te he said: "The world is full of different subjects." "Very true, Bridey." "If I were a painter," he said, "I should choose an entirely different subject every time; subjects with plenty of action in them like . . ." Another pause. What, I wondered, was coming? "The Flying Scotsman"'? "The Charge of the Light Brigade"? "Henley' Regatta"? Then surprisingly he said:". . . like 'Macbeth.'" There was something supremely preposterous in the idea of Bridey as a painter of action pictures; he was usually preposterous yet seldom quite absurd. He achieved dignity by his remoteness and agelessness; he was still half-child, already half-veteran; there seemed no spark of contemporary life in him; he had a kind of massive rectitude and impermeability, an indifference to the world, which compelled respect. Though we often laughed at: him, he was never wholly ridiculous; at times he was even formidable. We talked of the news from Central Europe until, suddenly ill cutting across this barren topic, Bridey asked: "Where are Mummy's jewels?" "This was hers," said Julia, "and this. Cordelia and I had all her own things. The family jewels went to the bank." "It's so long since I've seen them--I don't know that I ever saw them all. What is there? Aren't there some rather famous rubies, someone was telling me?" "Yes, a necklace. Mummy used often to wear it, don't you remember ? And there are the pearls -- she always had those out. But most of it stayed in the bank year after year. There are some hideous diamond fenders, I remember, and a Victorian diamond collar no one could wear now. There's a mass of good stones. Why?" "I'd like to have a look at them some day." "I say, Papa isn't going to pop them, is he? He hasn't got into debt again?" "No, no, nothing like that." Bridey was a slow and copious eater. Julia and I watched him between the candles. Presently he said: "If I was Rex . . .".His mind seemed full of such suppositions: "If I was Archbishop of Westminster," "If I was head of the Great Western Railway," "If I was an actress"--as though it were a mere trick of fate that he was none of these things, and he might awake any morning to find the matter adjusted. "If I was Rex I should want to live in my constituency." "Rex says it saves four days' work a week not to." "I'm sorry he's not here. I have a little announcement to make." "Bridey, don't be so mysterious. Out with it." He made the grimace, which seemed to mean "not before the servants." Later, when port was on the table and we three were alone, Julia said: "I'm not going till I hear the announcement." "Well," said Bridey sitting back in his chair and gazing fixedly at his glass. "You have only to wait until Monday to see it in black and white in the newspapers. I am engaged to be married. I hope you are pleased." "Bridey. How . . . how very exciting! Who to?." "Oh, no one you know." "Is she pretty?" "I don't think you would exactly call her pretty; 'comely' is the word I think of in her connection. She is a big woman." "Fat?" "No, big. She is called Mrs. Muspratt; her Christian name is Beryl. I have known her for a long time, but until last year she had a husband; now she is a widow. Why do you laugh?" "I'm sorry. It isn't the least funny. It's just so unexpected. Is she . . . is she about your own age?" "Just about, I believe. She has three children, the eldest boy has just gone to Ampleforth. She is not at all well off." "But Bridey, where did you find her?" "Her late husband, Admiral Muspratt, collected match-boxes," he said with complete gravity. Julia trembled on the verge of laughter, recovered her self-possession and asked: "You're not marrying her for her matchboxes?" "No, no; the whole collection was left to the Falmouth Town Library. I have a great affection for her. In spite of all her difficulties she is a very cheerful woman,, very fond of acting. She is connected with the Catholic Players' Guild." "Does Papa know?" "I had a letter from him this morning giving me his approval. He has been urging me to marry for some time." It occurred to both Julia and myself simultaneously that we were allowing curiosity and surprise to predominate; now we congratulated him in gentler tones from which mockery was almost excluded. "Thank you," he said, "thank you. I think I am very fortunate." "But when are we going to meet her? I do think you might have brought her down with you." He said nothing, sipped and gazed. "Bridey," said Julia. "You sly, smug old brute, why haven't you brought her here?" "Oh I couldn't do that, you know." "Why couldn't you? I'm dying to meet her. Let's ring her up now and invite her. She'll think us most peculiar leaving her alone at a time like this." "She has the children," said Brideshead. "Besides, you are peculiar, aren't