<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<p>The next few months passed away, as many years can pass away, without definite
events, and yet, if suddenly disturbed, it would be seen that such months or
years had a character unlike others. The three months which had passed had
brought them to the beginning of March. The climate had kept its promise, and
the change of season from winter to spring had made very little difference, so
that Helen, who was sitting in the drawing-room with a pen in her hand, could
keep the windows open though a great fire of logs burnt on one side of her.
Below, the sea was still blue and the roofs still brown and white, though the
day was fading rapidly. It was dusk in the room, which, large and empty at all
times, now appeared larger and emptier than usual. Her own figure, as she sat
writing with a pad on her knee, shared the general effect of size and lack of
detail, for the flames which ran along the branches, suddenly devouring little
green tufts, burnt intermittently and sent irregular illuminations across her
face and the plaster walls. There were no pictures on the walls but here and
there boughs laden with heavy-petalled flowers spread widely against them. Of
the books fallen on the bare floor and heaped upon the large table, it was only
possible in this light to trace the outline.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ambrose was writing a very long letter. Beginning “Dear
Bernard,” it went on to describe what had been happening in the Villa San
Gervasio during the past three months, as, for instance, that they had had the
British Consul to dinner, and had been taken over a Spanish man-of-war, and had
seen a great many processions and religious festivals, which were so beautiful
that Mrs. Ambrose couldn’t conceive why, if people must have a religion,
they didn’t all become Roman Catholics. They had made several expeditions
though none of any length. It was worth coming if only for the sake of the
flowering trees which grew wild quite near the house, and the amazing colours
of sea and earth. The earth, instead of being brown, was red, purple, green.
“You won’t believe me,” she added, “there is no colour
like it in England.” She adopted, indeed, a condescending tone towards
that poor island, which was now advancing chilly crocuses and nipped violets in
nooks, in copses, in cosy corners, tended by rosy old gardeners in mufflers,
who were always touching their hats and bobbing obsequiously. She went on to
deride the islanders themselves. Rumours of London all in a ferment over a
General Election had reached them even out here. “It seems
incredible,” she went on, “that people should care whether Asquith
is in or Austen Chamberlain out, and while you scream yourselves hoarse about
politics you let the only people who are trying for something good starve or
simply laugh at them. When have you ever encouraged a living artist? Or bought
his best work? Why are you all so ugly and so servile? Here the servants are
human beings. They talk to one as if they were equals. As far as I can tell
there are no aristocrats.”</p>
<p>Perhaps it was the mention of aristocrats that reminded her of Richard Dalloway
and Rachel, for she ran on with the same penful to describe her niece.</p>
<p>“It’s an odd fate that has put me in charge of a girl,” she
wrote, “considering that I have never got on well with women, or had much
to do with them. However, I must retract some of the things that I have said
against them. If they were properly educated I don’t see why they
shouldn’t be much the same as men—as satisfactory I mean; though,
of course, very different. The question is, how should one educate them. The
present method seems to me abominable. This girl, though twenty-four, had never
heard that men desired women, and, until I explained it, did not know how
children were born. Her ignorance upon other matters as important” (here
Mrs. Ambrose’s letter may not be quoted) . . . “was complete. It
seems to me not merely foolish but criminal to bring people up like that. Let
alone the suffering to them, it explains why women are what they are—the
wonder is they’re no worse. I have taken it upon myself to enlighten her,
and now, though still a good deal prejudiced and liable to exaggerate, she is
more or less a reasonable human being. Keeping them ignorant, of course,
defeats its own object, and when they begin to understand they take it all much
too seriously. My brother-in-law really deserved a catastrophe—which he
won’t get. I now pray for a young man to come to my help; some one, I
mean, who would talk to her openly, and prove how absurd most of her ideas
about life are. Unluckily such men seem almost as rare as the women. The
English colony certainly doesn’t provide one; artists, merchants,
cultivated people—they are stupid, conventional, and flirtatious. . .
.” She ceased, and with her pen in her hand sat looking into the fire,
making the logs into caves and mountains, for it had grown too dark to go on
writing. Moreover, the house began to stir as the hour of dinner approached;
she could hear the plates being chinked in the dining-room next door, and
Chailey instructing the Spanish girl where to put things down in vigorous
English. The bell rang; she rose, met Ridley and Rachel outside, and they all
went in to dinner.</p>
<p>Three months had made but little difference in the appearance either of Ridley
or Rachel; yet a keen observer might have thought that the girl was more
definite and self-confident in her manner than before. Her skin was brown, her
eyes certainly brighter, and she attended to what was said as though she might
be going to contradict it. The meal began with the comfortable silence of
people who are quite at their ease together. Then Ridley, leaning on his elbow
and looking out of the window, observed that it was a lovely night.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Helen. She added, “The season’s
begun,” looking at the lights beneath them. She asked Maria in Spanish
whether the hotel was not filling up with visitors. Maria informed her with
pride that there would come a time when it was positively difficult to buy
eggs—the shopkeepers would not mind what prices they asked; they would
get them, at any rate, from the English.</p>
<p>“That’s an English steamer in the bay,” said Rachel, looking
at a triangle of lights below. “She came in early this morning.”</p>
<p>“Then we may hope for some letters and send ours back,” said Helen.</p>
<p>For some reason the mention of letters always made Ridley groan, and the rest
of the meal passed in a brisk argument between husband and wife as to whether
he was or was not wholly ignored by the entire civilised world.</p>
<p>“Considering the last batch,” said Helen, “you deserve
beating. You were asked to lecture, you were offered a degree, and some silly
woman praised not only your books but your beauty—she said he was what
Shelley would have been if Shelley had lived to fifty-five and grown a beard.
