cruel to you. And he lied and funked." + +"It wasn't like him--it wasn't _like_ him to lie and funk. It was my +fault. I made the poor thing jumpy. I let him run such whopping risks. +_The_ horrible thing is thinking what I made him." + +"He was a liar and a coward, Charlotte; a swine." + +"I tell you he _wasn't_. Oh, why are we so beastly hard on each other? +Everybody's got their breaking-point. I don't lie about the things he +lied about; I don't funk the things he funked. But when my time comes I +daresay I shall funk and lie." + +"Charlotte--are you sure you don't care for him?" + +"Of course I'm sure. I told you I'd forgotten all about it. _This_ is +what I shall remember all my life. Your being here, my being with you. +It's the _real_ thing." + +"You wouldn't want to go back?" + +"To him?" + +"No. To that sort of thing." + +"You mean with--just anybody?" + +"I mean with--somebody you cared about. Could you do without it and go +on caring?" + +"Yes. If _he_ could. If he could go on. But he wouldn't." + +"'He' wouldn't, Charlotte. But _I_ would.... You know I _do_ care for +you?" + +"I thought you _did_--I mean I thought you were beginning to. That's why +I told you what happened, though I knew you'd loathe me." + +"I don't. I'm glad you told me. I'm glad it happened. I mean I'm glad +you worked it off on him.... You got it over; you've had your +experience; you know all about it; you know how long that sort of thing +lasts and how it ends. The baseness, the cruelty of it ... I'm like you, +Charlotte, I don't want any more of it.... When I say I care for you I +mean I want to be with you, to be with you _always_. I'm not happy when +you're not there.... + +"... I say, I wish you'd leave this place and come away and live with me +somewhere." + +"Where?" + +"There's my farm. My father's going to give me one if I stick to +this job. We could run it together. There are all sorts of jolly +things we could do together.... Would you like to live with me, +Charlotte, on my farm?" + +"Yes." + +"I mean--live with me without _that_." + +"Yes; without that." + +"It isn't that I don't care for you. It's because I care so awfully, so +much more than anybody else could. I want to go on caring, and it's the +only way. People don't know that. They don't know what they're +destroying with their blind rushing together. All the delicate, +exquisite sensations. Charlotte, I can get all the ecstasy I want by +just sitting here and looking at you, hearing your voice, touching +you--like this." His finger-tips brushed the bare skin of her arm. "Even +thinking of you ... + +"... And all that would go. Everything would go.... + +"... But our way--nothing could end it." + +"I can see one thing that would end it. If you found somebody you really +cared about." + +"Oh _that_--You mean if I--It wouldn't happen, and if it did, what +difference would it make?" + +"You mean you'd come back?" + +"I mean I shouldn't have left you." + +"Still, you'd have gone to her. John, I don't think I could bear it." + +"You wouldn't have to bear it long. It wouldn't last." + +"Why shouldn't it?" + +"Because--You don't understand, Charlotte--if I know a woman wants me, it +makes me loathe her." + +"It wouldn't, if you wanted _her_." + +"That would be worse. I should _hate_ her then if she made me go to her." + +"You don't know." + +"Oh, don't I!" + +"You can't, if you feel like that about it." + +"You say you feel like that about it yourself." + +"That's because I've been through it." + +"Do you suppose," he said, "I haven't?" + + + + +BOOK TWO + +JOHN RODEN CONWAY + + + + +VI + + +It was an hour since they had left Newhaven. + +The boat went steadily, inflexibly, without agitation, cutting the small, +crisp waves with a sound like the flowing of stiff silk. For a moment, +after the excited rushing and hooting of the ambulance car, there had +been something not quite real about this motion, till suddenly you caught +the rhythm, the immense throb and tremor of the engines. + +Then she knew. + +She was going out, with John and Gwinnie Denning and a man called Sutton, +Dr. Sutton, to Belgium, to the War. She wondered whether any of them +really knew what it would be like when they got there.--She was vague, +herself. She thought of the war mostly in two pictures: one very distant, +hanging in the air to her right, colourless as an illustration in the +papers, grey figures tumbled in a grey field, white puff-bursts of +shrapnel in a grey sky: and one very near; long lines of stretchers, +wounded men and dead men on stretchers, passing and passing before her. +She saw herself and John carrying a stretcher, John at the head and her +at the foot and Gwinnie and Dr. Sutton with another stretcher. + +Nothing for her and John and Gwinnie but field work; the farm had spoiled +them incurably for life indoors. But it had hardened their muscles and +their nerves, it had fitted them for the things they would have to do. +The things they would have to see. There would be blood; she knew there +would be blood; but she didn't see it; she saw white, very white +bandages, and greyish white, sallow-white faces that had no features that +she knew. She hadn't really thought so very much about the war; there had +been too many other things to think about. Their seven weeks' training at +Coventry, the long days in Roden and Conway's motor works, the long +evenings in the ambulance classes; field practice in the meadow that +John's father had lent to the Red Cross; runs along the Warwickshire +roads with John sitting beside her, teaching her to steer and handle the +heavy ambulance car. An endless preparation. + +And under it all, like a passion, like a hidden illness, their +impatience, their intolerable longing to be out there. + +If there had been nothing else to think about there was John. Always +John. Not that you could think about him without thinking about the war; +he was so thoroughly mixed up with it; you couldn't conceive him as left +out of it or as leaving himself out. It had been an obsession with him, +to get into it, to get into it at once, without waiting. That was why +there was only four of them. He wouldn't wait for more volunteers. They +could get all the volunteers they wanted afterwards; and all the cars, +his father would send out any number. She suspected John of not really +wanting the volunteers, of not even wanting Gwinnie and Dr. Sutton. She +could see he would have liked to have gone with her alone. Queer, that so +long as she had thought he would be going without her, she had been +afraid; she had felt certain he would be killed or die of wounds. The one +unbearable thing was that John should die. But after it had been settled +that she was to go with him as his chauffeur she hadn't been afraid any +more. It was as if she knew that she would keep him safe. Or perhaps all +the time she had been afraid of something else. Of separation. She had +had visions of John without her in another country; they were coloured, +vaguely, with the horror of her dreams. It had been just that. Anyhow, +she hadn't thought any more about John's dying. + +It was the old man, his father, who had made her think of it now. + +She could see him, the grey, kind, silent man, at the last minute, +standing on the quay and looking at John with a queer, tight look as +though he were sorry about something--oh, but unbearably sorry about +something he'd thought or said or done. He was keeping it all in, it was +a thing he couldn't speak about, but you could see it made him think John +wasn't coming back again. + +He had got it into his head that she was going out because of John. +She remembered, before that, his kind, funny look at her when he said +to John, "Mind you take care of her," and John's "No fear," and her +own "That's not what he's going out for." She had a slight pang when +she thought of John's father. He had been good to Gwinnie and to her +at Coventry. + +But as for going out because of John, whether he went or not she would +have had to go, so keen that she hated those seven weeks at Coventry, +although John had been there. + +With every thud of the engines her impatience was appeased. + +And all the time she could hear Gwinnie's light, cool voice explaining to +Dr. Sutton that the British Red Cross wouldn't look at them and their +field ambulance, but the Belgians, poor things, you know, weren't in a +position to refuse. They would have taken almost anything. + +Her mind turned to them: to Gwinnie, dressed in their uniform, khaki +tunic and breeches and puttees, her fawn-coloured overcoat belted close +round her to hide her knees. Gwinnie looked stolid and good, with her +face, the face of an innocent, intelligent routing animal, stuck out +between the close wings of her motor cap and the turned-up collar of her +coat. She would go through it all right. Gwinnie was a little plodder. + +She would plod through the war as she had plodded through her training, +without any fear of tests. + +And Dr. Sutton. From time to time she caught him looking at her across +the deck. When Gwinnie's talk dropped he made no effort to revive it, but +stood brooding; a square, thick-set man. His head leaned forward a little +from his heavy shoulders in a perpetual short-sighted endeavour to look +closer; you could see his eyes, large and clear under the watery wash of +his glasses. His features, slightly flattened, were laid quietly back on +his composed, candid face; the dab of docked moustache rising up in it +like a strange note of wonder, of surprise. + +There, he was looking at her again. But whether he looked or listened, or +stood brooding, his face kept still all the time, still and sad. His +mouth hardly moved as he spoke to Gwinnie. + +She turned from him to the contemplation of their fellow passengers. The +two Belgian boy scouts in capes and tilted caps with tassels bobbing over +their foreheads; they tramped the decks, seizing attention by their gay, +excited gestures. You could see that they were happy. + +The group, close by her in the stern, establishing itself there apart, +with an air of righteous possession: five, six, seven men, three young, +four middle-aged, rather shy and awkward, on its fringe. In its centre +two women in slender tailor-made suits and motor veils, looking like +bored uninterested travellers used to the adventure. + +They were talking to a little man in shabby tweeds and an olive-green +velvet hat too small for his head. His smooth, innocent pink face carried +its moustache like an accident, a mistake. Once, when he turned, she met +the arched stare of small china-blue eyes; it passed over her without +seeing, cold, dreamy, indifferent. + +She glanced again at his women. The tall one drew you every time by her +raking eyes, her handsome, arrogant face, the gesture of her small head, +alert and at the same time set, the predatory poise of an enormous bird. +But the other one was--rather charming. Her features had a curious, sweet +bluntness; her eyes were decorations, deep-set blue in the flushed gold +of her sunburn. The little man straddled as he talked to them, bobbing +forward now and then, with a queer jerking movement from his hips. + +She wondered what they were and decided that they were part of the +Commission for Relief in Belgium, bound for Ostend. + +All those people had the look that John had, of having found what they +had wanted, of being satisfied, appeased. Even Sutton had it, lying on +the top of his sadness, like a light. They felt precisely as she was +feeling--all those people. + +And through her wonder she remained aware of John Conway as he walked the +deck, passing and passing in front of her. + +She got up and walked with him. + +The two women stared at them as they passed. One, the tall one, whispered +something to the other. + +"John--do my knees show awfully as I walk?" + +"No. Of course they don't. Gwinnie's do. She doesn't know what to do +with them." + +He looked down at her and smiled. + +"I like you. I like you in that cap. You look as if you were sailing fast +against a head wind, as if you could cut through anything." + +Their turn brought them again under the women's eyes. He took her arm and +drew her aside to the rail of the boat's stern. They stood there, +watching the wake boiling and breaking and thinning, a white lace of +froth on the glassy green. Sutton passed them. + +"What's the matter with him?" she said. + +"The War. He's got it on his mind. It's no use taking it like that, +Jeanne, as one consummate tragedy ... How are _you_ feeling about it?" + +"I don't think I'm feeling anything--except wanting to get there. And +wanting--wanting frightfully--to help." + +"Unless you can go into it as if it was some tremendous, happy +adventure--That's the only way to take it. I shouldn't be any good if I +didn't feel it was the most _romantic_ thing that ever happened to +me.... To have let everything go, to know that nothing matters, that it +doesn't matter if you're killed, or mutilated ... Of course I want to +help, but that would be nothing without the gamble. The danger." + +He stopped suddenly in his turning and held her with his shining, +excited eyes. + +"War's the most romantic thing that ever happened ... False romance, my +father calls it. Jolly little romance about _him_. He'll simply make pots +of money out of the war, selling motors to the Government." + +"It's rather--romantic of him to give us those two ambulances, and +pay for us." + +"_Is_ it? Think of the kudos he gets out of it, and the advertisement for +Roden and Conway, the stinking paragraphs he'll put in the papers about +himself: 'His second son, Mr. John Roden Conway, is taking out two Roden +field ambulance cars which he will drive himself--'Mr. John Roden Conway +and his field ambulance car. A Roden, 30 horse power.' He makes me sick." + +She saw again, with a renewal of her pang, the old man, the poor, kind +man. Perhaps he wouldn't put the paragraphs in the papers. + +"False romance. He lied. There's no such thing as false romance. Romance +is a state of mind. A state of mind can't be false or true. It simply +exists. It hasn't any relation to reality. It _is_ reality, the most real +part of us. When it's dead we're dead." + +"Yes." + +But it was funny to _talk_ about it. About romance and danger. It made +her hot and shy. She supposed that was because she couldn't take things +in. Her fatheadedness. It was easy not to say things if you didn't feel +them. The more John felt them the more he had to say them. Besides, he +never said them to anybody but her. It was really saying them to himself, +a quiet, secret thinking. + +He stood close, close in front of her, tall and strong and handsome in +his tunic, knee breeches and puttees. She could feel the vibration of his +intense, ardent life, of his excitement. And suddenly, before his young +manhood, she had it again, the old feeling, shooting up and running over +her, swamping her brain. She wondered with a sort of terror whether he +would see it in her face, whether if she spoke he would hear it +thickening her throat. He would loathe her if he knew. She would loathe +herself if she thought she was going into the war because of that, +because of him. Women did. She remembered Gibson Herbert. Glasgow.... But +this was different. The sea was in it, magic was in it and romance. And +if she had to choose between John and her wounded it should not be John. +She had sworn that before they started. Standing there close beside him +she swore again, secretly to herself, that it should not be John. + +John glanced at Sutton as he passed them. + +"I'd give my soul to be a surgeon," he said. "That's what I wanted." + +"You wanted to be a soldier." + +"It would have been the next best thing.... Did you notice in the lists +the number of Army Medical men killed and missing? Out of all proportion. +That means that they're as much exposed as the combatants. More, +really.... + +"... Jeanne--do you realise that if we've any luck, any luck at all, we +shall take the same risks?" + +"It's all very well for us. If it was only being killed--But +there's killing." + +"Of course there's killing. If a man's willing to be killed he's jolly +well earned his right to kill. It's the same for the other johnnie. If +your life doesn't matter a hang, his doesn't either. He's got his +feeling. He's got his romance. If he hasn't--" + +"Yes--if he hasn't?" + +"He's better dead." + +"Oh no; he might simply go slogging on without feeling anything, from a +sense of duty. That would be beautiful; it would be _the_ most +beautiful thing." + +"There you are, then. His duty's his romance. You can't get away from +it." + +"No." + +But she thought: Supposing he went, loathing it, shivering, sick? +Frightened. Well, of course it would be there too, simply because he +_went_; only you would feel it, not he. + +Supposing he didn't go, supposing he stuck, and had to be pushed on, by +bayonets, from behind? It didn't bear thinking of. + +John hadn't thought of it. He wouldn't. He couldn't see that some people +were like that. + +"I don't envy," he said, "the chaps who come out to soft jobs in +this war." + +They had found the little man in tweeds asleep behind the engine house, +his chin sunk on his chest, his hands folded on his stomach. He had taken +off his green velvet hat, and a crest of greyish hair rose up from his +bald forehead, light and fine. + + * * * * * + +The sun was setting now. The foam of the wake had the pink tinge of red +wine spilt on a white cloth; a highway of gold and rose, edged with +purple, went straight from it to the sun. + +After the sunset, land, the sunk lines of the Flemish coast. + +There was a stir among the passengers; they plunged into the cabins and +presently returned, carrying things. The groups sorted themselves, the +Commission people standing apart with their air of arrogance and +distinction. The little man in tweeds had waked up from his sleep behind +the engine house, and strolled with a sort of dreamy swagger to his place +at their head. Everybody moved over to the starboard side. + +They stood there in silence watching the white walls and domes and towers +of Ostend. Charlotte and Conway had moved close to each other. She looked +up into his face, searching his thoughts there. Suddenly from somewhere +in the bows a song spurted and dropped and spurted again and shot up in +the stillness, slender and clear, like a rod oft white water. The Belgian +boys were singing the Marseillaise. On the deck their feet beat out the +thud of the march. + +Charlotte looked away. + + + + +VII + + +"Nothing," Charlotte said, "is going to be worse than this." + +It seemed to her that they had waited hours in the huge grey hall of the +Hotel-Hospital, she and Sutton and Gwinnie, while John talked to the +President of the Red Cross in his bureau. Everybody looked at them: the +door-keeper, the lift orderly; the ward men and nurses hurrying past; +wide stares and sharp glances falling on her and Gwinnie, slanting +downward to their breeches and puttees, then darting upwards to their +English faces. + +Sutton moved, putting his broad body between them and the batteries of +amused and interested eyes. + +They stood close together at the foot of the staircase. Above them the +gigantic Flora leaned forward, holding out her flowers to preoccupied +people who wouldn't look at her; she smiled foolishly; too stupid to know +that the Flandria was no longer an hotel but a military hospital. + +John came out of the President's bureau. He looked disgusted and +depressed. + +"They can put us up," he said; "but I've got to break it to you that +we're not the only Field Ambulance in Ghent." + +Charlotte said, "Oh, well, we'd no business to suppose we were." + +"We've got to share our quarters with the other one.... It calls itself +the McClane Corps." + +"Shall we have to sleep with it?" Sutton said. + +"We shall have to have it in our messroom. I believe it's up there now." + +"Well, that won't hurt us." + +"What'll hurt us is this. It'll be sent out before we are. McClane was +here hours ago. He's been to Head Quarters." + +Sutton's gloom deepened. "How do you know?" + +"President says so." + +They went, following the matron, up the grey, tessellated stairs; at each +landing the long, grey corridors were tunnels for the passage of strange +smells, ether and iodine and carbolic and the faint odour of drains, +seeking their outlet at the well of the staircase. + +On the third floor, at the turn of the corridor, a small vestibule +between two glass doors led to a room flooded with a blond light from the +south. Beyond the glass doors, their figures softened by the deep, +doubled shimmer of the panes, they saw the little man in shabby tweeds, +the two women, and the seven other men. This, Madame explained, was Dr. +Donald McClane's Field Ambulance Corps. You could see it had thought it +was the only one. As they entered they met the swoop of two beautiful, +indignant eyes, a slow turning and abrupt stiffening of shoulders; the +movement of the group was palpable, a tremor of hostility and resentment. + +It lasted with no abatement while Madame, standing there in her gaunt +Flemish graciousness, murmured names. "Mrs. Rankin--" Mrs. Rankin nodded +insolently and turned away. "Miss Bartrum--" Miss Bartrum, the rather +charming one, bowed, drawing the shadow of grave eyebrows over sweet +eyes. "Dr. Donald McClane--" As he bowed the Commandant's stare arched up +at them, then dropped, suddenly innocent, suddenly indifferent. + +They looked around. Madame and her graciousness had gone. Nobody made a +place for them at the two long tables set together in the middle of the +room. The McClane Corps had spread itself over all the chairs and +benches, in obstinate possession. They passed out through the open French +windows on to the balcony. + +It looked south over the railway towards the country where they thought +the fighting must be. They could see the lines where the troop trains +ran, going northwest and southeast, and the railway station and post +office all in one long red-brick building that had a flat roof with a +crenellated parapet. Grass grew on the roof. And beyond the black railway +lines miles upon miles of flat open country, green fields, rows of +poplars standing up in them very straight; little woods; here and there a +low rise bristling and dark with trees. The fighting must be over there. +Under the balcony the white street ran southeastward, and scouting cars +and ammunition wagons and long lines of troops were all going that way. + +While they talked they remained aware of the others. They could see +McClane rubbing his hands; they heard his brief laugh that had no +amusement in it, and his voice saying, "Anyhow, we've got in first." + +When they came back into the room they found the tables drawn apart with +a wide space between. The Belgian orderlies were removing plates and cups +from one to the other, establishing under the Commandant's directions a +separate mess. By tea-time two chauffeurs had added themselves to the +McClane Corps. + +Twelve to four. And they would have to live together nobody knew how +long: as long as the war lasted. + + * * * * * + +That evening, in the bedroom that John shared with Sutton, they sat on +two beds, discussing their prospects. Gwinnie was voluble. + +"They've driven us out of our messroom with their beastliness. We shall +have to sit in our bedrooms all the time." + +"We'd better let the office know we're here," said Sutton, "in case we're +sent for." + +"Anyhow," said Charlotte, "_I'm_ not going to bed." + +John smiled. A struggling, dejected smile. + +"My dear child, I've told you they're not going to send us out first." + +"I don't know--" said Gwinnie. + +"I _do_ know. We shall be lucky if we get a look in when McClane's cars +break down." + +"That's it. Have you seen their cars? I overhauled them this morning, in +the yard. They're nothing but old lorries, converted. And one of 'em's +got solid tyres." + +"Well?" + +"Well--You wait." + +They waited. Even the McClane Corps had to wait. + + * * * * * + +"I don't care," said Charlotte, "how beastly they are to me, provided +they leave John alone." + +"What can they do?" he said. "They don't matter." + +"There's such a lot of them," said Gwinnie. "It's when they're all +together they're so poisonous." + +"It's when they're _separate_," Charlotte said. "I think Mrs. Rankin +_does_ things. And there's McClane swearing he'll get us out of Belgium. +But he won't!" + +She didn't care. She had got used to it as she had got used to the +messroom and its furnishings, the basket chairs and backless benches, the +two long tables covered with white marbled American leather, the +photographs of the King and Queen of the Belgians above the chimney +piece. The atmosphere of hostility was thick and penetrating, something +that you breathed in with the smells of ether and iodine and +disinfectant, that hung about the grey, leeking corridors and floated in +the blond light of the room. She could feel a secret threat in it, as if +at any minute it might work up to some pitch still more malignant, some +supreme disaster. There were