flung across her, pressing her against the rail, warding myself off her with the arms that held her prisoner on either side, and as the ship paused at the end of its drop as though gathering strength for the ascent, we stood thus embraced, in the open, cheek against cheek, her hair blowing across my eyes; the dark horizon of tumbling water, flashing now with gold, stood still above us, then came sweeping down till I was staring through Julia's dark hair into a wide and golden sky, and she was thrown forward on my heart, held up by my hands on the rail, her face still pressed to mine. In that minute, with her lips to my ear and her breath warm in the salt wind, Julia said, though I had not spoken, "Yes, now," and as the ship righted herself and for the moment ran into calmer waters, Julia led me below. So at sunset I took formal possession of her as her lover. It was no time for the sweets of luxury; they would come, in then-season, with the swallow and the lime-flowers. Now on the rough water, as I was made free of her narrow loins and, it seemed now, in assuaging that fierce appetite, cast a burden which I had borne all my life, toiled under, not knowing its nature -- now, while the waves still broke and thundered on the prow, the act of possession was a symbol, a rite of ancient origin and solemn meaning. We dined that night high up in the ship, in the restaurant, and saw through the bow windows the stars come out and sweep across the sky as once, I remembered, I had seen them sweep above the towers and gables of Oxford. The stewards promised that to-morrow night the band would play again and the place be full. We had better book now, they said, if we wanted a good table. "Oh dear," said Julia, "where can we hide in fair weather, we orphans of the storm?" I could not leave her that night, but early next morning, as once again I made my way back along the corridor, I found I could walk without difficulty; the ship rode easily on a smooth sea, and I knew that our solitude was broken. My wife called joyously from her cabin: "Charles, Charles, I feel so well. What do you think I am having for breakfast?" I went to see. She was eating a beef-steak. "I've fixed up for a visit to the hairdresser -- do you know they couldn't take me till four o'clock this afternoon, they're so busy suddenly? So I shan't appear till the evening, but lots of people are coming in to see us this morning, and I've asked Miles and Janet to lunch with us in our sitting-room. I'm afraid I've been a worthless wife to you the last two days. What have you been up to?" "One gay evening," I said, "we played roulette till two o'clock, next door in the sitting-room, and our host passed out." "Goodness. It sounds very disreputable. Have you been behaving, Charles? You haven't been picking up sirens?" "There was scarcely a woman about. I spent most of the time with Julia." "Oh, good. I always wanted to bring you together. She's one of my friends I knew you'd like. I expect you were a godsend to her. She's had rather a gloomy time lately. I don't expect she mentioned it, but . . ." my wife proceeded to relate a current version of Julia's journey to New York. "I'll ask her to cocktails this morning," she concluded. Julia came, and it was happiness enough, now, merely to be near her. "I hear you've been looking after my husband for me," my wife said. "Yes, we've become very matey. He and I and a man whose name we don't know." "Mr. Kramm, what have you done to your arm?" "It was the bathroom floor," said Mr. Kramm, and explained at length how he had fallen. That night the Captain dined at his table and the circle was complete, for claimants came to the chairs on the Bishop's right, two Japanese who expressed deep interest in his projects for world-brotherhood. The Captain was full of chaff at Julia's endurance in the storm, offering to engage her as a seaman; years of sea-going had given him jokes for every occasion. My wife, fresh from the beauty parlour, was unravaged by her three days of distress, and in the eyes of many seemed to outshine Julia, whose sadness had gone and been replaced by an incommunicable content and tranquillity; incommunicable save to me; she and I, separated by the crowd, sat alone together close enwrapped, as we had lain in each other's arms the night before. There was a gala spirit in the ship that night. Though it meant rising at dawn to pack, everyone was determined that for this one night he would enjoy the luxury the storm had denied him. There was no solitude. Every corner of the ship was thronged; dance music and high, excited chatter, stewards darting everywhere with trays of glasses, the voice of the officer in charge of tombola: "Kelly's eye --number one; legs, eleven; and we'll Shake the