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    The Captain's Dol

    Page 7
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    There was no littleness, no meanness, and no real coarseness. But

      he was a great talker, and relentless towards his audience.

      Hannele was attracted to him by his talk. He began as soon as

      dinner appeared: and he went on, carrying the decanter and the

      wine-glass with him out on to the balcony of the villa, over the

      lake, on and on until midnight. The summer night was still and

      warm: the lake lay deep and full, and the old town twinkled away

      across. There was the faintest tang of snow in the air, from the

      great glacier-peaks that were hidden in the night opposite.

      Sometimes a boat with a lantern twanged a guitar. The clematis

      flowers were quite black, like leaves, dangling from the terrace.

      It was so beautiful, there in the very heart of the Tyrol. The

      hotels glittered with lights: electric light was still cheap.

      There seemed a fullness and a loveliness in the night. And yet for

      some reason it was all terrible and devastating: the life-spirit

      seemed to be squirming, bleeding all the time.

      And on and on talked the Herr Regierungsrat, with all the witty

      volubility of the more versatile Austrian. He was really very

      witty, very human, and with a touch of salty cynicism that reminded

      one of a real old Roman of the Empire. That subtle stoicism, that

      unsentimental epicureanism, that kind of reckless hopelessness, of

      course, fascinated the women. And particularly Hannele. He talked

      on and on--about his work before the war, when he held an important

      post and was one of the governing class--then about the war--then

      about the hopelessness of the present: and in it all there seemed a

      bigness, a carelessness based on indifference and hopelessness that

      laughed at its very self. The real old Austria had always

      fascinated Hannele. As represented in the witty, bitter-

      indifferent Herr Regierungsrat it carried her away.

      And he, of course, turned instinctively to her, talking in his

      rapid, ceaseless fashion, with a laugh and a pause to drink and a

      new start taken. She liked the sound of his Austrian speech: its

      racy carelessness, its salty indifference to standards of

      correctness. Oh yes, here was the grand geste still lingering.

      He turned his large breast towards her, and made a quick gesture

      with his fat, well-shapen hand, blurted out another subtle, rough-

      seeming romance, pursed his mouth, and emptied his glass once more.

      Then he looked at his half-forgotten cigar and started again.

      There was something almost boyish and impulsive about him: the way

      he turned to her, and the odd way he seemed to open his big breast

      to her. And again he seemed almost eternal, sitting there in his

      chair with knees planted apart. It was as if he would never rise

      again, but would remain sitting for ever, and talking. He seemed

      as if he had no legs, save to sit with. As if to stand on his feet

      and walk would not be natural to him.

      Yet he rose at last, and kissed her hand with the grand gesture

      that France or Germany have never acquired: carelessness, profound

      indifference to other people's standards, and then such a sudden

      stillness, as he bent and kissed her hand. Of course she felt a

      queen in exile.

      And perhaps it is more dangerous to feel yourself a queen in exile

      than a queen in situ. She fell in love with him, with this large,

      stout, loose widower of fifty, with two children. He had no money

      except some Austrian money that was worth nothing outside Austria.

      He could not even go to Germany. There he was, fixed in this

      hollow in the middle of the Tyrol.

      But he had an ambition still, old Roman of the decadence that he

      was. He had year by year and without making any fuss collected the

      material for a very minute and thorough history of his own

      district: the Chiemgau and the Pinzgau. Hannele found that his

      fund of information on this subject was inexhaustible, and his

      intelligence was so delicate, so human, and his scope seemed so

      wide, that she felt a touch of reverence for him. He wanted to

      write this history. And she wanted to help him.

      For, of course, as things were he would never write it. He was

      Regierungsrat: that is, he was the petty local governor of his town

      and immediate district. The Amthaus was a great old building, and

      there young ladies in high heels flirted among masses of papers

      with bare-kneed young gentlemen in Tyrolese costume, and

      occasionally they parted to take a pleasant, interesting attitude

      and write a word or two, after which they fluttered together for a

      little more interesting diversion. It was extraordinary how many

      finely built, handsome young people of an age fitted for nothing

      but love-affairs ran the governmental business of this department.

