Looking back on them afterwards, Peter
saw the months that followed as a time of waiting
between two periods of stress. Not, of course,
that anyone can ever stand still, for even if one
does but sit by a fire and warm one’s hands,
things happen, and one is imperceptibly led forward.
It was so in this case, but, not unnaturally, Graham
hardly noticed in what way his mind was moving.
He had been through a period of storm, and he had
to a certain extent emerged from it. The men he
had met, and above all Julie, had been responsible
for the opening of his eyes to facts that he had before
passed over, and it was entirely to his credit that
he would not refuse to accept them and act upon them.
But once he had resolved to do so things, as it were,
slowed down. He went about his work in a new
spirit, the spirit not of the teacher, but of the learner,
and ever since his talk with Louise he thought or
tried to think more of what love might
mean to Julie than to himself. The result was
a curious change in their relations, of which the
girl was more immediately and continually conscious
than Peter. She puzzled over it, but could not
get the clue, and her quest irritated her. Peter
had always been the least little bit nervous in her
presence. She had known that he never knew what
she would do or say next, and her knowledge had amused
and carried her away. But now he was so self-possessed.
Very friendly they were, and they met often in
the ward for a few sentences that meant much to each
of them; down town by arrangement in a cafe, or once
or twice for dinner; and once for a day in the country,
though not alone; and he was always the same.
Sometimes, on night duty, she would grope for an adjective
to fit him, and could only think of “tender.”
He was that. And she hated it, or all but hated
it. She did not want tenderness from him, for
it seemed to her that tenderness meant that he was,
as it were, standing aloof from her, considering,
helping when he could. She demanded the fierce
rush of passion with which he would seize and shrine
her in the centre of his heart, deaf to her entreaties,
careless of her pain. She would love then, she
thought, and sometimes, going to the window of the
ward and staring out over the harbour at the twinkling
lights, she would bite her lip with the pain of it.
He had thought she dismissed love lightly when she
called it animal passion. Good God, if he only
knew!...
Peter, for his part, did not realise
so completely the change that had come over him.
For one thing, he saw himself all the time, and she
did not. She did not see him when he lay on his
bed in a tense agony of desire for her. She did
not see him when life looked like a tumbled heap of
ruins to him and she smiled beyond. She all but
only saw him when he was staring at the images that
had been presented to him during the past months,
or hearing in imagination Louise’s quaintly accepted
English and her quick and vivid “La pauvre
petite!”
For it was Louise, curiously enough,
who affected him most in these days. A friendship
sprang up between them of which no one knew. Pennell
and Donovan, with whom he went everywhere, did not
speak of it either to him or to one another, with
that real chivalry that is in most men, but if they
had they would have blundered, misunderstanding.
Arnold, of whom Peter saw a good deal, did not know,
or, if he knew, Peter never knew that he knew.
Julie, who was well aware of his friendship with the
two first men, knew that he saw French girls, and,
indeed, openly chaffed him about it. But under
her chaff was an anxiety, typical of her. She
did not know how far he went in their company, and
she would have given anything to know. She guessed
that, despite everything, he had had no physical relationship
with any one of them, and she almost wished it might
be otherwise. She knew well that if he fell to
them, he would the more readily turn to her.
There was a strength about him now that she dreaded.
Whatever Louise thought she kept wonderfully
hidden. He took her out to dinner in quiet places,
and she would take him home to coffee, and they would
chat, and there was an end. She was seemingly
well content. She did her business, and they
would even speak of it. “I cannot come to-night,
mon ami,” she would say; “I am busy.”
She would nod to him as she passed out of the restaurant
with someone else, and he would smile back at her.
Nor did he ever remonstrate or urge her to change her
ways. And she knew why. He had no key with
which to open her cage.
Once, truly, he attempted it, and
it was she who refused the glittering thing.
He rarely came uninvited to her flat, for obvious reasons;
but one night she heard him on the stairs as she got
ready for bed. He was walking unsteadily, and
she thought at first that he had been drinking.
She opened to him with the carelessness her life had
taught her, her costume off, and her black hair all
about her shoulders. “Go in and wait, Peterr,”
she said; “I come.”
She had slipped on a coloured silk
wrap, and gone in to the sitting-room to find him
pacing up and down. She smiled. “Sit
down, mon ami,” she said; “I will
make the coffee. See, it is ready. Mais
vraiment, you shall drink cafe noir to-night.
And one leetle glass of this is it not so?”
and she took a green bottle of peppermint liqueur from
the cupboard.
“Coffee, Louise,” he said,
“but not the other. I don’t want it.”
She turned and looked more closely
at him then. “Non,” she said, “pardon.