Bag" -- Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander in a paper cap, Mr. Kramm and his bandages, the two Japanese decorously throwing paper streamers and hissing like geese. I did not speak to Julia, alone, all that evening. We met for a minute next day on the starboard side of the ship while everyone else crowded to port to see the officials come aboard and to gaze at the green coastline of Devon. "What are your plans?" "London for a bit," she said. "Celia's going straight home. She wants to see the children." "You, too?" "No." "In London then." "Charles, the little red-haired man -- Foulenough. Did you see? Two plain-clothes police have taken him off." "I missed it. There was such a crowd on that side of the ship." "I found out the trains and sent a telegram. We shall be home by dinner. The children will be asleep. Perhaps we might wake Johnjohn up, just for once." "You go down," I said. "I shall have to stay in London." "Oh, but Charles, you must come. You haven't seen Caroline." "Will she change much in a week or two?" "Darling, she changes every day." "Then what's the point of seeing her now? I'm sorry, my dear, but I must get the pictures unpacked and see how they've travelled. I must fix up for the exhibition right away." "Must you?" she said, but I knew that her resistance ended when I appealed to the mysteries of my trade. "It's very disappointing. Besides, I don't know if Andrew and Cynthia will be out of the flat. They took it till the end of the month." "I can go to a hotel." "But that's so grim. I can't bear you to be alone your first night home. I'll stay and go down to-morrow." "You mustn't disappoint the children." "No." Her children, my art, the two mysteries of our trades . . . "Will you come for the week-end?" "If I can." "All British passports to the smoking-room, please," said a steward. "I've arranged with that sweet Foreign Office man at our table to get us off early with him," said my wife. Chapter Two it was my wife's idea to hold the private view on Friday. "We are out to catch the critics this time," she said. "It's high time they began to take you seriously, and they know it. This is their chance. If you open on Monday they'll most of them have just come up from the country, and they'll dash off a few paragraphs before dinner -- I'm only worrying about the weeklies of course. If we give them the week-end to think about it, we shall have them in an urbane Sunday-in-the-country mood. They'll settle down after a good luncheon, tuck up their cuffs, and turn out a nice, leisurely, full-length essay, which they'll reprint later in a nice little book. Nothing less will do this time." She was up and down from the Old Rectory several times during the month of preparation, revising the list of invitations and helping with the hanging. On the morning of the private view I telephoned to Julia and said: "I'm sick of the pictures already and never want to see them again, but I suppose I shall have to put in an appearance." "D'you want me to come?" "I'd much rather you didn't." "Celia sent a card with 'Bring everyone' written across it in green ink. When do we meet?" "In the train. You might pick up my luggage." "If you'll have it packed soon I'll pick you up, too, and drop you at the gallery. I've got a fitting next door at twelve." When I reached the gallery my wife was standing looking through the window to the street. Behind her half a dozen unknown picture-lovers were moving from canvas to canvas, catalogue in hand; they were people who had once bought a woodcut and were consequently on the gallery's list of patrons. "No one has come yet," said my wife. "I've been here since ten and it's been very dull. Whose car was that you came in?" "Julia's." "Julia's? Why didn't you bring her in? Oddly enough, I've just been talking about Brideshead to a funny little man who seemed to know us very well. He said he was called Mr. Samgrass. Apparently he's one of Lord Copper's middle-aged young men on the Daily Beast. I tried to feed him some paragraphs, but he seemed to know more about you than I do. He said he'd met me years ago at Brideshead. I wish Julia had come in; then we could have asked her about him." "I remember him well. He's a crook." "Yes, that stuck out a mile. He's been talking all about what he calls 'the Brideshead set.' Apparently Rex Mottram has made the place a nest of party mutiny. Did you know? What would Teresa Marchmain have thought?" "I'm going there to-night." "Not to-night, Charles; you can't go there to-night. You're expected at home. You promised, as soon as the exhibition was J ready, you'd come home. Johnjohn and Nanny have made a banner with 'Welcome' on it. And you haven't seen Caroline yet." "I'm sorry, it's all settled." "Besides, Daddy will think it so odd. And Boy is home