'Aren't the two issues connected?' said Paula. She had found herself unable to look at him and was looking at the floor. 'They're connected in the sense that you might or mightn't want to visit me in jail. Only in one of the four possible permutations of (a) and () and yes and no are they actually interdependent.' Oh Richard, Richard. 'Is John – sort of forcing you here?' 'No, no one's forcing me. I just want (a) settled. We can't take () first.' 'John seems to think it's all right' to keep it all quiet, and he ' 'Damn John. What do you think?' Paula had not expected this. She had been utterly appalled by the story about Claudia and Radeechy, but she had not thought that any further judgement on it would be required from her. Or rather, she had at once taken over Ducane's judgement that it was not necessary for Richard to own up. She tried to think about it now. Richard was requiring her to be objective. That in itself was extraordinary, as extraordinary as the fact that they were now sitting side by side. She looked up at the terrible figures of Truth and Time. 'I don't think it's necessary, Richard. John's quite clear that his inquiry doesn't need your evidence. You can't help – the others now. You'd be punishing yourself and I see no point in it.' Richard gave a long sigh. She thought, he's relieved, oh God, and she felt the pain again. She looked back at the floor and let her gaze creep as far as to his feet. Metal limbs. , Now what about (), Paula? T 'Wait, wait,' she murmured. 'Let us be, as you say, businesslike.' She moved a little further away and began to look at him. His twisted face had screwed itself further into a contorted suspicious mask of anxiety which he touched periodically with his hand as if trying to smooth it out. 'Richard, do you want to come back?' He said a short clipped 'Yes'. He added, 'Do you want me back?' Paula said in the same quick tone, 'Yes'. Their two 'yesses' hovered, inconclusive and curt. 'Richard, you've been living with somebody, haven't you?» 'How did you know? Or did you just assume it?' 'I went one day – to the house – just to look – when I knew you were at the office. And I saw a rather beautiful girl let herself in with a latch key.' 'God. Did you do that, Paula? God. Well, there was a girl, but it's over now. She was a tart.' 'What sort of difference do you think that makes?' 'All right. None. Anyway, she's gone. She's eloped to Australia with Ducane's manservant, if you must know!' 'Did she write and tell you?' 'No, Ducane told me. Christ, you're not going to be jealous of a tart who's half-way to Australia!' 'There hasn't been anyone else, just lately I mean?' 'No. What about you? Have you had anybody?' 'No: 'You're not in love with Ducane, are you?' 'No, of course not, Richard!' 'Are you sure?' 'Yes!' 'Good. Well, go on interrogating me. I can't for the life of me see why you should want me back at all.' 'Richard, I must talk to you about Eric.' 'Christ, that bastard hasn't turned up again?' 'No, no. He wrote and said he was going to, but he changed his mind, thank heavens.' 'You don't love him, do you?' 'No, no, no.' 'Then can't we forget him? T 'No, we can't, that's the point. At least we can't forget – what happened. I know this sounds a bit mad, but that awful scene has remained like a sort of black lump spreading poison.' 'I know,' he said softly, 'I know.' Some Americans had arrived to inspect the Bronzino. They lingered, making learned comments, then glanced at the tense immobile pair upon the seat and hastily took themselves off. 'Paula,' said Richard, 'we're both rational beings. Maybe we couldn't do anything about this apart, but we might be able to do something together. Something dreadful happened for which we were both to blame. It happened. You know I don't believe in God or in guilt feelings or in repentance or any stuff of that sort. The past is gone, it doesn't exist any more. However, things that do exist are responsibilities occasioned by the past and also our thoughts about it, which we may not find it very easy to control. I judge that there's nothing further we can do for Eric except try to forget the bloody fool. There are things we might do for each other to make this cloud lift, if we decided that it was worth our trying to live together again. I don't think the blank lump would poison us then. I think it would just gradually go away.' As Paula looked at him, listening to his precise high-pitched voice so familiarly explaining something, expounding something, she felt a shudder pass through her which she recognized a second later as physical desire. She wanted to hurl her arms around Richard and hold him tightly. She stiffened and closed her eyes. 'What is it, Paula?' 'Nothing, «nothing. You may be right. Let's go on.' She opened her eyes and looked into a blue-golden blur of Bronzino. 'Richard, if you were to come to me, if, if, would you go on having love affairs with other girls from time to time?' After a short silence Richard said in a dry voice, 'Possibly.' 'I thought so ' 'please, Paula – It's hard to say. At this moment I feel – well, hell, feelings are just feelings. I don't know what I'd do. If the old pattern continues I'd probably be unfaithful now and then. I'd have to wait and see. You know it's no use my telling you I've decided anything.' 'I know. I expect I could stand it. Only, Richard, will you, would you, please not tell me lies?' 'You mean you'd want me to tell you every time I kiss my secretary?' 'No. But I'd want to know if you were going to bed with your secretary.' Richard was silent again for a short while, during which time a group of schoolchildren did the room with celerity. He said slowly, 'It's not at all easy to make such promises beforehand, Paula. At least it's easy to make them. It's not so easy to be sure what one will do when one is being tempted by some piece of quick trouble-free pleasure.' Paula stared at the enamel-faced figure of Deceit, and at her reversed hands and scaly tail. Was it here, after all, that everything broke down and descended into a roaring shaft of shattered masks and crumpled rose petals and bloody feathers? But as she looked, clear-eyed now, she felt, infinitely stronger than any doubt, her intention to take Richard back. She turned to him. 'All right. But lies do corrupt and spoil.' 'I know that. I would keep them to a minimum.' The Richardesque precision and even his intent at this moment of all moments to keep the door a little bit ajar for T-NATG-N 337 Venus, Cupid and Folly, touched her to an intensity of love for him which she could hardly control. 'Paula, about the twins ' 'What about the twins? T 'They're not anti-me?' 'Oh my darling, no. They've kept their love for you, nothing's touched it. I know that.' The sudden endearment, the image of the children, brought a hot rush of tears as far as her eyes. She blinked, turning away, and the thought came to her for the first time, am I still attractive to him? 'Thank God for that. When can I –? I mean, have we decided anything?' Paula stared back, tears and all. 'Richard, ask yourself, ask yourself, do you really want to?» 'Why, Paula, you're – Oh Paula, yes, yes, yes. Please give me your hand.' Paula moved towards him. Their hands touched, their knees touched. They were both trembling. 'Oh Richard, not here – someone will – ' 'Ives, here.'
Вы читаете The Nice and the Good
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату