Read The Present and the Past Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
Toby ran up and waited to be included in the attentions.
âAh, you are a happy little soul. I cannot imagine two children more different. I declare it is odd to be the father of you both.'
âHow do you do?' said Toby, offering his hand. âQuite well; so glad; very much.'
âHe watches us,' said Mr Clare. âWe should be on our guard. He will be bringing up what is forgotten.'
âAnd he doesn't always understand,' said Megan. âSo he often makes things seem different.'
âI hope he will not prove the most difficult customer of all,' said Cassius.
âVery good boy,' said Toby.
âIs it true that the child is the father of the man?' said Guy.
âYou must ask Mother that, or Mater,' said his father. âIt does not matter which. You are a happy boy to have the choice.'
Catherine and Flavia met each other's eyes, ready to speak but waiting for each other. Flavia seemed the more resolutely silent.
âI think there is something in us, that remains in us and grows with us,' said Catherine to her son. âThat is what the words mean.'
âSo Mother knows,' said Cassius. âThere are two people who will always know, Mother and Mater.'
âMother,' said Fabian, flushing as he spoke, âwill you always come here to us, or shall we sometimes come to you?'
âWell done, my boy!' said Cassius. âYou have taken the plunge. You have crossed the Rubicon. It will never be so hard again. It is a great thing to be able to surmount the obstacles in life. It will be easier for you in the end. Now, Guy, see if you can follow your brother's example.'
Guy looked up as if in question.
âSay something to Mother and use that name. Then the step will be behind. And you will not be haunted by a sense of something to come, something that would get more difficult with every day.'
âI can't think of anything to say.'
âOh, come, you cannot expect me to believe that.'
âI believe it,' said Megan, âbecause it is the truth.'
âOh, dear, oh, dear!' said Henry, looking from Guy to his father. âTrouble is made on purpose.'
âYou should prove your position, Cassius,' said Flavia. âSay something yourself.'
There was a pause.
âWell, I declare I can't think of anything. I declare that I can't. I should not have believed that words could dry up like that.'
âYou will now have a wider range of belief.'
âNow you are an ill-natured little woman. Trying to make an exhibition of your husband. What I said to the boy was said in all innocence. There was no spite in it.'
âAsk Mother if she has ever had the experience,' said Flavia to Guy. âSay “Mother, do you find it difficult to think of something to say on the spur of the moment?” â
Guy repeated the words in a quoting tone, and Catherine answered at once.
âYes, I think it is a common thing.'
âWell, it seems you are indebted to me for the thing to say, after all,' said Cassius, in his grim manner. âIt was I who put it into your heads. You did not think of anything yourselves. A common thing! It seems to be.'
âDid you ever love Fabian's mother best in the world?' said Henry.
âWhom does Toby love best in the world?' said Cassius, keeping his eyes from one son and lifting the other. âTell Father who it is.'
âMother,' said Toby, in a reverent tone.
âDo you not mean Mater?'
âOh, no.'
âWhy do you love her so much, the lady the boys call Mother?'
âToby calls her Mother too. Fabian and Guy and Toby. Poor Mother only come today.'
âYou really love Mater and Father the best.'
âOh, no, here today and yesterday.'
âYou little good-for-nothing! So new brooms sweep as clean as that.'
Toby looked at him without comprehension.
âDo you love Mother better than Bennet?'
âLove Mother and Bennet.'
âAnd no one else?'
âNo,' said Toby.
âThe age of innocence!' said Cassius, as he released his son. âIt ought to be called something else.'
âInnocence seems to mean a good many things,' said Megan.
âWell, you are all too much for me. So this is what it is to have a family. Whom do you and Henry love best in the world?'
Henry and Megan looked at each other and looked away.
âCome, answer a simple question.'
âThey have answered it,' said Flavia, âand it was more than it deserved. That kind of question need not be answered.'
âWhy, I meant it in all innocence. What have I done now?
Upon my word, I am an ill-used man. I wonder if anyone has any love for me. I shouldn't be surprised if no one has, after all I have done for everyone.'
âWhat have you done?' said Henry. âI don't mean you haven't done anything. I just mean I didn't know.'
âWell, what a question! I shall not answer it. It is the kind of question that need not be answered.'
âI think it is,' said Flavia.
âIt was meant in all innocence,' said Megan.
âOh, was it?' said Cassius. âAnd is that meant in innocence too? I will not ask you if you love your father. I have had my answer.'
âYou know that is not true,' said Henry. âMegan was making a joke.'
âOh? A joke is supposed to amuse us, isn't it?'
âI think it did amuse people.'
âWell Toby,' said Cassius, as if he did not hear, âyou will say something kind to Father.'
Toby submitted to be lifted and waited to earn his release.
âDo you think about Father at all?'
âOh, yes,' said Toby, beginning to descend, as if his duty was done.
âHow much do you think about him?'
âVery little bit,' said Toby, with affection for the diminutive.
âAnd whom do you think about a great deal?'
âBennet. No, Mother.'
âBut you have known her for such a little while.'
âVery little while,' said Toby with appreciation.
âUpon my word, Catherine, you have chosen the better part. The less you do, the more you get, it seems to me.'
âIt does not seem so to me, who have been able to do so little.'
âMegan didn't say she didn't love you,' said Henry to his father. âIt was you who said it. There is no need to make things different.'
âI think we know how they are,' said Cassius, putting his arm lightly about his son, as if he had learned better than to go further. âBut thank you, my boy. Father knows what you mean.'
âShall we go to the drawing-room?' said Flavia, rising from the table. âThe children do not come with us, but the boys may like to today.'
âWell, how do you feel, boys?' said Cassius, with a faint sigh in his tone.
âI should like to come,' said Fabian.
âAnd that means that Guy would too. I know you, speak with one voice, or that he speaks with yours.'
âI will go now,' said Catherine, standing straight and still. âIt is enough for one day. I find it is enough. I go with a mind at peace. I go in gratitude. I shall be grateful for anything more that I am given.'
She kissed her sons and went to the door, followed by Cassius. Flavia held out her hand to Guy, and he came and put his into it. Fabian came and stood in front of them.
âI am not ungrateful, Mater. You may think I am. I shall never be,' he said, speaking in short, quick sentences like his mother. âI have wanted this thing in my life. The thing the younger children had. I am glad to have it. But I know what you have given me. And I know you sometimes found it hard. I wanted the person who found it natural. But you will come third in my life. You will come after my mother and Guy. It is not much return for what you have done. But I shall not come so high in yours.'
Flavia put her arm about him, and Cassius returned to the room, having been succeeded by Ainger in the hall. His eyes dilated coldly on what met them.
âNow, boys, you may run away,' he said, his voice not disguising that he had had his fill of emotion. âYou have stood up to the occasion. You have borne yourselves well and made your father proud of you. And now you may be your natural selves again. It is what he wishes for you.'
The boys withdrew and Cassius threw himself into a chair.
âWell, I declare I feel that virtue has gone out of me. It was an exacting occasion, but I think I rose to it. I think I steered everyone through. Arid that was my part. What would both of you say?'
âIt is difficult to talk about some of it,' said Flavia.
âYes, Fabian behaved like a man. I declare I was proud of him,
and I should think Catherine was too. And I hope you were, Flavia. He did you credit, my dear. No mother could have done better for him. His own mother must have felt it. And I think she did, and meant to show it. I know her in those ways, and she gives people their due. Well, so you think it passed off well?'
âIn the sense that we did our best in it. We could not do more, and so I suppose it could not have been better. Fabian has thought about things more than we knew. I ought to have realized it.'
âNo, you ought not. You ought not to have done any more than you have. You have done everything, my dear. You have done too much. And you will not get much return for it, as far as I can see. It is a good thing you have children of your own. If you had not, you would be in a sorry place enough. But as it is, you will get your reward in your own way.'
âI would choose the ordinary way. Just as the boys, would have chosen the ordinary things.'
âGuy would have chosen what he has had. He has made that clear, and it is fair to him to accept it. And Catherine accepted it openly; I thought she came out well there, Flavia. It was never her way to fail under a test.'
âShe behaved like an honest woman. We have always known she was that.'
âShe was; God knows she was,' said Cassius, in another tone. âI have reason to remember her honesty. I remember the level we lived on. There was no getting away with little, everyday pretensions with her. One was always stripped of everything but the stark, staring truth. And there is an inner core in everyone that hardly bears that.'
âIt is true that cores are naturally hidden.'
âI am glad you agree with me. I am glad you are honest enough.'
âIt seems that honesty is a common quality,' said Mr Clare.
âHonesty of a kind,' said his son, grimly; âhonesty directed towards other people. It is not often that we turn it upon ourselves.'
âI should have thought that Catherine was more likely to do so than most of us,' said Flavia.
âWell, perhaps she is. But she wants everyone to be subject to the same scrutiny. And people have a right to a choice in the matter, as in any other. Well, well, I suppose we are all acting. Not that I think I act overmuch. I think I am a natural sort of man. I don't often turn my eyes on myself.'
âMrs Clare!' said Ainger, throwing open the door.
Catherine came forward, stood still and began to speak.
âI have returned. It is against my will. I could not do anything else. I have lost control of myself. I have been given much. I have come to ask for more. To ask to see my sons daily, hourly, when I wish, when they wish. I have come to ask for everything.'
âAh, you know the quarter to go to for that sort of thing, Catherine,' said Cassius, as Catherine turned to his wife. âIt has not taken you long to find that out.'
There was a pause, and then Flavia spoke in a new tone, that still seemed to belong to herself.
âI cannot give you everything. You must know that no one should ask that. It leaves the other side with nothing, and that cannot be accepted. The boys must see this house as their home; they must see me as its head. Anyone who comes to it, comes as my guest.'
âI will come as your guest,' said Catherine.
âYou would come as your children's mother.'
âWhat else am I to them?'
âMany things. Among them a stranger.'
âAnd what are you to them?'
âMany things. Among them a mother.'
âYou could remain a mother to them.'
âYou know I could not, and that you would not remain a stranger.'
âYou did not desire me to remain so.'
âI did and do desire it, to the point where you have given your word.'
âI am breaking it. I do not deny it. I have not strength to keep it.'
âYou cannot take that cover. You had strength to give it. You must have counted the cost.'
âCome, come, let the matter settle itself,' said Cassius, flushing and coming forward as if to separate two combatants. Leave it to the future.'
âI will not,' said his wife. âIt would mean that I had no future. My home is to be my own, and the children mine. Other people's word may not count, but mine stands as what it is. The boys may see their mother, know her, feel her influence. That is much to ask of me. I was told it would never be asked. Words, as I say, have no meaning. So I must protect myself. The more I give, the more must be given. Things must stop somewhere. I must cease from giving.'
âFew people can stand power,' said Catherine.
âWhat of yourself when you had it?'
âI had none. I sought your mercy.'
âWhat is that but using power? There is no strength like piti-fulness. And I have no more mercy. I have given what was in me.'
âI do not think you know yourself.'
âYou mean you thought you knew me, and find your mistake. You did not judge me truly. I do not ask nothing for myself. You who ask everything, should understand that.'
âI ask it again,' said Catherine.
âAnd again I refuse it. I give you no hope.'
Catherine turned and left the room, and left a silence.
Well, well, well,' said Cassius, âso it has come to this. And after it had gone off so well. I thought it seemed too good to be true. Well, I don't blame you, Flavia. I don't know that anyone is to blame. I daresay even Catherine was helpless.'