They drew apart and gazed at each other with a questioning astonishment, with fear, almost with terror. They were trembling, shuddering. It was as if some great blow had paralysed them. They sat thus for a short while, awkwardly shifting their positions, panting, their hearts racing. Then Harvey again pursued Sefton's hand and held it, stroking it, while they sat open-mouthed. Sefton then withdrew her hand and looked away.
Harvey said at last, almost in a whisper, âCan it really happen like this? Evidently it can.'
Sefton, not looking at him, said in an anguished voice, almost peevishly, âWell, what
has
happened? I'm not at all sure.'
Harvey said, âDo you mind if we lie on the bed?'
He slipped out of his jacket then arched himself up, edging back over the counterpane. He kicked off his shoes. Sefton somehow followed, lying inertly face downward. Harvey lay on his back, he stared up at the ceiling, noticing a crack, then that his teeth were chattering. He closed his mouth and breathed slowly and deeply through his nose. He felt and seemed to hear the noisy tumbling of his heart, he could also feel Sefton's heart beating against his side. Turning he put one arm across Sefton's back, then led his hand to touch the silky tangle of her hair, then to touch her neck which was burning hot. He opened his mouth again and bit his lower lip. He found himself moaning very softly. Withdrawing his outstretched arm he moved back against the wall, making a space for Sefton to turn towards him. Obeying or seeming to obey his movement she rolled over onto her back in the middle of the bed. Harvey undid his belt. Leaning on an elbow he touched her hot cheek, then began to undo her shirt. Her hand arrested him.
âSefton, don't be angry with me. I love you.'
After a moment Sefton said, âYes. Something has happened. But I think it is a form of madness.'
âYes, yes, it is!' said Harvey, now undoing his trousers and attempting to pull off his shirt and vest with one hand, since Sefton was still holding the other hand. âOh Sefton, Sefton, I want you so much, I love you so.'
âHarvey,
don't
. We don't know who we are, I've never felt so utterly strange to myself â we have become monsters, we are suddenly â
monsters
.'
âDon't be frightened, my darling Sefton.'
âI'm not â frightened â I think â just â amazed, appalled â '
âWe're nice monsters, good monsters, oh my dear, please let me undress you a little, just a little â '
âNo,
no
â '
âLook, I'm undressing too, just let me pull all this stuff â off.'
âStop, I don't want to struggle with you, stop,
please
, Harvey, be guided by me â it's all so terribly strange â and I do want it to be
all right.'
âYes, it will be all right, Sefton I want you, I've never felt like this before â '
âNor have I, but â '
âI'm overcome, I'm like â crushed, run over â I must have all of you forever â '
âThink how very strange your words are. Listen, Harvey,
listen,
this, whatever it is, has only just happened to us, it happened in seconds â '
âThank God it happened to both of us â '
âWhen we were sitting on the floor, remember, it seems ages ago â '
âI have known you for ages, we were made for each other, millions of years ago, I have known you forever â '
âHarvey, it's all beautiful â it's something the gods dropped on us, it's a weird awful beauty, like nothing we've known before, but wait, we have gone far enough now â '
âYou mustn't speak like that, you deny your own words, we've found each other, we must
go on
, don't
torment
me.'
âYou don't understand, I'm not denying or tormenting, we must prove this thing, we must respect it, we must try it â '
âYes, let's try it now, Sefton, I'm in agony â '
âSomeone may come in at any moment â '
âOh hang them! Just let me
be
with you â '
âHarvey, be gentle, be quiet â there's tomorrow and tomorrow. Let us put on our shirts and look at each other like sane people. Let me go, I'm getting up.' She slipped from him.
Harvey lay groaning, then slowly adjusted his shirt and vest, his trousers, his belt. He sat up on the edge of the bed. Sefton stood before him. He thought, who is this strange beautiful woman, her face is transfigured, it's radiant, it's so gentle, but was this all a dream perhaps, just this and nothing more? âSefton, sit beside me, that's right, let me just touch, do what I ask.'
