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nd yards of biscuit…coloured wood which no carpenter's tool had ever touched; wood that had been bent round ers; invisibly joined strip to strip; steamed and squeezed and polished; all over the blotting…paper carpet were strewn tables designed perhaps by a sanitary engineer; square blocks of stuffing; with square holes for sitting in; and upholstered; it seemed; in blotting paper also; the light of the hall was suffused from scores of hollows; giving an even glow; casting no shadows … the whole place hummed from its hundred ventilators and vibrated with the turn of the great engines below。
'Here I am;' I thought; 'back from the jungle; back from the ruins。 Here where wealth is no longer gorgeous and power has no dignity。 Quomodo sedet sola civitas' (for I had heard that great lament; which Cordelia once quoted to me in the drawing…room of Marchmain House; sung by a half…caste choir in Guatemala; nearly a year ago)。
A steward came up to me。
'Can I get you anything; sir?'
'A whisky and soda; not iced。'
'I'm sorry; sir; all the soda is iced。'
'Is the water iced; too?'
'Oh yes; sir。'
'Well; it; doesn't matter。'
He trotted off; puzzled; soundless in the pervading hum。
'Charles。'
I looked behind me。 Julia was sitting in a cube of blotting paper; her hands folded in her lap; so still that I had passed by without noticing her。
'I heard you were here。 Celia telephoned to me。 It's delightful。'
'What are you doing?'
She opened the empty hands in her lap with a little eloquent gesture。 'Waiting。 My maid's unpacking; she's been so disagreeable ever since we left England。 She's plaining now about my cabin。 I can't think why。 It seems a lap to me。'
The steward returned with whisky and two jugs; one of iced water; the other of boiling water; I mixed them to the rig ht temperature。 He watched and said: 'I'll remember that's how you take it; sir。'
Most passengers had fads; he was paid to fortify their self…esteem。 Julia asked for a cup of hot chocolate。 I sat by her in the next cube。
'I never see you now; ' she said。 'I never seem to see anyone I like。 I don't know why。'
But she spoke as though it were a matter of weeks rather than of years; as though; too; before our parting we had been firm friends。 It was dead contrary to the mon experience of such encounters; when time is found to have built its own defensive lines; camouflaged vulnerable points; and laid a field of mines across all but a few well…trodden paths; so that; more often than not; we can only signal to one another from either side of the tangle of wire。 Here she and I; who were never friends before; met on terms of long and unbroken intimacy。
'What have you been doing in America?'
She looked up slowly from her chocolate and; her splendid; serious eyes in mine; said: 'Don't you know? I'll tell you about it sometimes I've been a mug。 I thought I was in love with someone; but it didn't turn out that way。' And my mind went back ten years to the evening at Brideshead; when that lovely; spidery child of nineteen; as though brought in for an hour from the nursery and nettled by lack of attention from the grown…ups; had said: 'I'm causing anxiety; too; you know;' and I had thought at the time; though scarcely; it now seemed to me; in long trousers myself; 'How important these girls make themselves with their love affairs。'
Now it was different; there was nothing but humility and friendly candour in the way she spoke。
I wished I could respond to her confidence; give some token of acceptance; but there was nothing in my last; flat; eventful years that I could share with her。 I began instead to talk of my time in the jungle; of the ic characters I had met and the lost places I had visited; but in this mood of old friendship the tale faltered and came to an end abruptly。
'I long to see the paintings;' she said。
'Celia wanted me to unpack some and stick them round the cabin for her cocktail party。 I couldn't do that。'
'No。。。is Celia as pretty as ever? I always thought she had the most delicious looks of any girl of my year。'
'She hasn't changed。'
'You have; Charles。 So lean and grim; not at all the pretty boy Sebastian brought home with him。 Harder; too。'
'And you're softer。'
'Yes; I think so。。。and very patient now。'
She was not yet thirty; but was approaching the zenith of her loveliness; all her rich promise abundantly fulfilled。 She had lost that fashionable; spidery look; the head that I used to think quattrocento; which had sat a little oddly on her; was now part of herself and not at all Florentine; not connected in any way with painting or the arts or with anything except herself; so that it would be idle to itemize and dissect her beauty; which was her own essence; and could only be known in her and by her authority and in the love I was soon to have for her。
Time had wrought another change; too; not for her the sly; placent smile of la Gioconda; the years had been more than 'the sound of lyres and flutes'; and had saddened her。 She seemed to say: 'Look at me。 I have done my share。 I am beautiful。 It is something quite out of the ordinary; this beauty of mine。 I am made for delight。 But what do I get out of it? Where is my reward?'
That was the change in her from ten years ago; that; indeed; was her reward; this haunting; magical sadness which spoke straight to the heart and struck silence; it was the pletion of her beauty。
'Sadder; too;' I said。
'Oh yes; much sadder。'
My wife was in exuberant spirits when; two hours later; I returned to the cabin。
'I've had to do everything。 How does it look?'
We had been given; without paying more for it; a large suite of rooms; one so large; in fact; that it was seldom booked except by directors of the line; and on most voyages; the chief purser admitted; was given to those he wished to honour。 (My wife was adept in achieving such small advantages; first impressing the impressionable with her chic and my celebrity and; superiority once firmly established; changing quickly to a pose of almost flirtatious affability。) In token of her appreciation the chief purser had; been asked to our party and he; in token of his appreciation; had sent before him the life…size effigy of a swan; moulded in ice and filled with caviar。 This chilly piece of magnificence now dominated the room; standing on a table in the centre; thawing gently; dripping at the beak into its silver dish。 The flowers of the morning delivery hid as much as possible of the panelling (for this room was a miniature of the monstrous hall above)。
'You must get dressed at once。 Where have you been all this time?'
'Talking to Julia Mottram。'
'D'you know her? Oh; of course; you were a friend of the dipso brother。 Goodness; her glamour!'
'She greatly admires your looks; too。'
'She used to be a girl friend of Boy's。'
'Surely not?'
'He always said so。'
'Have you considered;' I asked; 'how your guests are going to eat this caviar?'
'I have。 It's insoluble。 But there's all this' … she revealed some trays of glassy titbits … 'and anyway; people always find ways of eating things a