Really, Ridley, I think you’re the vainest man I know,” she ended,
rising from the table, “which I may tell you is saying a good
deal.”</p>
<p>Finding her letter lying before the fire she added a few lines to it, and then
announced that she was going to take the letters now—Ridley must bring
his—and Rachel?</p>
<p>“I hope you’ve written to your Aunts? It’s high time.”</p>
<p>The women put on cloaks and hats, and after inviting Ridley to come with them,
which he emphatically refused to do, exclaiming that Rachel he expected to be a
fool, but Helen surely knew better, they turned to go. He stood over the fire
gazing into the depths of the looking-glass, and compressing his face into the
likeness of a commander surveying a field of battle, or a martyr watching the
flames lick his toes, rather than that of a secluded Professor.</p>
<p>Helen laid hold of his beard.</p>
<p>“Am I a fool?” she said.</p>
<p>“Let me go, Helen.”</p>
<p>“Am I a fool?” she repeated.</p>
<p>“Vile woman!” he exclaimed, and kissed her.</p>
<p>“We’ll leave you to your vanities,” she called back as they
went out of the door.</p>
<p>It was a beautiful evening, still light enough to see a long way down the road,
though the stars were coming out. The pillar-box was let into a high yellow
wall where the lane met the road, and having dropped the letters into it, Helen
was for turning back.</p>
<p>“No, no,” said Rachel, taking her by the wrist. “We’re
going to see life. You promised.”</p>
<p>“Seeing life” was the phrase they used for their habit of strolling
through the town after dark. The social life of Santa Marina was carried on
almost entirely by lamp-light, which the warmth of the nights and the scents
culled from flowers made pleasant enough. The young women, with their hair
magnificently swept in coils, a red flower behind the ear, sat on the
doorsteps, or issued out on to balconies, while the young men ranged up and
down beneath, shouting up a greeting from time to time and stopping here and
there to enter into amorous talk. At the open windows merchants could be seen
making up the day’s account, and older women lifting jars from shelf to
shelf. The streets were full of people, men for the most part, who interchanged
their views of the world as they walked, or gathered round the wine-tables at
the street corner, where an old cripple was twanging his guitar strings, while
a poor girl cried her passionate song in the gutter. The two Englishwomen
excited some friendly curiosity, but no one molested them.</p>
<p>Helen sauntered on, observing the different people in their shabby clothes, who
seemed so careless and so natural, with satisfaction.</p>
<p>“Just think of the Mall to-night!” she exclaimed at length.
“It’s the fifteenth of March. Perhaps there’s a Court.”
She thought of the crowd waiting in the cold spring air to see the grand
carriages go by. “It’s very cold, if it’s not raining,”
she said. “First there are men selling picture postcards; then there are
wretched little shop-girls with round bandboxes; then there are bank clerks in
tail coats; and then—any number of dressmakers. People from South
Kensington drive up in a hired fly; officials have a pair of bays; earls, on
the other hand, are allowed one footman to stand up behind; dukes have two,
royal dukes—so I was told—have three; the king, I suppose, can have
as many as he likes. And the people believe in it!”</p>
<p>Out here it seemed as though the people of England must be shaped in the body
like the kings and queens, knights and pawns of the chessboard, so strange were
their differences, so marked and so implicitly believed in.</p>
<p>They had to part in order to circumvent a crowd.</p>
<p>“They believe in God,” said Rachel as they regained each other. She
meant that the people in the crowd believed in Him; for she remembered the
crosses with bleeding plaster figures that stood where foot-paths joined, and
the inexplicable mystery of a service in a Roman Catholic church.</p>
<p>“We shall never understand!” she sighed.</p>
<p>They had walked some way and it was now night, but they could see a large iron
gate a little way farther down the road on their left.</p>
<p>“Do you mean to go right up to the hotel?” Helen asked.</p>
<p>Rachel gave the gate a push; it swung open, and, seeing no one about and
judging that nothing was private in this country, they walked straight on. An
avenue of trees ran along the road, which was completely straight. The trees
suddenly came to an end; the road turned a corner, and they found themselves
confronted by a large square building. They had come out upon the broad terrace
which ran round the hotel and were only a few feet distant from the windows. A
row of long windows opened almost to the ground. They were all of them
uncurtained, and all brilliantly lighted, so that they could see everything
inside. Each window revealed a different section of the life of the hotel. They
drew into one of the broad columns of shadow which separated the windows and
gazed in. They found themselves just outside the dining-room. It was being
swept; a waiter was eating a bunch of grapes with his leg across the corner of
