DERELICT
Clara went with her husband to
Sheffield, and Paul scarcely saw her again. Walter
Morel seemed to have let all the trouble go over him,
and there he was, crawling about on the mud of it,
just the same. There was scarcely any bond between
father and son, save that each felt he must not let
the other go in any actual want. As there was
no one to keep on the home, and as they could neither
of them bear the emptiness of the house, Paul took
lodgings in Nottingham, and Morel went to live with
a friendly family in Bestwood.
Everything seemed to have gone smash
for the young man. He could not paint. The
picture he finished on the day of his mother’s
death—one that satisfied him—was
the last thing he did. At work there was no Clara.
When he came home he could not take up his brushes
again. There was nothing left.
So he was always in the town at one
place or another, drinking, knocking about with the
men he knew. It really wearied him. He talked
to barmaids, to almost any woman, but there was that
dark, strained look in his eyes, as if he were hunting
something.
Everything seemed so different, so
unreal. There seemed no reason why people should
go along the street, and houses pile up in the daylight.
There seemed no reason why these things should occupy
the space, instead of leaving it empty. His friends
talked to him: he heard the sounds, and he answered.
But why there should be the noise of speech he could
not understand.
He was most himself when he was alone,
or working hard and mechanically at the factory.
In the latter case there was pure forgetfulness, when
he lapsed from consciousness. But it had to come
to an end. It hurt him so, that things had lost
their reality. The first snowdrops came.
He saw the tiny drop-pearls among the grey. They
would have given him the liveliest emotion at one
time. Now they were there, but they did not seem
to mean anything. In a few moments they would
cease to occupy that place, and just the space would
be, where they had been. Tall, brilliant tram-cars
ran along the street at night. It seemed almost
a wonder they should trouble to rustle backwards and
forwards. “Why trouble to go tilting down
to Trent Bridges?” he asked of the big trams.
It seemed they just as well might not be as be.
The realest thing was the thick darkness
at night. That seemed to him whole and comprehensible
and restful. He could leave himself to it.
Suddenly a piece of paper started near his feet and
blew along down the pavement. He stood still,
rigid, with clenched fists, a flame of agony going
over him. And he saw again the sick-room, his
mother, her eyes. Unconsciously he had been with
her, in her company. The swift hop of the paper
reminded him she was gone. But he had been with
her. He wanted everything to stand still, so
that he could be with her again.
The days passed, the weeks. But
everything seemed to have fused, gone into a conglomerated
mass. He could not tell one day from another,
one week from another, hardly one place from another.
Nothing was distinct or distinguishable. Often
he lost himself for an hour at a time, could not remember
what he had done.
One evening he came home late to his
lodging. The fire was burning low; everybody
was in bed. He threw on some more coal, glanced
at the table, and decided he wanted no supper.
Then he sat down in the arm-chair. It was perfectly
still. He did not know anything, yet he saw the
dim smoke wavering up the chimney. Presently
two mice came out, cautiously, nibbling the fallen
crumbs. He watched them as it were from a long
way off. The church clock struck two. Far
away he could hear the sharp clinking of the trucks
on the railway. No, it was not they that were
far away. They were there in their places.
But where was he himself?
The time passed. The two mice,
careering wildly, scampered cheekily over his slippers.
He had not moved a muscle. He did not want to
move. He was not thinking of anything. It
was easier so. There was no wrench of knowing
anything. Then, from time to time, some other
consciousness, working mechanically, flashed into
sharp phrases.
“What am I doing?”
And out of the semi-intoxicated trance came the answer:
“Destroying myself.”
Then a dull, live feeling, gone in
an instant, told him that it was wrong. After
a while, suddenly came the question:
“Why wrong?”
Again there was no answer, but a stroke
of hot stubbornness inside his chest resisted his
own annihilation.
There was a sound of a heavy cart
clanking down the road. Suddenly the electric
light went out; there was a bruising thud in the penny-in-the-slot
meter. He did not stir, but sat gazing in front
of him. Only the mice had scuttled, and the fire
glowed red in the dark room.
Then, quite mechanically and more
distinctly, the conversation began again inside him.
“She’s dead. What was it all for—her
struggle?”
That was his despair wanting to go after her.
“You’re alive.”
“She’s not.”
“She is—in you.”
Suddenly he felt tired with the burden of it.
“You’ve got to keep alive for her sake,”
said his will in him.
Something felt sulky, as if it would not rouse.
“You’ve got to carry forward
her living, and what she had done, go on with it.”
But he did not want to. He wanted to give up.
“But you can go on with your
painting,” said the will in him. “Or
else you can beget children. They both carry
on her effort.”
“Painting is not living.”
“Then live.”
“Marry whom?” came the sulky question.
“As best you can.”