She sat beside him and let him undo the buttons of her shirt. Sefton, as Spartan, wore, in the coldest weather, no brassière, no vest. Harvey touched her breasts, closing his eyes, then leaning down his heavy head against her. He did not resist her when she pulled his head up, tugging his hair like in the happy dream. They then began to kiss each other hungrily, fast. At last Sefton said, âYou must go.' âI can't leave you.' âI'll come to you.' âYou'll come to my flat?' âYes.' âTonight, tomorrow?' âNo.' âSefton, don't kill me, I have
got
to see you.' âListen, Harvey, I am older than you are, I am thousands and thousands of years older than you.' âSefton, I know that, but it is not relevant now!' â
Listen
â let us
not
meet tomorrow â ' âDon't say that â ' âLet us meet the day after. Harvey, this is holy, we must be worthy of it, tomorrow let us be quiet, and rest, let us be like â in penitence, in prayer-I want this, I want it like this â ' âYou want time to recover and tell me to go to hell.' âNo. I believe all this is real. Just do as I ask. And please go away now.' âWell â I have to obey you â I'll obey you to the end of the world.' âI'll come at ten, the day after tomorrow.' âAll right, my dear love, my dear.'
Sefton adjusted her shirt, buttoning the buttons and tucking in the tail. She rolled up the sleeves as they had been before. She opened the door.
Harvey stared at his overcoat hanging up in the hall. It was as if the overcoat
didn't know
. He went out and put it on. Sefton opened the front door. It was misty outside. Cold mist moved into the house. Harvey raised his hand and went out. The door closed. He walked down the road smiling like a madman.
Â
Sefton lay supine on the red and blue Turkey carpet, breathing in long deep breaths so slow that it seemed that between one and the next she might quietly die. She felt pinned to the floor by a gentle but insistent force. Her eyes were open, her face serene, her lips slightly parted in a faint quizzical smile. Her limbs were relaxed, strengthless, flattened as if by the passage of a vast silent wind. At intervals she framed words, holding them concealed in her mouth like sacred charms. She thought, I am now in a vacuum, I am nowhere and nothing, transparent, uncreated, substanceless, drifting in limbo, between being and non-being, where one may choose not to be. I am dissolved by fear and violence into a timeless peace. How little I have expected this overthrow, this sudden awful presence of the god. Perhaps after all not to have been born is best. How near the human soul must be to nothingness if it can be so tossed.
Â
Â
Moy came in. She closed the door quietly as she usually did, and went into the kitchen and put the kettle on. Then she went and knocked softly on Sefton's door, saying, âWould you like a cup of tea, Sef?' She often did this. There was a silence. Then Sefton replied, âThanks, dear, I'll come.' A few minutes later, just as Moy was making the tea, she came in.
âWhat's the matter, Sef?'
âWhat do you mean, what's the matter?'
âYou look funny.'
âHow funny?'
âAs if you were getting the âflu. Do you feel all right?'
âYes, of course! I'd love some tea. How did things go with Miss Fitzherbert?'
âOh very well, she's so kind. I wonder if we could invite her round.'
âYou know we never invite anyone round.'
âShe said I'd been cowardly and must be brave and wild.'
The telephone rang. Sefton upset her tea. Moy went out into the hall.
âHello.'
It was Clement. âHello, Moy.'
âHow did you know it was me.'
âYou have a special lovely voice.'
âOh. I'm afraid Louie is out, she's gone to the clinic.'
âHas she? Well, well.'
âI'll tell her you rang.'
âMoy, don't ring off.'
âSorry.'
âI might want to talk to you. What's the art school news?'
âMiss Fitzherbert said I should paint more in oils. Only it means buying canvases.'
âI'll buy you some canvases.'
âNo,
no
, I don't mean that, I wouldn't accept them â '
âDon't be silly! Just say I rang. I'll ring again.'
Moy returned to the kitchen. Sefton was mopping the table where she had spilt the tea. Moy said, âIt was Clement, he'll ring again.'