you?" "What can you mean?" Brideshead raised his head and looked solemnly at his sister, and continued in the same simple way, as though he were saying nothing particularly different from what had gone before, "I couldn't ask her here, as things are. It wouldn't be suitable. After all, I am a lodger here. This is Rex's house at the moment, as far as it's anybody's. What goes on here is his business. But I couldn't bring Beryl here." "I simply don't understand," said Julia rather sharply. I looked at her. All the gentle mockery had gone; she was alert, almost scared, it seemed. "Of course, Rex and I want her to come." "Oh yes, I don't doubt that. The difficulty is quite otherwise." He finished his port, refilled his glass, and pushed the decanter towards me. "You must understand that Beryl is a woman of strict Catholic principle fortified by the prejudices of the middle class. I couldn't possibly bring her here. It is a matter of indifference whether you choose to live in sin with Rex or Charles or both -- I have always avoided enquiry into the details of your menage --but in no case would Beryl consent to be your guest." Julia rose. "Why, you pompous ass . . ." she said, stopped, and turned towards the door. At first I thought she was overcome by laughter; then, as I opened the door to her, I saw with consternation that she was in tears. I hesitated. She slipped past me without a glance. "I may have given the impression that this was a marriage of convenience," Brideshead continued placidly. "I cannot speak for Beryl; no doubt the security of my position has some influence on her. Indeed, she has said as much. But for myself, let me emphasize, I am ardently attracted." "Bridey, what a bloody offensive thing to say to Julia!" "There was nothing she should object to. I was merely stating! a fact well known to her." She was not in the library; I mounted to her room, but she J was not there. I paused by her laden dressing-table wonderingT if she would come. Then through the open window, as the light I streamed out across the terrace, into the dusk, to the fountain which in that house seemed always to draw us to itself for comfort and refreshment, I caught the glimpse of a white skirt against I the stones. It was nearly night. I found her in the darkest refuge, on a wooden seat, in a bay of the clipped box which encircled the basin. I took her in my arms and she pressed her face to my heart. "Aren't you cold out here?" She did not answer, only clung closer to me and shook with sobs. "My darling, what is it? Why do you mind? What does it matter what that old booby says?" "I don't; it doesn't. It's just the shock. Don't laugh at me." In the two years of our love, which seemed a lifetime, I had not seen her so moved or felt so powerless to help. "How dare he speak to you like that?" I said. "The cold-blooded old humbug . . ." But I was failing her in sympathy. "No," she said, "it's not that. He's quite right. They know all about it, Bridey and his widow; they've got it in black and white; they bought it for a penny at the church door. You cat get anything there for a penny, in black and white, and nobody to see that you pay; only an old woman with a broom at the other end, rattling round the confessionals, and a young woman lighting a candle at the Seven Dolours. Put a penny in the box or not, just as you like; take your tract. There you've got it in black and white. "All in one word, too, one little, flat, deadly word that cover a lifetime. " 'Living in sin'; not just doing wrong, as I did when I went to America; doing wrong, knowing it is wrong, stopping doing it, forgetting. That's not what they mean. That's not Bridey's pennyworth. He means just what it says in black and white. "Living in sin, with sin, by sin, for sin, every hour, every day, year in, year out. Waking up with sin in the morning, seeing the curtains drawn on sin, bathing it, dressing it, clipping diamonds to it, feeding it, showing it round, giving it a good time, putting it to sleep at night with a tablet of Dial if it's fretful. "Always the same, like an idiot child carefully nursed, guarded from the world. 