moments when she wondered whether McClane +had prejudiced the authorities against them. At first she had regarded +the little man as negligible; it was the women who had fascinated her, as +if they had or might come to have for her some profound importance and +significance. She didn't like McClane. He straddled too much. But you +couldn't go on ignoring him. His dreamy, innocent full face with its +arching eyes was a mask, the mask of dangerous, inimical intentions; his +profile was rough cut, brutal, energetic, you guessed the upper lip thin +and hard under the hanging moustache; the lower one stuck out like a +sucker. That was his real face. It showed an adhesive, exhausting will +that squeezed and sucked till it had got what it wanted out of people. He +could work things. So could Mrs. Rankin. She had dined with the Colonel. + +Charlotte didn't care. She _liked_ that beastliness, that hostility of +theirs. It was something you could put your back against; it braced her +to defiance. It brought her closer to John, to John and Gwinnie, and +shut them in together more securely. Sutton she was not quite so sure +about. Through all their depression he seemed to stand apart somehow by +himself in a profounder discontent. "There are only four of us," he +said; "we can't call ourselves a corps." You could see the way his mind +was working. + +Then suddenly the atmosphere lifted at one point. Mrs. Rankin changed her +attitude to John. You could see her beautiful hawk's eyes pursuing him +about the room. When she found him in the corridors or on the stairs she +stopped him and chattered; under her breath because of the hushed wards. + +He told Charlotte about it. + +"That Mrs. Rankin seems inclined to be a bit too friendly." + +"I haven't noticed it." + +"Not with you. With Sutton and--and me." + +"Well--" + +"Well, I can't answer for Sutton, but I don't like it. That isn't what +we're out here for." + +They were going into the messroom together towards dinner time. Mrs. +Rankin and Alice Bartrum were there alone, seated at their tables, ready. +Mrs. Rankin called out in her stressed, vibrating voice across the room: + +"Mr. _Conway_, you people ought to come in with us." + +"Why?" + +"_Because_ there are only four of you and we're twelve. Sixteen's the +proper number for a unit. Alice, didn't I say, the minute I saw Mr. +Conway with that car of his, didn't I _say_ we ought to have him?" + +"You did." + +"Thanks. I'd rather take my orders from the Colonel." + +"And _I'd_ rather take _mine_ from you than from McClane. Fancy coming +out at the head of a Field Ambulance looking like that. Tell you what, +Mr. Conway, if you'll join up with us I'll get the Colonel to make you +our commandant." + +Alice Bartrum opened her shadowed eyes. "Trixie--you _can't_." + +"Can't I? I can make the old boy do anything I like." + +John stiffened. "You can't make me do anything you like, Mrs. Rankin. +You'd much better stick to McClane." + +"What do any of us know about McClane?" + +"What do you know about me?" + +You could see how he hated her. + +"I know you mean business." + +"Doesn't he?" + +"Don't ask me what he _means_." + +She shrugged her shoulders violently. "Come over here and sit by me. I +want to talk to you. Seriously." + +She had shifted her seat and made a place for him beside her on the +bench. Her flushed, handsome face covered him with its smile. You could +see she was used to being obeyed when she smiled like that; when she sent +that light out of her eyes men did what she wanted. All her life the men +she knew had obeyed her, all except McClane. She didn't know John. + +He raised his head and looked at her with cool, concentrated dislike. + +"I'd rather stay where I am if you don't mind. I want to talk to +Miss Redhead." + +"Oh--" Mrs. Rankin's flush went out like a blown flame. Her lips made +one pale, tight thread above the set square of her chin. All her light +was in her eyes. They stared before her at the glass door where McClane +was entering. + +He came swaggering and slipped into his place between her and Alice +Bartrum with his air of not seeing Mrs. Rankin, of not seeing Charlotte +and John, of not seeing anything he didn't want to see. Presently he +bobbed round in his seat so as to see Sutton, and began talking to him +excitedly. + +At the end of it Charlotte and Sutton found themselves alone, smiling +into each other's faces. + +"Do you like him?" she said. + +"I'm not sure. All the same that isn't a bad idea of Mrs. Rankin's." + +It was Sutton who tried to work it the next morning, sounding McClane. + +Charlotte was in the space between the glass doors, arranging their +stores in their own cupboard. McClane's stores had overflowed into it on +the lower shelves. She could hear the two men talking in the room, +Sutton's low, persuasive voice; she couldn't hear what he was saying. + +Suddenly McClane brought his fist down on the table. + +"I'll take you. And I'll take your women. And I'll take your ambulances. +I could do with two more ambulances. But I won't take Conway." + +"You can't tell him that." + +"Can't I!" + +"What can you say?" + +"I can say--" + +She pushed open the glass door and went in. McClane was whispering +furtively. She saw Sutton stop him with a look. They turned to her and +Sutton spoke. + +"Come in, Miss Redhead. This concerns you. Dr. McClane wants you and Miss +Denning and me to join his corps." + +"And how about Mr. Conway?" + +"Well--" McClane was trying to look innocent. "Mr. Conway's just the +difficulty. There can't be two commandants in one corps and he says he +won't take orders from me." + +(Mrs. Rankin must have talked about it, then.) + +"Is that what you told Dr. Sutton?" + +"Yes." + +His cold, innocent blue eyes supported him. He was lying; she knew he was +lying; that was not what he had said when he had whispered. + +"You don't suppose," she said, "I should leave Mr. Conway? And if I stick +to him Gwinnie'll stick." + +"And Dr. Sutton?" + +"He can please himself." + +"If Miss Redhead stays I shall stay." + +"John will let you off like a shot, if you don't want to." + +She turned to go and McClane called after her, "My offer remains open to +you three." + +Through the glass door she heard Sutton saying, "If you're right, +McClane, I can't very well leave her with him, can I?" + +Sutton was stupid. He didn't understand. Lying on her bed that night +Charlotte made it out. + +"Gwinnie--you know why McClane won't have John?" + +"I suppose because Mrs. Rankin's keen on him." + +"McClane isn't keen on Mrs. Rankin.... Can't you see he's trying to hoof +John out of Belgium, because he wants all the glory to himself? We +wouldn't do that to one of them, even if we were mean enough not to want +them in it." + +"He wanted Sutton." + +"Oh, Sutton--He wasn't afraid of _him_.... When you think of the war--and +think of people being like that. Jealous. Hating each other--" + + * * * * * + +You mightn't like Mrs. Rankin, Mrs. Rankin and McClane; but you couldn't +say they weren't splendid. + +Five days had passed. On the third day the McClane Corps had been sent +out. (Mrs. Rankin had not dined with the Colonel for nothing.) + +It went again and again. By the fifth day they knew that it had +distinguished itself at Alost and Termonde and Quatrecht. The names +sounded in their brains like a song with an exciting, maddening refrain. +October stretched before them, golden and blank, a volume of tense, +vibrating time. + +Nothing for it but to wait and wait. The summons might come any minute. +Charlotte and Gwinnie had begun by sitting on their drivers' seats in the +ambulances standing in the yard, ready to start the very instant it came. +Their orders were to hold themselves in readiness. They held themselves +in readiness and saw McClane's cars swing out from the rubbered sweep in +front of the Hospital three and four times a day. They stood on their +balcony and watched them rush along the road that led to the battlefields +southeast of the city. The sight of the flat Flemish land and the sadness +of lovely days oppressed them. She felt that it must be partly that. The +incredible loveliness of the days. They sat brooding over the map of +Belgium, marking down the names of the places, Alost, Termonde and +Quatrecht, that McClane had gone to, that he would talk about on his +return, when an awful interest would impel them to listen. He and Mrs. +Rankin would come in about tea-time, swaggering and excited, telling +everybody that they had been in the line of fire; and Alice Bartrum would +move about the room, quiet and sweet, cutting bread and butter and +pretending to be unconcerned in the narration. And in the evening, after +dinner, the discussion went on and on in John's bedroom. He raged against +his infernal luck. If they thought he was going to take it lying down-- + +"McClane can keep me out of my messroom, but he can't keep me out of my +job. There's room in 'the line of fire' for both of us." + +"How are you going to get into it?" said Sutton. + +"Same way as McClane. If he can go to Head Quarters, so can I." + +"I wouldn't," Sutton said. "It might give a bad impression. Our turn'll +come before long." + +Gwinnie laughed. "It won't--unless Charlotte dines with the Colonel." + +"It certainly _mayn't_," said Charlotte. "They may commandeer our cars +and give them to McClane." + +"They can't," said Gwinnie. "We're volunteers." + +"They can do anything they choose. Military necessity." + +Gwinnie was thoughtful. + +"John," she said, "can I have one of the cars to-morrow afternoon?" + +"What for?" + +"Never mind. Can I?" + +"You can have both the damned things if you like; they're no good to me." + +The next afternoon they looked on while Gwinnie, who wore a look of great +wisdom and mystery, slipped her car out of the yard into a side street +and headed for the town. She came back at tea-time, bright-eyed and +faintly flushed. + +"You'll find we shall be sent out to-morrow." + +"Oh, shall we!" John said. + +"Yes. I've worked it for you." + +"You?" + +"Me. They've seen my car." + +"Who have?" + +"The whole lot of them. General Staff. First of all I paraded it all +round the blessed town. Then I turned into the Place d'Armes. I kept it +standing two solid hours outside the Hotel de la Poste where the blooming +brass hats all hang out. In five minutes it collected a small crowd. +First it was only refugees and war correspondents. Then the Colonel came +out and stuck his head in at the back. He got quite excited when he saw +we could take five stretcher cases. + +"I showed him our tyres and the electric light, and I ran the stretchers +in and out for him. He'd never seen them with wheels before.... He said +it was 'magnifique'... The old bird wanted to take me into the hotel and +stand me tea." + +"Didn't you let him?" + +"No. I said I had to stay with my car. And I took jolly good care to let +him know it hadn't been out yet." + +"Whatever made you think of it?" + +"I don't know. It just sort of came to me." + +Next afternoon John had orders to go to Berlaere to fetch wounded. + + + + +VIII + + +At the turn of the road they heard the guns: a solemn Boom--Boom coming +up out of hushed spaces; they saw white puffs of smoke rising in the blue +sky. The French guns somewhere back of them. The German guns in front +southwards beyond the river. + +Charlotte looked at John; he was brilliantly happy. They smiled at each +other as if they said "_Now_ it's beginning." + +Outside the village of Berlaere they were held up by two sentries with +rifles. (Thrilling, that.) Their Belgian guide leaned out and whispered +the password; John showed their passports and they slipped through. + +Where the road turned on their left into the street they saw a group of +soldiers standing at the door of a house. Three of them, a Belgian +lieutenant and two non-commissioned officers, advanced hurriedly and +stopped the car. The lieutenant forbade them to go on. + +"But," John said, "we've got orders to go on." + +A shrug intimated that their orders were not the lieutenant's affair. +They couldn't go on. + +"But we _must_ go on. We've got to fetch some wounded." + +"There aren't any wounded," said the lieutenant. + +Charlotte had an inspiration. "You tell us that tale every time," she +said, "and there are always wounded." + +The Belgian guide and the lieutenant exchanged glances. + +"I've told you there aren't any," the lieutenant said. "You must go +back." + +"Here--You explain." + +But instead of explaining the little Belgian backed up the lieutenant by +a refusal on his own part to go on. + +"He can please himself. _We're_ going on." + +"You don't imagine," Charlotte said, "by any chance that we're _afraid_?" + +The lieutenant smiled, a smile that lifted his ferocious, upturned +moustache: first sign that he was yielding. He looked at the sergeant and +the corporal, and they nodded. + +John had his foot on the clutch. "We're due," he said, "at the dressing +station by three o'clock." + +She thought: He's magnificent. She could see that the lieutenant and the +soldiers thought he was magnificent. Supposing she had gone out with some +meek fool who would have gone back when they told him! + +The lieutenant skipped aside before the advancing car. "You can go," he +said, "to the dressing-station." + +"They always do that as a matter of form--sort of warning us that it's +our own risk. They won't be responsible." + +She didn't answer. She was thinking that when they turned John's driving +place would be towards the German guns. + +"I wish you'd let me drive. You know I like driving." + +"Not this time." + +At the dressing-station, a deserted store, they found a Belgian Army +Medical officer engaged with a tired and flushed and dirty soldier. He +was bandaging his left hand which had made a trail of blood splashes from +the street to the counter. The right hand hung straight down from a nick +in the dropped wrist where a tendon had been severed. He told them that +they had grasped the situation. Seven men waited there for transport. + +The best thing--perhaps--He looked doubtfully at Charlotte--would be for +them to take these men back at once. (The tired soldier murmured +something: a protest or an entreaty.) Though they were not exactly urgent +cases. They could wait. + +Charlotte suspected a serious reservation. "You mean you have others +more urgent?" + +The soldier got in his word. "Much more." His lips and eyes moved +excitedly in the flush and grime. + +"Well yes," the doctor admitted that they had. Not in the village, but in +a hamlet about a mile outside of it. An outpost. This man and three +others had been holding it with two machine guns. He had had a finger +shot away and his wrist cut open by a shell-burst; the other three were +left there, badly wounded. + +"All right, we'll go and fetch them." + +"Monsieur, the place is being shelled. You have no orders." + +"We've no orders not to." + +The doctor spread out helpless palms, palms that disclaimed +responsibility. + +"If you go, you go at your own risk. I will not send you." + +"That's all right." + +"Oh well--But certainly Mademoiselle must be left behind." + +"Mademoiselle is much too useful." + +Frantic gestures of eyebrows and palms. + +"You must not stay there more than three minutes. _Three minutes_." + +He turned to the cut tendon with an air of integrity, his conscience +appeased by laying down this time limit. + +John released the clutch, and the soldier shouted out something, they +couldn't make out what, that ended with "mitrailleuses." + +As they ran down the street the solemn Boom--Boom came right and left; +they were now straight between the two batteries. + +"Are you all right, Sharlie?" + +"Rather." + +The little Belgian by her side muttered, protesting. + +"We're not really in any danger. It's all going on over our heads." + +"Do you suppose," she said, "they'll get our range?" + +"Rather not. Why should they? They've got their range and they'll +stick to it." + +The firing on their right ceased. + +"They're quiet enough now," she said. + +The little Belgian informed her that if they were quiet so much the +worse. They were finding their range. + +She thought: We were safe enough before, but-- + +"Supposing," she said, "they alter their range?" + +"They won't alter it just for the fun of killing us. They haven't +spotted the batteries yet. It's the batteries they're trying for, not +the street." + +But the little Belgian went on protesting. + +"What's the matter with him?" + +"He's getting a bit jumpy," she said, "that's all." + +"Tell him to buck up. Tell him it's all right." + +She translated. The little Belgian shook his head, mournfully persistent. +"Monsieur," he said, "didn't know." + +"Oh yes, he does know." + +It was absurd of the little man to suppose you didn't know, when +the noise of the French guns told them how near they were to the +enemy's target. + +She tried not to listen to him. His mutterings broke up the queer +stillness that held her after she had heard the guns. It was only by +keeping still that you felt, wave by wave, the rising thrill of the +adventure. Only by keeping still she was aware of what was passing in +John's mind. He knew. He knew. They were one in the almost palpable +excitement that they shared; locked close, closer than their bodies could +have joined them, in the strange and poignant ecstasy of danger. + +There was the sound of an explosion somewhere in front of them beyond +the houses. + +"Did you hear that, Mademoiselle?" + +"I did." + +"Miles away," said John. + +She knew it wasn't. She thought: He doesn't want me to know. He thinks +I'll be frightened. I mustn't tell him. + +But the Belgian had none of John's scruples. The shell was near, he said; +very near. It had fallen in the place they were going to. + +"But that's the place where the wounded men are." + +He admitted that it was the place where the wounded men were. + +They were out of the village now. Their road ran through flat open +country, a causeway raised a little above the level of the fields. No +cover anywhere from the fire if it came. The Belgian had begun again. + +"What's that he's saying now?" + +"He says we shall give away the position of the road." + +"It's the one they told us to take. We've got to go on it. He's in a +beastly funk. That's what's the matter with him." + +The Belgian shrugged his shoulders as much as to say he had done his duty +and things might now take their course, and they were mistaken if for one +minute they supposed he was afraid. But they had not gone fifty yards +before he begged to be put down. He said it was absolutely necessary that +he should go back to the village and collect the wounded there and have +them ready for the ambulance on its return. + +They let him go. Charlotte looked round the corner of the hood and saw +him running with brief, jerky strides. + +"He's got a nerve," said John, "to be able to do it." + +"What excuse do you think he'll make?" + +"Oh, he'll say we sent him." + +The straight dyke of the road went on and on. Seen from the sunk German +lines the heavy ambulance car would look like a house on wheels running +along a wall. She thought again of John on his exposed seat. If only he +had let her drive--But that was absurd. Of course he wouldn't let her. If +you were to keep on thinking of the things that might happen to +John--Meanwhile nothing could take from them the delight of this +dangerous run across the open. She had to remind herself that the +adventure, the romance of it was not what mattered most; it was not the +real thing, the thing they had gone out for. + +When they came to the wounded, when they came to the wounded, then it +would begin. + +The hamlet began to show now; it sat on one side of the road, low and +alone in the flat land, an open field in front of it, and at the bottom +of the field the river and a line of willows, and behind the willows the +Germans, hidden. White smoke curled among the branches. You could see it +was an outpost, one of the points at which the Germans, if they broke +through, would come into the village. They supposed that the house where +the wounded men were would be the last of the short row. + +Here on their right there were no houses, only the long, high flank of a +barn. The parts that had been built out into the field were shelled away, +but the outer wall by the roadside still held. It was all that stood +between them and the German guns. They drew up the car under its shelter +and got down. + +They could see all the houses of the hamlet at once on their left; +whitewashed walls; slender grey doors and shutters. The three that +looked out on to the barn were untouched. A few yards ahead a small, +empty wine-shop faced the open field; its doorstep and the path in front +of its windows glittered with glass dust, with spikes and splinters, and +heaped shale of glass that slid and cracked under your feet. Beyond it, +a house with its door and all its windows and the front slope of its +roof blown in. A broken shutter sagged from the wall. Then the shell of +the last house; it pricked up one plastered gable, white and hard +against the blue. + +They found the men in the last house but one, the house with the broken +shutter. They went, carrying their stretchers and the haversack of +dressings, under the slanted lintel into the room. The air in there was +hot and stifling and thickened with a grey powdery swarm. Their feet sank +through a layer of pinkish, greyish dust. + +The three wounded men lay stretched out on this floor, among brickbats +and broken panes and slabs of dropped plaster. A thin grey powder had +settled on them all. And by the side of each man the dust was stiffened +into a red cake with a glairy pool in the middle of it, fed from the raw +wound; and where two men lay together their pools had joined and +overflowed in a thin red stream. + +John put down his stretcher and stood still. His face was very white, and +his upper lip showed in-drawn and dry, and tightened as though it were +glued to his teeth. + +"John, you _aren't_ going to faint or be sick or anything?" + +"I'm all right." + +He went forward, clenching his fists; moving in a curious drawn way, like +a sleep walker. + +They were kneeling in the dust now, looking for the wounds. + +"We must do this chap with the arm first. He'll want a tourniquet." + +He spoke in a husky whisper as if he were half asleep.... + +The wounded head stuck to the floor. They scraped round it, digging with +their hands; it came up wearing a crust of powdered lime. A pad and a +bandage. They couldn't do anything more for that ... The third man, with +the fractured shin-bone and the big flesh-wound in his thigh, must have +splints and a dressing. + +She wondered how John would set about his work. But his queer, hypnotised +actions were effectual and clean. + +Between them they had fixed the tourniquet. + +Through all her preoccupation and the quick, dexterous movement of her +hands she could feel her pity tightening her throat: pity that hurt like +love, that was delicious and exquisite like love. Nothing mattered, +nothing existed in her mind but the three wounded men. John didn't +matter. John didn't exist. He was nothing but a pair of hands working +quickly and dexterously with her own.... She looked up. John's mouth kept +its hard, glued look; his eyes were feverish behind a glaze of water, and +red-rimmed. + +She thought: It's awful for him. He minds too much. It hurt her to see +how he minded. After all, he did matter. Deep inside her he mattered more +than the wounded men; he mattered more than anything on earth. Only there +wasn't time, there wasn't _time_ to think of him. + +She turned to the next man and caught sight of the two machine guns with +their tilted muzzles standing in the corner of the room by the chimney. +They must remember to bring away the guns. + +John's hypnotic whisper came again. "You might get those splints, +Charlotte." + +As she crossed the road a shell fell in the open field beyond, and burst, +throwing up a great splash and spray of brown earth. She stiffened +herself in an abrupt gesture of defiance. Her mind retorted: "You've +missed, that time. You needn't think I'm going to put myself out for +_you_." To show that she wasn't putting herself out (in case they should +be looking) she strolled with dignity to her car, selected carefully the +kind of splint she needed, and returned. She thought: Oh well--supposing +they _do_ hit. We must get those men out before another comes. + +John looked up as she came to him. His face glistened with pinheads of +sweat; he panted in the choking air. + +"Where did that shell burst?" + +"Miles away." + +"Are you certain?" + +"Rather." + +She lied. Why not? John had been lying all the time. Lying was part of +their defiance, a denial that the enemy's effort had succeeded. Nothing +mattered but the fixing of the splints and the carrying of the men.... + +John was cranking up the engine when she turned back into the house. + +"I _say_, what are you doing?" + +"Going for the guns." + +There was, she noticed, a certain longish interval between shells. John +and the wounded men would be safe from