“Miriam?”
But he did not trust that.
He rose suddenly, went straight to
bed. When he got inside his bedroom and closed
the door, he stood with clenched fist.
“Mater, my dear—”
he began, with the whole force of his soul. Then
he stopped. He would not say it. He would
not admit that he wanted to die, to have done.
He would not own that life had beaten him, or that
death had beaten him. Going straight to bed,
he slept at once, abandoning himself to the sleep.
So the weeks went on. Always
alone, his soul oscillated, first on the side of death,
then on the side of life, doggedly. The real agony
was that he had nowhere to go, nothing to do, nothing
to say, and was nothing himself. Sometimes
he ran down the streets as if he were mad: sometimes
he was mad; things weren’t there, things were
there. It made him pant. Sometimes he stood
before the bar of the public-house where he called
for a drink. Everything suddenly stood back away
from him. He saw the face of the barmaid, the
gobbling drinkers, his own glass on the slopped, mahogany
board, in the distance. There was something between
him and them. He could not get into touch.
He did not want them; he did not want his drink.
Turning abruptly, he went out. On the threshold
he stood and looked at the lighted street. But
he was not of it or in it. Something separated
him. Everything went on there below those lamps,
shut away from him. He could not get at them.
He felt he couldn’t touch the lamp-posts, not
if he reached. Where could he go? There was
nowhere to go, neither back into the inn, or forward
anywhere. He felt stifled. There was nowhere
for him. The stress grew inside him; he felt he
should smash.
“I mustn’t,” he
said; and, turning blindly, he went in and drank.
Sometimes the drink did him good; sometimes it made
him worse. He ran down the road. For ever
restless, he went here, there, everywhere. He
determined to work. But when he had made six strokes,
he loathed the pencil violently, got up, and went
away, hurried off to a club where he could play cards
or billiards, to a place where he could flirt with
a barmaid who was no more to him than the brass pump-handle
she drew.
He was very thin and lantern-jawed.
He dared not meet his own eyes in the mirror; he never
looked at himself. He wanted to get away from
himself, but there was nothing to get hold of.
In despair he thought of Miriam. Perhaps—perhaps—?
Then, happening to go into the Unitarian
Church one Sunday evening, when they stood up to sing
the second hymn he saw her before him. The light
glistened on her lower lip as she sang. She looked
as if she had got something, at any rate: some
hope in heaven, if not in earth. Her comfort
and her life seemed in the after-world. A warm,
strong feeling for her came up. She seemed to
yearn, as she sang, for the mystery and comfort.
He put his hope in her. He longed for the sermon
to be over, to speak to her.
The throng carried her out just before
him. He could nearly touch her. She did
not know he was there. He saw the brown, humble
nape of her neck under its black curls. He would
leave himself to her. She was better and bigger
than he. He would depend on her.
She went wandering, in her blind way,
through the little throngs of people outside the church.
She always looked so lost and out of place among people.
He went forward and put his hand on her arm. She
started violently. Her great brown eyes dilated
in fear, then went questioning at the sight of him.
He shrank slightly from her.
“I didn’t know—” she
faltered.
“Nor I,” he said.
He looked away. His sudden, flaring hope sank
again.
“What are you doing in town?” he asked.
“I’m staying at Cousin Anne’s.”
“Ha! For long?”
“No; only till to-morrow.”
“Must you go straight home?”
She looked at him, then hid her face under her hat-brim.
“No,” she said—“no; it’s
not necessary.”
He turned away, and she went with
him. They threaded through the throng of church
people. The organ was still sounding in St. Mary’s.
Dark figures came through the lighted doors; people
were coming down the steps. The large coloured
windows glowed up in the night. The church was
like a great lantern suspended. They went down
Hollow Stone, and he took the car for the Bridges.
“You will just have supper with
me,” he said: “then I’ll bring
you back.”
“Very well,” she replied, low and husky.
They scarcely spoke while they were
on the car. The Trent ran dark and full under
the bridge. Away towards Colwick all was black
night. He lived down Holme Road, on the naked
edge of the town, facing across the river meadows
towards Sneinton Hermitage and the steep scrap of Colwick
Wood. The floods were out. The silent water
and the darkness spread away on their left. Almost
afraid, they hurried along by the houses.
Supper was laid. He swung the
curtain over the window. There was a bowl of
freesias and scarlet anemones on the table. She
bent to them. Still touching them with her finger-tips,
she looked up at him, saying:
“Aren’t they beautiful?”
“Yes,” he said. “What will
you drink—coffee?”
“I should like it,” she said.
“Then excuse me a moment.”
He went out to the kitchen.
Miriam took off her things and looked
round. It was a bare, severe room. Her photo,
Clara’s, Annie’s, were on the wall.