'Poor Julia,' they say, 'she can't go out. She's got to take care of her little sin. A pity it ever lived,' they say, 'but it's so strong. Children like that always are. Julia's so good to her little, mad sin.'" An hour ago, I thought, under the sunset, she sat turning her ring in the water fend counting the days of happiness; now under the first stars and the last grey whisper of day, all this mysterious tumult of sorrow! What had happened to us in the Painted Parlour? What shadow had fallen in the candlelight? Two rough sentences and a trite phrase. She was beside herself; her voice, now muffled in my breast, now clear and anguished, came to me in single words and broken sentences, which may be strung together thus: -- "Past and future; the years when I was trying to be a good wife, in the cigar smoke, while time crept on and the counters clicked on the backgammon board, and the man who was 'dummy' at the men's table filled the glasses; when I was trying to bear his child, torn in pieces by something already dead; putting him, away, forgetting him, finding you, the past two years with you, all the future with you, all the future with or without you, war coming, world ending -- sin. "A word from so long ago, from Nanny Hawkins stitching by the hearth and the nightlight burning before the Sacred Heart. Cordelia and me with the catechism, in Mummy's room, before luncheon on Sundays. Mummy carrying my sin with her to church, bowed under it and the black lace veil, in the chapel; slipping out with it in London before the fires were lit; taking it with her through the empty streets, where the milkman's ponies stood with their forefeet on the pavement; Mummy dying with my sin eating at her, more cruelly than her own deadly illness. "Mummy dying with it; Christ dying with it, nailed hand and foot; hanging over the bed in the night-nursery; hanging year after year in the dark little study at Farm Street with the shining oilcloth; hanging in the dark church where only the old char- woman raises the dust and one candle burns; hanging at noon, high among the crowds and the soldiers; no comfort except a sponge of vinegar and the kind words of a thief; hanging forever; never the cool sepulchre and the grave clothes spread on the stone slab, never the oil and spices in the dark cave; always I the midday sun and the dice clicking for the seamless coat. "Never the shelter of the cave or of the castle walls. Outcast il in the desolate spaces where the hyenas roam at night and the 1 rubbish heaps smoke in the daylight. No way back; the gates barred; all the saints and angels posted along the walls. Nothing but bare stone and dust and the smouldering dumps. Thrown away, scrapped, rotting down; the old man with lupus and the forked stick who limps out at nightfall to turn the rubbish,, hoping for something to put in his sack, something marketable, turns away with disgust. "Nameless and dead, like the baby they wrapped up and took away before I had seen her." Between her tears she talked herself into silence. I could do nothing; I was adrift in a strange sea; my hands on the metal-spun threads of her tunic were cold and stiff, my eyes dry; I was as far from her in spirit, as she clung to me in the darkness, as when years ago I had lit her cigarette on the way from the station; as far as when she was out of mind, in the dry, empty years at the Old Rectory and in the jungle. Tears spring from speech; presently in the silence her weeping stopped. She sat up, away from me, took my handkerchief, shivered, rose to her feet. "Well," she said, in a voice much like normal. "Bridey is one for bombshells, isn't he?" I followed her into the house and to her room; she sat at her looking-glass. "Considering that I've just recovered from a fit of hysteria," she said, "I don't call that at all bad." Her eyes seemed unnaturally large and bright, her cheeks pale with two spots of high colour, where, as a girl, she used to put a dab of rouge. "Most hysterical women look as if they had a bad cold. You'd better change your shirt before going down; it's all tears and lipstick." "Are we going down?" "Of course, we mustn't leave poor Bridey on his engagement night." When I came back to her she said: "I'm sorry for that appalling ' scene, Charles. I can't explain." Brideshead was in the library, smoking his pipe, placidly reading a detective story. "Was it nice out? If I'd known you were going I'd have come, too." "Rather cold." "I hope it's not going to be inconvenient for Rex moving out of here. You see, Barton Street is much too small for us and the three children. Besides, Beryl likes the country. In his letter Papa proposed making over the whole estate right away." I remembered how Rex had greeted me on my first arrival at Brideshead as Julia's guest. "A very happy arrangement," he had said. "Suits me down to the ground. The old boy keeps the place up; Bridey does all the feudal stuff with the tenants; I have the run of the house rent-free. All it costs me is the food and the wages of the indoor servants. Couldn't ask faker than that, could you?" "I should think he'll be sorry to go," I said. "Oh, he'll find another bargain somewhere," said Julia; "trust him." "Beryl's got some furniture of her own she's very attached to. I don't know that it would go very well here. You know, oak dressers and coffin stools and things. I thought she could put it in Mummy's