shrapnel under the shelter of the +wall. She brought out the first gun and stowed it at the back of the car. +Then she went in for the other. It stood on the seat between them with +its muzzle pointing down the road. Charlotte put her arm round it to +steady it. + +On the way back to the dressing-station she sat silent, thinking of +the three wounded men in there, behind, rocked and shaken by the +jolting of the car on the uneven causeway. John was silent, too, +absorbed by his steering. + +But as they ran into Ghent the romance of it, the romance of it, came +back to her. It wasn't over yet. They would have to go out again for the +wounded they had had to leave behind at Berlaere. + +"John--John--It's like nothing else on earth." + +"I told you it would be." + +Slowly realization came to her. They had brought in their wounded under +the enemy's fire. And they had saved the guns. + + * * * * * + +"Do you mind," John said, "if Sutton goes instead of me He hasn't +been out yet?" + +"N-no. Not if I can go too." + +"Do you want to?" + +"Awfully." + +She had drawn up the ambulance in the Square before the Hospital and sat +in her driver's seat, waiting. Sutton came to her there. When he saw her +he stood still. + +"_You_ going?" + +"Rather. Do you mind?" + +Sutton didn't answer. All the way out to Berlaere he sat stolid and +silent, not looking at anything they passed and taking no more notice of +the firing than if he hadn't heard it. As the car swung into Berlaere she +was aware of his voice, low under the noise of the engine. + +"What did you say?" + +"Conway told me it was you who saved the guns." + +Suddenly she was humbled. + +"It was the men who saved them. We just brought them away." + +"Conway told me what you did," he said quietly. + +Going out with Sutton was a quiet affair. + +"You know," he said presently, "it was against the Hague Convention." + +"Good heavens, so it was! I never thought of it." + +"You must think of it. You gave the Germans the right to fire on all our +ambulances.... You see, this isn't just a romantic adventure; it's a +disagreeable, necessary, rather dangerous job." + +"I didn't do it for swank. I knew the guns were wanted, and I couldn't +bear to leave them." + +"I know, it would have been splendid if you'd been a combatant. But," he +said sadly, "this is a field ambulance, not an armoured car." + + + + +IX + + +She was glad they had been sent out with the McClane Corps to Melle. She +wanted McClane to see the stuff that John was made of. She knew what had +been going on in the commandant's mind. He had been trying to persuade +himself that John was no good, because, from the minute he had seen him +with his ambulance on the wharf at Ostend, from the minute he had known +his destination, he had been jealous of him and afraid. Why, he must have +raced them all the way from Ostend, to get in first. Afraid and jealous, +afraid of John's youth with its secret of triumph and of courage; jealous +of John's face and body that men and women turned back to look at as they +passed; even the soldiers going up to the battlefields, going up to +wounds and death, turned to look at this creature of superb and brilliant +life. Even on the boat he must have had a dreadful wonder whether John +was bound for Ghent; he must have known from the beginning that wherever +Conway placed himself he would stand out and make other men look small +and insignificant. If he wasn't jealous and afraid of Sutton she supposed +it was because John had had that rather diminishing effect on poor Billy. + +If Billy Sutton distinguished himself that would open McClane's eyes a +little wider, too. + +She wondered why Billy kept on saying that McClane was a great +psychologist. If it was true that would be very awful for McClane; he +would see everything going on inside people, then, all the things he +didn't want to see; he wouldn't miss anything, and he would know all the +time what John was like. The little man was wilfully shutting his eyes +because he was so mean that he couldn't bear to see John as he really +was. Now he would have to see. + +The thought of McClane's illumination consoled her for her own inferior +place in the adventure. This time the chauffeurs would have to stay at +the end of the village with their cars. The three were drawn up at the +street side, close under the house walls, McClane's first. Then Sutton's, +with Gwinnie. Then hers; behind it the short straight road where the +firing would come down. + +John stood in the roadway waiting for the others. He had his hand beside +her hand, grasping the arm of the driver's seat. + +"I wish you could take me with you," she said. + +"Can't. The orders are, all chauffeurs to stand by the cars." + +... His eyebrows knotted and twitched in sudden anxiety. + +"You know, Sharlie, you'll be fired on." + +"I know. I don't mind, John, I don't really. I shall be all right." + +"Yes. You'll be all right." But by the way he kept on glancing up and +down the road she could see he was uneasy. "If you could have stood in +front of those cars. _You're_ in the most dangerous place here." + +"Somebody's got to be in it." + +He looked at her and smiled. "Jeanne," he said, "in her armour." + +"Rot." + +And they were silent. + +"I say, John--my car _does_ cover Gwinnie's a bit, doesn't it?" + +"Yes," he said abruptly. + +"_That's_ all right. You must go now. They're coming for the stretchers." + +His face quivered. He thrust out his hand quickly, and as she took it she +thought: He thinks he isn't coming back. She was aware of Mrs. Rankin and +two of the McClane men with stretchers, passing; she could see Mrs. +Rankin looking at them as she came on, smiling over her shoulder, drawing +the men's attention to their leave-taking. + +She thought: _They_ don't shake hands when they're going out. They don't +think whether they're coming back or not.... They don't think at all. But +then, none of them were lovers as she and John were lovers. + +"John, you'd better go and carry Mrs. Rankin's stretcher for her." + +He went. + +She watched them as they walked together up the short straight road to +the battlefield at the top. Sutton followed with Alice Bartrum; then the +McClane men; they nodded to her and smiled. Then McClane, late, running, +trying to overtake John and Mrs. Rankin, to get to the head of his unit. +Perhaps he was afraid that John, in his khaki, would be mistaken for the +commandant. + +How childish he was with his fear and jealousy. Childish. She thought of +his petulant refusal to let John come in with them. As if he could really +keep him out. When it came to action they _were_ one corps; they couldn't +very well be divided, since McClane had more men than stretchers and John +had more stretchers than men. They would all be infinitely happier, +working together like that, instead of standing stupidly apart, glaring +and hating. + +Yet she knew what McClane and Mrs. Rankin had been playing for. McClane, +if he could, would have taken their fine Roden cars from them; he would +have taken Sutton. She knew that Mrs. Rankin would have taken John from +her, Charlotte Redhead, if she could. + +And when she thought of the beautiful, arrogant woman, marching up to the +battlefield with John, she wondered whether, after all, she didn't hate +her.... No. No. It was horrible to hate a woman who at any minute might +be killed. They said McClane didn't look after his women. He didn't +care how they exposed themselves to the firing; he took them into +unnecessary danger. He didn't care. He was utterly cold, utterly +indifferent to everybody and everything except his work of getting in the +wounded.... Well, perhaps, if he had been decent to John, she wouldn't +have believed a word of it, and anyhow they hadn't come out there to be +protected. + +She had a vision of John and McClane carrying Mrs. Rankin between them on +a stretcher. That was what would happen if you hated. Hate could kill. + +Then John and she were safe. They were lovers. Lovers. Neither of them +had ever said a word, but they owned the wonderful, immaterial fact in +secret to each other; the thought of it moved in secret behind all their +other thoughts. From the moment, just passed, when they held each other's +hands she knew that John loved her, not in a dream, not in coldness, but +with a queer unearthly ardour. He had her in his incredible, immaterial +way, a way that none of them would understand. + +From the Barrow Hill Farm time? Or from yesterday? She didn't know. +Perhaps it had gone on all the time; but it would be only since yesterday +that he really knew it. + +A line of soldiers marched by, going up to the battlefield. They looked +at her and smiled, a flashing of bright eyes and teeth all down the line. +When they had passed the street was deserted. + +... That rattle on the stones was the firing. It had come at last. She +saw Gwinnie looking back round the corner of the hood to see what it was +like. She called to her, "Don't stick your head out, you silly cuckoo. +You'll be hit." She said to herself, If I think about it I shall feel +quite jumpy. It was one thing to go tearing along between two booming +batteries, in excitement, with an end in view, and quite another thing to +sit tight and still on a motionless car, to be fired on. A bit trying to +the nerves, she thought, if it went on long. She was glad that her car +stood next to the line of fire, sheltering Gwinnie's, and she wondered +how John was getting on up there. + +The hands of the ambulance clock pointed to half-past three. They had +been waiting forty minutes, then. She got down to see if any of the +stretcher bearers were in sight. + + * * * * * + +They were coming back. Straggling, lurching forms. White bandages. The +wounded who could walk came first. Then the stretchers. + +Alice Bartrum stopped as she passed Charlotte. The red had gone from her +sunburn, but her face was undisturbed. + +"You've got to wait here," she said, "for Mr. Conway and Sutty. And +Trixie and Mac. They mayn't be back for ages. They've gone miles up +the field." + +She waited. + +The front cars had been loaded, had driven off and returned three times. +It was six o'clock before John appeared with Mrs. Rankin. + +She heard Mrs. Rankin calling sharply to her to get down and give a hand +with the stretcher. + +John and Mrs. Rankin were disputing. + +_"Can't_ you shove it in at the bottom?" he was saying. + +_"No._ The first cases _must_ go on top." + +Her mouth snapped like a clamp. Her eyes were blazing. She was struggling +with the head of the stretcher while John heaved at the foot. He +staggered as he moved, and his face was sallow-white and drawn and +glistening. When Charlotte took the shafts from him they were slippery +with his sweat. + +"Is he hurt?" she whispered. + +"Very badly hurt," said Mrs. Rankin. + +"John, I mean." + +Mrs. Rankin snorted. "You'd better ask him." + +John was slouching round to the front of the car, anxious to get out of +the sight and sound of her. He went with an uneven dropping movement of +one hip. Charlotte followed him. + +"Get into your seat, Sharlie. We've got to wait for Billy and McClane." + +He dragged himself awkwardly into the place beside her. + +"John," she said, "are you hurt?" + +"No. But I think I've strained something. That's why I couldn't lift that +damned stretcher." + + * * * * * + +The windows stood wide open to the sweet, sharp air. She heard Mrs. +Rankin and Sutton talking on the balcony. In that dreadful messroom you +heard everything. + +"What do you suppose it was then?" Mrs. Rankin said. + +And Sutton, "Oh, I don't know. Something upset him." + +"If he's going to be upset _like that_ every time he'd better go home." + +They were talking--she knew they were talking about John. + +"Hallo, Charlotte, we haven't left you much tea." + +"It doesn't matter." + +Her hunger left her suddenly. She stared with disgust at the remains of +the tea the McClane Corps had eaten. + +Sutton went on. "He hasn't been sleeping properly. I've made him +go to bed." + +"If you can keep him in bed for the duration of the war--" + +"Are you talking about John?" + +"We are." + +"I don't know what you're driving at; but I suppose he was sick on +that beastly battlefield. It's all very well for you two; you're a +trained nurse and Billy's a surgeon.... You aren't taken that way when +you see blood." + +"Blood?" said Mrs. Rankin. + +"Yes. Blood. He was perfectly all right yesterday." + +Mrs. Rankin laughed. "Yesterday he couldn't see there was any danger. You +could tell that by the idiotic things he said." + +"I saw it. And if I could he could." + +"Funny kid. You'd better get on with your tea. You'll be sent out again +before you know where you are." + +Charlotte settled down. Sutton was standing beside her now, cutting bread +and butter. + +"Hold on," he said. "That tea's all stewed and cold. I'll make you +some of mine." + +She drank the hot, fragrant China tea he brought her. + +Presently she stood up. "I think I'll take John some of this." + +"Best thing you can give him," Sutton said. He got up and opened the +doors for her, the glass doors and the door of the bedroom. + +She sat down beside John's bed and watched him while he drank +Sutton's tea. He said he was all right now. No. He hadn't ruptured +anything; he only thought he had; but Sutton had overhauled him and +said he was all right. + +And all the time his face was still vexed and drawn. Something must have +happened out there; something that hurt him to think of. + +"John," she said, "I wish I'd gone with you instead of Mrs. Rankin." + +"I wish to God you had. Everything's all right when you're with me, and +everything's all wrong when you're not." + +"How do you mean, wrong?" + +He shook his head, frowning slightly, as a sign for her to stop. Sutton +had come into the room. + +"You needn't go," he said, "I've only come for my coat and my case. I've +got to help with the operations." + +He slipped into the white linen coat. There were thin smears of blood on +the sleeves and breast. He groped about the room, peering short-sightedly +for his case of instruments. + +"John, was Mrs. Rankin any good?" she asked presently. + +John lay back and closed his eyes as if to shut out the sight of +Mrs. Rankin. + +"Don't talk to me," he said, "about that horrible woman." + +Sutton had turned abruptly from his search. + +"Good?" he said. "She was magnificent. So was Miss Bartrum. So was +McClane." + +John opened his eyes. "So was Charlotte." + +"I quite agree with you." Sutton had found his case. His face was hidden +by the raised lid as he peered, examining his instruments. He spoke +abstractly. "Magnificent." + +When he left the room Charlotte followed him. + +"Billy--" + +"Well--" + +He stopped in his noiseless course down the corridor. + +"What was it?" she said. "What happened?" + +He didn't pretend not to understand her. + +"Oh, nothing. Conway and Mrs. Rankin didn't hit it off very well +together." + +They spoke in low, rapid tones, conscious, always, of the wards behind +the shut doors. Her feet went fast and noiseless beside his as he hurried +to the operating theatre. They came out on to the wide landing and waited +there by the brass lattice of the lift. + +"How do you mean, hit it off?" + +"Oh well, she thought he didn't come up quick enough with a stretcher, +and she pitched into him." + +"But he was dead beat. Done. Couldn't she see that?" + +"No. I don't suppose she could. She was a bit excited." + +"She was horrible." Now that Mrs. Rankin was back safe she hated her. She +knew she hated her. + +"A bit cruel, perhaps. All the same," he said, "she was magnif--" + +The lift had come hissing and wailing up behind him. The orderly stood in +it, staring at Sutton's back, obsequious, yet impatient. She thought of +the wounded men in the theatre downstairs. + +"You mustn't keep them waiting," she said. + +He stepped back into the lift. It lowered him rapidly. His chin was on a +level with the floor when his mouth tried again and succeeded: +"Magnificent." + +And she knew that she had followed him out to near him say that John had +been magnificent, too. + +Gwinnie was looking in at the messroom door and saying "Do you know where +Charlotte is?" Mrs. Rankin's voice called out, "I think you'll find her +in _Mr. Conway's_ bedroom." One of the chauffeurs laughed. Charlotte knew +what they were thinking. + +Gwinnie failed to retort. She was excited, shaken out of her stolidity. + +"Oh, there you are! I've got something ripping to tell you. Not in here." + +They slouched, with their arms slung affectionately round each other's +waists, into their own room. Behind the shut door Gwinnie began. + +"The Colonel's most frightfully pleased about Berlaere." + +"Does he think they'll hold it?" + +"It isn't that. He's pleased about you." + +"Me?" + +"You and John. What you did there. And your bringing back the guns." + +"Who told you that?" + +"Mac. The old boy was going on to him like anything about you last +night. It means you'll be sent out every time. Every time there's +anything big on." + +"Oh-h! Let's go and tell John.... I suppose," she added, "that's what was +the matter with Mrs. Rankin." + +She wondered whether it had been the matter with Billy Sutton too; if he +too were jealous and afraid. + +That night Mrs. Rankin told her what the Colonel really had said: "'C'est +magnifique, mais ce n'est pas--la Croix Rouge.' If you're all sent home +to-morrow it'll serve you jolly well right," she said. + +But somehow she couldn't make it sound as if he had been angry. + + + + +X + + +She waited. + +John had told her to stay there with the wounded man up the turn of the +stable yard while he went for the stretcher. His car, packed with +wounded, stood a little way up the street, headed for Ghent. Sutton's +car, with one of McClane's chauffeurs, was in front of it, ready; she +could hear the engine purring. + +Instead of going at once for the stretcher John had followed Sutton into +the house opposite, the house with the narrow grey shutters. And he had +called to her again across the road to wait for him. + +Behind her in the yard the wounded man sat on the cobblestones, his back +propped against the stable wall. He was safe there, safer than he would +have been outside in the ambulance. + +It was awful to think that he would have been left behind if they had not +found him at the last minute among the straw. + +She went and stood by the yard entrance to see whether John were coming +with the stretcher. A soldier came out of the house with the narrow +shutters, wounded, limping, his foot bound to a splint. Then Sutton came, +hurrying to help him. He shouted to her, "Come on, Charlotte, hurry up!" +and she called back, "I've got to wait here for John." + +She watched them go on slowly up the road to Sutton's car; she saw them +get in; she saw the car draw out and rush away. + +Then she saw John come out of the door of the house and stand there, +looking up and down the street. Once she saw him glance back over his +shoulder at something behind him in the room. The same instant she heard +the explosion and saw the shell burst in the middle of the street, not +fifty yards from the ambulance. Half a minute after she saw John dash +from the doorway and run, run at an incredible pace, towards his car. She +heard him crank up the engine. + +She supposed that he was going to back towards the yard, and she wondered +whether she could lift up the Belgian and carry him out. She stooped over +him, put her hands under his armpits, raising him and wondering. Better +not. He had a bad wound. Better wait for the stretcher. + +She turned, suddenly, arrested. The noise she heard was not the grating +noise of a car backing, it was the scream of a car getting away; it +dropped to a heavy whirr and diminished. + +She looked out. Up the road she saw John's car rushing furiously +towards Ghent. + +The Belgian had heard it. His eyes moved. Black hare's eyes, terrified. +It was not possible, he said, that they had been left behind? + +No, it was not possible. John had forgotten them; but he would +remember; he would come back. In five minutes. Seven minutes. She had +waited fifteen. + +The Belgian was muttering something. He complained of being left there. +He said he was not anxious about himself, but about Mademoiselle. +Mademoiselle ought not to have been left. She was sitting on the ground +now, beside him. + +"It'll be all right," she said. "He'll come back." When he remembered he +would come back. + +She had waited half an hour. + +Another shell. It had burst over there at the backs of the houses, beyond +the stable. + +She wondered whether it would be safer to drag her man across the street +under the wall of the Town Hall. They would be sure to aim at it and miss +it, whereas any minute they might hit the stable. + +At the moment while she wondered there was a third tremendous explosion, +the crash and roar of brickwork falling like coal down an enormous chute. +It came from the other side of the street a little way down. It couldn't +be far from the Town Hall. That settled it. Much better stay where they +were. The Belgian had put his arm round her, drawing her to him, away +from the noise and shock of the shell. + +It was clear now that John was not coming back. He had forgotten them. + +The Belgian's hold slackened; he dozed, falling against her and +recovering himself with a jerk and begging her pardon. She drew down his +head on to her shoulder and let it rest there. Her mind was soaked in the +smell of his rank breath, of the warm sweat that oozed through his tunic, +the hot, fetid smell that came through his unlaced boots. She didn't +care; she was too sorry for him. She could feel nothing but the helpless +pressure of his body against hers, nothing but her pity that hurt her and +was exquisite like love. Yesterday she had thought it would be good to +die with John. Now she thought it would be good to die with the wounded +Belgian, since John had left her there to die. + +And again, she had a vehement desire for life, a horror of the unjust +death John was bringing on them. + +But of course there wouldn't be any death. If nobody came she would walk +back to Ghent and bring out the ambulance. + +If only he had shouted to her to carry the wounded man and come. In the +minute between the concussion of the shell and the cranking of the +engine. But she could see him rushing. If only she knew _why_ he had left +them.... She wanted to get back to Ghent, to see John, to know. To know +if John--if John really _was_--Nothing could be worse than not knowing. + +It didn't matter so much his forgetting her. The awful thing was his +forgetting the wounded man. How could you forget a wounded man? When she +remembered the Belgian's terrified hare's eyes she hated John. + +And, as she sat there supporting his head with her shoulder, she thought +again. There must have been a wounded man in the house John had come out +of. Was it possible that he had forgotten him, too?... He hadn't +forgotten. She could see him looking back over his shoulder; looking at +something that was lying there, that couldn't be anything but a wounded +man. Or a dead man. Whatever it was, it had been the last thing he had +seen; the last thing he had thought of before he made his dash. It +wasn't possible that he had left a wounded man in there, alive. It was +not possible. + +And all the time while she kept on telling herself that it was not +possible she saw a wounded man in the room John had left; she saw his +head turning to the doorway, and his eyes, frightened; she felt his +anguish in the moment that he knew himself abandoned. Not forgotten. +Abandoned. + +She would have to go over to the house and see. She must know whether the +man was there or not there. She raised the Belgian's head, gently, from +her shoulder. She would have to wake him and tell him what she was going +to do, so that he mightn't think she had left him and be frightened. + +But the Belgian roused himself to a sudden virile determination. +Mademoiselle must _not_ cross the road. It was too dangerous. +Mademoiselle would be hit. He played on her pity with an innocent, +cunning cajolery. "Mademoiselle must not leave me. I do not want +to be left." + +"Only for one minute. One little minute. I think there's a wounded man, +like you, Monsieur, in that house." + +"Ah--h--A wounded man?" He seemed to acknowledge the integrity of her +purpose. "If only I were not wounded, if only I could crawl an inch, I +would go instead of Mademoiselle." + + * * * * * + +The wounded man lay on the floor of the room in his corner by the +fireplace where John had left him. His coat was rolled up under his head +for a pillow. He lay on his side, with humped hips and knees drawn up, +and one hand, half clenched, half relaxed, on his breast under the +drooped chin; so that at first she thought he was alive, sleeping. She +knelt down beside him and clasped his wrist; she unbuttoned his tunic +and put in her hand under his shirt above the point of his heart. He was +certainly dead. No pulse; no beat; no sign of breathing. Yet his body +was warm still, and limp as if with sleep. He