      And the Herr Regierungsrat sailed in and out of the big, old room,

      his wide coat flying like wings and making the papers flutter, his

      rather wine-reddened, old-Roman face smiling with its bitter look.

      And of course it was a witticism he uttered first, even if Hungary

      was invading the frontier or cholera was in Vienna.

      When he was on his legs, he walked nimbly, briskly, and his coat-

      bottoms always flew. So he waved through the town, greeting

      somebody at every few strides and grinning, and yet with a certain

      haughty reserve. Oh yes, there was a certain salty hauteur about

      him which made the people trust him. And he spoke the vernacular

      so racily.

      Hannele felt she would like to marry him. She would like to be

      near him. She would like him to write his history. She would like

      him to make her feel a queen in exile. No one had ever QUITE

      kissed her hand as he kissed it: with that sudden stillness and

      strange, chivalric abandon of himself. How he would abandon

      himself to her!--terribly--wonderfully--perhaps a little horribly.

      His wife, whom he had married late, had died after seven years of

      marriage. Hannele could understand that too. One or the other

      must die.

      She became engaged. But something made her hesitate before

      marriage. Being in Austria was like being on a wrecked ship that

      MUST sink after a certain short length of time. And marrying the

      Herr Regierungsrat was like marrying the doomed captain of the

      doomed ship. The sense of fatality was part of the attraction.

      And yet she hesitated. The summer weeks passed. The strangers

      flooded in and crowded the town, and ate up the food like locusts.

      People no longer counted the paper money, they weighed it by the

      kilogram. Peasants stored it in a corner of the meal-bin, and mice

      came and chewed holes in it. Nobody knew where the next lot of

      food was going to come from: yet it always came. And the lake

      teemed with bathers. When the captain arrived he looked with

      amazement on the crowds of strapping, powerful fellows who bathed

      all day long, magnificent blond flesh of men and women. No wonder

      the old Romans stood in astonishment before the huge blond limbs of

      the savage Germana.

      Well, the life was like a madness. The hotels charged fifteen

      h
    undred kronen a day: the women, old and young, paraded in the

      peasant costume, in flowery cotton dresses with gaudy, expensive

      silk aprons: the men wore the Tyrolese costume, bare knees and

      little short jackets. And for the men, the correct thing was to

      have the leathern hose and the blue linen jacket as old as

      possible. If you had a hole in your leathern seat, so much the

      better.

      Everything so physical. Such magnificent naked limbs and naked

      bodies, and in the streets, in the hotels, everywhere, bare, white

      arms of women and bare, brown, powerful knees and thighs of men.

      The sense of flesh everywhere, and the endless ache of flesh. Even

      in the peasants who rowed across the lake, standing and rowing with

      a slow, heavy, gondolier motion at the one curved oar, there was

      the same endless ache of physical yearning.

      XIII

      It was August when Alexander met Hannele. She was walking under a

      chintz parasol, wearing a dress of blue cotton with little red

      roses, and a red silk apron. She had no hat, her arms were bare

      and soft, and she had white stockings under her short dress. The

      Herr Regierungsrat was at her side, large, nimble, and laughing

      with a new witticism.

      Alexander, in a light summer suit and Panama hat, was just coming

      out of the bank, shoving twenty thousand kronen into his pocket.

      He saw her coming across from the Amtsgericht, with the Herr

      Regierungsrat at her side, across the space of sunshine. She was

      laughing, and did not notice him.

      She did not notice till he had taken off his hat and was saluting

      her. Then what she saw was the black, smooth, shining head, and

      she went pale. His black, smooth, close head--and all the blue

      Austrian day seemed to shrivel before her eyes.

      'How do you do, Countess! I hoped I should meet you.'

      She heard his slow, sad-clanging, straying voice again, and she

      pressed her hand with the umbrella stick against her breast. She

      had forgotten it--forgotten his peculiar, slow voice. And now it

      seemed like a noise that sounds in the silence of night. Ah, how

      difficult it was, that suddenly the world could split under her

      eyes, and show this darkness inside. She wished he had not come.