Moy drank some tea. Then she went slowly upstairs. Anax used to run up the stairs in front of her, push open her door, and jump on her bed, turning to her with his wild lively always expectant foxy face. She went in and closed the door behind her. The silent room seemed full, full of something, as if all the atoms had grown and were crowding upon one another, atoms of silence. She breathed them in through her nose and mouth. Looking toward the Polish Rider she met his calm tender gentle thoughtful gaze. She thought, what he sees is the face of death. He sees the silence of the valley, its emptiness, its innocence â and beyond it the hideous field of war on which he will die. And his poor horse will die too. He is courage, he is love, he loves what is good, and will die for it, and his body will be trampled by horses' hooves, and no one will know his grave. She thought, he is so beautiful, he has the beauty of goodness. I am a freak, a crippled animal, something which will be put down and out of its misery, I am a hump-backed dwarf. She turned away toward her stones, which had so much worried Anax, upon their shelf, and reached out her hand, nearer and nearer. A stone moved to her hand. She thought, my stones, oh, my stones. She warmed the cold stone in her hand, and she thought too, as this thought came suddenly at such times, of the rock upon the hillside, and its stone which she had taken away. She thought, I shall die of misery and pain. Then she thought, when I am eighteen I shall go to India where all things, even the tiniest things, are holy and sacred. And she thought, I don't yet know what pain is. The world is full of
terrible pain. He
could see that too.
Â
Â
Soon after Moy had gone upstairs Louise returned. Sefton was still sitting in the kitchen. She sprang up. âOh Louie, have some tea, I think the pot is still warm.'
âI'll put the kettle on just in case. Have you had tea?'
âYes.' Sefton watched her mother, still with her coat on and her woollen cap pulled down over her ears, filling the kettle at the sink, and it brought back to her some memory of early childhood, and its special security, and for a moment Sefton thought about her father.
âWhere's Moy?'
âUpstairs.'
âOh dear, she must be missing Anax. Do you think we should buy her a dog?'
âNo. It would just get run over. What happened at the clinic?'
âNothing â it was no good.'
âI thought so. It's too early to start visiting. What's the place like?'
âTerribly grand and expensive â and terribly quiet and as it were barricaded! I didn't get past the girl at the desk. She asked me to wait in a room full of flowering plants. Then she came and told me Peter was recovering and they would let us know when he was ready for visitors. She already had our address. She said Bellamy had called earlier and been told the same.'
âSo they know all about us.'
âYes, I'm rather glad of that. I asked for Dr Fonsett but they said he wasn't available.'
âOf course!'
âDid anyone ring up?'
âClement called. Moy took the call.'
âOh dear, she gets so upset talking with him by telephone.'
âAnd Harvey dropped in.'
âI'm sorry I missed him. I'll ring Clement now.'
Louise went into the hall and rang Clement's number. No answer. She returned to the kitchen. Sefton had gone back to her own room. Louise emptied the lukewarm tea-pot, put in some more tea and poured the boiling water into the pot. She sat down at the table. She had not mentioned to Sefton a visit, equally fruitless, which she had made after leaving the clinic. She had gone again to Lucas's house and rung the bell. No answer. She went through the gate into the garden, but did not climb the iron staircase. She returned to the front door and rang again, and called his name. Silence. She thought, he is dead. Now tears came to her once more, familiar tears. Something which Louise had never divulged to anyone was that, soon after Teddy's death, Lucas had made her an offer of marriage.
âWhat did you do yesterday?'
âI worked as usual. I thought about you. What did you do?'
âI couldn't do anything, I just was â I couldn't eat or drink or speak â I walked about London. I was in heaven and hell.'
The sun was shining into Harvey's little room, it shone upon the bed which was extended across the room. The bed was neatly made up with a neat Indian counterpane upon it. Sefton, who had just arrived, stood by the door, Harvey was near the window beside his little writing-desk. They looked at each other across the bed.