couldn't have been dead +very long. + +And he was young. A boy. Not more than sixteen. John couldn't have left +him. + +She wasn't certain. She was no nearer certainty so long as she didn't +know when the boy had died. If only she knew-- + +They hadn't unfastened his tunic and shirt to feel over his heart if he +were dead. So he couldn't have been dead when they left him.... But there +was Sutton. Billy wouldn't have left him unless he had been dead. Her +mind worked rapidly, jumping from point to point, trying to find some +endurable resting place.... He was so young, so small, so light. Light. +It wouldn't take two to carry him. She could have picked him up and +carried him herself. Billy had had the lame man to look after. He had +left the boy to John. She saw John looking back over his shoulder. + +She got up and went through the house, through all the rooms, to see if +there were any more of them that John had left there. She felt tired out +and weak, sick with her belief, her fear of what John had done. The dead +boy was alone in the house. She covered his face with her handkerchief +and went back. + +The Belgian waited for her at the entrance to the yard. He had +dragged himself there, crawling on his hands and knees. He smiled +when he saw her. + +"I was coming to look for you, Mademoiselle." + +She had him safe beside her against the stable wall. He let his head rest +on her shoulder now, glad of the protecting contact. She tried not to +think about John. Something closed down between them. Black. Black; +shutting him off, closing her heart against him, leaving her heart hard +and sick. The light went slowly out of the street, out of the sky. The +dark came, the dark sounding with the "Boom--Boom" of the guns, lit with +spiked diamond flashes like falling stars. + +The Belgian had gone to sleep again when she heard the ambulance coming +down the street. + + * * * * * + +"Is that you, Charlotte?" + +"Billy--! What made you come?" + +"Conway. He's in a frantic funk. Said he'd lost you. He thought you'd +gone on with me." + +How awful it would be if Billy knew. + +"It was my fault," she lied. "He told me to go on with you." She could +hear him telling her to wait for him in the stable yard. + +"I'd have come before only I didn't see him soon enough. I had an +operation.... Is that a wounded man you've got there? I suppose he lost +him, too?" + +"He didn't know he was here." + +"I see." + +Then she remembered. Billy would know. Billy would tell her. + +"Billy--was that boy dead when you left him! The boy in the house +over there." + +He was stooping to the Belgian, examining his bandages, and he didn't +answer all at once. He seemed to be meditating. + +"Was he?" she repeated. + +It struck her that Billy was surprised. + +"Because--" She stopped there. She couldn't say to him, "I want to know +whether John left him dead or alive." + +"He was dead all right." Sutton's voice came up slow and muffled out of +his meditation. + +It was all right. She might have known. She might have known. Vaguely for +a moment she wondered why Billy had come for her and not John; then she +was frightened. + +"Billy--John isn't hurt, is he?" + +"No. Rather not. A bit done up. I made him go and lie down.... Look here, +we must get out of this." + + * * * * * + +The McClane Corps were gathered on their side of the messroom. They +greeted her with shouts of joy, but their eyes looked at her queerly, as +if they knew something dreadful had happened to her. + +"You should have stood in with us, Charlotte," Mrs. Rankin was saying. +"Then you wouldn't get mislaid among the shells." She was whispering. +"Dr. McClane, if you took Charlotte out among the shells, would you run +away and leave her there?" + +"I'd try not to." + +Oh yes. He wouldn't run away and leave her. But he wouldn't care where he +took her. He wouldn't care whether a shell got her or not. But John +cared. If only she knew _why_.... Their queer faces sobered her and +suddenly she knew. She saw Sutton coming out of the house with the narrow +shutters; she heard him shouting to her, "Come on, Charlotte, hurry up!" + +John must have heard him. He must really have thought that she had +gone with him. + +But he must have known, too, that she wouldn't go. He must have known +that if he told her to wait for him she would wait. So that-- + +The voices of the McClane women ceased abruptly. One of them turned +round. Charlotte saw John standing between the glasses of the two doors. +He came in and she heard Mrs. Rankin calling out in her hard, insolent +voice, "Well, Mr. Conway, so you've got in safe." + +She was always like that, hard and insolent, with her damned courage. As +if courage were ever anything more than just being decent, and as if +other people couldn't be decent too. She hated John because she couldn't +make him come to her, couldn't make him look with pleasure at her +beautiful, arrogant face. She disliked Sutton and McClane for the same +reason, but she hated John. He treated her face with a hardness and +insolence like her own. You could see her waiting for her revenge, +watching every minute for a chance to stick her blade into him. He was +pretending that he hadn't heard her. + +His hair stood up in pointed tufts, rumpled from his pillow. His eyes had +a dazed, stupid look as if he were not perfectly awake. But at the sound +of the rasping voice his mouth had tightened; it was pinched and sharp +with pain. He didn't look at Mrs. Rankin. He came to her, Charlotte +Redhead, straight; straight as if she had drawn him from his sleep. + +The McClane people got up, one after another, and went out. + +"Charlotte," he said, "did you really think I'd left you?" + +"I thought you'd left me. But I knew you hadn't." + +"You _knew_ it wasn't possible?" + +"Yes. Inside me I knew." + +"I'm awfully sorry. Sutton told me you were going on with him, and I +thought you'd gone." + + + + +XI + + +She would remember for ever the talk they had on the balcony that day +while Antwerp was falling. + +They were standing there, she and John Conway and Sutton, looking over +the station and the railway lines to the open country beyond: the fields, +the tall slender trees, the low mounds of the little hills, bristling and +dark. Round the corner of the balcony they could see into the _Place_ +below; it was filled with a thick black crowd of refugees. Antwerp was +falling. Presently the ambulance train would come in and they would have +to go over there to the station with their stretchers and carry out the +wounded. Meanwhile they waited. + +John brooded. His face was heavy and sombre with discontent. "No," he +said. "No. It isn't good enough." + +"What isn't?" + +"What we're doing here. Going to all those little tin-pot places. The +real fighting isn't down there. They ought to send us to Antwerp." + +"I suppose they send us where they think we're most wanted." + +"I don't believe they do. We were fools not to have insisted on going +to Antwerp, instead of letting ourselves be stuck here in a rotten +side show." + +"We've had enough to do, anyhow," said Sutton. + +"And there isn't anybody but us and Mac to do it," Charlotte said. + +John's eyebrows twisted. "Yes; but we're not _in_ it. I want to be in it. +In the big thing; the big dangerous thing." + +Sutton sighed and got up and left them. John waited for the closing +of the door. + +"Does it strike you," he said, "that Billy isn't very keen?" + +"No. It doesn't. What do you mean?" + +"I notice that he's jolly glad when he can get an indoor job." + +"That's because they're short of surgeons. He only wants to do what's +most useful." + +"I didn't say he had cold feet." + +"Of course he hasn't. Billy would go to Antwerp like a shot if they'd +let him. He feels just as we do about it. That's why he got up and +went away." + +"He'd go. But he wouldn't enjoy it." + +"Oh, don't talk about 'enjoying.'" + +"Sharlie, you don't mean to say that _you're_ not keen?" + +"No. It's only that I don't care as much as I did about what you call the +romance of it; and I do care more about the solid work. It seems to me +that it doesn't matter who does it so long as it's done." + +"I'd very much rather I did it than McClane. So would you." + +"Yes. I would. But I'd be sorry if poor little Mac didn't get any of it. +And all the time I know it doesn't matter which of us it is. It doesn't +matter whether we're in danger or out of danger, or whether we're in the +big thing or a little one." + +"Don't you want to be in the big thing?" + +"Yes. I _want_. But I know my wanting doesn't matter. I don't matter. +None of us matters." + +That was how she felt about it now that it had come to defeat, now that +Antwerp was falling. Yesterday they, she and John, had been vivid +entities, intensely real, living and moving in the war as in a +containing space that was real enough, since it was there, but real like +hell or heaven or God, not to be grasped or felt in its reality; only +the stretch of it that they covered was real, the roads round Ghent, the +burning villages, the places where they served, Berlaere and Melle, +Quatrecht and Zele; the wounded men. Yesterday her thoughts about John +had mattered, her doubt and fear of him and her pain; her agony of +desire that he should be, should be always, what she loved him for +being; and her final certainty had been the one important, the one real +thing. To-day she had difficulty in remembering all that, as if _they_ +hadn't really been. To-day they were unimportant to themselves and to +each other; small, not quite real existences, enveloped by an immense +reality that closed in on them; alive; black, palpitating defeat. It +made nothing of them, of their bodies nothing but the parts they worked +with: feet and hands. Nothing mattered, nothing existed but the war, and +the armies, the Belgian army, beaten. + +Antwerp was falling. And afterwards it would be Ghent, and then Ostend. +And then there would be no more Belgium. + +But John wouldn't hear of it. Ghent wouldn't fall. + +"It won't fall because it isn't a fortified city," she objected. "But +it'll surrender. It'll have to." + +"It won't. If the Germans come anywhere near we shall drive them back." + +"They _are_ near. They're all round in a ring with only a little narrow +opening up _there_. And the ring's getting closer." + +"It's easier to push back a narrow ring than a wide one." + +"It's easier to break through a thin ring than a thick one, and who's +going to push?" + +"We are. The British. We'll come pouring in, hundreds of thousands of us, +through that little narrow opening up there." + +"If we only would--" + +"Of course we shall. If I thought we wouldn't, if I thought we were going +to let the Belgians down, if we _betrayed_ them--My God! I'd kill +myself.... No. No, I wouldn't. That wouldn't hurt enough. I'd give up my +damned country and be a naturalized Belgian. Why, they trust us. They +_trust_ us to save Antwerp." + +"If we don't, that wouldn't be betrayal." + +"It would. The worst kind. It would be like betraying a wounded man; or a +woman. Like me betraying you, Jeanne. You needn't look like that. It's so +bad that it can't happen." + +Through the enveloping sadness she felt a prick of joy, seeing him so +valiant, so unbeaten in his soul. It supported her certainty. His soul +was so big that nothing could satisfy it but the big thing, the big +dangerous thing. He wouldn't even believe that Antwerp was falling. + + * * * * * + +She knew. She knew. There was not the smallest doubt about it any more. +She saw it happen. + +It happened in the village near Lokeren, the village whose name she +couldn't remember. The Germans had taken Lokeren that morning; they were +_in_ Lokeren. At any minute they might be in the village. + +You had to pass through a little town to get to it. And there they had +been told that they must not go on. And they had gone on. And in the +village they were told that they must go back and they had not gone back. +They had been given five minutes to get in their wounded and they had +been there three-quarters of an hour, she and John working together, and +Trixie Rankin with McClane and two of his men. + +Charlotte had been sorry for Sutton and Gwinnie and the rest of McClane's +corps who had not come out with them to this new place, but had been sent +back again to Melle where things had been so quiet all morning that they +hadn't filled their ambulances, and half of them had hung about doing +nothing. She had fretted at the stupidity which had sent them where they +were not wanted. But here there were not enough hands for the stretchers, +and Charlotte was wanted every second of the time. From the first minute +you could see what you were in for. + +The retreat. + +And for an instant, in the blind rush and confusion of it, she had lost +sight of John. She had turned the car round and left it with its nose +pointing towards Ghent. Trixie Rankin and the McClane men were at the +front cars taking out the stretchers; John and McClane were going up the +road. She had got out her own stretcher and was following them when the +battery came tearing down the road and cut them off. It tore headlong, +swerving and careening with great rattling and crashing noises. She could +see the faces of the men, thrown back, swaying; there was no terror in +them, only a sort of sullen anger and resentment. + +She stood on the narrow sandy track beside the causeway to let it pass, +and when a gap came in the train she dashed through to get to John. And +John was not there. When all the artillery had passed he was not there; +only McClane, going on up the middle of the street by himself. + +She ran after him and asked him what had happened to John. He turned, +dreamy and deliberate, utterly unperturbed. John, he said, had gone on to +look for a wounded man who was said to have been taken into one of those +houses there, on the right, in the lane. She went down the lane with her +stretcher and McClane waited for them at the top. The doors of the houses +were open; Flemish women stood outside, looking up to the street. There +was one house with a shut door, a tall green door; she thought that would +be the one that John had gone into. She rapped and he opened the door and +came striding out, holding his head high. He shut the door quietly and +looked at her, an odd look, piercing and grave. + +"Dead," he said. + +And when McClane met them he said it again, "Dead." + +The wounded were being brought down from Lokeren in trams that ran on to +a siding behind a little fir plantation outside the village. At the wide +top of the street a table of boards and trestles stood by the foot track, +and the stretchers were laid on it as they came in, and the wounded had +their first bandaging and dressings there. McClane took up his place by +this table, and the stretcher bearers went backwards and forwards between +the village and the plantation. + +Beyond the plantation the flagged road stretched flat and grey, then bent +in a deep curve, and on the wider sweep of the curve a row of tall, +slender trees stood up like a screen. + +It would be round the turn of the road under the trees that the Germans +would come when they came. You couldn't lose this sense of them, coming +on behind there, not yet seen, but behind, coming on, pursuing the +retreat of the batteries. Every now and then they found themselves +looking up towards the turn. The grey, bending sweep and the screen of +tall trees had a fascination for them, a glamour; and above the movements +of their hands and feet their minds watched, intent, excited, but without +fear. There was no fear in the village. The women came out of their +houses carrying cups of water for the men's thirst; they seemed to be +concerned, not with the coming of the Germans, but with the bringing in +of the wounded and the presence of the English ambulance in their street. + +And the four stretcher bearers came and went, from house to house and +between the village and the plantation, working, working steadily. Yet +they were aware, all the time, of the pursuing terror, behind the turn of +the road; they were held still in their intentness. Over all of them was +a quiet, fixed serenity. McClane's body had lost its eager, bustling +energy and was still; his face was grave, preoccupied and still; only +Trixie Rankin went rushing, and calling out to her quiet man in a fierce, +dominating excitement. + +And in John's face and in his alert body there was happiness, happiness +that was almost ecstasy; it ran through and shone from him, firm and +still, like a flame that couldn't go out. It penetrated her and made her +happy and satisfied and sure of him. She had seen it leap up in him as he +swung himself into the seat beside her when they started. He was +restless, restless every day until they were sent out; he couldn't wait +in peace before they had set off on the adventure, as if he were afraid +that at the last minute something would happen to dash his chance from +him. She couldn't find this passionate uneasiness in herself; she waited +with a stolid trust in the event; but she had something of his feeling. +After all, it was there, the romance, the fascination, the glamour; you +couldn't deny it any more than you could deny the beating of the blood in +your veins. It was their life. + +They had been in the village three quarters of an hour. John and +Charlotte waited while McClane at his table was putting the last bandage +on the last wound. In another minute they would be gone. It was then that +the Belgian Red Cross man came running to them. Had they taken a man with +a wound in his back? A bad wound? As big as that? No? Then he was still +here, and he had got to take him to the ambulance. No, he didn't know +where he was. He might be in one of those houses where they took in the +wounded, or he might be up there by the tramway in the plantation. Would +they take a stretcher and find him? _He_ had to go back to the tramway. +The last tram was coming in from Lokeren. He ran back, fussy and a little +frightened. + +John shouted out, "Hold on, McClane, there's another tram coming," and +set off up the street. They had taken all the men out of the houses; +therefore the man with the bad wound must have been left somewhere by the +plantation. They went there, carrying their stretcher, going, going up to +the last minute, in delight, in the undying thrill of the danger. + +The wounded man was not in the plantation. As they looked for him the +tram from Lokeren slid in, Red Cross men on the steps, clinging. The +doors were flung open and the wounded men came out, stumbling, falling, +pushing each other. Somebody cried, "No stretchers! Damned bad +management. With the Germans on our backs." A Red Cross man, with a +puffed white face, stood staring at John and Charlotte, stupefied. + +"Are they coming?" John said. + +"Coming? They'll be here in ten minutes--five minutes." He snarled, a +terrified animal. + +He had caught sight of their stretcher and snatched at it, thrusting out +his face, the face of a terrified animal, open mouth, and round, +palpitating eyes. He lifted his hand as though he would have struck at +Charlotte, but John pushed him back. He was brutalized, made savage and +cruel by terror; he had a lust to hurt. + +"You can't have our stretcher," Charlotte said. + +She could see they didn't want it. This was the last tram. The serious +cases had been sent on first. All these men could walk or hobble along +somehow with help. But they were the last in the retreat of the wounded; +they were the men who had been nearest to the enemy, and they had known +the extremity of fear. + +"You can't have it. It's wanted for a badly wounded man." + +"Where is he?" + +"We don't know. We're looking for him." + +"Ah, pah! We can't wait till you find him. Do you think we're going to +stand here to be taken?--For one man!" + +They went on through the plantation, stumbling and growling, dragging the +wounded out into the road. + +"If," Charlotte said, "we only knew where he was." + +John stood there silent; his head was turned towards the far end of the +wood, the Lokeren end. The terror of the wood held him. He seemed to be +listening; listening, but only half awake. + +Here, where the line stopped, a narrow track led downwards out of the +wood. Charlotte started to go along it. "Come on," she said. She saw him +coming, quickly, but with drawn, sleep-walking feet. The track led into a +muddy alley at the back of the village. + +There was a house there and a woman stood at the door, beckoning. She ran +up to them. "He's here," she whispered, "he's here." + +He lay on his side on the flagged floor of the kitchen. His shirt was +ripped open, and in his white back, below the shoulder blade, there was a +deep red wound, like a pit, with a wide mouth, gaping. He was ugly, a +Flamand; he had a puffed face with pushed out lips and a scrub of red +beard; but Charlotte loved him. + +They carried him out through the wood on to the road. He lay inert, +humped up, heavy. They had to go slowly, so slowly that they could +see the wounded and the Red Cross men going on far before them, down +the street. + +The flagged road swayed and swung with the swinging bulge of the +stretcher as they staggered. The shafts kept on slipping and slipping; +her grasp closed, tighter and tighter; her arms ached in their sockets; +but her fingers and the palms of her hands were firm and dry; they could +keep their hold. + +They had only gone a few yards along the road when suddenly John +stopped and sank his end of the stretcher, compelling Charlotte to +lower hers too. + +"What did you do that for?" + +"We can't, Charlotte. He's too damned heavy." + +"If I can, you can." + +He didn't move. He stood there, staring with his queer, hypnotised eyes, +at the man lying in the middle of the road, at the red pit in the white +back, at the wide, ragged lips of the wound, gaping. + +"For goodness' sake pick him up. It isn't the moment for resting." + +"Look here--it isn't good enough. We can't get him there in time." + +"You're--you're _not_ going to leave him!" + +"We've got to leave him. We can't let the whole lot be taken just +for one man." + +"We'll be taken if you stand here talking." + +He went on a step or two, slouching; then stood still, waiting for her, +ashamed. He was changed from himself, seized and driven by the fear that +had possessed the men in the plantation. She could see it in his +retreating eyes. + +She cried out--her voice sounded sharp and strange--"John--! You _can't_ +leave him." + +The wounded man who had lain inert, thinking that they were only resting, +now turned his head at her cry. She saw his eyes shaking, palpitating +with terror. + +"You've frightened him," she said. "I won't have him frightened." + +She didn't really believe that John was going. He went slowly, still +ashamed, and stopped again and waited for her. + +"Come back," she said, "this minute, and pick up that stretcher +and get on." + +"I tell you it isn't good enough." + +"Oh, go then, if you're such a damned coward, and send Mac to me. +Or Trixie." + +"They'll have gone." + +He was walking backwards, his face set towards the turn of the road. + +"Come on, you little fool. You can't carry him." + +"I can. And I shall, if Mac doesn't come." + +"You'll be taken," he shouted. + +"I don't care. If I'm taken, I'm taken. I shall carry him on my back." + +While John still went backwards she thought: It's all right. If he sees +I'm not coming he won't go. He'll come back to the stretcher. + +But John had turned and was running. + +Even then she didn't realise that he was running away, that she was left +there with the wounded man. Things didn't happen like that. People ran +away all of a sudden, in panics, because they couldn't help it; they +didn't begin by going slowly and stopping to argue and turning round and +walking backwards; they were gone before they knew where they were. She +believed that he was going for the ambulance. One moment she believed it +and the next she knew better. As she waited in the road (conscious of the +turn, the turn with its curving screen of tall trees) her knowledge, her +dreadful knowledge, came to her, dark and evil, creeping up and up. John +wasn't coming back. He would no more come back than he had come back the +other day. Sutton had come. The other day had been like to-day. John was +like that. + +Her mind stood still in amazement, seeing, seeing clearly, what John was +like. For a moment she forgot about the Germans. + +She thought: I don't believe Mac's gone. He wouldn't go until he'd got +them all in. Mac would come. + +Then she thought about the Germans again. All this was making it much +more dangerous for Mac and everybody, with the Germans coming round the +corner any minute; she had no business to stand there thinking; she must +pick that man up on her back and go on. + +She stooped down and turned him over on his chest. Then, with great +difficulty, she got him up on to his feet; she took him by the wrists +and, stooping again, swung him on to her shoulder. These acts, requiring +attention and drawing on all her energy, dulled the pain of