      She presented him to the Herr Regierungsrat, who was stiff and

      cold. She asked where the captain was staying. And then, not

      knowing what else to say, she said:

      'Won't you come to tea?'

      She was staying in a villa across the lake. Yes, he would come to

      tea.

      He went. He hired a boat and a man to row him across. It was not

      far. There stood the villa, with its brown balconies one above the

      other, the bright red geraniums and white geraniums twinkling all

      round, the trees of purple clematis tumbling at one corner. All

      the green window doors were open: but nobody about. In the little

      garden by the water's edge the rose trees were tall and lank, drawn

      up by the dark green trees of the background. A white table with

      chairs and garden seats stood under--the shadow of a big willow

      tree, and a hammock with cushions swung just behind. But no one in

      sight. There was a little landing bridge on to the garden: and a

      fairly large boat-house at the garden end.

      The captain was not sure that the boat-house belonged to the villa.

      Voices were shouting and laughing from the water's surface, bathers

      swimming. A tall, naked youth with a little red cap on his head

      and a tiny red loin-cloth round his slender young hips was standing

      on the steps of the boat-house calling to the three women who were

      swimming near. The dark-haired woman with the white cap swam up to

      the steps and caught the boy by the ankle. He cried and laughed

      and remonstrated, and poked her in the breast with his foot.

      'Nein, nein, Hardu!' she cried as he tickled her with his toe.

      'Hardu! Hardu! H�r' auf!--Leave off!'--and she fell with a crash

      back into the water. The youth laughed a loud, deep laugh of a lad

      whose voice is newly broken.

      'Was macht er dann?' cried a voice from the waters. 'What is he

      doing?' It was a dark-skinned girl swimming swiftly, her big dark

      eyes watching amused from the water surface.

      'Jetzt Hardu h�r' auf. Nein. Jetzt ruhig! Now leave off! Now be

      quiet.' And the dark-skinned woman was climbing out in the

      sunshine onto the pale, raw-wood steps of the boathouse, the water

      glistening on her dark-blue, stockinette, soft-moulded back and

      loins: while the boy, with his foot stretched out, was trying to

      push her back into the water. She clambered out, however, and sat

      on the steps in the sun, panting slightly. She was dark and

      attractive-looking, with a mature beautiful figure, and handsome,

      strong woman's legs.

      In the garden appeared a black-and-white maid-servant with a tray.

      'Kaffee, gn�dige Frau!'

      The voice came so distinct over the water.

      'Hannele! Hannele! Kaffee!' called the woman on the steps of the

      bathing-house.

      'Tante Hannele! Kaffee!' called the dark-eyed girl, turning round

      in the water, then swimming for home.

      'Kaffee! Kaffee!' roared the youth, in anticipation.

      'Ja--a! Ich kom--mm,' sang Hannele's voice from the water.

      The dark-eyed girl, her hair tied up in a silk bandana, had reached

      the steps and was climbing out, a slim young fish in her close dark

      suit. The three stood clustered on the steps, the elder woman with

      one arm over the naked shoulders of the youth, the other arm over

      the shoulders of the girl. And all in chorus sang:

      'Hannele! Hannele! Hannele! Wir warten auf dich.'

      The boatman had left off rowing, and the boat was drifting slowly

      in. The family became quiet, because of the intrusion. The

      attractive-looking woman turned and picked up her blue bath-robe,

      of a mid-blue colour that became her. She swung it round her as if

      it were an opera cloak. The youth stared at the boat.

      The captain was watching Hannele. With a white kerchief tied round

      her silky, brownish hair, she was swimming home. He saw her white

      shoulders and her white, wavering legs below in the clear water.

      Round the boat fishes were suddenly jumping.

      The three on the steps beyond stood silent, watching the intruding

      boat with resentment. The boatman twisted his head round and

      watched them. The captain, who was facing them, watched Hannele.

      She swam slowly and easily up, caught the rail of the steps, and

      stooping forward, climbed slowly out of the water. Her legs were

      large and flashing white and looked rich, the rich, white thighs

      with the blue veins behind, and the full, rich softness of her

      sloping loins.