for Sunday. And you haven't seen the new studio. You can't go tonight. Did they ask me?" "Of course; but I knew you wouldn't be able to come." "I can't now. I could have if you'd let me know earlier. I should adore to see the 'Brideshead set' at home. I do think you're perfectly beastly, but this is no time for a family rumpus. The Clarences promised to come in before luncheon; they may be here any minute." We were interrupted, however, not by royalty, but by a woman reporter from one of the dailies, whom the manager of the gallery now led up to us. She had not come to see the pictures but to get a "human story" of the dangers of my journey. I left her to my wife, and next day read in her paper: -- charles "stately homes" ryder steps off the map That the snakes and vampires of the jungle have nothing on Mayfair is the opinion of socialite artist Ryder, who has abandoned the houses of the great for the ruins of equatorial Africa. ... The rooms began to fill and I was soon busy being civil. My wife was everywhere, greeting people, introducing people, deftly transforming the crowd into a party. I saw her lead friends forward one after another to the subscription list that had been opened for the book of Ryder's Latin America; I heard her say: "No, darling, I'm not at all surprised, but you wouldn't expect me to be, would you? You see Charles lives for one thing -- Beauty. I think he got bored with finding it ready-made in England; he had to go and create it for himself. He wanted new worlds to conquer. After all, he has said the last word about country houses, hasn't he? Not, I mean, that he's given that up altogether. I'm sure he'll always do one or two more for friends". A photographer brought us together, flashed a lamp in our faces, and let us part. Presently there was the slight hush and edging away which follows the entry of a royal party. I saw my wife curtsey and heard her say: "Oh, sir, you are sweet"; then I was led into the clearing and the Duke of Clarence said: "Pretty hot out there I should think." "It was, sir." "Awfully clever the way you've hit off the impression of heat. Makes me feel quite uncomfortable in my great-coat." "Ha, ha." When they had gone my wife said: "Goodness, we're late for lunch. Margot's giving a party in your honour," and in the taxi she said: "I've just thought of something. Why don't you write and ask the Duchess's permission to dedicate Latin America to her?" "Why should I?" "She'd love it so." "I wasn't thinking of dedicating it to anyone." "There you are; that's typical of you, Charles. Why miss an opportunity to give pleasure?" There were a dozen at luncheon, and though it pleased my hostess and my wife to say that they were there in my honour, it was plain to me that half of them did not know of my exhibition and had come because they had been invited and had no other engagement. Throughout luncheon they talked without stopping of Mrs. Simpson, but they all, or nearly all, came back with us to the gallery. The hour after luncheon was the busiest time. There were representatives of the Tate Gallery, the Chantrey Bequest, the National Art Collections Fund, who all promised to return shortly with colleagues and, in the meantime, reserved certain pictures for further consideration. The most influential critic, who in the past had dismissed me with a few wounding commendations, peered out at me from between his slouch hat and woollen muffler, gripped my arm, and said: "I knew you had it. I saw it there. I've been waiting for it." From fashionable and unfashionable lips alike I heard fragments of praise. "If you'd asked me to guess," I overheard, "Ryder's is the last name would have occurred to me. They're so virile, so passionate." They all thought they had found something new. It had not been thus at my last exhibition in these same rooms, shortly before my going abroad. Then there had been an unmistakable note of weariness. Then the talk had been less of me than of the houses, anecdotes of their owners. That same woman, it came back to me, who how applauded my virility and passion, had stood quite near me, before a painfully laboured canvas, and said, "So facile." I remembered the exhibition, too, for another reason; it was the week I detected my wife in adultery. Then, as now, she was a tireless hostess, and I heard her say: "Whenever I see anything lovely nowadays -- a building or a piece of scenery -- I think to -myself, 'That's by Charles.' I see everything through his eyes. He is England to me." I heard her say that; it was the sort of thing she had the habit of saying. Throughout our married life, again and again, I had felt my bowels shrivel within me at the things she said. But that ,j day, in this gallery, I heard her unmoved, and suddenly realized that