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    The Ladybird

    Page 4
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    becomes true.'

      'The secret knowledge?'

      'Yes.'

      'What, for instance?'

      'Take actual fire. It will bore you. Do you want to hear?'

      'Go on.'

      'This is what I was taught. The true fire is invisible. Flame,

      and the red fire we see burning, has its back to us. It is running

      away from us. Does that mean anything to you?'

      'Yes.'

      'Well then, the yellowness of sunshine--light itself--that is only

      the glancing aside of the real original fire. You know that is

      true. There would be no light if there was no refraction, no bits

      of dust and stuff to turn the dark fire into visibility. You know

      that's a fact. And that being so, even the sun is dark. It is

      only his jacket of dust that makes him visible. You know that too.

      And the true sunbeams coming towards us flow darkly, a moving

      darkness of the genuine fire. The sun is dark, the sunshine

      flowing to us is dark. And light is only the inside-turning away

      of the sun's directness that was coming to us. Does that interest

      you at all?'

      'Yes,' she said dubiously.

      'Well, we've got the world inside out. The true living world of

      fire is dark, throbbing, darker than blood. Our luminous world

      that we go by is only the reverse of this.'

      'Yes, I like that,' she said.

      'Well! Now listen. The same with love. This white love that we

      have is the same. It is only the reverse, the whited sepulchre of

      the true love. True love is dark, a throbbing together in

      darkness, like the wild-cat in the night, when the green screen

      opens and her eyes are on the darkness.'

      'No, I don't see that,' she said in a slow, clanging voice.

      'You, and your beauty--that is only the inside-out of you. The

      real you is the wild-cat invisible in the night, with red fire

      perhaps coming out of its wide, dark eyes. Your beauty is your

      whited sepulchre.'

      'You mean cosmetics,' she said. 'I've got none on today--not even

      powder.'

      He laughed.

      'Very good,' he said. 'Consider me. I used to think myself small

      but handsome, and the ladies used to admire me moderately, never

      very much. A trim little fellow, you know. Well, that was just

      the inside-out of me. I am a black tom-cat howling in the night,

      and it is then that fire comes out of me. This me you look at is

      my whited sepulchre. What do you say?'

      She was looking into his eyes. She could see the darkness swaying

      in the depths. She perceived the invisible, cat-like fire stirring

      deep inside them, felt it coming towards her. She turned her face

      aside. Then he laughed, showing his strong white teeth, that

      seemed a little too large, rather dreadful.

      She rose to go.

      'Well,' she said. 'I shall have the summer in which to think about

      the world inside-out. Do write if there is anything to say. Write

      to Thoresway. Good-bye!'

      'Ah, your eyes!' he said. 'They are like jewels of stone.'

      Being away from the Count, she put him out of her mind. Only she

      was sorry for him a prisoner in that sickening Voynich Hall. But

      she did not write. Nor did he.

      As a matter of fact, her mind was now much more occupied with her

      husband. All arrangements were being made to effect his exchange.

      From month to month she looked for his return. And so she thought

      of him.

      Whatever happened to her, she thought about it, thought and thought

      a great deal. The consciousness of her mind was like tablets of

      stone weighing her down. And whoever would make a new entry into

      her must break these tablets of stone piece by piece. So it was

      that in her own way she thought often enough of the Count's world

      inside-out. A curious latency stirred in her consciousness that

      was not yet an idea.

      He said her eyes were like jewels of stone. What a horrid thing to

      say! What did he want her eyes to be like? He wanted them to

      dilate and become all black pupil, like a cat's at night. She

      shrank convulsively from the thought, and tightened her breast.

      He said her beauty was her whited sepulchre. Even that, she knew

      what he meant. The invisibility of her he wanted to love. But ah,

      her pearl-like beauty was so dear to her, and it was so famous in

      the world.

      He said her white love was like moonshine, harmful, the reverse of

      love. He meant Basil, of course. Basil always said she was the

      moon. But then Basil loved her for that. The ecstasy of it! She

      shivered, thinking of her husband. But it had also made her nerve-

      worn, her husband's love. Ah, nerve-worn.