      'Ach! Sch�n! 'S war sch�n! Das Wasser ist gut,' her voice was

      heard, half singing as she took her breath. 'It was lovely.'

      'Heiss,' said the woman above. 'Zu warm. Too warm.'

      The youth made way for Hannele, who drew herself erect at the top

      of the steps, looking round, panting a little and putting up her

      hands to the knot of her kerchief on her head. Her legs were


      magnificent and white.

      'Kuck de Leut, die da bleiben,' said the woman in the blue wrap, in

      a low voice. 'Look at the people stopping there.'

      'Ja!' said Hannele negligently. Then she looked. She started as

      if in fear, looked round, as if to run away, looked back again, and

      met the eyes of the captain, who took off his hat.

      She cried in a loud, frightened voice:

      'Oh, but--I thought it was TOMORROW!'

      'No--today,' came the quiet voice of the captain over the water.

      'TODAY! Are you sure?' she cried, calling to the boat.

      'Quite sure. But we'll make it tomorrow if you like,' he said.

      'Today! Today!' she repeated in bewilderment.' No! Wait a

      minute.' And she ran into the boat-house.

      'Was ist es?' asked the dark woman, following her. 'What is it?'

      'A friend--a visitor--Captain Hepburn,' came Hannele's voice.

      The boatman now rowed slowly to the landing-stage. The dark woman,

      huddled in her blue wrap as in an opera-cloak, walked proudly and

      unconcernedly across the background of the garden and up the steps

      to the first balcony. Hannele, her feet slip-slopping in loose

      slippers, clutching an old yellow wrap round her, came to the

      landing-stage and shook hands.

      'I am so sorry. It is so stupid of me. I was sure it was

      tomorrow,' she said.

      'No, it was today. But I wish for your sake it had been tomorrow,'

      he replied.

      'No. No. It doesn't matter. You won't mind waiting a minute,

      will you? You mustn't be angry with me for being so stupid.'

      So she went away, the heelless slippers flipping up to her naked

      heels. Then the big-eyed, dusky girl stole into the house: and

      then the naked youth, who went with sang-froid. He would make a

      fine, handsome man: and he knew it.

      XIV

      Hepburn and Hannele were to make a small excursion to the glacier

      which stood there always in sight, coldly grinning in the sky. The

      weather had been very hot, but this morning there were loose clouds

      in the sky. The captain rowed over the lake soon after dawn.

      Hannele stepped into the little craft, and they pulled back to the

      town. There was a wind ruffling the water, so that the boat leaped

      and chuckled. The glacier, in a recess among the folded mountains,

      looked cold and angry. But morning was very sweet in the sky, and

      blowing very sweet with a faint scent of the second hay from the

      low lands at the head of the lake. Beyond stood naked grey rock

      like a wall of mountains, pure rock, with faint, thin slashes of

      snow. Yesterday it had rained on the lake. The sun was going to

      appear from behind the Breitsteinhorn, the sky with its clouds

      floating in blue light and yellow radiance was lovely and cheering

      again. But dark clouds seemed to spout up from the Pinzgau valley.

      And once across the lake, all was shadow, when the water no longer

      gave back the sky-morning.

      The day was a feast day, a holiday. Already so early three young

      men from the mountains were bathing near the steps of the

      Badeanstalt. Handsome, physical fellows, with good limbs rolling

      and swaying in the early morning water. They seemed to enjoy it

      too. But to Hepburn it was always as if a dark wing were stretched

      in the sky, over these mountains, like a doom. And these three

      young, lusty, naked men swimming and rolling in the shadow.

      Hepburn's was the first boat stirring. He made fast in the hotel

      boat-house, and he and Hannele went into the little town. It was

      deep in shadow, though the light of the sky, curdled with cloud,

      was bright overhead. But dark and chill and heavy lay the shadow

      in the black-and-white town, like a sediment.

      The shops were all shut, but peasants from the hills were already

      strolling about in their holiday dress: the men in their short

      leather trousers, like football drawers, and bare brown knees and

     


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