old room." "Yes, that would be the place." So brother and sister sat and talked about the arrangement of the house until bed-time. An hour ago, I thought, in the black refuge in the box hedge, she wept her heart out for the death of her God; now she is discussing whether Beryl's children shall take the old smoking-room or the schoolroom for their own. I was all at sea. "Julia," I said later, when Brideshead had gone upstairs, "have you ever seen a picture of Holman Hunt's called 'The Awakened Conscience'?" "No." I had seen a copy of Pre-Raphaelitism in the library some days before; I found it again and read her Ruskin's description. She laughed quite happily. "You're perfectly right. That's exactly what I did feel." "But, darling, I can't believe that all that tempest of emotion came just from a few words of Bridey's. You must have been thinking about it before." "Hardly at all; now and then; more, lately, with the Last Trump so near." "Of course it's a thing psychologists could explain; a preconditioning from childhood; feelings of guilt from the nonsense you were taught in the nursery. You do know at heart that it's all bosh, don't you?" "How I wish it was!" "Sebastian once said almost the same thing to me." "He's gone back to the Church, you know. Of course, he never left it as definitely as I did. I've gone too far; there's no turning back now; I know that, if that's wha you mean by thinking it all bosh. All I can hope to do is to put my life in some sort of order in a human way, before all human order comes to an end. That's why I want to marry you. I should like to have a child. That's one thing I can do. . . . Let's go out again. The moon should be up by now." The moon was full and high. We walked round the house; under the limes Julia paused and idly snapped off one of the long shoots, last year's growth, that fringed their boles, and stripped it as she walked, making a switch, as children do, but with petulant movements that were not a child's, snatching nervously at the leaves and crumpling them between her fingers; she began peeling the bark, scratching it with her nails. Once more we stood by the fountain. "It's like the setting of a comedy," I said. "Scene: a baroque fountain in a nobleman's grounds. Act One, Sunset; Act Two, Dusk; Act Three, Moonlight. The characters keep assembling at the fountain for no very clear reason." "Comedy?" "Drama. Tragedy. Farce. What you will. This is the reconciliation scene." "Was there a quarrel?" "Estrangement and misunderstanding in Act Two." "Oh, don't talk in that damned bounderish way. Why must you see everything secondhand? Why must this be a play? Why must my conscience be a Pre-Raphaelite picture?" "It's a way I have." "I hate it." Her anger was as unexpected as every change on this evening of swift veering moods. Suddenly she cut me across the face with her switch, a vicious, stinging little blow as hard as she could strike. "Now do you see how I hate it?" She hit me again. "All right," I said, "go on." Then, though her hand was raised, she stopped and threw | the half-peeled wand into the water, where it floated white and black in the moonlight. "Did that hurt?" "Yes." "Did it? ... Did I?" In the instant her rage was gone; her tears, newly flowing, were on my cheek. I held her at arm's length and she put down her head, stroking my hand on her shoulder with her face, catlike, but, unlike a cat, leaving a tear there. "Cat on the roof-top," I said. "Beast!" She bit at my hand, but when I did not move it and her teeth touched me, she changed the bite to a kiss, the kiss to a lick of her tongue. "Cat in the moonlight." This was the mood I knew. We turned towards the house. When we came to the lighted hall she said: "Your poor face," touching the weals with her fingers. "Will there be a mark to-morrow?" "I expect so." "Charles, am I going crazy? What's happened to-night? I'm so tired." She yawned; a fit of yawning took her. She sat at her dressing-table, head bowed, hair over her face, yawning helplessly; when she looked up I saw over her shoulder in the glass a face that was dazed with weariness like a retreating soldier's, and beside it my own, streaked with two crimson lines. "So tired," she repeated, taking off her gold tunic and letting, it fall to the floor, "tired and crazy and good for nothing." I saw her to bed; the blue lids fell over her eyes; her pale lips moved on the pillow, but whether to wish me good-night or to murmur a prayer -- a jingle of the nursery that came to her now in the twilit world between sorrow and sleep; some ancient pious rhyme that had come down to Nanny Hawkins from centuries of bedtime whispering, through all the changes of language, from the days of pack-horses on the Pilgrim's Way -- I did not know. Next