a table. Next door was the kitchen, where they were washing up; white cooks
were dipping their arms into cauldrons, while the waiters made their meal
voraciously off broken meats, sopping up the gravy with bits of crumb. Moving
on, they became lost in a plantation of bushes, and then suddenly found
themselves outside the drawing-room, where the ladies and gentlemen, having
dined well, lay back in deep arm-chairs, occasionally speaking or turning over
the pages of magazines. A thin woman was flourishing up and down the piano.</p>
<p>“What is a dahabeeyah, Charles?” the distinct voice of a widow,
seated in an arm-chair by the window, asked her son.</p>
<p>It was the end of the piece, and his answer was lost in the general clearing of
throats and tapping of knees.</p>
<p>“They’re all old in this room,” Rachel whispered.</p>
<p>Creeping on, they found that the next window revealed two men in shirt-sleeves
playing billiards with two young ladies.</p>
<p>“He pinched my arm!” the plump young woman cried, as she missed her
stroke.</p>
<p>“Now you two—no ragging,” the young man with the red face
reproved them, who was marking.</p>
<p>“Take care or we shall be seen,” whispered Helen, plucking Rachel
by the arm. Incautiously her head had risen to the middle of the window.</p>
<p>Turning the corner they came to the largest room in the hotel, which was
supplied with four windows, and was called the Lounge, although it was really a
hall. Hung with armour and native embroideries, furnished with divans and
screens, which shut off convenient corners, the room was less formal than the
others, and was evidently the haunt of youth. Signor Rodriguez, whom they knew
to be the manager of the hotel, stood quite near them in the doorway surveying
the scene—the gentlemen lounging in chairs, the couples leaning over
coffee-cups, the game of cards in the centre under profuse clusters of electric
light. He was congratulating himself upon the enterprise which had turned the
refectory, a cold stone room with pots on trestles, into the most comfortable
room in the house. The hotel was very full, and proved his wisdom in decreeing
that no hotel can flourish without a lounge.</p>
<p>The people were scattered about in couples or parties of four, and either they
were actually better acquainted, or the informal room made their manners
easier. Through the open window came an uneven humming sound like that which
rises from a flock of sheep pent within hurdles at dusk. The card-party
occupied the centre of the foreground.</p>
<p>Helen and Rachel watched them play for some minutes without being able to
distinguish a word. Helen was observing one of the men intently. He was a lean,
somewhat cadaverous man of about her own age, whose profile was turned to them,
and he was the partner of a highly-coloured girl, obviously English by birth.</p>
<p>Suddenly, in the strange way in which some words detach themselves from the
rest, they heard him say quite distinctly:—</p>
<p>“All you want is practice, Miss Warrington; courage and
practice—one’s no good without the other.”</p>
<p>“Hughling Elliot! Of course!” Helen exclaimed. She ducked her head
immediately, for at the sound of his name he looked up. The game went on for a
few minutes, and was then broken up by the approach of a wheeled chair,
containing a voluminous old lady who paused by the table and said:—</p>
<p>“Better luck to-night, Susan?”</p>
<p>“All the luck’s on our side,” said a young man who until now
had kept his back turned to the window. He appeared to be rather stout, and had
a thick crop of hair.</p>
<p>“Luck, Mr. Hewet?” said his partner, a middle-aged lady with
spectacles. “I assure you, Mrs. Paley, our success is due solely to our
brilliant play.”</p>
<p>“Unless I go to bed early I get practically no sleep at all,” Mrs.
Paley was heard to explain, as if to justify her seizure of Susan, who got up
and proceeded to wheel the chair to the door.</p>
<p>“They’ll get some one else to take my place,” she said
cheerfully. But she was wrong. No attempt was made to find another player, and
after the young man had built three stories of a card-house, which fell down,
the players strolled off in different directions.</p>
<p>Mr. Hewet turned his full face towards the window. They could see that he had
large eyes obscured by glasses; his complexion was rosy, his lips clean-shaven;
and, seen among ordinary people, it appeared to be an interesting face. He came
straight towards them, but his eyes were fixed not upon the eavesdroppers but
upon a spot where the curtain hung in folds.</p>
<p>“Asleep?” he said.</p>
<p>Helen and Rachel started to think that some one had been sitting near to them
unobserved all the time. There were legs in the shadow. A melancholy voice
issued from above them.</p>
<p>“Two women,” it said.</p>
<p>A scuffling was heard on the gravel. The women had fled. They did not stop
running until they felt certain that no eye could penetrate the darkness and
the hotel was only a square shadow in the distance, with red holes regularly
cut in it.</p>
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