her +knowledge. When she stood up with him she saw John and McClane coming to +her. She lowered her man gently back on to the stretcher. + +The Flamand, thinking that she had given it up and that he was now +abandoned to the Germans, groaned. + +"It's all right," she said. "He's coming." + +She saw McClane holding John by the arm, and in her pain there was a +sharper pang. She had the illusion of his being dragged back unwillingly. + +McClane smiled as he came to her. He glanced at the Flamand lying heaped +on his stretcher. + +"He's been too much for you, has he?" + +"Too much--? Yes." + +Instantly she saw that John had lied, and instantly she backed his lie. +She hated McClane thinking she had failed; but anything was better than +his knowing the truth. + +John and McClane picked up the stretcher and went on quickly. Charlotte +walked beside the Flamand with her hand on his shoulder to comfort him. +Again her pity was like love. + +From the top of the village she could see the opening of the lane. Down +there was the house with the tall green door where the dead man was. John +had _said_ he was dead. + +Supposing he wasn't? Or supposing he was still warm and limp like the boy +at Melle? She must know; it was a thing she must know for certain, or she +would never have any peace. And when the Flamand was laid out on +McClane's table, while McClane dressed his wound, she slipped down the +lane and opened the green door. + +The man lay on a row of packing cases with his feet parted. She put one +hand over his heart and the other on his forehead under the lock of +bloodstained hair. He was dead: stiff dead and cold. His tunic and shirt +had been unbuttoned to ease his last breathing. She had a queer baffled +feeling of surprise and incompleteness, as if some awful sense in her +would have been satisfied if she had seen that he had been living when +John had said that he was dead. To-day would then have been linked on +firmly to the other day. + +John stood at the top of the lane. He scowled at her as she came. + +"What do you think you're doing!" he said. + +"I went to that house--to see if the man was dead." + +"You'd no business to. I told you he was dead." + +"I wanted to make sure." + + * * * * * + +That evening she had just gone to her room when somebody knocked at her +door. McClane stood outside, straddling, his way when he had got +something important on hand. He asked if he might come in and speak to +her for a minute. + +She sat down on the edge of her bed and he sat on Gwinnie's, elbows +crooked out, hands planted on wide parted knees; he leaned forward, +looking at her, his face innocent and yet astute; his thick, +expressionless eyes clear now and penetrating. He seemed to be fairly +humming with activity left over from the excitement of the day. He was +always either dreamy and withdrawn, or bursting, bursting with energy, +and at odd moments he would drop off suddenly to sleep with his chin +doubled on his breast, recovering from his energy. Perhaps he had just +waked up now to this freshness. + +"Look here," he said. "You didn't break down. That man wasn't too +heavy for you." + +"He was. He was an awful weight. I couldn't have carried him a yard." + +"That won't do, Charlotte. I _saw_ you take him on your back." + +She could feel the blood rising up in her face before him. He was hurting +her with shame. + +He persisted, merciless. "It was Conway who broke down." + +She had tears now. + +"Nobody knows," he said gently, "but you and me.... I want to talk to +you about him. He must be got away from the Front. He must be got out +of Belgium." + +"You always wanted to get him away." + +"Only because I saw he would break down." + +"How could you tell?" + +"I'm a psychotherapist. It's my business to tell." + +But she was still on the defensive. + +"You never liked him." + +"I neither like nor dislike him. To me Conway is simply a sick man. If I +could cure him--" + +"Can't you?" + +"Not as you think. I can't turn his cowardice into courage. I might turn +it into something else but not that. That's why I say he ought to go +home. You must tell him." + +"I can't. Couldn't Billy tell him?" + +"Well, hardly. He's his commandant." + +"Can't _you_?" + +"Not I. You know what he thinks about me." + +"What?" + +"That I've got a grudge against him. That I'm jealous of him. You thought +it yourself." + +"Did I?" + +"You did. Look here, I say--I wanted to take you three into my corps. And +you'd have been sent home after the Berlaere affair if I hadn't spoken +for you. So much for my jealousy." + +"I only thought you were jealous of John." + +"Why, it was I who got him sent out that first day." + +"_Was_ it?" + +"Yes. I wanted to give him his chance. And," he added meditatively, "I +wanted to know whether I was right. I wanted to see what he would do." + +"I don't think it now," she said, reverting. + +"_That's_ all right." + +He laughed his brief, mirthless laugh, the assent of his egoism. But his +satisfaction had nothing personal in it. He was pleased because justice, +abstract justice, had been done. But she suspected his sincerity. He did +things for you, not because he liked you, but for some other reason; and +he would be so carried away by doing them that he would behave as though +he liked you when he didn't, when all the time you couldn't for one +minute rouse him from his immense indifference. She knew he liked her for +sticking to her post and for taking the wounded man on her back, because +that was the sort of thing he would have done himself. And he had only +helped John because he wanted to see what he would do. Therefore she +suspected his sincerity. + +But, no; he wasn't jealous. + +"And now," he went on, "you must get him to go home at once, or he'll +have a bad break-down. You've got to tell him, Charlotte." + +She stood up, ready. "Where is he?" + +"By himself. In his room." + +She went to him there. + +He was sitting at his little table. He had been trying to write a letter, +but he had pushed it from him and left it. You could see he was absorbed +in some bitter meditation. She seated herself at the head of his bed, on +his pillow, where she could look down at him. + +"John," she said, "you can't go on like this--" + +"Like what?" + +He held his head high; but the excited, happy light had gone out of his +eyes; they stared, not as though they saw anything, but withdrawn, as +though he were contemplating the fearful memory of his fear. + +And she was sorry for him, so sorry that she couldn't bear it. She bit +her lip lest she should sob out with pain. + +"Oh--" she said, and her pain stopped her. + +"I don't know what you're talking about--'going on like this.' +I'm--going--on." + +"What's the good? You've had enough. If I were you I should go home. You +know you can't stand it." + +"What? Go and leave my cars to Sutton?" + +"McClane could take them." + +"I don't know how long McClane signed on for. _I_ signed on for the +duration of the war." + +"There wasn't any signing on." + +"Well, if you like, I swore I wouldn't go back till it was over." + +"Yes, and supposing it happens again." + +"What _should_ happen again?" + +"What happened this afternoon.... And it wasn't the first time." + +"Do you _know_ what happened?" + +"I _saw_ what happened. You simply went to pieces." + +"My dear Charlotte, _you_ went to pieces, if you like." + +"I know that's what you told Mac. And _he_ knows how true it is." + +"Does he? Well--he shan't have my ambulances. You don't suppose I'm +going to let McClane fire me out of Belgium?... I suppose he put you up +to this...." + +He stood up as a sign to her to leave him. "I don't see that there's +anything more to be said." + +"There's one thing." (She slid to her feet.) "_You_ swore you'd stick +till the war's over. _I_ swore, if I had to choose between you and the +wounded, it shouldn't be you." + +"You haven't got to choose. You've only got to obey orders...." + +His face stiffened. He looked like some hard commander imposing an +unanswerable will. + +"... The next time," he said, "you'll be good enough to remember that I +settle what risks are to be taken, not you." + +Her soul stiffened, too, and was hard. She stood up against him with her +shoulder to the door. + +"It sounds all right," she said. "But the _next time_ I'll carry him on +my back all the way." + + * * * * * + +She went to bed with her knowledge. He funked and lied. The two things +she couldn't stand. His funk and his lying were a real part of him. And +it was as if she had always known it, as if all the movements of her mind +had been an effort to escape her knowledge. + +She opened her eyes. Something hurt them. Gwinnie, coming late to bed, +had turned on the electric light. And as she rolled over, turning her +back to the light and to Gwinnie, her mind shifted. It saw suddenly the +flame leaping in John's face. His delight in danger, that happiness he +felt when he went out to meet it, happiness springing up bright and new +every day; that was a real part of him. She couldn't doubt it. She knew. +And she was left with her queer, baffled sense of surprise and +incompleteness. She couldn't see the nature of the bond between these two +realities. + +That was his secret, his mystery. + + + + +XII + + +She woke very early in the morning with one clear image in her mind: what +John had done yesterday. + +Her mind seemed to have watched all night behind her sleep to attack her +with it in the first moment of waking. She had got to come to a clear +decision about that. If Billy Sutton had done it, or one of McClane's +chauffeurs, her decision would have been very clear. She would have said +he was a filthy coward and dismissed him from her mind. But John couldn't +be dismissed. His funk wasn't like other people's funk. Coupled with his +ecstatic love of danger it had an unreal, fantastic quality. Somehow she +couldn't regard his love of danger as an unreal, fantastic thing. It had +come too near her; it had moved her too profoundly and too long; she had +shared it as she might have shared his passion. + +So that, even in the sharp, waking day she felt his fear as a secret, +mysterious thing. She couldn't account for it. She didn't, considering +the circumstances, she didn't judge the imminence of the Germans to be a +sufficient explanation. It was as incomprehensible to-day as it had been +yesterday. + +But there was fear and fear. There was the cruel, animal fear of the +Belgians in the plantation, fear that was dark to itself and had no +sadness in it; and there was John's fear that knew itself and was sad. +The unbearable, inconsolable sadness of John's fear! After all, you could +think of him as a gentle thing, caught unaware in a trap and tortured. +And who was she to judge him? She in her "armour" and he in his coat of +nerves. His knowledge and his memory of his fear would be like a raw open +wound in his mind; and her knowledge of it would be a perpetual irritant, +rubbing against it and keeping up the sore. Last night she hadn't done +anything to heal him; she had only hurt.... And if she gave John up his +wound would never heal. She owed a sort of duty to the wound. + +Of course, like John, she would go on remembering what had happened +yesterday. She would never get over it any more than he would. Yet, +after all, yesterday was only one day out of his life. There might never +be another like it. And to set against yesterday there was their first +day at Berlaere and the day afterwards at Melle; there was yesterday +morning and there was that other day at Melle. She had no business to +suppose that he had done then what he did yesterday. They had settled +that once for all at the time, when he said Billy Sutton had told him +she was going back with him. It all hung on that. If that was right, the +rest was right.... + +Supposing Billy hadn't told him anything of the sort, though? She would +never know that. She couldn't say to Billy: "_Did_ you tell John I was +going back with you? Because; if you didn't--" She would have to leave +that as it was, not quite certain.... And she couldn't be quite certain +whether the boy had been dead or alive. And ... No. She couldn't get over +it, John's cowardice. It had destroyed the unique, beautiful happiness +she had had with him. + +For it was no use saying that courage, physical courage, didn't count. +She could remember a long conversation she had had with George Corfield, +the man who wanted to marry her, about that. He had said courage was the +least thing you could have. That only meant that, whatever else you +hadn't, you must have that. It was a sort of trust. You were trusted not +to betray defenceless things. A coward was a person who betrayed +defenceless things. George had said that the world's adoration of courage +was the world's cowardice, its fear of betrayal. That was a question for +cowards to settle among themselves. The obligation not to betray +defenceless things remained. It was so simple and obvious that people +took it for granted; they didn't talk about it. They didn't talk about it +because it was so deep and sacred, like honour and like love; so that, +when John had talked about it she had always felt that he was her lover, +saying the things that other men might not say, things he couldn't have +said to any other woman. + +It was inconceivable that he--It couldn't have happened. As he had said +of the defeat of Belgium, it was so bad that it couldn't happen. Odd, +that the other day she had accepted at once a thing she didn't know for +certain, while now she fought fiercely against a thing she knew; and +always the memory of it, returning, beat her down. + +She had to make up her mind on what terms she would live with it and +whether she would live with it at all. Supposing it happened again? +Supposing you had always to go in fear of its happening?... It mightn't +happen. Funk might be a thing that attacked you like an illness, or like +drink, in fits, with long, calm intervals between. She wondered what it +would feel like to be subject to attacks. Perhaps you would recover; you +would be on the look-out, and when you felt another fit coming on you +could stave it off or fight it down. And the first time wouldn't count +because you had had no warning. It wouldn't be fair to give him up +because of the first time. + +He would have given her up, he would have left her to the Germans--Yes; +but if she broke with him now she would never get beyond that thought, +she would never get beyond yesterday; she would always see it, the +flagged road swinging with the swinging bulge of the stretcher, the +sudden stopping, the Flamand with his wound, the shafts of the stretcher, +suddenly naked, sticking out; and then all the fantastic, incredible +movements of John's flight. Her mind would separate from him on that, +closing everything down, making his act eternal. + +And, after all, the Germans hadn't come round the corner. Perhaps he +wouldn't have left her if they had really come. How did she know what he +wouldn't have done? + +No. That was thin. Thin. She couldn't take herself in quite in that way. +It was the way she had tried with Gibson Herbert. When he did anything +she loathed she used to pretend he hadn't done it. But with John, if she +didn't give him up, her eyes must always be open. Perhaps they would get +beyond yesterday. Perhaps she would see other things, go on with him to +something new, forgetting. Her unique, beautiful happiness was smashed. +Still, there might be some other happiness, beautiful, though not with +the same beauty. + +If John had got the better of his fear--She thought of all the men she +had ever heard of who had done that, coming out in the end heroic, +triumphant. + + * * * * * + +Three things, three little things that happened that morning, that showed +the way his mind was working. Things that she couldn't get over, that she +would never forget. + +John standing on the hospital steps, watching Trixie Rankin and Alice +Bartrum as they started with the ambulances; the fierce fling of his +body, turning away. + +His voice saying, "I loathe those women. There's Alice Bartrum--I saw her +making eyes at Sutton over a spouting artery. As for Mrs. Rankin they +ought to intern her. She oughtn't to be allowed within ten miles of any +army. That's one thing I like about McClane. He can't stand that sort of +thing any more than I can." + +"How about Gwinnie and me?" + +"Gwinnie hangs her beastly legs about all over the place. So do you." + +John standing at the foot of the stairs, looking at the Antwerp men. +Their heads and faces were covered with a white mask of cotton wool like +a diver's helmet, three small holes in each white mask for mouth and +eyes. They were the men whose faces had been burned by fire at Antwerp. + +"Come away," she said. But he still stood, fascinated, hypnotised by the +white masks. + +"If I were to stick there, doing nothing, looking at the wounded, I +should go off my head." + +"My God! So should I. Those everlasting wounds. They make you dream +about them. Disgusting dreams. I never really see the wound, but I'm +just going to see it. I know it's going to be more horrible than any +wound I've ever seen. And then I wake.... That's why I don't look at +them more than I can help." + +"You're looking at them now," she said. + +"Oh, them. That's nothing. Cotton wool." + +And she, putting her hand on his arm to draw him up the stairs, away. +John shaking her hands off and his queer voice rising. "I wish you +wouldn't do that, Charlotte. You know I hate it." + +He had never said anything to her like that before. It hadn't struck her +before that, changed to himself, he would change to her. He hadn't got +over last night. She had hurt him; her knowledge of his cowardice hurt +him; and this was how he showed his pain. + +She thought: Here's Antwerp falling and Belgium beaten. And all those +wounded. And the dead.... And here am I, bothering about these little +things, as if they mattered. Three little things. + + * * * * * + +The fire from the battlefield had raked the village street as they came +in; but it had ceased now. The cure had been through it all, going up and +down, helping with the stretchers. John was down there in the wine-shop, +where the soldiers were, looking for more wounded. + +They had found five in the stable yard, waiting to be taken away; they +had moved four of them into the ambulance. The fifth, shot through the +back of his head, still lay on the ground on a stretcher that dripped +blood. Charlotte stood beside him. + +The cure came to her there. He was slender and lean in his black cassock. +He had a Red Cross brassard on his sleeve, and in one hand he carried his +missal and in the other the Host and the holy oils in a little bag of +purple silk. He looked down at the stretcher and he looked at Charlotte, +smiling faintly. + +"Where is Monsieur?" he said. + +"In the wine-shop, looking for wounded." + +She thought: He isn't looking, for them. He's skulking there, out of the +firing. He'll always be like that. + +It had begun again. The bullets whistled in the air and rapped on the +stone causeway, and ceased. The cure glanced down the street towards the +place they had come from and smiled again. + +She liked his lean dark face and the long lines that came in it when it +smiled. It despised the firing, it despised death, it despised everything +that could be done to him there. And it was utterly compassionate. + +"Then," he said, "it is for you and me to carry him, Mademoiselle." He +stooped to the stretcher. + +Between them they lifted him very slowly and gently into the ambulance. + +"There, Monsieur, at the bottom." + +At the bottom because of the steady drip, drip, that no bandaging could +staunch. He lay straight and stiff, utterly unconcerned, and his feet in +their enormous boots, slightly parted, stuck out beyond the stretcher. +The four others sat in a row down one side of the car and stared at him. + +The cure climbed in after him, carrying the Host. He knelt there, +where the blood from the smashed head oozed through the bandages and +through the canvas of the stretchers to the floor and to the skirts of +his cassock. + +The Last Sacrament. Charlotte waited till it was over, standing stolidly +by the tail of the car. She could have cried then because of the sheer +beauty of the cure's act, even while she wondered whether perhaps the +wafer on his tongue might not choke the dying man. + +The cure hovered on the edge of the car, stooping with a certain +awkwardness; she took from him his missal and his purple bag as he +gathered his cassock about him and came down. + +"Can I do anything, Monsieur?" + +"No, Mademoiselle. It _is_ done." + +His eyes smiled at her; but his lips were quivering as he took again +his missal and his purple bag. She watched him going on slowly down the +street till he turned into the wine-shop. She wondered: Had he seen? +Did he know why John was there? In another minute John came out, +hurrying to the car. + +He glanced down at the blood stains by the back step; then he looked in; +and when he saw the man lying on the stretcher he turned on her in fury. + +"What are you thinking of? I told you you weren't to take him." + +"I had to. I couldn't leave him there. I thought--" + +"You've no business to think." + +"Well, but the cure--" + +"The cure doesn't know anything about it." + +"I don't care. If he's in a clean bed--if they take his boots off--" + +"I told you they can't spare clean beds for corpses. He'll be dead before +you can get him there." + +"Not if we're quick." + +"Nonsense. We must get him out of that." + +He seized the handle of the stretcher and began pulling; she hung on to +his arm and stopped that. + +"No. No," she said. "You shan't touch him." + +He flung her arm off and turned. "You fool," he said. "You fool." + +She looked at him steadily, a long look that remembered, that made +him remember. + +"There isn't time," she said. "They'll begin _firing_ in another minute." + +"Damn you." But he had turned, slinking round the corner of the hood to +the engine. While he cranked it up she thought of the kit that one of the +men had left there in the yard. She made a dash and fetched it, and as +she threw it on the floor the car started. She snatched at the rope and +swung herself up on to the step. The dying man lay behind her, straight +and stiff; his feet in their heavy boots stuck out close under her hand. + +The four men nodded and grinned at her. They protected her. They +understood. + +If only she could get him into a clean bed. If only she had had time +to take his boots off. It would be all right if only she could bring +him in alive. + +He was still alive when they got into Ghent. + +She had forgotten John and it was not until they came to take out the +stretcher that she was again aware of him. They had drawn up before the +steps of the hospital; he had got down and was leaning sideways, staring +under the stretcher. + +"What is it?" + +"You can see what it is. Blood." + +From the hole in the man's head, through the soaked bandages, it still +dripped, dripped with a light sound; it had made a glairy pool on the +floor of the ambulance. + +"Don't look at it," she said. "It'll make you sick. You know you can't +stand it." + +"Oh. I can't _stand_ it, can't I?" + +He straightened himself. He threw back his head; his upper lip lifted, +stretched tight and thin above the clean white teeth. His eyes looked +down at her, narrowed, bright slits under dropped lids. + +"John--I want to get him in before he dies." + +"All right. Get in under there. Take his head." + +"Hadn't I better take his feet?" + +"You'd better take what you're told to." + +She stiffened to the weight, heaved up her shoulder. Two men came running +down the steps to help her as John pulled. + +"They'll be glad," he said, "to see him." + + * * * * * + +She was in the yard of the hospital, swabbing out the car, when John +came to her. + +The back and side of the hospital, the long barracks of the annex and the +wall at the bottom enclosed a waste place of ochreish clay. A long wooden +shed, straw-white and new, was built out under the red brick of the +annex. She thought it was a garage. John came out of the door of the +shed. He beckoned to her as he came. + +"Come here," he said. "I want to show you something." + +They went close together, John gripping her arm, in the old way, to steer +her. As they came to the long wall of the shed his eyes slewed round and +looked at her out of their corners. She had seen that sidelong, attentive +look once before, when she was a little girl, in the eyes of a schoolboy +who had taken her away and told her something horrid. The door of the +shed stood ajar. John half led, half pushed her in. + +"Look there--" he said. + +The dead men were laid out in a row, on their backs; greyish-white, +sallow-white faces upturned; bodies straight and stiff on a thin litter +of straw. Pale grey light hovered, filtered through dust. + +It came from some clearer place of glass beyond that might have been a +carpenter's shop, partitioned off. She couldn't see what was going on +there. She didn't see anything but the dead bodies, the dead faces, and +John's living face. + +He leaned against the wall; his head was thrown back, his eyes moved +glistening under the calm lids; the corners of his mouth and the wings of +his nostrils were lifted as he laughed: a soft, thin laugh breathed out +between the edges of his teeth. He pointed. + +"There's your man. Shows how much they wanted him, doesn't it?" + +He lay there, the last comer, in his uniform and bloody bandages, his +stiff, peaked mouth open, his legs stretched apart as they had sprung in +his last agony. + +"Oh, John--" + +She cried out in her fright and put her hands over her eyes. She had +always been afraid of the dead bodies. She didn't want to know where they +put them, and nobody told her. + +John gripped her wrists so that he hurt her and dragged down her hands. +He looked into her eyes, still laughing. + +"I thought you weren't afraid of anything," he said. + +"I'm not afraid when we're out there. I'm only afraid of _seeing_ them. +You know I am." + +She turned, but he had put himself between her and the door. She wrenched +at the latch, sobbing. + +"How could you be so _cruel?