night Rex and his political associates were with us. "They won't fight." "They can't fight. They haven't the money; they haven't the oil." "They haven't the wolfram; they haven't the men." "They haven't the guts." "They're afraid." "Scared of the French; scared of the Czechs; scared of the Slovaks; scared of us." ' "It's a bluff." "Of course it's a bluff. Where's their tungsten? Where's their manganese?" "Where's their chrome?" "I'll tell you a thing . . ." "Listen to this; it'll be good; Rex will tell you a thing." "... Friend of mine motoring in the Black Forest, only the other day, just came back and told me about it while we played a round of golf. Well, this friend driving along, turned down a lane into the high road. What should he find but a military convoy? Couldn't stop, drove right into it, smack into a tank, broadside-on. Gave himself up for dead. . . . Hold on, this is the funny part." "This is the funny part." "Drove clean through it, didn't scratch his paint. What do you think? It was made of canvas -- a bamboo frame and painted canvas." "They haven't the steel." "They haven't the tools. They haven't the labour. They're half starving. They haven't the fats. The children have rickets." "The women are barren." "The men are impotent." "They haven't the doctors." "The doctors were Jewish." "Now they've got consumption." "Now they've got syphilis." "Goering told a friend of mine . . ." "Goebbels told a friend of mine . . ." "Ribbentrop told me that the army just kept Hitler in power, so long as he was able to get things for nothing. The moment anyone stands up to him, he's finished. The army will shoot him." "The liberals will hang him." "The Communists will tear him limb from limb." "He'll scupper himself." "He'd do it now if it wasn't for Chamberlain." "If it wasn't for Halifax." "If it wasn't for Sir Samuel Hoare." "And the 1920 Committee." "Peace Pledge." "Foreign Office." "New York banks." "All that's wanted is a good strong line." "A line from Rex." "And a line from me." "We'll give Europe a good strong line. Europe is waiting for | a speech from' Rex." "And a speech from me." "And a speech from me. Rally the freedom-loving peoples of 'the world. Germany will rise; Austria will rise. The Czechs and the Slovaks are bound to rise." "To a speech from Rex and a speech from me." "What about a rubber? How about a whiskey? Which of you chaps will have a big cigar? Hullo, you two going out?" "Yes, Rex," said Julia. "Charles and I are going into the moon-light." We shut the windows behind us and the voices ceased; the moonlight lay like hoar-frost on the terrace and the music of the fountain crept in our ears; the stone balustrade of the terrace might have been the Trojan walls, and in the silent park might have stood the Grecian tents where Cressid lay that night. "A few days, a few months." "No time to be lost." "A lifetime between the rising of the mooii and its setting. Then the dark." Chapter Four "and of course Celia will have custody of the children." "Of course." "Then what about the Old Rectory? I don't imagine you'll want to settle down with Julia bang at our gates. The children look on it as their home, you know. Robin's got no place of his own till his uncle dies. After all, you never used the studio, did you? Robin was saying only the other day what a good playroom it would make--big enough for badminton." "Robin can have the Old Rectory." "Now with regard to money, Celia and Robin naturally don't want to accept anything for themselves, but there's the question of the children's education." "That will be all right. I'll see the lawyers about it." "Well, I think that's everything," said Mulcaster. "You know, I've seen a few divorces in my time, and I've never known one work out so happily for all concerned. Almost always, however matey people are at the start, bad blood crops up when they get down to detail. Mind you, I don't miricl saying there have been times in the last two years when I thought you were treating Celia a bit rough. It's hard to tell with one's own sister, but I've always thought her a jolly attractive girl, the sort of girl any chap would be glad to have--artistic, too, just down your street. But I must admit you're a good picker. I've always had a soft spot for Julia. Anyway, as things have turned out everyone seems satisfied. Robin's been mad about Celia for a year or more. D'you know him?" "Vaguely. A half-baked, pimply youth as I remember him." "Oh, I wouldn't quite say that. He's rather young, of course, but the great thing is that Johnjohn and Caroline adore him. You've got two grand kids there, Charles. Remember me to Julia; wish her all the best for old time's sake." "So you're being divorced," said my father. "Isn't that rather unnecessary, after