Michael was at once eager to be off. His work was done now at the Court. Nothing detained him. He spent the day packing and making telephone calls and arranged to leave next day on the early train. Dora was to leave by a later train which would take her, with only one change, to Bath. She telephoned Sally to expect her late the following evening.
Dora, who had watched with anxiety the arrival of any letter from Mrs Mark, knew by Michael’s excited agitation, even before he told her, that this must be
She had not regretted her decision not to return to Paul. With immense relief, and the sense of a load taken off her, she welcomed Michael’s support. She wrote long explanatory letters to Paul. Paul replied with angry screeds, telegram ultimatums, and telephone calls which always ended abruptly with one or other of them banging down the receiver. Paul had, for some reason perhaps connected with Michael, spared her his arrival in person. He announced to her, more clearly than ever before, his philosophy. There were no two ways about it. She was the type of woman who was made to vacillate between teasing and submitting. He had had enough of her teasing. It was time for her to submit. This was in fact what she really wanted to do, and she would find that this was where her true happiness lay. Independence was a chimera. All that would happen would be that she would be drawn into a new love affair. And was it right, because she knew that he would wait for her indefinitely, that she should inflict upon him, indeed upon both of them, these continual and pointless sufferings? He was aware that when she had some new fantasy in her head she was cold and ruthless, but he appealed to her common sense and to any remembrance that she still had of how much she had loved him. And by the way, could he now have back those two letters he had given her?
Dora was moved but not profoundly shaken by these communications. She pondered over them and answered them with clumsy attempts at argument. She also replied at length to a letter from Noel. Noel apologized for having bothered her by appearing at Imber. He realized now that it had been unwise. He was sorry, if she was sorry, that the place had been made to look so ludicrous in the press. But there it is, facts will speak. His own article had been fairly moderate. He was sorry too, subject to the same proviso, to hear that Imber was folding up. However, it was also good news since it meant that Dora would soon be back in London, and when, oh when, should they meet? She owed him a lunch. He had meant it when he said he missed her. He was missing her at this moment.
Dora replied that she was not coming to London. She would see him at some later time. For the present she wanted to be left alone. She felt a nostalgia for the ease of his company; but she no longer had the feverish urge to escape into his world. She attempted to turn her thoughts away from Paul, away from Noel, away even from Michael. It was not easy. She packed her things and collected together the paintings she had made in the last few weeks. She went to bed exhausted. She imagined, as she imagined every night, Paul sitting alone in his beautiful Knightsbridge room, beside the white telephone, wanting her back. But her last remembrance was that on the morrow Michael would be leaving her, and when they met again he would perhaps be married to Catherine. She wept herself to sleep, but they were quiet and comforting tears.
The morning was foggy as usual. They walked along the platform and sat down on the seat. The fog curled in slow tall breakers across the track and the fields opposite were invisible. The air was damp and cold.
“Have you got a winter coat?” said Michael.
“No. Well, it’s at Knightsbridge,” said Dora. “It doesn’t matter. I’m not a cold person.”
“You’d better buy one, you know,” said Michael. “You can’t get through the winter in that mackintosh. Do let me lend you some money, Dora. I’m not short.”
“No, of course not!” said Dora. “I shall make out very well on the grant, now I’ve got that part-time teaching job as well. Oh dear, I wish you weren’t going. Anyway, your train’s sure to be late with this fog.”
“I hope it won’t be too late,” said Michael.“Margaret’s meeting me at Paddington.” He sighed deeply.
Dora sighed too. She said, “You packed my pictures all right?” She had given him three of her sketches of Imber.
“They’re flat on the bottom of my case,” said Michael. “I do like them so much. I’ll have them framed in London.”
“They’re not worth it,” said Dora, “but I’m glad you like them. I can’t really paint.”
Michael did not contradict her. They sat silently for a while, looking into the fog and listening for the train. The day was blanketed and still.
“Don’t forget to give the key to Sister Ursula when you go,” said Michael.
“What will happen to Imber, anyway?” said Dora. “Who does it belong to? Funny, I never wondered this before. It seemed as if it just belonged to us.”
“Well, in fact, it belongs to me,” said Michael.
“To
“It’s the old home of my family,” said Michael,“although we haven’t been able to live there for a good many years. What will happen to it? It’s going to be leased indefinitely to the Abbey.”
“To the Abbey?” said Dora. She drew a small sigh of relief. “And what will they do with it?”
“Live in it,” said Michael. “They’ve needed more space for a long time.”
“So it’ll actually be inside the enclosure, the whole thing, the house, the lake, everything?”
“Yes, I suppose so.”
“How perfectly dreadful!” said Dora.
Michael laughed. “It’s a just reversal of roles,” he said. “In the old days the Abbey used to be a curiosity in the grounds of the Court. Now the Court will be a curiosity in the grounds of the Abbey.”
Dora shook her head. She could not think how Michael could bear not to live there even if the place fell down about his ears. The distant sound of the train was heard booming through the fog. “Oh dear,” she said, “here’s your train.”
They got up. The train came into the station.
Not many people were travelling, and Michael soon found an empty carriage. He stowed his suitcases and opened the window, leaning out and looking down on Dora. She seemed ready to burst into tears.
“Come, come,” said Michael, “cheer up!”
“I know I’m silly,” said Dora, “but I’ll miss you so much. You will write, won’t you, and let me know your address?”
“Of course I will,” said Michael. “I’ll be in London till January, and then in Norwich rill the summer. Anyhow, I’ll let you know where I am.” He had taken a temporary job at a Secondary Modern school for the spring and summer terms.
“I’ll write,” said Dora. “I may write, mayn’t I?”
“Of course,” said Michael.
“Do give my love to Catherine,” said Dora. “I do hope she’ll be all right.”
“Surely I will,” said Michael.
They remained looking at each other, trying to think of something to say. Dora was aware of his hand on the edge of the window. She wanted very much to cover it with her own hand, but did not do so. She wondered if she would dare to kiss him when the train was leaving.
“I never thanked you properly about Bath,” she said.“I couldn’t have managed it without you.”
“Oh, that’s all right,” said Michael. “I’m so glad it worked out. Give my greetings to Sally!”
“I will!” said Dora. “You know, I quite look forward to it. I’ve never been in the West Country. I wonder how I shall get on. What does one drink there?”
Michael made a wry face. “West Country cider,” he said.
“Isn’t it nice?” said Dora.
“It’s nice,” said Michael, “but very strong. I shouldn’t take too much of it, if I were you.”
“I shall telephone Sally to get in a large jug,”said Dora, “and tonight we shall be drinking your health in West Country cider!”
The whistle blew;, and the train gave a preliminary jolt. Blushing violently, Dora stood on tiptoe, drew Michael’s