she was powerless to hurt me any more; I was a free man; she had given me my manumission in that brief, sly lapse of hers; my cuckold's horns made me lord of the forest. At the end of the day my wife said: "Darling, I must go. It's been a terrific success, hasn't it? I'll think of something to tell them at home, but I wish it hadn't got to happen quite this way." So she knows, I thought. She's a sharp one. She's had her nose down since luncheon and picked up the scent. I let her get clear of the place and was about to follow--the rooms were nearly empty -- when I heard a voice at the turnstile I had not heard for many years, an unforgettable self-taught stammer, a sharp cadence of remonstration. "No. I have not brought a card of invitation. I do not even know whether I received one. I have not come to a social function; I do not seek to scrape acquaintance with Lady Celia; I do not want my photograph in the Tatler; I have not come to exhibit myself. I have come to see the pictures. Perhaps you are unaware that there are any pictures here. I happen to have a personal interest in the artist--if that word has any meaning for you." "Antoine," I said, "come in." "My dear, there is a g-g-gorgon here who thinks I am g-g-gate-crashing. I only arrived in London yesterday, and heard quite by chance at luncheon that you were having an exhibition, so of course I dashed impetuously to the shrine to pay homage. Have I changed? Would you recognize me? Where are the pictures? Let me explain them to you." Anthony Blanche had not changed from when I last saw him; not, indeed, from when I first saw him. He swept lightly across the room to the most prominent canvas -- a jungle landscape -- paused a moment, his head cocked like a knowing terrier, and asked: "Where, my dear Charles, did you find this sumptuous greenery? The corner of a hothouse at T-t-trent or T-t-tring? What gorgeous usurer nurtured these fronds for your pleasure?" Then he made a tour of the two rooms; once or twice he sighed deeply, otherwise he kept silence. When he came to the end he sighed once more, more deeply than ever, and said: "But they tell me, my dear, you are happy in love. That is everything, is it not, or nearly everything?" "Are they as bad as that?" Anthony dropped his voice to a piercing whisper: "My dear, let us not expose your little imposture before these good, plain people" -- he gave a conspiratorial glance to the last remnants o the crowd -- "let us not spoil their innocent pleasure. We know, you and I, that this is all t-t-terrible t-t-tripe. Let us go, before we offend the connoisseurs. I know of a louche little bar, quite near here. Let us go there and talk of your other c-c-conquests." It needed this voice from the past to recall me; the indiscriminate chatter of praise all that crowded day had worked on me like a succession of advertisement hoardings on a long road, kilometre after kilometre between the poplars, commanding one to stay at some new hotel, so that when at the end of the drive, stiff and dusty, one arrives at the destination, it seems inevitable to turn into the yard under the name that had first bored, then angered one, and finally become an inseparable part of one's fatigue. Anthony led me from the gallery and down a side street to a door between a disreputable news agent and a disreputable chemist, painted with the words blue grotto club. Members Only. "Not quite your milieu, my dear, but mine, I assure you. After all, you have been in your milieu all day." He led me downstairs, from a smell of cats to a smell of gin and cigarette-ends and the sound of a wireless. "I was given the address by a dirty old man in the Bceuf sur le Toit. I am most grateful to him. I have been out of England so long, and really sympathetic little joints like this change so fast. J I presented myself here for the first time yesterday evening, and already I feel quite at home. Good evening, Cyril." "'Lo, Toni, back again?" said the youth behind the bar. "We will take our drinks and sit in a corner. You must remember, my dear, that here you are just as conspicuous and, may I say, abnormal, my dear, as I should be in B-b-bratt's." The place was painted cobalt; there was cobalt linoleum on the floor. Fishes of Silver and gold paper had been pasted haphazard on ceiling and walls. Half a dozen youths were drinking and playing with the slot-machines; an older, natty, crapulous-looking man seemed to be in control; there was some sniggering round the fruit-gum machine; then one of the youths came up to us and said, "Would your friend care to rumba?" "No, Tom, he would not, and I'm not going to give a drink; not yet, anyway. . . . That's a very impudent boy, a regular little gold-digger, my dear." "Well," I said, affecting an ease I was far from