you've been happy together all these years?" "We weren't particularly happy, you know." "Weren't you? Were you not? I distinctly remember last Christmas seeing you together and thinking how happy you looked, and wondering why. You'll find it very disturbing, you know, starting off again. How old are you--thirty-four? That's no age to be starting. You ought to be settling down. Have you made any plans?" "Yes. I'm marrying again as soon as the divorce is through." "Well, I do call that a lot of nonsense. I can understand a man wishing he hadn't married and trying to get out of it -- though I never felt anything of the kind myself -- but to get rid of one wife and take up with another immediately is beyond all reason. Celia was always perfectly civil to me. I had quite a liking for her, in a way. If you couldn't be happy with her, why on earth should you expect to be happy with anyone else? Take my advice, my dear boy, and give up the whole idea." "Why bring Julia and me into this?" asked Rex. "If Celia wants to marry again, well and good; let her. That's your business and hers. But I should have thought Julia and I were quite happy as we are. You can't say I've been difficult. Lots of chaps would have cut up nasty. I hope I'm a man of the world. I've had my own fish to fry, too. But a divorce is a different thing altogether; I've never known a divorce do anyone any good." "That's your affair and Julia's." "Oh, Julia's set on it. What I hoped was, you might be able to talk her round. I've tried to keep out of the way as much as I could; if I've been around too much, just tell me, I shan't mind. But there's too much going on altogether at the moment, what with Bridey wanting me to clear out of the house; it's disturbing, and I've got a lot on my mind." Rex's public life was approaching a climacteric. Things had not gone as smoothly with him as he had planned. I knew nothing of finance, but I heard it said that his dealings were badly looked on by orthodox conservatives; even his good qualities of geniality and impetuosity counted against him, for his parties at Brideshead got talked about. There was always too much about him in the papers; he was one with the press lords and their sad-eyed, smiling hangers-on; in his speeches he said the sort of thing which "made a story" in Fleet Street, and that did him no good with his party chiefs; only war could put Rex's fortunes right and carry him into power. A divorce would do Him no harm with these cronies; it was rather that with a big bank running he could not look up from the table. "If Julia insists on a divorce, I suppose she must have it," he said. "But she couldn't have chosen a worse time. Tell her to hang on a bit, Charles, there's a good fellow." "Bridey's widow said: 'So you're divorcing one divorced man and marrying another. It sounds rather complicated, but my dear' -- she called me 'my dear' about twenty times -- 'I've usually found every Catholic family has one lapsed member, and it's often the nicest.'" Julia had just returned from a luncheon party given by Lady Rosscommon in honour of Brideshead's engagement. "What's she like?" "Majestic and voluptuous; common, of course; might be Irish or Jewish or both; husky voice, big mouth, small eyes, dyed hair -- I'll tell you one thing, she's lied to Bridey about her age. She's a good forty-five. I don't see her providing an heir. Bridey can't take his eyes off her. He was gloating on her in the most revolting way all through luncheon." "Friendly?" "Goodness, yes, in a condescending way. You see, I imagine 1 she's been used to bossing things rather in naval circles, with flag-lieutenants trotting round and young officers-on-the-make sucking up to her. Well, she clearly couldn't do a great deal of bossing at Aunt Fanny's, so it put her rather at ease to have me there as the black sheep. She concentrated on me, in fact; asked my advice about shops and things; said, rather pointedly, she hoped to see me often in London. I think Bridey's scruples only extend to her sleeping under the same roof with me. Apparently I can do her no serious harm in a hat-shop or hairdresser's ' or lunching at the Ritz. The scruples are all on Bridey's part, anyway; the widow is madly tough." "Does she boss him?" "Not yet, much. He's in an amorous stupor, poor beast, and doesn't quite know where he is. She's just a good-hearted woman who wants a good home for her children and isn't going to let anything get in her way. She's playing up the religious stuff at j the moment for all it's worth. I daresay she'll ease up a bit when she's settled." The divorces were much talked of among our friends; even in that summer of general alarm there were still corners where private affairs commanded first attention. My wife was able to