_ What did you do it for? What did you +_do_ it for?" + +"I wanted you to see what they've done with him. There's his clean bed. +They haven't even taken his boots off." + +"You brute. You _utter_ brute!" + +A steely sound like a dropped hammer came from behind the glass +partition; then the sliding of a latch. John opened the door a little way +and she slipped out past him. + +"_Next time_," he said, "perhaps you'll do as you're told." + +She wanted to get away by herself. Not into her own room, where Gwinnie, +who had been unloading ambulance trains half the night, now rested. The +McClane Corps was crowding into the messroom for tea. She passed through +without looking at any of them and out to the balcony, closing the French +window behind her. She could hide there beyond the window where the wall +was blank. + +She leaned back, flattening herself against the wall.... + +Something would have to be done. They couldn't go on like this.... Her +mind went to and fro, quickly, with short jerky movements, distressed; it +had to do so much thinking in so short a time. + +She would always have to reckon with John's fear. And John's fear was not +what she had thought it, a sad, helpless, fatal thing, sad because it +knew itself doom-like and helpless. It was cruel, with a sort of mental +violence in it, worse than the cruel animal fear of the men in the +plantation. She could see that his cowardice had something to do with his +cruelty and that his cruelty was somehow linked up with his cowardice; +but she couldn't for the life of her imagine the secret of the bond. She +only felt that it would be something secret and horrible; something that +she would rather not know about. + +And she knew that since yesterday he had left off caring for her. His +love had died a sudden, cruel and violent death. His cowardice had done +that too.... And he had left off caring for the wounded. It was almost as +if he hated them, because they lay so still, keeping him back, keeping +him out under the fire. + +Queer, but all those other cowardly things that he had done had seemed to +her unreal even when she had seen him doing them; and afterwards when she +thought about them they were unreal, as if they hadn't happened, as if +she had just imagined them. Incredible, and yet the sort of thing you +_could_ imagine if you tried. But that last devilish thing he did, it had +a hard, absolute reality. Just because it was inconceivable, because you +couldn't have imagined it, you couldn't doubt that it had happened. + +It was happening now. As long as she lived it would go on happening in +her mind. She would never get away from it. + +There were things that men did, bestial things, cruel things, things they +did to women. But not things like this. They _didn't_ think of them, +because this thing wasn't thinkable. + +Why had John done it? Why? She supposed he wanted to hurt her and +frighten her because he had been hurt, because he had been frightened. +And because he knew she loved her wounded men. Perhaps he wanted to make +her hate him and have done with it. + +Well, she did hate him. Oh, yes, she hated him. + +She heard the window open and shut and a woman's footsteps swishing on +the stone floor. Trixie Rankin came to her, with her quick look that fell +on you like a bird swooping. She stood facing her, upright and stiff in +her sharp beauty; her lips were pressed together as though they had just +closed on some biting utterance; but her eyes were soft and intent. + +"What's he done this time?" she said. + +"He hasn't done anything." + +"Oh yes, he has. He's done something perfectly beastly." + +It was no use lying to Trixie. She knew what he was like, even if she +didn't know about yesterday, even if she didn't know what he had done +now. Nobody could know that. She looked straight at Trixie, with broad, +open eyes that defied her to know. + +"What makes you think so?" + +"Your face." + +"Damn my face. It's got nothing to do with you, Trixie." + +"Yes it has. If it gives the show away I can't help seeing, can I?" + +"You can help talking." + +"Yes, I can help talking." + +The arrogance had gone out of her face. It could change in a minute from +the face of a bird of prey to the face of a watching angel. It looked at +her as it looked at wounded men: tender and protective. But Trixie +couldn't see that you didn't want any tenderness and protection just +then, or any recognition of your wound. + +"You rum little blighter," she said. "Come along. Nobody's going to +talk." + +There was a stir as Charlotte went in; people shifting their places to +make room for her; McClane calling out to her to come and sit by him; +Alice Bartrum making sweet eyes; the men getting up and cutting bread and +butter and reaching for her cup to give it her. She could see they were +all determined to be nice, to show her what they thought of her; they had +sent Trixie to bring her in. There was something a little deliberate +about it and exaggerated. They were getting it up--a demonstration in her +favour, a demonstration against John Conway. + +She talked; but her thoughts ran by themselves on a line separate from +her speech. + +"We got in six wounded." ... "That cure was there again. He was +splendid." ... They didn't know anything. They condemned him on the +evidence of her face, the face she had brought back to them, coming +straight from John. Her face had the mark of what he had done to +her.... "Much firing? Not so very much." ... She remembered what he had +said to her about her face. "Something's happened to it. Some cruelty. +Some damnable cruelty...." + +"We'll have to go out there again." + +They were all listening, and Alice Bartrum had made fresh tea for her; +McClane was setting down her cup. She was thirsty; she longed for the +fresh, fragrant tea; she was soothed by the kind, listening faces. +Suddenly they drew away; they weren't listening any more. John had come +into the room. + +It flashed on her that all these people thought that John was her lover, +her lover in the way they understood love. They were looking at him as if +they hated him. But John's face was quiet and composed and somehow +triumphant; it held itself up against all the hostile faces; it fronted +McClane and his men as their equal; it was the face of a man who has +satisfied a lust. His whole body had a look of assurance and +accomplishment, as if his cruelty had given him power. + +And with it all he kept his dreadful beauty. It hurt her to look at him. + +She rose, leaving her tea untasted, and went out of the room. She +couldn't sit there with him. She had given him up. Her horror of him was +pure, absolute. It would never return on itself to know pity or remorse. + + + + +XIII + + +And the next day, as if nothing had happened, he was excited and eager to +set out. He could sleep off his funk in the night, like drink, and get up +in the morning as if it had never been. He was more immune from memory +than any drunkard. He woke to his romance as a child wakes to the renewed +wonder of the world. It was so real to him that, however hardly you +judged him, you couldn't think of him as a humbug or a hypocrite.... No. +He was not that. He was not that. His mind truly lived in a glorious +state for which none of his disgraceful deeds were ever done. It created +a sort of innocence for him. She could forgive him (even after +yesterday), she could almost believe in him again when she saw him coming +down the hall to the ambulance with his head raised and his eyes shining, +gallant and keen. + +They were to go to Berlaere. Trixie Rankin had gone on before them with +Gurney, McClane's best chauffeur. McClane and Sutton were at Melle. + +They had not been to Berlaere since that day, the first time they had +gone out together. That time at least had been perfect; it remained +secure; nothing could ever spoil it; she could remember the delight of +it, their strange communion of ecstasy, without doubt, without misgiving. +You could never forget. It might have been better if you could, instead +of knowing that it would exist in you forever, to torment you by its +unlikeness to the days, the awful, incredible days that had come +afterwards. There was no way of thinking that John had been more real +that day than he had been yesterday. She was simply left with the +inscrutable mystery of him on her hands. But she could see clearly that +he was more real to himself. Yesterday and the day before had ceased to +exist for him. He was back in his old self. + +There was only one sign of memory that he gave. He was no longer her +lover; he no longer recognised her even as his comrade. He was her +commandant. It was his place to command, and hers to be commanded. He +looked at her, when he looked at her at all, with a stern coldness. She +was a woman who had committed some grave fault, whom he no longer +trusted. So masterly was his playing of this part, so great, in a way, +was still his power over her, that there were moments when she almost +believed in the illusion he created. She had committed some grave fault. +She was not worthy of his trust. Somewhere, at some time forgotten, in +some obscure and secret way, she had betrayed him. + +She had so mixed her hidden self with his in love that even now, with all +her knowledge of him, she couldn't help feeling the thing as he felt it +and seeing as he saw. Her mind kept on passing in and out of the illusion +with little shocks of astonishment. + +And yet all the time she was acutely aware of the difference. When she +went out with him she felt that she was going with something dangerous +and uncertain. She knew what fear was now. She was afraid all the time of +what he would do next, of what he would not do. Her wounded were not safe +with him. Nothing was safe. + +She wished that she could have gone out with Billy; with Billy there +wouldn't be any excitement, but neither would there be this abominable +fear. On the other hand you couldn't let anybody else take the risk of +John; and you couldn't, you simply couldn't let him go alone. Conceive +him going alone--the things that might happen; she could at least see +that some things didn't. + +It was odd, but John had never shown the smallest desire to go without +her. If he hadn't liked it he could easily have taken Sutton or Gwinnie +or one of the McClane men. It was as if, in spite of his hostility, he +still felt, as he had said, that where she was everything would be right. + +And it looked as if this time nothing could go wrong. When they came into +the village the firing had stopped; it was concentrating further east +towards Zele. Trixie's ambulance was packed, and Trixie was excited and +triumphant. + +Her gestures waved them back as useless, much too late; without them she +had got in all the wounded. But in the end they took over two of them, +slight cases that Trixie resigned without a pang. She had had to turn +them out to make room for poor Gurney, the chauffeur, who had hurt +himself, ruptured something, slipping on a muddy bank with his stretcher. + +Mr. Conway, she said, could drive her back to Ghent and Charlotte could +follow with the two men. She had settled it all, in her bright, +domineering way, in a second, and now swung herself up on the back step +of her car. + +They had got round the turn of the village and Charlotte was starting to +follow them when she heard them draw up. In another minute John appeared, +walking back slowly down the street with a young Belgian lieutenant. They +were talking earnestly together. So soon as Charlotte saw the lieutenant +she had a sense of something happening, something fatal, that would +change Trixie's safe, easy programme. John as he came on looked perturbed +and thoughtful. They stopped. The lieutenant was saying something final. +John nodded assent and saluted. The lieutenant sketched a salute and +hurried away in the opposite direction. + +John waited till he was well out of sight before he came to her. (She +noticed that.) He had the look at first of being up to something, as if +the devil of yesterday was with him still. + +It passed. His voice had no devil in it. "I say, I've got a job for you, +Charlotte. Something you'll like." + +There was no devil in his voice, but he stared away from her as he spoke. + +"I don't want you to go to Ghent. I want you to go on to Zele." + +"Zele? Do I know the way?" + +"It's quite easy. You turn round and go the way we went that first +day--you remember? It's the shortest cut from here." + +"Pretty bad going though. Hadn't we better go on and strike the +main road?" + +"Yes, if you want to go miles round and get held up by the transport." + +"All right--if we can get through." + +"You'll get through all right." His voice had the tone of finality. + +"I'm to go by myself then?" + +"Well--if I've got to drive Mrs. Rankin--" + +She thought: It's going to be dangerous. + +"By the way, I haven't told her I'm sending you. You don't want her +butting in and going with you." + +"No. I certainly don't want Trixie.... And look here, I don't +particularly want those men. Much better leave them here where they're +safe and send in again for them." + +"I don't know that I _can_ send in again. We're supposed to have finished +this job. The cars may be wanted for anything. _They'll_ be all right." + +"I don't _like_ taking them." + +"You're making difficulties," he said. He was irritable and hurried; he +had kept on turning and looking up the street as though he thought the +lieutenant might appear again at any minute. + +"When _will_ you learn that you've simply got to obey orders?" + +"All right." + +She hadn't a chance with him. Whatever she said and did he could always +bring it round to that, her orders. She thought she knew what _his_ +orders had been. + +He cranked up the engine. She could see him stooping and rising to it, a +rhythmic, elastic movement; he was cranking energetically, with a sort of +furious, flushed enjoyment of his power. + +She backed and turned and he ran forward with her as she started. He +shouted "Don't think about the main road. Get through.... And hurry _up_. +You haven't got too much time." + +She knew. It was going to be dangerous and he funked it. He hadn't got to +drive Trixie into Ghent. When the worst came to the worst Trixie could +drive herself. She thought: He didn't tell her because he daren't. He +knew she wouldn't let him send me by myself. She'd _make_ him go. She'd +stand over him and bully him till he had to. + +Still, she could do it. She could get through. Going by herself was +better than going with a man who funked it. Only she would have liked it +better without the two wounded men. She thought of them, jostled, falling +against each other, falling forward and recovering, shaken by the jolting +of the car, and perhaps brought back into danger. She suspected that not +having too much time might be the essence of the risk. + +Everything was quiet as they ran along the open road from the village to +the hamlet that sat low and humble on the edge of the fields. A few +houses and the long wall of the barn still stood; but by this time the +house she had brought the guns from had the whole of its roof knocked in, +and the stripped gable at the end of the row no longer pricked up its +point against the sky; the front of the hollow shell had fallen forward +and flung itself across the road. + +For a moment she thought the way was blocked. She thought: If I can't get +round I must get over. She backed, charged, and the car, rocking a +little, struggled through. And there, where the road swerved slightly, +the high wall of a barn, undermined, bulged forward, toppling. It +answered the vibration of the car with a visible tremor. So soon as she +passed it fell with a great crash and rumbling and sprawled in a smoky +heap that blocked her way behind her. + +After that they went through quiet country for a time, but further east, +near the town, the shelling began. The road here was opened up into great +holes with ragged, hollow edges; she had to skirt them carefully, and +sometimes there would not be enough clear ground to move in, and one +wheel of the car would go unsupported, hanging over space. + +Yet she had got through. + +As she came into Zele she met the last straggling line of the refugees. +They cried out to her not to go on. She thought: I must get those men +before the retreat begins. + + * * * * * + +Returning with her heavy load of wounded, on the pitch-black road, +half way to Ghent she was halted. She had come up with the tail end of +the retreat. + + * * * * * + +Trixie Rankin stood on the hospital steps looking out. The car turned in +and swung up the rubber incline, but instead of stopping before the porch +it ran on towards the downward slope. Charlotte jammed on the brakes with +a hard jerk and backed to the level. + +She couldn't think how she had let the car do that. She couldn't think +why she was slipping from the edge of it into Trixie's arms. And +stumbling in that ignominious way on the steps with Trixie holding her up +on one side.... It didn't last. After she had drunk the hot black coffee +that Alice Bartrum gave her she was all right. + +The men had gone out of the messroom, leaving them alone. + +"I'm all right, Trixie, only a bit tired." + +"Tired? I should think you _were_ tired. That Conway man's a perfect +devil. Fancy scooting back himself on a safe trip and sending you out to +Zele. _Zele_!" + +"McClane doesn't care much where he sends _you_." + +"Oh, Mac--As if he could stop us. But he'd draw the line at Zele, with +the Germans coming into it." + +"Rot. They weren't coming in for hours and hours." + +"Well, anyhow he thought they were." + +"He didn't think anything about it. I wanted to go and I went. He--he +couldn't stop me." + +"It's no good lying to me, Charlotte. I know too much. I know he had +orders to go to Zele himself and the damned coward funked it. I've a good +mind to report him to Head Quarters." + +"No. You won't do that. You wouldn't be such a putrid beast." + +"If I don't, Charlotte, it's because I like you. You're the pluckiest +little blighter in the world. But I'll tell you what I _shall_ do. Next +time your Mr. Conway's ordered on a job he doesn't fancy I'll go with him +and hold his nose down to it by the scruff of his neck. If he was _my_ +man I'd bloody well tell him what I thought of him." + +"It doesn't matter what you think of him. You were pretty well gone on +him yourself once." + +"When? When?" + +"When you wanted to turn Mac out and make him commandant." + +"Oh, _then_--I was a jolly fool to be taken in by him. So were you." + +She stopped on her way to the door. "I admit he _looks_ everything he +isn't. But that only shows what a beastly humbug the man is." + +"No. He isn't a humbug. He really likes going out even if he can't stand +it when he gets there." + +"I've no use for that sort of courage." + +"It isn't courage. But it isn't humbug." + +"I've no use for your fine distinctions either." + +She heard Alice Bartrum's voice calling to Trixie as she went out, "It's +jolly decent of her not to go back on him." + +The voice went on. "You needn't mind what Trixie says about cold +feet. She's said it about everybody. About Sutton and Mac, and all +our men, and me." + +She thought: What's the good of lying when they all know? Still, there +were things they wouldn't know if she kept on lying, things they would +never guess. + +"Trixie doesn't know anything about him," she said. "No more do you. You +don't know what he _was_." + +"Whatever he _is_, whatever he's done, Charlotte, you mustn't let it hurt +you. It hasn't anything to do with you. We all know what _you_ are." + +"Me? I'm not bothering about myself. I tell you it's not what _you_ think +about him, it's what _I_ think." + +"Yes," said Alice Bartrum. Then Gwinnie Denning and John Conway came in +and she left them. + +John carried himself very straight, and again Charlotte saw about him +that odd look of accomplishment and satisfaction. + +"So you got through?" he said. + +"Yes. I got through." They kept their eyes from each other as they spoke. + +Gwinnie struck in, "Are you all right?" + +"Yes, rather.... The little Belgian Army doctor was there. He was +adorable, sticking on, working away with his wounded, in a sort of +heavenly peace, with the Germans just outside." + +"How many did you get?" + +"Eleven--Thirteen." + +"Oh good.... I've the rottenest luck. I'd have given my head to have gone +with you." + +"I'm glad you didn't. It wasn't what you'd call a lady's tea-party." + +"Who wants a lady's tea-party? I ought to have gone in with the Mac +Corps. Then I'd have had a chance." + +"Not this time. Mac draws the line somewhere.... Look here, Gwinnie, I +wish you'd clear out a minute and let me talk to John." + +Gwinnie went, grumbling. + +For a moment silence came down between them. John was drinking coffee +with an air of being alone in the room, pretending that he hadn't heard +and didn't see her. + +"John--I didn't mind driving that car. I knew I could do it and I did it. +I won't say I didn't mind the shelling, because I did. Still, shelling's +all in the day's work. And I didn't mind your sending me, because I'd +rather have gone myself than let you go. I don't want you to be killed. +Somehow that's still the one thing I couldn't bear. But if you'd sent +Gwinnie I'd have killed you." + +"I didn't send Gwinnie. I gave you your chance. I knew you wanted to cut +Mrs. Rankin out." + +"I? I never thought of such a rotten thing." + +"Well, you talked about danger as if you liked it." + +"So did you." + +"Oh--_go_ to hell." + +"I've just come from there." + +"Oh--so you were frightened, were you?" + +"Yes, I was horribly frightened. I had thirteen wounded men with me. What +do you suppose it feels like, driving a heavy ambulance car by yourself? +You can't sit in front and steer and look after thirteen wounded men at +the same time. I had to keep hopping in and out. That isn't nice when +there's shells about. I shall never forgive you for not coming to give a +hand with those men. There's funk you can forgive and--" + +She thought: "It's John--John--I'm saying these disgusting things to. +I'm as bad as Trixie, telling him what I bloody well think of him, going +back on him." + +"And there's funk--" + +"You'd better take care, Charlotte. Do you know I could get you fired out +of Belgium to-morrow?" + +"Not after to-night, I think." (It was horrible.) + +He got up and opened the door. "Anyhow, you'll clear out of this room +now, damn you." + +"I wish you'd heard that Army doctor damning _you_." + +"Why didn't he go back with you himself, then?" + +"_He_ couldn't leave his wounded." + +He slammed the door hard behind her. + +That was just like him. Wounded men everywhere, trying to sleep, and he +slammed doors. He didn't care. + +She would have to go on lying. She had made up her mind to that. So long +as it would keep the others from knowing, so long as John's awfulness +went beyond their knowledge, so long as it would do any good to John, she +would lie. + +Her time had come. She remembered saying that. She could hear herself +talking to John at Barrow Hill Farm: "Everybody's got their breaking +point.... I daresay when my time comes I shall funk and lie." + +Well, didn't she? Funk--the everlasting funk of wondering what John would +do next; and lying, lying at every turn to save him. _He_ was her +breaking point. + +She had lied, the first time they went out, about the firing. She +wondered whether she had done it because then, even then, she had been +afraid of his fear. Hadn't she always somehow, in secret, been afraid? +She could see the car coming round the corner by the Church in the narrow +street at Stow, she could feel it grazing her thigh, and John letting her +go, jumping safe to the curb. She had pretended that it hadn't happened. + +But that first day--No. He had been brave then. She had only lied because +she was afraid he would worry about her.... Brave then. Could war tire +you and wear you down, and change you