But sit you down. Am I to have the wild beast
prowling up and down in my place?”
“That’s just it, Louise,”
he cried; “I am a wild beast to-night. I
can’t stand it any longer. Kiss me.”
He put his arms round her, and bent
her head back, studying her French and rather inscrutable
eyes, her dark lashes, her mobile mouth, her long
white throat. He put his hand caressingly upon
it, and slid his fingers beneath the loose lace that
the open wrap exposed. “Dear,” he
said, “I want you to-night.”
“To-night, chérie?” she questioned.
“Yes, now,” he said hotly.
“And why not? You give to other men why
not to me, Louise?”
She freed herself with a quick gesture,
and, brave heart, she laughed merrily. The devil
must have started at that laugh, and the angels of
God sung for joy. “Ah, non,” she
cried, “It is the mistake you make. I sell
myself to other men. But you you are
my friend; I cannot sell myself to you.”
He did not understand altogether why
she quibbled; how should he have done? But lie
was ashamed. He slid into the familiar chair and
ran his fingers through his hair. “Forgive
me, dear,” he muttered. “I think I
am mad to-night, but I am not drunk, as you thought,
except with worrying. I feel lost, unclean, body
and soul, and I thought you would help me to forget no,
more than that, help me to feel a man. Can’t
you, won’t you?” he demanded, looking
up. “I am tired of play-acting. I’ve
a body, like other men. Let me plunge down deep
to-night, Louise. It will do me good, and it
doesn’t matter. That girl was right after
all. Oh, what a fool I am!”
Then did the girl of the streets set
out to play her chosen part. She did not preach
at all how could she? Besides, neither
had she any use for the Ten Commandments. But
if ever Magdalene broke an alabaster-box of very precious
ointment, Louise did so that night. She was worldly
wise, and she did not disdain to use her wisdom.
And when he had gone she got calmly into bed, and
slept not all at once, it is true, but as
resolutely as she had laughed and talked. It was
only when she woke in the morning that she found her
pillow wet with tears.
It was a few days later that Louise
took Peter to church. His ignorance of her religion
greatly amused her, or so at least she pretended, and
when he asked her to come out of town to lunch one
morning, and she refused because it was Corpus Christi,
and she wanted to go to the sung Mass, it was he who
suggested that he should go with her. She looked
at him queerly a moment, and then agreed. They
met outside the church and went in together, as strange
a pair as ever the meshes of that ancient net which
gathers of all kinds had ever drawn towards the shore.
Louise led him to a central seat,
and found the place for him in her Prayer-Book.
The building was full, and Peter glanced about him
curiously. The detachment of the worshippers impressed
him immensely. There did not appear to be any
proscribed procedure among them, and even when the
Mass began he was one of the few who stood and knelt
as the rubrics of the service directed. Louise
made no attempt to do so. For the most part she
knelt, and her beads trickled ceaselessly through her
fingers.
Peter was, if anything, bored by the
Mass, though he would not admit it to himself.
It struck him as being a ratherly poorly played performance.
True, the officiating ministers moved and spoke with
a calm regularity which impressed him, familiar as
he was with clergymen who gave out hymns and notices,
and with his own solicitude at home that the singing
should go well or that the choirboys should not fidget.
But there was a terrible confusion with chairs, and
a hideous kind of clapper that was used, apparently,
to warn the boys to sit and rise. The service,
moreover, as a reverential congregational act of worship
such as he was used to hope for, was marred by innumerable
collections, and especially by the old woman who came
round even during the Sanctus to collect the
rent of the chairs they occupied, and changed money
or announced prices with all the zest of the market-place.
But at the close there was a procession
which is worth considerable description. Six
men with censers of silver lined up before the high
altar, and stood there, slowly swinging the fragrant
bowls at the end of their long chains. The music
died down. One could hear the rhythmical, faint
clangour of the metal. And then, intensely sudden,
away in the west gallery, but almost as if from the
battlements of heaven, pealed out silver trumpets
in a fanfare. The censers flew high in time with
it, and the sweet clouds of smoke, caught by the coloured
sunlight of the rich painted windows, unfolded in
the air of the sanctuary. Lights moved and danced,
and the space before the altar filled with the white
of the men and boys who should move in the procession.
Again and again those trumpets rang out, and hardly
had the last echoes died away than the organ thundered
the Pange Lingua, as a priest in cloth of gold
turned from the altar with the glittering monstrance
in his hand. Even from where he stood Peter could
see the white centre of the Host for Whom all this
was enacted. Then the canopy, borne by four French
laymen in frock-coats and white gloves, hid It from
his sight; and the high gold cross, and its attendant
tapers, swung round a great buttress into view.