      What then would the Count's love be like? Something so secret and

      different. She would not be lovely and a queen to him. He hated

      her loveliness. The wild-cat has its mate. The little wild-cat

      that he was. Ah!

      She caught her breath, determined not to think. When she thought

      of Count Dionys she felt the world slipping away from her. She

      would sit in front of a mirror, looking at her wonderful cared-for

      face that had appeared in so many society magazines. She loved it

      so, it made her feel so vain. And she looked at her blue-green

      eyes--the eyes of the wild-cat on a bough. Yes, the lovely blue-

      green iris drawn tight like a screen. Supposing it should relax.

      Supposing it should unfold, and open out the dark depths, the dark,

      dilated pupil! Supposing it should?

      Never! She always caught herself back. She felt she might be

      killed before she could give way to that relaxation that the Count

      wanted of her. She could not. She just could not. At the very

      thought of it some hypersensitive nerve started with a great twinge

      in her breast; she drew back, forced to keep her guard. Ah no,

      Monsieur le Comte, you shall never take her ladyship off her guard.

      She disliked the thought of the Count. An impudent little fellow.

      An impertinent little fellow! A little madman, really. A little

      outsider. No, no. She would think of her husband: an adorable,

      tall, well-bred Englishman, so easy and simple, and with the amused

      look in his blue eyes. She thought of the cultured, casual trail

      of his voice. It set her nerves on fire. She thought of his

      strong, easy body--beautiful, white-fleshed, with the fine

      springing of warm-brown hair like tiny flames. He was the

      Dionysos, full of sap, milk and honey, and northern golden wine:

      he, her husband. Not that little unreal Count. Ah, she dreamed of

      her husband, of the love-days, and the honeymoon, the lovely,

      simple intimacy. Ah, the marvellous revelation of that intimacy,

      when he left himself to her so generously. Ah, she was his wife

      for this reason, that he had given himself to her so greatly, so

      generously. Like an ear of corn he was there for her gathering--

      her husband, her own, lovely, English husband. Ah, when would he

      come again, when would he come again!

      She had letters from him--and how he loved her. Far away, his life

      was all hers. All hers, flowing to her as the beam flows from
    a

      white star right down to us, to our heart. Her lover, her husband.

      He was now expecting to come home soon. It had all been arranged.

      'I hope you won't be disappointed in me when I do get back,' he

      wrote. 'I am afraid I am no longer the plump and well-looking

      young man I was. I've got a big scar at the side of my mouth, and

      I'm as thin as a starved rabbit, and my hair's going grey. Doesn't

      sound attractive, does it? And it isn't attractive. But once I

      can get out of this infernal place, and once I can be with you

      again, I shall come in for my second blooming. The very thought of

      being quietly in the same house with you, quiet and in peace, makes

      me realize that if I've been through hell, I have known heaven on

      earth and can hope to know it again. I am a miserable brute to

      look at now. But I have faith in you. You will forgive my

      appearance, and that alone will make me feel handsome.'

      She read this letter many times. She was not afraid of his scar or

      his looks. She would love him all the more.

      Since she had started making shirts--those two for the Count had

      been an enormous labour, even though her maid had come to her

      assistance forty times: but since she had started making shirts,

      she thought she might continue. She had some good suitable silk:

      her husband liked silk underwear.

      But she still used the Count's thimble. It was gold outside and

      silver inside, and was too heavy. A snake was coiled round the

      base, and at the top, for pressing the needle, was inlet a semi-

      translucent apple-green stone, perhaps jade, carved like a scarab,

      with little dots. It was too heavy. But then she sewed so slowly.

      And she liked to feel her hand heavy, weighted. And as she sewed

      she thought about her husband, and she felt herself in love with

      him. She thought of him, how beautiful he was, and how she would

      love him now he was thin: she would love him all the more. She

      would love to trace his bones, as if to trace his living skeleton.

      The thought made her rest her hands in her lap and drift into a

      muse. Then she felt the weight of the thimble on her finger, and

      took it off, and sat looking at the green stone. The ladybird.