feeling in that den, "what have you been up to all these years?" "My dear, it is what you have been up to that we are here to talk about. I've been watching you, my dear. I'm a faithful old body and I've kept my eye on you." As he spoke the bar and the bar-tender, the blue wicker furniture, the gambling-machines, the wireless, the couple of youths dancing on the oilcloth, the youths sniggering round the slots, the purple-veined, stiffly dressed elderly man drinking in the corner opposite us, the whole drab and furtive joint, seemed to fade, and I was back in Oxford looking out over Christ Church meadow through a window of Ruskin Gothic. "I went to your first exhibition," said Anthony; "I found it -- charming. There was an interior of Marchmain House, very English, very correct, but quite delicious. 'Charles has done something,' I said; 'not all he will do, not all he can do, but something.' "Even then, my dear, I wondered a little. It seemed to me that there was something a little gentlemanly about your painting. You must remember I arm not English; I cannot understand this keen zest to be well-bred. English snobbery is more macabre to me even than English morals. However, I said, 'Charles has done something delicious. What will he do next?' "The next thing I saw was your very handsome volume -- Village and Provincial Architecture, was it called? Quite a tome, my dear, and what did I find? Charm again. 'Not quite my cup of tea,' I thought; 'this is too English.' I have the fancy I for rather spicy things, you know, not for the shade of the cedar tree, the cucumber sandwich, the silver cream-jug, the English girl dressed in whatever English girls do wear for tennis -- not that, not Jane Austen, not M-m-miss M-m-mitford. Then, to be frank, dear Charles, I despaired of you. 'I am a degenerate old d-d-dago,' I said, 'and Charles -- I speak of your art, my dear -- is a dean's daughter in flowered muslin.' "Imagine then my excitement at luncheon to-day. Everyone was talking about you. My hostess was a friend of my mother's, a Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander; a friend of yours, too, my dear. Such a frump! Not at all the society I imagined you to keep. 1 However, they had all been to your exhibition, but it was you f they talked of, how you had broken away, my dear, gone to the tropics, become a Gauguin, a Rimbaud. You can imagine how my old heart leaped. "' Poor Celia,' they said, 'after all she's done for him.' 'He owes everything to her. It's too bad.' 'And with Julia,' they said, 'after the way she behaved in America.' 'Just as she was going back 1 to Rex.' " 'But the pictures,' I said; 'tell me about them' '"Oh, the pictures,' they said: 'they're most peculiar.' 'Not at 1 all what he usually does.' 'Very forceful.' 'Quite barbaric.' 'if call them downright unhealthy,' said Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander. "My dear, I could hardly keep still in my chair. I wanted tof dash out of the house and leap in a taxi and say, 'Take me to Charles's unhealthy pictures.' Well, I went, but the gallery after J luncheon was so full of absurd women in the sort of hats they'i] should be made to eat, that I rested a little --I rested here witfcl Cyril and Tom and these saucy boys. Then I came back at the unfashionable time of five o'clock, all agog, my dear; and what did I find? I found, my dear, a very naughty and very successful practical joke. It reminded me of dear Sebastian when he liked so much to dress up in false whiskers. It was charm again, my dear, simple, creamy English charm, playing tigers." "You're quite right," I said. "My dear, of course I'm right. I was right years ago--more years, I am happy to say, than either of us shows -- when I warned you. I took you out to dinner to warn you of charm. I warned you expressly and in great detail of the Flyte family. Charm is the great English blight. It does not exist outside these damp islands. It spots and kills anything it touches. It kills love; it kills art; I greatly fear, my dear Charles, it has killed you." The youth called Tom approached us again. "Don't be a tease, Toni; buy me a drink." I remembered my train and left Anthony with him. As I stood on the platform by the restaurant-car I saw my luggage and Julia's go past with Julia's sour-faced maid strutting beside the porter. They had begun shutting the carriage-doors when Julia arrived, unhurried, and took her place in front of me. I had a table for two. This was a very convenient train; there was half an hour before dinner and half an hour after it; then, instead of changing to the branch line, as had been the rule in Lady Marchmain's day, we were met at the junction. It was night as we drew out of Paddington, and the glow of the town gave place first to the