Peter had never heard a hymn sung
so before. First the organ would peal alone;
then the men’s voices unaided would take up the
refrain; then the organ again; then the clear treble
of the boys; then, like waves breaking on immemorial
cliffs, organ, trumpets, boys, men, and congregation
would thunder out together till the blood raced in
his veins and his eyes were too dim to see.
Down the central aisle at last they
came, and Peter knelt with the rest. He saw how
the boys went before throwing flowers; how in pairs,
as the censers were recharged, the thurifers walked
backward before the three beneath the canopy, of whom
one, white-haired and old, bore That in the monstrance
which all adored. In music and light and colour
and scent the Host went by, as It had gone for centuries
in that ancient place, and Peter knew, all bewildered
as he was, there, by the side of the girl, that a
new vista was opening before his eyes.
It was not that he understood as yet,
or scarcely so. In a few minutes all had passed
them, and he rose and turned to see the end. He
watched while, amid the splendour of that court, with
singers and ministers and thurifers arranged before,
the priest ascended to enthrone the Sacrament in the
place prepared for It. With banks of flowers behind,
and the glitter of electric as well as of candle light,
the jewelled rays of the monstrance gleaming and the
organ pealing note on note in a triumphant ecstasy,
the old, bent priest placed That he carried there,
and sank down before It. Then all sound of singing
and of movement died away, and from that kneeling
crowd one lone, thin voice, but all unshaken, cried
to Heaven of the need of men. It was a short
prayer and he could not understand it, but it seemed
to Peter to voice his every need, and to go on and
on till it reached the Throne. The “Amen”
beat gently about him, and he sank his face in his
hands.
But only for a second. The next
he was lifted to his feet. All that had gone
before was as nothing to this volume of praise that
shook, it seemed to him, the very carven roof above
and swept the ancient walls in waves of sound.
Adoremus in aeternum Sanctissimum
Sacramentum, cried men on earth, and, as it seemed
to him, the very angels of God.
But outside he collected his thoughts.
“Well,” he said. “I’m
glad I’ve been, but I shan’t go again.”
“Why not?” demanded Louise.
“It was most beautiful. I have never ’eard
it better.”
“Oh yes, it was,” said
Peter; “the music and singing were wonderful,
but forgive me if I hurt you, but I can’t
help saying it I see now what our people
mean when they say it is nothing less than idolatry.”
“Idolatry?” queried Louise,
stumblingly and bewildered. “But what do
you mean?”
“Well,” said Peter, “the
Sacrament is, of course, a holy thing, a very holy
thing, the sign and symbol of Christ Himself, but in
that church sign and symbol were forgotten; the Sacrament
was worshipped as if it were very God.”
“Oui, oui,” protested
Louise vehemently, “It is. It is lé
bon Jesu. It is He who is there. He passed
by us among them all, as we read He went through the
crowds of Jerusalem in the holy Gospel. And there
was not one He did not see, either,” she added,
with a little break in her voice.
Peter all but stopped in the road.
It was absurd that so simple a thing should have seemed
to him new, but it is so with us all. We know
in a way, but we do not understand, and then there
comes the moment of illumination sometimes.
“Jesus Himself!” he exclaimed,
and broke off abruptly. He recalled a fragment
of speech: “Not a dead man, not a man on
the right hand of the throne of God.” But
“He can’t be found,” Langton had
said. Was it so? He walked on in silence.
What if Louise, with her pitiful story and her caged,
earthy life, had after all found what the other had
missed? He pulled himself together; it was too
good to be true.
One day Louise asked him abruptly
if he had been to see the girl in the house which
he had visited with Pennell. He told her no, and
she said they had met by chance in the
town “Well, go you immediately, then,
or you will not see her.”
“What do you mean?” he asked. “Is
she ill dying?”
“Ah, non, not dying, but she
is ill. They will take her to a ’ospital
to-morrow. But this afternoon she will be in bed.
She like to see you, I think.”
Peter left her and made for the house.
On his way he thought of something, and took a turning
which led to the market-place of flowers. There,
at a stall, he bought a big bunch of roses and some
sprays of asparagus fern, and set off again.
Arriving, he found the door shut. It was a dilemma,
for he did not even know the girl’s name, but
he knocked.
A grim-faced woman opened the door
and stared at him and his flowers. “I think
there is a girl sick here,” said Peter.
“May I see her?”
The woman stared still harder, and
he thought she was going to refuse him admission,
but at length she gave way. “Entrez,”
she said. “Je pense que
vous savez lé chambre. Mais,
lé bouquet c’est incroyable.”