put it across that the business was a matter of congratulation for her and reproach for me; that she had behaved wonderfully, had stood it longer than anyone but she would have done; Robin was seven years younger and a little immature for his age, they whispered in their private corners, but he was absolutely devoted to poor Celia, and really she deserved it after all she had been through. As for Julia and me, that was an old story. "To put it crudely," said my cousin Jasper, as though he had ever in his life put anything otherwise: "I don't see why you bother to marry." Summer passed; delirious crowds cheered Neville Chamberlain's return from Munich; Rex made a rabid speech in the House of Commons which sealed his fate one way or the other; sealed it, as is sometimes done with naval orders, to be opened later at sea. Julia's family lawyers, whose black, tin boxes, painted marquis of marchmain, seemed to fill a room, began the slow process of her divorce; my own, brisker firm, two doors down, were weeks ahead with my affairs. It was necessary for Rex and Julia to separate formally, and since, for the time being, Brideshead was still her home, she remained there and Rex removed his trunks and valet to their house in London. Evidence was taken against Julia and me in my flat. A date was fixed for Brideshead's wedding, early in the Christmas holidays, so that his future stepchildren might take part. One afternoon in November Julia and I stood at a window in the drawing-room watching the wind at work stripping the lime-trees, sweeping down the yellow leaves, sweeping them up and round and along the terrace and lawns, trailing them through puddles and over the wet grass, pasting them on walls and window-panes, leaving them at length in sodden piles against the stonework. "We shan't see them in spring," said Julia; "perhaps never again." "Once before," I said, "I went away, thinking I should never return." "Perhaps years later, to what's left of it, with what's left of us ..." A door opened and shut in the darkling room behind us. Wilcox approached through the firelight into the dusk about the long windows. "A telephone message, my lady, from Lady Cordelia." "Lady Cordelia! Where was she?" "In London, my lady." "Wilcox, how lovely! Is she coming home?" "She was just starting for the station. She will be here after dinner." "I haven't seen her for twelve years," I said -- not since the evening when we dined together and she spoke of being a nun; the evening when I painted the drawing-room at Marchmain House. "She was an enchanting child." "She's had an odd life. First, the convent; then, when that was no good, the war in Spain. I've not seen her since then. The other girls who went with the ambulance came back when the war was over; she stayed on, getting people back to their homes, helping in the prison camps. An odd girl. She's grown up quite plain, you know." "Does she know about us?" "Yes, she wrote me a sweet letter." It hurt to think of Cordelia growing up quite plain; to think of all that burning love spending itself on serum injections and delousing powder. When she arrived, tired from her journey, rather shabby, moving in the manner of one who has no interest in pleasing, I thought her an ugly woman. It was odd, I thought, how the same ingredients, differently dispensed, could produce Brideshead, Sebastian, Julia and her. She was unmistakably their sister, without any of Julia's or Sebastian's grace, without Brideshead's gravity. She seemed brisk and matter-of-fact, steeped in the atmosphere of camp and dressing station, so accustomed to gross suffering as to lose the finer shades of pleasure. She looked more than her twenty-six years; hard living had roughened her; constant intercourse in a foreign tongue had worn away the nuances of speech; she straddled a little as she sat by the fire, and when she said, "It's wonderful to be home," it sounded to my ears like the grunt of an animal returning to its basket. Those were the impressions of the first half-hour, sharpened by the contrast with Julia's white skin and silk and jewelled hair and with my memories of her as a child. "My job's over in Spain," she said; "the authorities were very polite, thanked me for all I'd done, gave me a medal and sent me packing. It looks as though there'll be plenty of the same sort of work over here soon." Then she said: "Is it too late to see Nanny?" "No, she sits up to all hours with her wireless." We went up, all three together, to the old nursery. Julia and I always spent part of our day there. Nanny Hawkins and my father were two people who seemed impervious to change; neither an hour older than when I first knew them. A wireless set had now been added to Nanny Hawkins's small assembly of pleasures--the