She looked on the drawing-board to see what he was
doing. There were only a few meaningless lines.
She looked to see what books he was reading.
Evidently just an ordinary novel. The letters
in the rack she saw were from Annie, Arthur, and from
some man or other she did not know. Everything
he had touched, everything that was in the least personal
to him, she examined with lingering absorption.
He had been gone from her for so long, she wanted
to rediscover him, his position, what he was now.
But there was not much in the room to help her.
It only made her feel rather sad, it was so hard and
comfortless.
She was curiously examining a sketch-book
when he returned with the coffee.
“There’s nothing new in it,” he
said, “and nothing very interesting.”
He put down the tray, and went to
look over her shoulder. She turned the pages
slowly, intent on examining everything.
“H’m!” he said,
as she paused at a sketch. “I’d forgotten
that. It’s not bad, is it?”
“No,” she said. “I don’t
quite understand it.”
He took the book from her and went
through it. Again he made a curious sound of
surprise and pleasure.
“There’s some not bad stuff in there,”
he said.
“Not at all bad,” she answered gravely.
He felt again her interest in his
work. Or was it for himself? Why was she
always most interested in him as he appeared in his
work?
They sat down to supper.
“By the way,” he said,
“didn’t I hear something about your earning
your own living?”
“Yes,” she replied, bowing her dark head
over her cup. “And what of it?”
“I’m merely going to the
farming college at Broughton for three months, and
I shall probably be kept on as a teacher there.”
“I say—that sounds
all right for you! You always wanted to be independent.”
“Yes.
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
“I only knew last week.”
“But I heard a month ago,” he said.
“Yes; but nothing was settled then.”
“I should have thought,” he said, “you’d
have told me you were trying.”
She ate her food in the deliberate,
constrained way, almost as if she recoiled a little
from doing anything so publicly, that he knew so well.
“I suppose you’re glad,” he said.
“Very glad.”
“Yes—it will be something.”
He was rather disappointed.
“I think it will be a great
deal,” she said, almost haughtily, resentfully.
He laughed shortly.
“Why do you think it won’t?” she
asked.
“Oh, I don’t think it
won’t be a great deal. Only you’ll
find earning your own living isn’t everything.”
“No,” she said, swallowing with difficulty;
“I don’t suppose it is.”
“I suppose work can be
nearly everything to a man,” he said, “though
it isn’t to me. But a woman only works
with a part of herself. The real and vital part
is covered up.”
“But a man can give all himself to work?”
she asked.
“Yes, practically.”
“And a woman only the unimportant part of herself?”
“That’s it.”
She looked up at him, and her eyes dilated with anger.
“Then,” she said, “if it’s
true, it’s a great shame.”
“It is. But I don’t know everything,”
he answered.
After supper they drew up to the fire.
He swung her a chair facing him, and they sat down.
She was wearing a dress of dark claret colour, that
suited her dark complexion and her large features.
Still, the curls were fine and free, but her face
was much older, the brown throat much thinner.
She seemed old to him, older than Clara. Her bloom
of youth had quickly gone. A sort of stiffness,
almost of woodenness, had come upon her. She
meditated a little while, then looked at him.
“And how are things with you?” she asked.
“About all right,” he answered.
She looked at him, waiting.
“Nay,” she said, very low.
Her brown, nervous hands were clasped
over her knee. They had still the lack of confidence
or repose, the almost hysterical look. He winced
as he saw them. Then he laughed mirthlessly.
She put her fingers between her lips. His slim,
black, tortured body lay quite still in the chair.
She suddenly took her finger from her mouth and looked
at him.
“And you have broken off with Clara?”
“Yes.”
His body lay like an abandoned thing, strewn in the
chair.
“You know,” she said, “I think we
ought to be married.”
He opened his eyes for the first time
since many months, and attended to her with respect.
“Why?” he said.
“See,” she said, “how
you waste yourself! You might be ill, you might
die, and I never know—be no more then than
if I had never known you.”
“And if we married?” he asked.
“At any rate, I could prevent
you wasting yourself and being a prey to other women—like—like
Clara.”
“A prey?” he repeated, smiling.
She bowed her head in silence. He lay feeling
his despair come up again.
“I’m not sure,” he said slowly,
“that marriage would be much good.”
“I only think of you,” she replied.
“I know you do. But—you
love me so much, you want to put me in your pocket.
And I should die there smothered.”
She bent her head, put her fingers
between her lips, while the bitterness surged up in
her heart.
“And what will you do otherwise?” she
asked.
“I don’t know—go on, I suppose.
Perhaps I shall soon go abroad.”