Peter went up the stairs and knocked
at the door. A voice asked who was there, and
he smiled because he could not say. The girl did
not know his name, either. “A friend,”
he said: “May I come in?”
A note of curiosity sounded in her
voice. “Oui, certainement.
Entrez,” she called. Peter turned the handle
and entered the remembered room.
The girl was sitting up in bed in
her nightdress, her hair in disorder, and the room
felt hot and stuffy and looked more tawdry than ever.
She exclaimed at the sight of his flowers. He
deposited the big bunch by the side of her, and seated
himself on the edge of the bed. She had been
reading a book, and he noticed it was the sort of book
that Langton and he had seen so prominently in the
book-shop at Abbeville.
If he had expected to find her depressed
or ashamed, he was entirely mistaken. “Oh,
you darling,” she cried in clipped English.
“Kiss me, quick, or I will forget the orders
of the doctor and jump out of bed and catch you.
Oh, that you should bring me the rose so beautiful!
Helas! I may not wear one this night in the cafe!
See, are they not beautiful here?”
She pulled her nightdress open considerably
more than the average evening dress is cut away and
put two or three of the blooms on her white bosom,
putting her head on one side to see the result.
“Oui,” she exclaimed, “je suis
exquise! To-night I ’ave so many
boys I do not know what to do! But I forget:
I cannot go. Je suis malade, très
malade. You knew? You are angry with
me is it not so?”
He laughed; there was nothing else
to do. “No,” he said; “why should
I be? But I am very sorry.”
She shrugged her shoulders. “It
is nothing,” she said. “C’est
la guerre for me. I shall not be long,
and when I come out you will come to see me again,
will you not? And bring me more flowers?
And you shall not let me ’ave the danger
any more, and if I do wrong you shall smack me ’ard.
Per’aps you will like that. In the books
men like it much. Would you like to whip me?”
she demanded, her eyes sparkling as she threw herself
over in the bed and looked up at him.
Peter got up and moved away to the
window. “No,” he said shortly, staring
out. He had a sensation of physical nausea, and
it was as much as he could do to restrain himself.
He realised, suddenly, that he was in the presence
of the world, the flesh, and the devil’s final
handiwork. Only his new knowledge kept him quiet.
Even she might be little to blame. He remembered
all that she had said to him before, and suddenly his
disgust was turned into overwhelming pity. This
child before him for she was little more
than a child had bottomed degradation.
For the temporary protection and favour of a man that
she guessed to be kind there was nothing in earth
or in hell that she would not do. And in her already
were the seeds of the disease that was all but certain
to slay her.
He turned again to the bed, and knelt
beside it. “Poor little girl,” he
said, and lightly brushed her hair. He certainly
never expected the result.
She pushed him from her. “Oh,
go, go!” she cried. “Quick go!
You pretend, but you do not love me. Why you
give me money, the flowers, if you do not want me?
Go quick. Come never to see me again!”
Peter did the only thing he could
do; he went. “Good-bye,” he said
cheerfully at the door. “I hope you will
be better soon. I didn’t mean to be a beast
to you. Give the flowers to Lucienne if you don’t
want them; she will be able to wear them to-night.
Cheerio. Good-bye-ee!”
“Good-bye-ee!” she echoed
after him. And he closed the door on her life.
In front of the Hotel de Ville he
met Arnold, returning from the club, and the two men
walked off together. In a moment of impulse he
related the whole story to him. “Now,”
he said, “what do you make of all that?”
Arnold was very moved. It was
not his way to say much, but he walked on silently
for a long time. Then he said: “The
Potter makes many vessels, but never one needlessly.
I hold on to that. And He can remake the broken
clay.”
“Are you sure?” asked Peter.
“I am,” said Arnold.
“It’s not in the Westminster Confession,
nor in the Book of Common Prayer, nor, for all I know,
in the Penny Catechism, but I believe it. God
Almighty must be stronger than the devil, Graham.”
Peter considered this. Then he
shook his head. “That won’t wash,
Arnold,” he said. “If God is stronger
than the devil, so that the devil is never ultimately
going to succeed, I can see no use in letting him have
his fling at all. And I’ve more respect
for the devil than to think he’d take it.
It’s childish to suppose the existence of two
such forces at a perpetual game of cheat. Either
there is no devil and there is no hell in
which case I reckon that there is no heaven either,
for a heaven would not be a heaven if it were not
attained, and there would be no true attainment if
there were no possibility of failure or
else there are all three. And if there are all
three, the devil wins out, sometimes, in the end.”
“Then, God is not almighty?”