rosary, the Peerage with its neat brown-paper wrapping protecting the red and gold covers, the photographs and holiday souvenirs -- on her table. When we broke it to her that Julia and I were to be married, she said, "Well, dear, I hope it's all for the best," for it was not part of her religion to question the propriety of Julia's actions. Brideshead had never been a favourite with her; she greeted the news of his engagement with "He's certainly taken long enough to make up his mind," and, when the search through Debrett afforded no information about Mrs. Muspratt's connections: "She's caught him, I daresay." We found her, as always in the evening, at the fireside with her teapot, and the wool rug she was making. "I knew you'd be up," she said. "Mr. Wilcox sent to tell me you were coming." "I brought you some lace." "Well, dear, that is nice. Just like her poor Ladyship used to wear at mass. Though why they made it black I never did understand, seeing lace is white naturally. That is very welcome, I'm sure." "May I turn off the wireless, Nanny?" "Why, of course; I didn't notice it was still on, in the pleasure of seeing you. What have you done to your hair?" "I know it's terrible. I must get all that put right now I'm back. Darling Nanny." As we sat there talking, and I saw Cordelia's fond eyes on all of us, I began to realize that she, too, had a beauty of her own. "I saw Sebastian last month." "What a time he's been gone! Was he quite well?" "Not very. That's why I went. It's quite near you know from Spain to Tunis. He's with the monks there." "I hope they look after him properly. I expect they find him a regular handful. He always sends to me at Christmas, but it's not the same as having him home. Why you must all always be going abroad I never did understand. Just like his Lordship. When there was that talk about going to war with Munich, I said to myself, there's Cordelia and Sebastian and his Lordship all abroad; that'll be very awkward for them." "I wanted him to come home with me, but he wouldn't. He's got beard now, you know, and he's very religions." "That I won't believe, not even if I see it. He was always a little heathen. Brideshead was one for church, not Sebastian. And a beard, only fancy; such a nice fair skin as he had; always looked clean though he'd not been near water all day, while Brideshead there was no doing anything with scrub as you might." "It's frightening," Julia once said, "to think how completely you have forgotten Sebastian." "He was the forerunner." "That's what you said in the storm. I've thought since: perhaps I am only a forerunner, too." Perhaps, I thought, while her words still hung in the air between us like a wisp of tobacco smoke -- a thought to fade and vanish like smoke without a trace -- perhaps all our loves are merely hints and symbols; a hill of many invisible crests; doors that open as in a dream to reveal only a further stretch of carpet and another door; perhaps you and I are types and this sadness which sometimes falls between us springs from disappointment in our search, each straining through and beyond the other, snatching a glimpse now and then of the shadow which turns the corner always a pace or two ahead of us. I had not forgotten Sebastian. He was with me daily in Julia; or rather it was Julia I had known in him, in those distant, Arcadian days. "That's cold comfort for a girl," she said when I tried to explain. "How do I know I shan't suddenly turn out to be somebody else? It's an easy way to chuck." I had not forgotten Sebastian; every stone of the house had a memory of him, and when I heard him spoken of by Cordelia as someone she had seen a month ago, my lost friend filled my thoughts. When we left the nursery, I said, "I want to hear all about Sebastian." "To-morrow. It's a long story." And next day, walking through the wind-swept park, she told me: -- "I heard he was dying," she said. "A journalist in Burgos told me, who'd just arrived from North Africa. A down-and-out called Flyte, who people said was an English lord, whom the fathers had found starving and taken in at a monastery near Carthage. That was how the story reached me. I knew it couldn't be quite true--however little we did for Sebastian, he at least got his money sent him--but I started off at once. "It was all quite easy. I went to the consulate first and they knew all about him; he was in the infirmary of the head house of some missionary fathers. The consul's story was that Sebastian had turned up in Tunis one day, some weeks before, in a motor bus from Algiers, and had applied to be taken on as a missionary lay brother. The fathers took one look at him and turned him down. Then he started drinking. He lived in a little.' hotel on the edge of the Arab quarter. I