Spandrell got up from his chair and began to walk up and down the room. “You didn’t think much of my happiness in the past,” he said.
His mother did not answer, but went on noiselessly crying.
“When you married that man,” he went on, “did you think of my happiness?”
“You know I thought it would be for the best,” she answered brokenly. She had explained it so often; she couldn’t begin again. “You know it,” she repeated.
“I only know what I felt and said at the time,” he answered. “You didn’t listen to me, and now you tell me you wanted to make me happy.”
“But you were so unreasonable,” she protested. “If you had given me any reasons …”
“Reasons,” he repeated slowly. “Did you honestly expect a boy of fifteen to tell his mother the reasons why he didn’t want her to share her bed with a stranger?”
He was thinking of that book which had circulated surreptitiously among the boys of his house at school. Disgusted and ashamed, but irresistibly fascinated, he had read it at night, by the light of an electric torch, under the bedclothes. A Girls’ School in Paris it was called, innocuously enough; but the contents were pure pornography. The sexual exploits of the military were pindarically exalted. A little later his mother wrote to him that she was going to marry Major Knoyle.
“It’s no good, Mother,” he said aloud. “Hadn’t we better talk about something else?”
Mrs. Knoyle drew her breath sharply and with determination, gave her eyes a final wipe, and put away the handkerchief. “I’m sorry,” she said. “It was stupid of me. Perhaps I’d better go.”
Secretly she hoped that he would protest, would beg her to stay. But he said nothing.
“Here’s the money,” she added.
He took the folded bank notes and stuffed them into the pocket of his dressing gown. “I’m sorry I had to ask you for it,” he said. “I was in a hole. I’ll try not to get into it again.”
He looked at her for a moment, smiling, and suddenly, through the worn mask, she seemed to see him as he was in boyhood. Tenderness like a soft warmth expanded within her, soft but irresistible. It would not be contained. She laid her hands on his shoulders.
“Goodbye, my darling boy,” she said, and Spandrell recognized in her voice that note which used to come into it when she talked to him of his dead father. She leaned forward to kiss him. Averting his face, he passively suffered her lips to touch his cheek.
XIV
Miss Fulkes rotated the terrestrial globe until the crimson triangle of India was opposite their eyes.
“That’s Bombay,” she said, pointing with her pencil. “That’s where Daddy and Mummy took the ship. Bombay is a big town in India,” she went on instructively. “All this is India.”
“Why is India red?” asked little Phil.
“I told you before. Try to remember.”
“Because it’s English?” Phil remembered, of course; but the explanation had seemed inadequate. He had hoped for a better one this time.
“There, you see, you can remember if you try,” said Miss Fulkes, scoring a small triumph.
“But why should English things be red?”
“Because red is England’s colour. Look, here’s little England.” She spun the globe. “Red, too.”
“We live in England, don’t we?” Phil looked out of the window. The lawn with its Wellingtonia, the clot-polled elms looked back at him.
“Yes, we live just about here,” and Miss Fulkes poked the red island in the stomach.
“But it’s green, where we live,” said Phil. “Not red.”
Miss Fulkes tried to explain, as she had done so many times before, just precisely what a map was.
In the garden Mrs. Bidlake walked among her flowers, weeding and meditating. Her walking stick had a little pronged spud at the end of it; she could weed without bending. The weeds in the flower beds were young and fragile; they yielded without a struggle to the spud. But the dandelions and plantains on the lawn were more formidable enemies. The dandelions’ roots were like long tapering white serpents. The plantains, when she tried to pull them up, desperately clawed the earth.
It was the season of tulips. Duc van Thol and Keisers Kroon, Proserpine and Thomas Moore stood at attention in all the beds, glossy in the light. Atoms in the sun vibrated and their trembling filled all space. Eyes felt the pulses as light; the tulip atoms absorbed or reverberated the accorded movements, creating colours for whose sake the burgesses of Seventeenth Century Haarlem were prepared to part with hoarded guilders. Red tulips and yellow, white and parti-coloured, smooth or feathery—Mrs. Bidlake looked at them happily. They were like those gay and brilliant young men, she reflected, in Pinturicchio’s frescoes at Siena. She halted so as to be able to shut her eyes and think more thoroughly of Pinturicchio. Mrs. Bidlake could only think really well when she had her eyes shut. Her face tilted a little upward toward the sky, her heavy, wax white eyelids closed against the light, she stood remembering, confusedly thinking. Pinturicchio, Siena, the solemn huge cathedral. The Tuscan Middle Ages marched past her in a rich and confused pageant. … She had been brought up on Ruskin. Watts had painted her portrait as a child. Rebelling against the Pre-Raphaelites, she had thrilled with an admiration that was quickened, at first, by a sense of sacrilege, over the Impressionists.
It was because she loved art that she had married John Bidlake. Liking his pictures, she had imagined, when the painter of The Haymakers had paid his court to her, that she adored the man. He was twenty years her senior; his reputation as a husband was bad; her family objected strenuously. She did not care. John Bidlake was embodied Art. His was a sacred function, and through his function he appealed to all her vague, but ardent, idealism.
John Bidlake’s reasons for desiring to marry yet again were unromantic. Travelling in Provence, he had caught typhoid.