from yourself? In two weeks? Change +him so that she had to hate him! + +Half the night she lay awake wondering: Do I hate him because he doesn't +care about me? Or because he doesn't care about the wounded? She could +see all their faces: the face of the wounded man at Melle (_he_ had +crawled out on his hands and knees to look for her); the face of the dead +boy who hadn't died when John left him; the Flamand they brought from +Lokeren, lying in the road; the face of the dead man in the shed--And +John's face. + +How could you care for a thing like that? How could you want a thing like +that to care for you? + +And she? She didn't matter. Nothing mattered in all the world but Them. + + + + +XIV + + +It was Saturday, the tenth of October, the day after the fall of Antwerp. +The Germans were pressing closer round Ghent; they might march in any +day. She had been in Belgium a hundred years; she had lived a hundred +years under this doom. + +But at last she was free of John. Utterly free. His mind would have no +power over her any more. Nor yet his body. She was glad that he had not +been her lover. Supposing her body had been bound to him so that it +couldn't get away? The struggle had been hard enough when her first flash +came to her; and when she had fought against her knowledge and denied it, +unable to face the truth that did violence to her passion; and when she +had given him up and was left with just that, the beauty of his body, and +it had hurt her to look at him. + +Oh well, nothing could hurt her now. And anyhow she would get through +to-day without being afraid of what might happen. John couldn't do +anything awful; he had been ordered on an absolutely safe expedition, +taking medical stores to the convent hospital at Bruges and convoying +Gurney, the sick chauffeur, to Ostend for England. Charlotte was to go +out with Sutton, and Gwinnie was to take poor Gurney's place. She was +glad she was going with Billy. Whatever happened Billy would go through +it without caring, his mind fixed on the solid work. + +And John, for an hour before he started, had been going about in gloom, +talking of death. _His_ death. + +They were looking over the last letter from his father which he had asked +her to answer for him. It seemed that John had told him the chances were +he would be killed and had asked him whether in this case he would allow +the Roden ambulances to be handed over to McClane. And the old man had +given his consent. + +"Isn't it a pity to frighten him?" she said. + +"He's no business to be frightened. It's _my_ death. If I can face it, he +can. I'm simply making necessary arrangements." + +She could see that. At the same time it struck her that he wanted you to +see that he exposed himself to all the risks of death, to see how he +faced it. She had no patience with that talk about death; that pitiful +bolstering up of his romance. + +"If McClane says much more you can tell him." + +He was counting on this transfer of the ambulances to get credit with +McClane; to silence him. + +There were other letters which he had told her to answer. As soon as he +had started she went into his room to look for them. If they were not on +the chimneypiece they would be in the drawer with his razors and +pockethandkerchiefs. + +It was John's room, after she had gone through it, that showed her what +he was doing. + +Sutton looked in before she had finished. She called to him, "Billy, you +might come here a minute." + +He came in, eyebrows lifted at the inquisition. + +"What's up?" + +"I'm afraid John isn't coming back." + +"Not coming back? Of course he's coming back." + +"No. I think he's--got off." + +"You mean he's--" + +"Yes. Bolted." + +"What on earth makes you think that?" + +"He's taken all sorts of things--pyjamas, razors, all his +pockethandkerchiefs... I _had_ to look through his drawers to find those +letters he told me to answer." + +Sutton had gone through into the slip of white tiled lavatory beyond. She +followed him. + +"My God," he said, "yes. He's taken his toothbrush and his sleeping +draught.... You know he tried to get leave yesterday and they wouldn't +give it him?" + +"No. That makes it simply awful." + +"Pretty awful." + +"Billy--we must get him back." + +"I--I don't know about that. He isn't much good, is he? I think we'd +better let him go." + +"Don't you see how awful it'll be for the Corps?" + +"The Corps? Does that matter? McClane would take us all on to-morrow." + +"I mean for _us_. You and me and Gwinnie. He's our Corps, and we're it." + +"Sharlie--with the Germans coming into Ghent do you honestly believe +anybody'll remember what he did or didn't do?" + +"Yes. We're going to stick on with the Belgian Army. It'll be remembered +against _us_. Besides, it'll kill his father." + +"He'll do that any way. He's rotten through and through." + +"No. He was splendid in the beginning. He might be splendid some day +again. But if we let him go off and do this he's done for." + +"He's done for anyhow. Isn't it better to recognize that he's rotten? +McClane wouldn't have him. He saw what he was." + +"He didn't see him at Berlaere. He _was_ splendid there." + +"My dear child, don't you know why? He didn't see there was any danger. +He was too stupid to see it." + +"I saw it." + +"You're not stupid." + +"He did see it at the end." + +"At the end, yes--When he let you go back for the guns." + +She remembered. She remembered his face, the little beads of sweat +glittering. He couldn't help that. + +"Look here, from the time he realised the danger, did he go out or did he +stay under cover?" + +She didn't answer. + +"There," he said, "you see." + +"Oh, Billy, won't you leave him one shred?" + +"No. Not one shred." + +Yet, even now, if he could only be splendid--If he could only be it! Why +shouldn't Billy leave him one shred? After all, he didn't know all the +awful things John had done; and she would never tell him.... He did know +two things, the two things she didn't know. She had got to know them. The +desire that urged her to the completion of her knowledge pursued her now. +She would possess him in her mind if in no other way. + +"Billy--do you remember that day at Melle, when John lost me? Did you +tell him I was going back with you?" + +"No. I didn't." + +Then he _had_ left her. And he had lied to both of them. + +"Was the boy dead or alive when he left him?" + +"He was alive all right. We could have saved him." + +He had died--he had died of fright, then. + +"You _said_ he was dead." + +"I know I did. I lied." + +"... And before that--when he was with you and Trixie on that +battlefield--Did he--" + +"Yes. Then, too ... You see there aren't any shreds. The only thing you +can say is he can't help it. Nobody'd have been hard on him if he hadn't +gassed so much about danger." + +"That's the part you can't understand.... But, Billy, why did you lie +about him?" + +"Because I didn't want you to know, then. I knew it would hurt you, I +knew it would hurt you more than anything else." + +"That was rather wonderful of you." + +"Wasn't wonderful at all. I knew because what _you_ think, what _you_ +feel, matters more to me than anything else. Except perhaps my job. I +have to keep that separate." + +Her mind slid over that, not caring, returning to the object of +its interest. + +"Look here, Billy, you may be right. It probably doesn't matter to us. +But it'll be perfectly awful for him." + +"They can't do anything to him, Sharlie." + +"It's what he'll do to himself." + +"Suicide? Not he." + +"I don't mean that. Can't you see that when he gets away to England, +safe, and the funk settles down he'll start romancing all over again. +He'll see the whole war again like that; and then he'll remember what +he's done. He'll have to live all his life remembering...." + +"He won't. _You'll_ remember--_You'll_ suffer. You're feeling the shame +he ought to feel and doesn't." + +"Well, somebody's got to feel it.... And he'll feel it too. He won't be +let off. As long as he lives he'll remember.... I don't want him to have +that suffering." + +"He's brought it on himself, Sharlie." + +"I don't care. I don't want him to have it. I couldn't bear it if he +got away." + +"Of course, if you're going to be unhappy about it--" + +"The only thing is, can we go after him? Can we spare a car?" + +"Well yes, I can manage that all right. The fact is, the Germans may +really be in to-morrow or Monday, and we're thinking of evacuating all +the British wounded to-day. There are some men here that we ought to take +to Ostend. I've been talking to the President about it." + +And in the end they went with their wounded, less than an hour after John +had started. + +"I don't say I'll bring him back," said Sutton. "But at any rate we can +find out what he's up to." He meditated.... "We mayn't have to bring him. +I shouldn't wonder if he came back on his own. He's like that. He can't +stand danger yet he keeps on coming back to it. Can't leave it alone." + +"I know. He isn't quite an ordinary coward." + +"I'm not sure. I've known chaps like that. Can't keep away from +the thing." + +But she stuck to it. John's cowardice was not like other people's +cowardice. Other cowards going into danger had the imagination of horror. +He had nothing but the imagination of romantic delight. It was the +reality that became too much for him. He was either too stupid, or too +securely wrapped up in his dream to reckon with reality. It surprised him +every time. And he had no imaginative fear of fear. His fear must have +surprised him. + +"He'll have got away from Bruges," she said. + +"I don't think so. He'll have to put up at the Convent for a bit, to let +Gurney rest." + +They had missed the Convent and were running down a narrow street towards +the Market Place when they found John. He came on across a white bridge +over a canal at the bottom. He was escorted by some Belgian women, +dressed in black; they were talking and pointing up the street. + +He said he had been to lunch in the town and had lost himself there and +they were showing him the way back to the Convent. + +She had seen all that before somewhere, John coming over the Canal bridge +with the women in black.... She remembered. That was in one of her three +dreams. Only what she saw now was incomplete. There had been something +more in the dream. Something had happened. + +It happened half an hour later when she went out to find John in the +Convent garden where he was walking with the nuns. The garden shimmered +in a silver mist from the canal, the broad grass plots, the clipped +hedges, the cones and spikes of yew, the tall, feathery chrysanthemums, +the trailing bowers and arches, were netted and laced and webbed with the +silver mist. Down at the bottom of the path the forms of John and the +three women showed blurred and insubstantial and still. + +Presently they emerged, solid and clear; the nuns in their black habits +and the raking white caps like wings that set them sailing along. They +were showing John their garden, taking a shy, gentle, absorbed +possession of him. + +And as she came towards him John passed her without speaking. But his +face had turned to her with the look she had seen before. Eyes of hatred, +eyes that repudiated and betrayed her. + +The nuns had stopped, courteously, to greet her; she fell behind with one +of them; the two others had overtaken John who had walked on, keeping up +his stiff, repudiating air. + +The air, the turn of the head, the look that she had dreamed. Only in the +dream it had hurt her, and now she was hard and had no pain. + + * * * * * + +It was in the Convent garden that they played it out, in one final, +astounding conversation. + +The nuns had brought two chairs out on to the flagged terrace and set a +small table there covered with a white cloth. Thus invited, John had no +choice but to take his place beside her. Still he retained his mood. + +(The nuns had left them. Sutton was in one of the wards, helping with an +operation.) + +"I thought," he said, "that I was going to have peace...." + +It seemed to her that they had peace. They had been so much at the mercy +of chance moments that this secure hour given to them in the closed +garden seemed, in its quietness, immense. + +"... But first it's Sutton, then it's you." + +"We needn't say anything unless you like. There isn't much to be said." + +"Oh, isn't there!" + +"Not," she said, "if you're coming back." + +"Of course I'm coming back.... Look here, Charlotte. You didn't suppose I +was really going to bolt, did you?" + +"Were you going to change into your pyjamas at Ostend?" + +"My pyjamas? I brought them for Gurney." + +"And your sleeping draught was for Gurney?" + +"Of course it was." + +"And your razors and your toothbrush, too. Oh, John, what's the good of +lying? You forgot that I helped Alice Bartrum to pack Gurney's things. +You forget that Billy knows." + +"Do I? I shan't forget your going back on me; your betraying me," he +said. + +And for the first time she realised how alone he was; how horribly alone. +He had nobody but her. + +"Who have I betrayed you to?" + +"To Sutton. To McClane. To everybody you talked to." + +"No. No." + +"Yes. And you betrayed me in your thoughts. That's worse. People don't +always mean what they say. It's what they think." + +"What was I to think?" + +"Why, that all the damnable things you said about me weren't true." + +"I didn't say anything." + +"You've betrayed me by the things you didn't say." + +"Why should I have betrayed you?" + +"You know why. When a woman betrays a man it's always for one reason." + +He threw his head back to strike at her with his eyes, hard and keen, +dark blue like the blade of a new knife ... "Because he hasn't given her +what she wants." + +"Oh, what I want--I thought we'd settled that long ago." + +"You've never settled it. It isn't in you to settle it." + +"I can't talk to you about that. You're too horrible. But I didn't +betray you." + +"You listened to people who betrayed me. If you cared for me in any +decent way you'd have stood by me." + +"I _have_ stood by you through thick and thin. I've lied your lies. There +isn't one of your lies I haven't backed. I've done everything I could +think of to keep people from knowing about you." + +"Yet you go and tell Sutton that I've bolted. That I'm a deserter." + +"Yes, when it was all over. If you'd got away everybody'd have known. As +it is, only Billy and I know; and he's safe." + +"You insist that I was trying to get away? I own I thought of it. But one +doesn't do everything one thinks of.... No.... Don't imagine I was sick +of the war, or sick of Belgium. It's you I'm sick of." + +"Me?" + +"Yes, you. You had your warning. I told you what would happen if you let +me see you wanted me." + +"You think you've seen that?" + +"I've seen nothing else." + +"Once, perhaps. Twice. Once when you came to me on Barrow Hill. And when +we were crossing; once. And each time you never saw it." + +"Anybody can see. It's in your face. In your eyes and mouth. You can't +hide your lust." + +"My--'lust.' Don't you know I only cared for you because I'd done +with that?" + +They stopped. The nuns were back again, bringing great cups of hot black +coffee, coming quietly, and going quietly away. It was wonderful, all +that beauty and gentleness and peace existing in the horror of the war, +and through this horror within horror that John had made. + +They drank their coffee, slowly, greedily, prolonging this distraction +from their torment. Charlotte finished first. + +"You say I want you. I own I did once. But I don't now. Why, I care +more for the scrubbiest little Belgian with a smashed finger than I +do for you." + +"I suppose you can satisfy your erotic susceptibilities that way." + +"I haven't any, I tell you. I only cared for you because I thought you +were clean. I thought your mind was beautiful. And you aren't clean. And +your mind's the ugliest thing I know. And the cruelest.... Let's get it +right, John. I can forgive your funking. If your nerves are jumpy they're +jumpy. I daresay _I_ shall be jumpy if the Germans come into Ghent before +I'm out of it. I can forgive everything you've done to _me_. I can +forgive your lying. I see there's nothing left for you but to lie.... But +I can't forgive your not caring for the wounded. That's cruel.... You +didn't care for that boy at Melle--" + +John's mouth opened as if he were going to say something. He +seemed to gasp. + +"--No, you didn't or you wouldn't have left him. Whatever your funk was +like, you couldn't have left him if you'd cared, any more than I could +have left _you_." + +"He was dead when I left him." + +"He was still warm when I found him. Billy thought you were bringing him +away. He says he wasn't dead." + +"He lies, then. But you'll take his word against mine." + +"Yes," she said simply. "And he says he _didn't_ tell you I was going +on with him. You don't care for _me_. If you'd cared you couldn't +have left me." + +"I thought you said if it was a toss up between you and a wounded man--? +There were wounded men in that car." + +"There was a wounded man with me. You left _him_.... Don't imagine I +cared about myself, whether I lived or died. It was because I cared about +you. I cared so awfully." + +He jerked out a laugh. One light, short sound of dismissal and contempt. + + + + +XV + + +That light sound he made had ended it. + +She remembered it afterwards, not as a thing that hurt her, but as an +unpleasant incident of the day, like the rudeness of a stranger, and yet +not to be forgotten. It had the importance of extreme finality; his +answer to everything, unanswerable. + +She didn't care. She had ended it herself and with so clean a cut that +she could afford to let him have that inarticulate last word. She had +left him nothing to do but keep up his pretence that there had never been +so much as a beginning. He gave no sign of anything having been between +them, unless his attitude to Sutton was a sign. + +It showed the next day, the terrible Sunday that was ending everything. +Yesterday he had given orders that Charlotte should drive Sutton while he +drove by himself. To-day he had changed all that. Gwinnie was to drive +Sutton and Charlotte was to go out alone. And he had offered himself to +McClane. To McClane. That gave her the measure of his resentment. She +could see that he coupled her with Sutton while he yet tried to keep them +apart. He was not going to have more to do with either of them than he +could help. + +So that she had hardly seen or heard of him that day. And when the solid +work began she found that she could turn him out of her mind as if he had +never been there. The intolerable burden of him slipped from her; all +morning she had a sense of cold clearness and lightness; and she judged +that her deliverance was complete. + + * * * * * + +She had waited a long time with her car drawn up close under the house +wall in the long street at Melle. McClane's car stood in front of her, +waiting for John. He was up there on the battlefield, with Sutton and +McClane. McClane had kept him off it all day; he had come to her when +they started and told her not to worry. Conway would be all right. He +would see that he didn't get into places where he--well, unsuitable +places. He would keep him driving. But in the end one of the stretcher +bearers had given in, and John had to take his turn. + +He had been keen to go. Keen. She could see him swinging along up the +road to the battlefield and McClane with him, running to keep up with his +tall stride. + +She had taken her turn too and she knew what it was like up there. +Endless turnip fields; turnips thrown up as if they had been pulled, +livid roots that rotted, and the wounded and the dead men lying out among +them. You went stumbling; the turnips rolled and slipped under your feet. +Seeing things. + +Her mind looked the other way, frightened. She was tired out, finished; +she could have gone to sleep now, sitting up there on the car. It would +be disgraceful if she went to sleep.... + +She mustn't think about the battlefield. She couldn't think; she could +only look on at things coming up in her mind. Hoeing turnips at Barrow +Hill Farm. Supposing you found dead men lying out on the fields at +Stow? You would mind that more; it would be more horrible.... She saw +herself coming over the fields carrying a lamb that she had taken from +its dead mother. Then she saw John coming up the field to their seat in +the beech ring. _That_ hurt her; she couldn't bear it; she mustn't +think about that. + +John was all right; he wasn't shirking. They had been away so long now +that she knew they must have gone far down the battlefield, deep into it; +the edges and all the nearer places had been gleaned. It would be dark +before they came back. + +It was getting dark now, and she was afraid that when the light went she +would go to sleep. If only she wasn't so tired. + +She was so drowsy that at first she didn't hear McClane speaking, she +hadn't seen him come to the step of the car. + +McClane's voice sounded soft and unnatural and a little mysterious. + +"I'm afraid something's--happened." + +"Who to?" + +"We-ell--" + +The muffled drawl irritated her. Why couldn't he speak out? + +"Is John hurt?" + +"I'm afraid so." + +"Is he killed?" + +"Well--I don't know that he can live. A German's put a bullet into him." + +"Where is he?" + +She jumped down off the car. + +McClane laid his hand on her arm. "Don't. We shall bring him in--" + +"He's dead then?" + +"I think so--You'd better not go to him." + +"Of course I'm going to him. Where _is_ he?" + +He steered her very quickly and carefully across the street, then led her +with his arm in hers, pressing her back to the dark shelter of the +houses. They heard the barking of machine guns from the battlefield at +the top and the rattle of the bullets on the causeway. These sounds +seemed to her to have no significance. As if they had existed only in +some unique relation to John Conway, his death robbed them of vitality. + +The door of the house opened a little way; they slipped into the long +narrow room lighted by a few oil lamps at one end. At the other John's +body lay on a stretcher set up on a trestle table, his feet turned +outwards to the door, ready. The corners at this end were so dark that +the body seemed to stretch across the whole width of the room. A soldier +came forward with a lighted candle and gave it to McClane. And she saw +John's face; the bridge of his nose, with its winged nostrils lifted. His +head was tilted upwards at the chin; that gave it a noble look. His mouth +was open, ever so slightly open ... McClane shifted the light so that it +fell on his forehead.... Black eyebrows curling up like little +moustaches.... The half-dropped eyelids guarded the dead eyes. + +She thought of how he used to dream. All his dream was in his dead face; +his dead face was cold and beautiful like his dream. + +As she looked at him her breast closed down on her heart as though it +would never lift again; her breath shuddered there under her tightened +throat. She could feel McClane's hand pressing heavily on her shoulder. +She had no strength to shake it off; she was even glad of it. She felt +small and weak and afraid; afraid, not of the beautiful thing that lay +there, but of something terrible and secret that it hid, something that +any minute she would have to know about. + +"Where was he hit?" + +"In the back." + +She trembled and McClane's hand pressed closer. "The bullet passed clean +through his heart. He didn't suffer." + +"He was getting in Germans?" + +"I don't--quite--know--" McClane measured his words out one by one, +"what--he was doing. Sutton was with him. He knows." + +"Where _is_ Billy?" + +"Over there. Do you want him?" + +"Not yet." + +A soldier brought a chair for her. She sat down with her back to the +trestle table. At the lighted end of the room she saw Sutton stooping +over a young Belgian captain, buttoning his tunic under the sling he had +adjusted. The captain's face showed pure and handsome, like a girl's, +like a young nun's, bound round and chin-wrapped in the white bandages. +He sat on the floor in front of Sutton's table with his legs stretched +out flat. His back was propped against the thigh of a Belgian soldier +seated on an upturned barrel. Her hurt eyes saw them very plain and with +detail in the light of Sutton's lamp. + +That part of the room was full of soldiers. She noticed that they kept +clear of the trestle table as they went in and out. Only one of them, the +soldier who supported the young captain, kept on looking, raising his +head and looking there as if he couldn't turn his eyes away. He faced +her. His rifle stood steadied by his knees, the bayonet pointing up +between his eyes. + +She found herself thinking. It was Sutton's back that made her think. +John must have been stooping over the German like that. John's wound +was in his back. But if he was stooping it couldn't have come that +way. The bullet would have gone through his chest.... Perhaps he had +turned to pick up his stretcher. Billy was there. He would tell her +how it had happened. + +She