      The ladybird. And if only her husband would come soon, soon. It

      was wanting him that made her so ill. Nothing but that. She had

      wanted him so badly. She wanted now. Ah, if she could go to him

      now, and find him, wherever he was, and see him and touch him and

      take all his love.

      As she mused, she put the thimble down in front of her, took up a

      little silver pencil from her work-basket, and on a bit of blue

      paper that had been the band of a small skein of silk she wrote the

      lines of the silly little song

      'Wenn ich ein Voglein war'

      Und auch zwei Fluglein hatt'

      Flag' ich zu dir--'

      That was all she could get on her bit of pale-blue paper.

      'If I were a little bird

      And had two little wings

      I'd fly to thee--

      Silly enough, in all conscience. But she did not translate it, so

      it did not seem quite so silly.

      At that moment her maid announced Lady Bingham--her husband's

      sister. Daphne crumpled up the bit of paper in a flurry, and in

      another minute Primrose, his sister, came in. The newcomer was not

      a bit like a primrose, being long-faced and clever, smart, but not

      a bit elegant, in her new clothes.

      'Daphne dear, what a domestic scene! I suppose it's rehearsal.

      Well, you may as well rehearse, he's with Admiral Burns on the

      Ariadne. Father just heard from the Admiralty: quite fit. He'll

      be here in a day or two. Splendid, isn't it? And the war is going

      to end. At least it seems like it. You'll be safe of your man

      now, dear. Thank heaven when it's all over. What are you sewing?'

      'A shirt,' said Daphne.

      'A shirt! Why, how clever of you. I should never know which end

      to begin. Who showed you?'

      'Millicent.'

      'And how did SHE know? She's no business to know how to sew

      shirts: nor cushions nor sheets either. Do let me look. Why, how

      perfectly marvellous you are!--every bit by hand too. Basil isn't

      worth it, dear, really he isn't. Let him order his shirts in

      Oxford Street. Your business is to be beautiful, not to sew

      shirts. What a dear little pin-poppet, or rather needle-woman! I

      say, a satire on us, that is. But what a darling, with mother-of-

      pearl wings to her skirts! And darling little gold-eyed needles

      inside her. You screw her head off, and you find she's full of

      pins and needles. Woman for you! Mother says won't you come to

      lunch tomorrow. And won't you come to Brassey's to tea with me at

      this minute. Do, there's a dear. I've got a taxi.'

      Daphne bundled her sewing loosely together.

      When she tried to do a bit more, two days later, she could not find

      her thimble. She asked her maid, whom she could absolutely trust.

      The girl had not seen it. She searched everywhere. She asked her

      nurse--who was now her housekeeper--and footman. No, nobody had

      seen it. Daphne even asked her sister-in-law.

      'Thimble, darling? No, I don't remember a thimble. I remember a

      dear little needle-lady, whom I thought such a precious satire on

      us women. I didn't notice a thimble.'

      Poor Daphne wandered about in a muse. She did not want to believe

      it lost. It had been like a talisman to her. She tried to forget

      it. Her husband was coming, quite soon, quite soon. But she could

      not raise herself to joy. She had lost her thimble. It was as if

      Count Dionys accused her in her sleep of something, she did not

      quite know what.

      And though she did not really want to go to Voynich Hall, yet like

      a fatality she went, like one doomed. It was already late autumn,

      and some lovely days. This was the last of the lovely days. She

      was told that Count Dionys was in the small park, finding

      chestnuts. She went to look for him. Yes, there he was in his

      blue uniform stooping over the brilliant yellow leaves of the sweet

      chestnut tree, that lay around him like a fallen nimbus of glowing

      yellow, under his feet, as he kicked and rustled, looking for the

      chestnut burrs. And with his short, brown hands he was pulling out

      the small chestnuts and putting them in his pockets. But as she

      approached he peeled a nut to eat it. His teeth were white and

      powerful.

      'You remind me of a squirrel laying in a winter store,' said she.

      'Ah, Lady Daphne--I was thinking and did not hear you.'