scattered lights of the suburbs, then to the darkness of the fields. "It seems days since I saw you," I said. "Six hours; and we were together all yesterday. You look worn out." "It's been a day of nightmare -- crowds, critics, the Clarences, a luncheon party at Margot's, ending up with half an hour's well-reasoned abuse of my pictures in a pansy bar. ... I think Celia knows about us." "Well, she had to know some time." "Everyone seems to know. My pansy friend had not been in London twenty-four hours before he'd heard." "Damn everybody." "What about Rex?" "Rex isn't anybody at all," said Julia; "he just doesn't exist." The knives and forks jingled on the tables as we sped through the darkness; the little circle of gin and vermouth in the glasses i lengthened to oval, contracted again, with the sway of the carriage, touched the lip, lapped back again, never spilt; I was leaving the day behind me. Julia pulled off her hat and tossed it into the rack above her, and shook her night-dark hair with a little sigh of ease -- a sigh fit for the pillow, the sinking firelight and a bedroom window open to the stars and the whisper of bare trees. "It's great to have you back, Charles; like the old days." Like the old days? I thought. Rex, in his early forties, had grown heavy and ruddy; he had lost his Canadian accent and acquired instead the hoarse, loud tone that was common to all his friends, as though their voices were perpetually strained to make themselves heard above a crowd, as though, with youth forsaking them, there was no timdi to wait the opportunity to speak, no time to listen, no time ten reply; time for a laugh -- a throaty mirthless laugh, the base| currency of goodwill. There were half a dozen of these friends in the Tapestry Hall ill politicians, "young conservatives" in the early forties, with spar hair and high blood-pressure; a socialist from the coal mines wh had already caught their clear accents, whose cigars came lid pieces in his lips, whose hand shook when he poured hir out a drink; a lovesick columnist, who alone was silent, glc ing sombrely on the only woman of the party; a financier oldafl than the rest, and, one might guess from the way they treated him, richer; a woman they called "Grizel," a knowing rake whom, in their hearts, they all feared a little. They all feared Julia, too, Grizel included. She greeted them and apologized for not being there to welcome them, with a formality which hushed them for a minute; then she came and sat with me near the fire, and the storm of talk arose once more and whirled about bur ears. "Of course, he can marry her and make her queen to-morrow." "We had our chance in October. Why didn't we send the Italian fleet to the bottom of Mare Nostrum? Why didn't we blow Spezia to blazes. Why didn't we land on Pantelleria?" "Franco's simply a German agent. They tried to put him in to prepare air'bases to bomb France. That bluff has been called, anyway." "It would make the monarchy stronger than it's been since Tudor times. The people are with him." "The press arc with him." "I'm with him." "Who cares about divorce now except a few old maids who aren't married, anyway?" "If he has a showdown with the old gang, they'll just disappear like, like . . ." "Why didn't we close the Canal? Why didn't we bomb Rome?" "It wouldn't have been necessary. One firm note . . ." "One firm speech." "One showdown." "Anyway, Franco will soon be skipping back to Morocco. Chap I saw to-day just come from Barcelona . . ." ". . . Chap just come from Fort Belvedere . . ." ". . . Chap just come from the Palazzo Venezia . . ." "All we want is a showdown." "A showdown with Baldwin." "A showdown with Hitler." "A showdown with the Old Gang." ". . . That I should live to see my country, the land of Clive and Nelson ..." ". . . My country of Hawkins and Drake." ". . . My country of Palmerston . . ." "Would you very much mind not doing that?"'said Grizel the columnist, who had been attempting in a maudlin manner to twist her wrist. "I don't happen to enjoy it." "I wonder which is the more horrible," I said, "Celia's Art and Fashion or Rex's Politics and Money." "Why worry about them?" "Oh, my darling, why is it that love makes me hate the world? It's supposed to have quite the opposite effect. I feel as though' all mankind, and God, too, were in a conspiracy against us." "They are, they are." "But we've got our happiness in spite of them; here and noW| we've taken possession of it. They can't hurt us, can they?" "Not to-night; not now." "Not for how many nights?" Chapter Three "Do you remember," said Julia, in the tranquil, lime-scented evening, "do you remember the storm?" "The bronze doors banging." "The roses in cellophane." "The man who gave the 'get-together' party and was never seen