thought: No. I've had enough. I shall give it up. I won't ask him. +But she knew that she would ask him. Once started, having gone so far, +flash by flash and step by step, she couldn't give it up; she would go +on, even now, till her knowledge was complete. Then she was aware again +of the soldier's eyes. + +They were very large and bright and black in his smooth boy's face; he +had a small innocent boy's mouth that seemed to move, restless and +fascinated, like his eyes. Presently she saw that he was looking at her, +that his eyes returned to her again and again, as if he were aware of +some connection between her and the thing that fascinated him, as if _he_ +were somehow connected. + +He was listening to her now as Sutton spoke to her. + +"We must get him away quick." + +"Yes. Do let's get him away." + +Sutton shook his head. He was thinking of the wounded captain. + +"We can't yet. I'll come back for him." + +"Then I'll wait with him here." + +"Oh no--I think--" + +"I can't leave him." + +"It isn't safe. The place may be taken." + +"I won't leave him." Sutton hesitated. "I won't, Billy." + +"McClane, she says she won't leave him." + +"Then," McClane said, "we must take him now. We'll have to make +room somehow." + +(To make room for him--somehow.) + +Sutton and the soldier carried the captain out and came back for John's +body. The Belgian sprang forward with eager, subservient alacrity to put +himself at the head of the stretcher, but Sutton thrust him aside. + +The Belgian shrugged his shoulders and picked up his rifle with an air of +exaggerated unconcern. Sutton and McClane carried out the stretcher. + +Charlotte was following them when the soldier stopped her. + +"Mademoiselle--" + +He had propped his rifle against the trestles and stood there, groping in +his pocket. A dirty handkerchief, dragged up by his fumbling, hung out by +its corner. All along the sharp crease there was a slender smear of +blood. He looked down at it and pushed it back out of her sight. + +He had taken something out of his pocket. + +"I will give you this. I found it on the battlefield." + +He handed her a small leather pocketbook that was John's. It had her +photograph in it and his, taken together. + + * * * * * + +They were putting him out of sight, under the hood of the ambulance, and +she waited there when the war correspondent came up. + +"_Can_ you tell me the name of the volunteer who's been killed?" + +"Conway. John Roden Conway." + +"What? _That_ man? The man who raced the Germans into Zele?" + +"Yes," she said, "that man." + + * * * * * + +She was in John's room, packing, gathering together the things she would +have to take to his father. Sutton came to her there. + +They had orders to be ready for the retreat any time that night. + +Billy had brought her John's wrist watch and cigarette case. + +"Billy," she said, "that soldier gave me this." + +She showed him the pocketbook. + +"What soldier?" + +"The one who was with the captain." + +"_He_ gave it you?" + +"Yes. He said he found it on the battlefield. It must have dropped out of +John's pocket." + +"It couldn't have dropped.... I wonder why he kept that." + +"But he didn't keep it. He gave it to me." + +"He was going to keep it, or he'd have handed it over to me with the +other things." + +"Does it matter?" + +"Well--" + +She thought: "Why can't he leave it alone? They _had_ all his things, his +poor things." + +But Sutton was still thoughtful. "I wonder why he gave it you." + +"I think he was sorry." + +"_Was_ he!" + +"Sorry for me, I mean." + +Sutton said nothing. He was absorbed in contemplating the photograph. +They had been taken standing by the hurdle of the sheepfold, she with the +young lamb in her arms and John looking down at her. + +"That was taken at Barrow Hill Farm," she said, "where we were together. +He looked just like that.... Oh, Billy, do you think the past's really +past?... Isn't there some way he could go on being what he _was_?" + +"I don't know, Sharlie, I don't know." + +"Why couldn't he have stayed there! Then he'd always have been like that. +We should never have known." + +"You're not going to be unhappy about him?" + +"No. I think I'm glad. It's a sort of relief. I shan't ever have that +awful feeling of wondering what he'll do next.... Billy--you were with +him, weren't you?" + +"Yes." + +"Was he all right?" + +"Would it make you happier to think that he was or to know that he +wasn't?" + +"Oh--just to _know_." + +"Well, I'm afraid he wasn't, quite.... He paid for it, Sharlie. If he +hadn't turned his back he wouldn't have been shot." + +She nodded. + +"What? You knew?" + +"No. No. I wasn't sure." + +She was possessed of this craving to know, to know everything. Short of +that she would be still bound to him; she could never get free. + +"Billy--what did happen, really? Did he _leave_ the German?" + +"The German?" + +"Yes. Was that why he shot him?" + +"The German didn't shoot him. He was too far gone, poor devil, to shoot +anybody.... It was the Belgian captain that he left.... He was lying +there, horribly wounded. His servant was with him; they were calling out +to Conway--" + +"_Calling_ to him?" + +"Yes. And he was going all right when some shrapnel fell--a regular +shower bath, quite near, like it did with you and me. That scared him and +he just turned and ran. The servant shouted to him to stop, and when he +wouldn't he went after him and put a bullet through his back." + +"That Belgian boy?" + +"Yes. I couldn't do anything. I had the German. It was all over in a +second.... When I got there I found the Belgian standing up over him, +wiping his bayonet with his pockethandkerchief. He _said_ his rifle went +off by accident." + +"Couldn't it? Rifles do." + +"Bayonets don't.... I suppose I could get him court martialed if I tried. +But I shan't. After all, it was his captain. I don't blame him, +Charlotte." + +"No.... It was really you and me, Billy. We brought him back to be +killed." + +"I don't know that we did bring him--that he wasn't coming by himself. He +couldn't keep off it. Even if we did, you wouldn't be sorry for that, +would you?" + +"No. It was the best thing we could do for him." + +But at night, lying awake in her bed, she cried. For then she +remembered what he had been. On Barrow Hill, on their seat in the beech +ring, through the Sunday evenings, when feeding time and milking time +were done. + + * * * * * + +At four o'clock in the morning she was waked by Sutton, standing beside +her bed. The orders had come through to evacuate the hospital. Three +hours later the ambulances had joined the great retreat. + + + + +XVI + + +They had halted in Bruges, and there their wounded had been taken into +the Convent wards to rest. + +Charlotte and Sutton were sitting out, alone together on the flagged +terrace in the closed garden. The nuns had brought out the two chairs +again, and set again the little table, covered with the white cloth. +Again the silver mist was in the garden, but thinned now to the clearness +of still water. + +They had been silent after the nuns had left them. Sutton's sad, +short-sighted eyes stared out at the garden without seeing it. He was +lost in melancholy. Presently he came to himself with a long sigh-- + +"Charlotte, what are we going to do now? Do you know?" + +"_I_ know. I'm going into Mac's corps." + +"So am I. That isn't what I meant." + +For a moment she didn't stop to wonder what he did mean. She was too full +of what she was going to do. + +"Is that wise? I don't altogether trust old Mac. He'll use you till you +drop. He'll wear you to the last shred of your nerves." + +"I want to be used till I drop. I want to be worn. Besides, I know I'm +safe with Mac." + +His cold, hard indifference made her feel safe. She wasn't really safe +with Billy. His goodness might disarm her any minute, his sadness might +conceivably move her to a tender weakness. But for McClane she would +never have any personal feeling, never any fiery affection, any exalted +devotion. Neither need she be afraid of any profound betrayal. Small +betrayals perhaps, superficial disasters to her vanity, while his egoism +rode over it in triumph. He didn't want affection or anything fiery, +anything that John had had. He would leave her in her hardness; he would +never ask anything but hard, steel-cold loyalty and a willingness to +share his risks. + +"What else can I do? I should have come out if John hadn't. Of course I +was glad we could go together, but you mustn't suppose I only went +because of him." + +"I don't. I only thought perhaps you wouldn't want to stay on now +he's dead." + +"More than ever now he's dead. Even if I didn't want to stay I should +have to now. To make up." + +"For what?" + +"For what he did. All those awful things. And for what he didn't do. His +dreams. I've got to do what he dreamed. But more than anything I must pay +his debt to Belgium. To all those wounded men." + +"You're not responsible for his debts, Charlotte." + +"No? Sometimes I feel as if I were. As if he and I were tied up +together. I could get away from him when he was alive. But now he's dead +he's got me." + +"It doesn't make him different." + +"It makes _me_ different. I tell you, I can't get away from him. And I +want to. I want to cut myself loose; and this is the way." + +"Isn't it the way to tie yourself tighter?" + +"No. Not when it's _done_, Billy." + +"I can see a much better way.... If you married me." + +She turned to him, astonished and a little anxious, as though she thought +something odd and dangerous had happened to him. + +"Oh, Billy, I--I couldn't do that.... What made you think of it?" + +"I've been thinking of it all the time." + +"All the time?" + +"Well, most of the time, anyhow. But I've loved you all the time. You +know I loved you. That was why I stuck to Conway. I couldn't leave you to +him. I wouldn't even leave you to McClane." + +"I didn't know." + +"I should have thought it was pretty, obvious." + +"It wasn't. I'd have tried to stop it if I'd known." + +"You couldn't have stopped it." + +"I'm sorry." + +"What about?" + +"That. It isn't any good. It really isn't." + +"Why isn't it? I know I'm rather a queer chap. And I've got an +ugly face--" + +"I love your _face_...." + +She loved it, with its composure and its candour, its slightly flattened +features, laid back; its little surprised moustache, its short-sighted +eyes and its sadness. + +"It's the dearest face. But--" + +"I suppose," he said, "it sounds a bit startling and sudden. But if you'd +been bottling it up as long as I have--Why, I loved you the first time I +saw you. On the boat.... So you see, it's you. It isn't just anything +you've done." + +"If you knew what I _have_ done, my dear. If you only knew. You wouldn't +want to marry me." + +She would have to tell him. That would put him off. That would stop +him. If she had loved him she would have had to tell him, as she had +told John. + +"I'm going to tell you...." + + * * * * * + +She wondered whether he had really listened. A queer smile played +about his mouth. He looked as if he had been thinking of something +else all the time. + +"What are you smiling at?" + +"Your supposing that that would make any difference." + +"Doesn't it?" + +"Not a bit. Not a little bit.... Besides I knew it." + +"Who--who told you?" + +"The only other person who knew about it, I suppose--Conway." + +"He betrayed me?" + +"He betrayed you. Is there any vile thing he didn't do?" + +And it was as it had been before. The nuns came out again, bringing the +great cups of hot black coffee, coming and going gently. Only this time +she couldn't drink. + +"It's awful of us," she said, "to talk about him this way when +he's dead." + +"He isn't dead as long as he makes you feel like that. As long as he +keeps you from me." + +A long pause. And then, "Billy--he wasn't my lover." + +"I know that," he said fiercely. "He took good care to tell me." + +"I brought it all on myself. I ought to have given him up instead of +hanging on to him that way. Platonic love--It's all wrong. People aren't +really made like that. It was every bit as bad as going to Gibson +Herbert.... Worse. That was honest. This was all lying. Lying about +myself. Lying about him. Lying about--love." + +"Then," he said, "you don't really know what it is." + +"I know John's sort. And I know Gibson's sort. And I know there's a +heavenly sort, Billy, in between. But I'm spoiled for it. I think I could +have cared for you if it hadn't been for John.... I shan't ever get away +from him." + +"Yes. If you can see it--" + +"Of course I see it. I can see everything now. All that war-romancing. I +see how awful it was. When I think how we went out and got thrills. Fancy +getting thrills out of this horror." + +"Oh well--I think you earned your thrill." + +"You can't earn anything in this war. At least _I_ can't. It's paying, +paying all the time. And I've got more things than John to pay for. There +was little Effie." + +"Effie?" + +"Gibson's wife. I didn't _want_ to hurt her.... Billy, are you sure it +makes no difference? What I did." + +"I've told you it doesn't.... You mustn't go on thinking about it." + +"No. But I can't get over his betraying me. You see, that's the worst +thing he did to _me_. The other things--well, he was mad with fright, and +he was afraid of me, because I knew. I can't think why he did this." + +"Same reason. You knew. He was degraded by your knowing, so you had to be +degraded. At least I suppose that's how it was." + +She shook her head. He was darker to her than ever and she was no nearer +to her peace. She knew everything and she understood nothing. And that +was worse than not knowing. + +"If only I could understand. Then, I believe, I could bear it. I wouldn't +care how bad it was as long as I understood." + +"Ask McClane, then. He could explain it to you. It's beyond me." + +"McClane?" + +"He's a psychotherapist. He knows more about people's souls than I know +about their bodies. He probably knows all about Conway's soul." + +Silence drifted between them, dim and silvery like the garden mist. + +"Charlotte--are we never to get away from him? Is he always to stick +between us? That dead man." + +"It isn't that." + +"What is it, then?" + +"All _this_.... I'd give anything to care for you, Billy dear, but I +don't care. I _can't_. I can't care for anything but the war." + +"The war won't last for ever. And afterwards?" + +"I can't see any afterwards." + +Sutton smiled. + +"And yet," he said, "there will be one." + + + + +XVII + + +The boat went steadily, cutting the waves with its sound like the flowing +of stiff silk. + +Charlotte and Sutton and McClane, stranded at Dunkirk on their way to +England, had been taken on board the naval transport _Victoria_. They +were the only passengers besides some young soldiers, and these had left +them a clear space on the deck. Charlotte was sitting by herself under +the lee of a cabin when McClane came to her there. + +He was straddling and rubbing his hands. Something had pleased him. + +"I knew," he said, "that some day I should get you three. And that I +should get those ambulances." + +She couldn't tell whether he meant that he always got what he wanted +or that he had foreseen John Conway's fate which would ultimately +give it him. + +"The ambulances--Yes. You always wanted them." + +"Not more than I wanted you and Sutton." + +He seemed aware of her secret antagonism, yet without resentment, +waiting till it had died down before he spoke again. He was sitting +beside her now. + +"What are you going to do about Conway?" + +"Nothing. Except lie about him to his father." + +"That's all right as long as you don't lie about him to yourself." + +"I've lied about him to other people. Never to myself. I was in love with +him, if that's what you mean. But he finished that. What's finished is +finished. I haven't a scrap of feeling for him left." + +"Are you quite sure?" + +"Quite. I'm not even sorry he's dead." + +"You've forgiven him?" + +"I'm not always sure about that. But I'm trying to forget him." + +McClane looked away. + +"Do you ever dream about him, Charlotte?" + +"Never. Not now. I used to. I dreamed about him once three nights +running." + +He looked at her sharply. "Could you tell me what you dreamed?" + +She told him her three dreams. + +"You don't suppose they meant anything?" she said. + +"I do. They meant that part of you was kicking. It knew all the time what +he was like and was trying to warn you." + +"To keep me off him?" + +"To keep you off him." + +"I see.... The middle one was funny. It _happened_. The day we were in +Bruges. But I can't make out the first one with that awful woman in it." + +"You may have been dreaming something out of his past. Something he +remembered." + +"Well anyhow I don't understand the last one." + +"_I_ do." + +"But I dreamed he wanted me. Frightfully. And he didn't." + +"He did. He wanted you--'frightfully'--all the time. He went to pieces if +you weren't there. Don't you know why he took you out with him +everywhere? Because if he hadn't he couldn't have driven half a mile out +of Ghent." + +"That's one of the things I'm trying to forget." + +"It's one of the things you should try to remember." + +He grasped her arm. + +"And, Charlotte, look here. I want you to forgive him. For your +own sake." + +She stiffened under his touch, his look, his voice of firm, intimate +authority. His insincerity repelled her. + +"Why should you? You don't care about him. You don't care about me. If I +was blown to bits to-morrow you wouldn't care." + +He laughed his mirthless, assenting laugh. + +"You don't care about people at all. You only care about their diseases +and their minds and things." + +"I think I care a little about the wounded." + +"You don't really. Not about _them_. You care about getting in more of +them and quicker than any other field ambulance on the front. I can't +think why you're bothering about me now." + +"That's why. If I'm to get in more wounded I can't have anybody in my +corps who isn't fit." + +"_I'm_ fit. What's the matter with me?" + +"Not much. Your body's all right. And your mind _was_ all right till +Conway upset it. Now it's unbalanced." + +"Unbalanced?" + +"Just the least little bit. There's a fight going on in it between your +feeling for Conway and your knowledge of him." + +"I've told you I haven't any feeling." + +"Your memory of your feeling then. Same thing. You know he was cruel and +a liar and a coward. And you loved him. With you those two states are +incompatible. They struggle. And that's bad for you. If it goes on you'll +break down. If it stops you'll be all right.... The way to stop it is to +know the _truth_ about Conway. The truth won't clash with your feeling." + +"Don't I know it?" + +"Not all. Not the part that matters most. You know he was all wrong +morally. You don't know _why_.... Conway was an out and out degenerate. +He couldn't help _that_. He suffered from some physical disability. It +went through everything. It made him so that he couldn't live a man's +life. He was afraid to enter a profession. He was afraid of women." + +"He wasn't afraid of me. Not in the beginning." + +"Because he felt your strength. You're very strong, Charlotte. You gave +him your strength. And he could _feel_ passion, mind you, though he +couldn't act it.... I suppose he could feel courage, too, only somehow he +couldn't make it work. Have you got it clear?" + +She nodded. So clear that it seemed to her he was talking about a thing +she had known once and had forgotten. All the time she had known John's +secret. She knew what would come next: McClane's voice saying, "Well +then, think--think," and his excited gestures, bobbing forward suddenly +from the hips. He went on. + +"The balance had to be righted somehow. His whole life must have been a +struggle to right it. Unconscious, of course. Instinctive. His platonics +were just a glorifying of his disability. All that romancing was a +gorgeous transformation of his funk.... So that his very lying was a sort +of truth. I mean it was part of the whole desperate effort after +completion. He jumped at everything that helped him to get compensation, +to get power. He jumped at your feeling for him because it gave him +power. He jumped at the war because the thrill he got out of it gave him +the sense of power. He sucked manhood out of you. He sucked it out of +everything--out of blood and wounds.... He'd have been faithful to you +forever, Charlotte, if you hadn't found him out. _That_ upset all his +delicate adjustments. The war upset him. I think the sight of blood and +wounds whipped up the naked savage in him." + +"But--no. He was afraid of that." + +"He was afraid of himself. Of what was in him. That fear of his was his +protection, like his fear of women. The war broke it down. Then he was +cruel to you." + +"Yes. He was cruel." Her voice sounded flat and hard, without feeling. +She had no feeling; she had exhausted all the emotions of her suffering. +And her knowledge of his cruelty was absolute. To McClane's assertion of +the fact she had no response beyond that toneless acquiescence. + +"Taking you into that shed--" + +He had roused her. + +"How on earth did you know that? I've never told a single soul." + +"It was known in the hospital. One of the carpenters saw the whole thing. +He told one of our orderlies who told my chauffeur Gurney who told me." + +"It doesn't matter what he did to _me_. I can't get over his not caring +for the wounded." + +"He was jealous of them, because you cared for them." + +"Oh no. He'd left off caring for me by then." + +"_Had_ he?" He gave a little soft, wise laugh. "What makes you think so?" + +"That. His cruelty." + +"Love can be very cruel." + +"Not as cruel as that," she said. + +"Yes. As cruel as that.... Remember, it was at the bottom of the whole +business. Of his dreams. In a sense, the real John Conway was the man +who dreamed." + +"If you're right he was the man who was cruel, too. And it's his +cruelty I hate." + +"Don't hate it. Don't hate it. I want you to understand his cruelty. It +wasn't just savagery. It was something subtler. A supreme effort to get +power. Remember, he couldn't help it. He _had_ to right himself. +Supposing his funk extinguished something in him that could only be +revived through cruelty? You'll say he could help betraying you--" + +"To you, too?" + +"To me, too. When you lost faith in him you cut off his main source of +power. You had to be discredited so that it shouldn't count. You mustn't +imagine that he did anything on purpose. He was driven. It sounds +horrible, but I want you to see it was just his way of saving his soul, +the only way open to him. You mustn't think of it as a bad way. Or a good +way. It wasn't even _his_ way. It was the way of something bigger than he +was, bigger than anything he could ever be. Bigger than badness or +goodness." + +"Did 'it' do cowardly things to 'save' itself?" + +"No. If Conway could have played the man 'it' would have been satisfied. +It was always urging him." ... "Try," he said, and she knew that now at +any rate he was sincere; he really wanted to help her; he was giving her +his best. His voice was very quiet now, his excited gestures had ceased. +"Try and think of it as something more real, more important and necessary +than he was; or you and I. Something that is always struggling to be, to +go on being. Something that degeneracy is always trying to keep +under.... Power. A power in retreat, fighting to get back its lost +ground." + +Then what she had loved was not John Conway. What she had hated was not +he. He was this Something, tremendous and necessary, that escaped your +judgment. You couldn't hurt it with your loving or hating or your ceasing +to love and hate. Something that tortured you and betrayed you because +that was the only way it knew to save itself. + +Something that couldn't save itself altogether--that clung to you and +called to you to save it. + +But that _was_ what she had loved. Nothing could touch it. + +For a moment while McClane was talking she saw, in the flash he gave +her, that it was real. And when the flash went it slipped back into +her darkness. + +But on the deck in front of her she could see John walking up and down. +She could see the wide road of gold and purple that stretched from the +boat's stern to the sun. John's head was thrown back; he looked at her +with his shining, adventurous eyes. He was happy and excited, going out +to the war. + +And she saw them again: the batteries, the cars and the wagons. Dust like +blown smoke, and passing in it the long lines of beaten men, reeling +slowly to the footway, passing slowly, endlessly, regiment by regiment, +in retreat. + + +THE END + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Romantic, by May Sinclair + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ROMANTIC *** + +***** This file should be named 13292.txt or 13292.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/3/2/9/13292/ + +Produced by Suzanne Shell, Beginners Projects, Mary Meehan and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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