      'I thought you were gathering chestnuts--even eating them.'

      'Also!' he laughed. He had a dark, sudden charm when he laughed,

      showing his rather large white teeth. She was not quite sure

      whether she found him a little repulsive.

      'Were you REALLY thinking?' she said, in her slow, resonant way.

      'Very truly.'

      'And weren't you enjoying the chestnut a bit?'

      'Very much. Like sweet milk. Excellent, excellent.' He had the

      fragments of the nut betw
    een his teeth, and bit them finely. 'Will

      you take one too.' He held out the little, pointed brown nuts on

      the palm of his hand.

      She looked at them doubtfully.

      'Are they as tough as they always were?' she said.

      'No, they are fresh and good. Wait, I will peel one for you.'

      They strayed about through the thin clump of trees.

      'You have had a pleasant summer; you are strong?'

      'Almost QUITE strong,' said she. 'Lovely summer, thanks. I

      suppose it's no good asking you if you have been happy?'

      'Happy?' He looked at her direct. His eyes were black, and seemed

      to examine her. She always felt he had a little contempt of her.

      'Oh yes,' he said, smiling. 'I have been very happy.'

      'So glad.'

      They drifted a little farther, and he picked up an apple-green

      chestnut burr out of the yellow-brown leaves, handling it with

      sensitive fingers that still suggested paws to her.

      'How did you succeed in being happy?' she said.

      'How shall I tell you? I felt that the same power which put up the

      mountains could pull them down again--no matter how long it took.'

      'And was that all?'

      'Was it not enough?'

      'I should say decidedly too little.'

      He laughed broadly, showing the strong, negroid teeth.

      'You do not know all it means,' he said.

      'The thought that the mountains were going to be pulled down?' she

      said. 'It will be so long after my day.'

      'Ah, you are bored,' he said. 'But I--I found the God who pulls

      things down: especially the things that men have put up. Do they

      not say that life is a search after God, Lady Daphne? I have found

      my God.'

      'The god of destruction,' she said, blanching.

      'Yes--not the devil of destruction, but the god of destruction.

      The blessed god of destruction. It is strange'--he stood before

      her, looking up at her--'but I have found my God. The god of

      anger, who throws down the steeples and the factory chimneys. Ah,

      Lady Daphne, he is a man's God, he is a man's God. I have found my

      God, Lady Daphne.'

      'Apparently. And how are you going to serve him?'

      A naive glow transfigured his face.

      'Oh, I will help. With my heart I will help while I can do nothing

      with my hands. I say to my heart: Beat, hammer, beat with little

      strokes. Beat, hammer of God, beat them down. Beat it all down.'

      Her brows knitted, her face took on a look of discontent.

      'Beat what down?' she asked harshly.

      'The world, the world of man. Not the trees--these chestnuts, for

      example'--he looked up at them, at the tufts and loose pinions of

      yellow--'not these--nor the chattering sorcerers, the squirrels--

      nor the hawk that comes. Not those.'

      'You mean beat England?' she said.

      'Ah, no. Ah, no. Not England any more than Germany--perhaps not

      as much. Not Europe any more than Asia.'

      'Just the end of the world?'

      'No, no. No, no. What grudge have I against a world where little

      chestnuts are so sweet as these! Do you like yours? Will you take

      another?'

      'No, thanks.'

      'What grudge have I against a world where even the hedges are full

      of berries, bunches of black berries that hang down, and red

      berries that thrust up. Never would I hate the world. But the

      world of man. Lady Daphne'--his voice sank to a whisper--'I HATE

      IT. Zzz!' he hissed. 'Strike, little heart! Strike, strike, hit,

      smite! Oh, Lady Daphne!'--his eyes dilated with a ring of fire.

      'What?' she said, scared.

      'I believe in the power of my red, dark heart. God has put the

      hammer in my breast--the little eternal hammer. Hit--hit--hit! It

      hits on the world of man. It hits, it hits! And it hears the thin

      sound of cracking. The thin sound of cracking. Hark!'

     


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