again." "Do you remember how the sun came out on our last evening just as it has done to-day?" It had been an afternoon of low cloud and summer squalls, so overcast that at times I had stopped work and roused Julia from the light trance in which she sat -- she had sat so often; I never tired of painting her, forever finding in her new wealth and delicacy -- until at length we had gone early to our baths, and on coming down, dressed for dinner, in the last half-hour of the day, we found the world transformed; the sun had emerged; the wind had fallen to a soft breeze which gently stirred the blossom in the limes and carried its fragrance, fresh from the late rains, to merge with the sweet breath of box and the drying stone. The shadow of the obelisk spanned the terrace. I had carried two garden cushions from the shelter of the colonnade and put them on the rim of the fountain. There Julia sat, in a tight little gold tunic and a white gown, one hand in the water idly turning an emerald ring to catch the fire of the sunset; the carved animals mounted over her dark head in a cumulus of green moss and glowing stone and dense shadow, and the waters round them flashed and bubbled and broke into scattered beads of flame. ". . . So much to remember," she said. "How many days have there been 'since then, when we haven't seen each other; a hundred, do you think?" "Not so many." "Two Christmases" -- those bleak, annual excursions into propriety. Boughton, home of my family, home of my cousin Jasper, with what glum memories of childhood I revisited its pitch-pine corridors and dripping walls! How querulously my father and I, seated side by side in my uncle's Humber, approached the avenue of Wellingtonias knowing that at the end of the drive we should find my uncle, my aunt, my Aunt Philippa, my cousin Jasper and, of recent years, Jasper's wife and children; and besides them, perhaps already arrived, perhaps every moment expected, my wife and my children. This annual sacrifice united us; here among the holly and mistletoe and the cut spruce, the parlour games ritually performed, the brandy-butter and the Carlsbad plums, the village choir in the pitch-pine minstrekl gallery, gold twine and sprigged wrapping-paper, she and I weril accepted, whatever ugly rumours had been afloat in the past yeafJ as man and wife. "We must keep it up, whatever it costs us, fc the sake of the children," my wife said. "Yes, two Christmases. . . . And the three days of good tas before I followed you to Capri." "Our first summer." "Do you remember how I hung about Naples, then followe how we met by arrangement on. the hill path and how flat fell?" "I went back to the villa and said, 'Papa, who do you think arrived at the hotel?' and he said, 'Charles Ryder, I suppose.' said, 'Why did you think of him?' and Papa replied, 'Cara came back from Paris with the news that you and he were inseparable He seems to have a penchant for my children. However, brir him here. I think we have the room.'" "There was the time you had jaundice and wouldn't let see you." "And when I had flu and you were afraid to come." "Countless visits to Rex's constituency." "And Coronation Week, when you ran away from Londc Your goodwill mission to your father-in-law. The time you went to Oxford to paint the picture they didn't like. Oh, yes, quite' hundred days." "A hundred days wasted out of two years and a bit ... a day when you were not in my heart; not a day's coldness mistrust or disappointment." "Never that." We fell silent; only the birds spoke in a multitude of smalj clear voices in the lime-trees; only the waters spoke among the carved stones. Julia took the handkerchief from my breast pocket and her hand; then lit a cigarette. I feared to break the spell of memories, but for once our thoughts had not kept pace together, for when at length Julia spoke, she said sadly: "How many more? Another hundred?" "A lifetime." "I want to marry you, Charles." "One day; why now?" "War," she said, "this year, next year, sometime soon. I want a day or two with you of real peace." "Isn't this peace?" The sun had sunk now to the line of woodland beyond the valley; all the opposing slope was already in twilight, but the lakes below us were aflame; the light grew in strength and splendour as it neared death, spreading long shadows across the pasture, falling full on the rich stone spaces of the house, firing the panes in the windows, glowing on cornices and colonnade and dome, drawing out all the hidden sweetness of colour and scent from earth and stone and leaf, glorifying the head and golden shoulders of the woman beside me. "What do you mean by 'peace'; if not this?" "So much more"; and then in a chill, matter-of-fact tone she continued: "Marriage isn't a thing we can take when the