Peter shrugged his shoulders.
“If I breed white mice, I don’t lessen
my potential power if I choose to let some loose in
the garden to see if the cat will get them. Besides,
in the end I could annihilate the cat if I wanted
to.”
“You can’t think of God so,” cried
Arnold sharply.
“Can’t I?” demanded
Peter. “Well, maybe not, Arnold; I don’t
know that I can think of Him at all. But I can
face the facts of life, and if I’m not a coward,
I shan’t run away from them. That’s
what I’ve been doing these days, and that’s
what I do not think even a man like yourself does
fairly. You think, I take it, that a girl like
that is damned utterly by all the canons of theology,
and then, forced on by pity and tenderness, you cry
out against them all that she is God’s making
and He will not throw her away. Is that it?”
Arnold slightly evaded an answer.
“How can you save her, Graham?” he asked.
“I can’t. I don’t
pretend I can. I’ve nothing to say or do.
I see only one flicker of hope, and that lies in the
fact that she doesn’t understand what love is.
No shadow of the truth has ever come her way.
If now, by any chance, she could see for one instant in
fact, mind you the face of God....
If God is Love,” he added. They walked a
dozen paces. “And even then she might refuse,”
he said.
“Whose fault would that be?” demanded
the older man.
Peter answered quickly, “Whose
fault? Why, all our faults yours and
mine, and the fault of men like Pennell and Donovan,
as well as her own, too, as like as not. We’ve
all helped build up the scheme of things as they are,
and we are all responsible. We curse the Germans
for making this damned war, and it is the war that
has done most to make that girl; but they didn’t
make it. No Kaiser made it, and no Nietzsche.
The only person who had no hand in it that I know
of was Jesus Christ.”
“And those who have left all
and followed Him,” said Arnold softly.
“Precious few,” retorted Peter.
The other had nothing to say.
During these months Peter wrote often
to Hilda, and with increasing frankness. Her
replies grew shorter as his letters grew longer.
It was strange, perhaps, that he should continue to
write, but the explanation was not far to seek.
It was by her that he gauged the extent of his separation
from the old outlook, and in her that he still clung,
desperately, as it were, to the past. Against
reason he elevated her into a kind of test position,
and if her replies gave him no encouragement, they
at least served to make him feel the inevitableness
and the reality of his present position. It would
have been easy to get into the swim and let it carry
him carelessly on moderately easy, at any
rate. But with Hilda to refer to he was forced
to take notice, and it was she, therefore, that hastened
the end. Just after Christmas, in a fit of temporary
boldness, he told her about Louise, so that it was
Louise again who was the responsible person during
these months. Hilda’s reply was delayed,
nor had she written immediately. When he got it,
it was brief but to the point. She did not doubt,
she said, but that what he had written was strictly
true, and she did not doubt his honour. But he
must see that their relationship was impossible.
She couldn’t marry the man who appeared actually
to like the company of such a woman, nor could she
do other than feel that the end would seem to him as
plain as it did to her, and that he would leave the
Church, or at any rate such a ministry in it as she
could share. She had told her people that she
was no longer engaged in order that he should feel
free, but she would ever remember the man as she had
known him, whom she had loved, and whom she loved
still.
It was in the afternoon that Peter
got the letter, and he was just setting off for the
hospital. When he had read it, he put on his cap
and set off in the opposite direction. There
was a walk along the sea-wall a few feet wide, where
the wind blew strongly laden with the Channel breezes,
and on the other side was a waste of sand and stone.
In some places water was on both sides of the wall,
and here one could feel more alone than anywhere else
in the town.
Peter set off, his head in a mad whirl.
He had felt that such a letter would come for weeks,
but that did not, in a way, lessen the blow when it
came. He had known, too, that Hilda was not to
him what she had been, but he had not altogether felt
that she never could be so again. Now he knew
that he had gone too far to turn back. He felt,
he could not help it, released in a sense, with almost
a sense of exhilaration behind it, for the unknown
lay before. And yet, since we are all so human,
he was intensely unhappy below all this. He called
to mind little scenes and bits of scenes: their
first meeting; the sight of her in church as he preached;
how she had looked at the dining-table in Park Lane;
her walk as she came to meet him in the park.
And he knew well enough how he had hurt her, and the
thought maddened him. He told himself that God
was a devil to treat him so; that he had tried to
follow the right; and that the way had led him down
towards nothing but despair. He was no nearer
answering the problems that beset him. He might
have been in a fool’s paradise before, but what
was the use of coming out to see the devil as he was
and men and women as they were if he could see no more
than that? The throne of his heart was empty,
and there was none to fill it.
Julie?