impulse moves us. There must be a divorce -- two divorces. We must make plans." "Plans, divorce, war -- on an evening like this." "Sometimes," said Julia, "I feel the past and the future pressing so hard on either side that there's no room for the present at all." Then Wilcox came down the steps into the sunset to tell us that dinner was ready. Shutters were up, curtains drawn, candles lit, in the Painted Parlour. "Hullo, it's laid for three." "Lord Brideshead arrived half an hour ago, my lady. He sent a message would you please not wait dinner for him as he may be a little late." "It seems months since he was here last," said Julia. "What does he do in London?" It was often a matter for speculation between us -- giving birth to many fantasies, for Bridey was a mystery; a creature from under ground; a hard-snouted, burrowing, hibernating animal who shunned the light. He had been completely without action in all his years of adult life; the talk of his going into the army, 1 and into Parliament, and into a monastery, had all come to nothing. All that he was known with certainty to have done--andi this because in a season of scant news it had formed the subject of a newspaper article entitled peer's unusual hobby -- was to form a collection of match-boxes; he kept them mounted on boards, card-indexed, yearly occupying a larger and larger space in his small house in Westminster. At first he was bashful about the notoriety which the newspaper caused, but later greatly pleased, for he found it the means of his getting into touch with other collectors in all parts of the world with whom he now corresponded and swapped duplicates. Other than this he was not known to have any interests. He remained Joint-Master of the Marchmain and hunted with them dutifully on their two days a week when he was at home; he never hunted with the neighbouring pack, who had the better country. He had no real zest for sport, and had not been out a dozen times that season; he had few friends; he visited his aunts; he went to public dinners held in the Catholic interest. At Brideshead he performed all unavoidable local duties, bringing with him to platform and fettfil and committee room his own thin mist of clumsiness and aloofness. "There was a girl found strangled with a piece of barbed wire at Wandsworth last week," I said, reviving an old fantasy. "That must be Bridey. He is naughty." When we had been a quarter of an hour at the table he joined us, coming ponderously into the room in the bottle-green velvet smoking suit which he kept at Brideshead and always wore when he was there. At thirty-eight he had grown heavy and bald, and might have been taken for forty-five. "Well," he said, "well, only you two; I hoped to find Rex here." I often wondered what he made of me and of my continual presence; he seemed to accept me, without curiosity, as one of the household. Twice in the past two years he had surprised me by what seemed to be acts of friendship; last Christmas he sent me a photograph of himself in the robes of a Knight of Malta, and shortly afterwards he asked me to go with him to a dining club. Both acts had an explanation: he had had more copies of his portrait printed than he knew what to do with; he was proud of his club. It was a surprising association of men quite eminent in their professions who met once a month for an cvp-ning of ceremonious buffoonery; each had his sobriquet-- Bridey was called "Brother Grandee"--and a specially designed jewel worn like an order of chivalry, symbolizing it; they had club buttons for their waistcoats and an elaborate ritual for the introduction of guests; after dinner a paper was read and facetious speeches made. There was plainly some competition to bring guests of distinction, and since Bridey had few friends, and since I was tolerably well-known, I was invited. Even on that convivial evening I could feel my host emanating little magnetic waves of social uneasiness, creating, rather, a pool of general embarrassment about himself in which he floated with loglike calm. He sat down opposite me and bowed his sparse, pink head over his plate. "Well, Bridey. What's the news?" "As a matter of fact," he said, "I have some news. But it can wait." "Tell us now." He made a grimace which I took to mean "not in front of the f servants," and said, "How is the painting, Charles?" "Which painting?" "Whatever you have on the stocks." "I began a sketch of Julia, but the light was tricky all to-day." "Julia? I thought you'd done her before. I suppose it's a change from architecture, and much more difficult." His conversation abounded in long pauses during which his mind seemed to remain motionless; he always brought one back with a start to the exact point where he had stopped. Now after more than a minu