The despairing doggedness in his tone
made her go on her knees on the rug before the fire,
very near to him. There she crouched as if she
were crushed by something, and could not raise her
head. His hands lay quite inert on the arms of
his chair. She was aware of them. She felt
that now he lay at her mercy. If she could rise,
take him, put her arms round him, and say, “You
are mine,” then he would leave himself to her.
But dare she? She could easily sacrifice herself.
But dare she assert herself? She was aware of
his dark-clothed, slender body, that seemed one stroke
of life, sprawled in the chair close to her. But
no; she dared not put her arms round it, take it up,
and say, “It is mine, this body. Leave
it to me.” And she wanted to. It called
to all her woman’s instinct. But she crouched,
and dared not. She was afraid he would not let
her. She was afraid it was too much. It lay
there, his body, abandoned. She knew she ought
to take it up and claim it, and claim every right
to it. But—could she do it? Her
impotence before him, before the strong demand of
some unknown thing in him, was her extremity.
Her hands fluttered; she half-lifted her head.
Her eyes, shuddering, appealing, gone, almost distracted,
pleaded to him suddenly. His heart caught with
pity. He took her hands, drew her to him, and
comforted her.
“Will you have me, to marry me?” he said
very low.
Oh, why did not he take her?
Her very soul belonged to him. Why would he not
take what was his? She had borne so long the cruelty
of belonging to him and not being claimed by him.
Now he was straining her again. It was too much
for her. She drew back her head, held his face
between her hands, and looked him in the eyes.
No, he was hard. He wanted something else.
She pleaded to him with all her love not to make it
her choice. She could not cope with it, with
him, she knew not with what. But it strained
her till she felt she would break.
“Do you want it?” she asked, very gravely.
“Not much,” he replied, with pain.
She turned her face aside; then, raising
herself with dignity, she took his head to her bosom,
and rocked him softly. She was not to have him,
then! So she could comfort him. She put her
fingers through his hair. For her, the anguished
sweetness of self-sacrifice. For him, the hate
and misery of another failure. He could not bear
it—that breast which was warm and which
cradled him without taking the burden of him.
So much he wanted to rest on her that the feint of
rest only tortured him. He drew away.
“And without marriage we can do nothing?”
he asked.
His mouth was lifted from his teeth
with pain. She put her little finger between
her lips.
“No,” she said, low and like the toll
of a bell. “No, I think not.”
It was the end then between them.
She could not take him and relieve him of the responsibility
of himself. She could only sacrifice herself to
him—sacrifice herself every day, gladly.
And that he did not want. He wanted her to hold
him and say, with joy and authority: “Stop
all this restlessness and beating against death.
You are mine for a mate.” She had not the
strength. Or was it a mate she wanted? or did
she want a Christ in him?
He felt, in leaving her, he was defrauding
her of life. But he knew that, in staying, stilling
the inner, desperate man, he was denying his own life.
And he did not hope to give life to her by denying
his own.
She sat very quiet. He lit a
cigarette. The smoke went up from it, wavering.
He was thinking of his mother, and had forgotten Miriam.
She suddenly looked at him. Her bitterness came
surging up. Her sacrifice, then, was useless.
He lay there aloof, careless about her. Suddenly
she saw again his lack of religion, his restless instability.
He would destroy himself like a perverse child.
Well, then, he would!
“I think I must go,” she said softly.
By her tone he knew she was despising him. He
rose quietly.
“I’ll come along with you,” he answered.
She stood before the mirror pinning
on her hat. How bitter, how unutterably bitter,
it made her that he rejected her sacrifice! Life
ahead looked dead, as if the glow were gone out.
She bowed her face over the flowers—the
freesias so sweet and spring-like, the scarlet anemones
flaunting over the table. It was like him to have
those flowers.
He moved about the room with a certain
sureness of touch, swift and relentless and quiet.
She knew she could not cope with him. He would
escape like a weasel out of her hands. Yet without
him her life would trail on lifeless. Brooding,
she touched the flowers.
“Have them!” he said;
and he took them out of the jar, dripping as they
were, and went quickly into the kitchen. She waited
for him, took the flowers, and they went out together,
he talking, she feeling dead.
She was going from him now. In
her misery she leaned against him as they sat on the
car. He was unresponsive. Where would he
go? What would be the end of him? She could
not bear it, the vacant feeling where he should be.
He was so foolish, so wasteful, never at peace with
himself. And now where would he go? And
what did he care that he wasted her? He had no
religion; it was all for the moment’s attraction
that he cared, nothing else, nothing deeper.
Well, she would wait and see how it turned out with
him. When he had had enough he would give in and
come to her.
He shook hands and left her at the
door of her cousin’s house. When he turned
away he felt the last hold for him had gone. The
town, as he sat upon the car, stretched away over
the bay of railway, a level fume of lights. Beyond
the town the country, little smouldering spots for
more towns—the sea—the night—on
and on! And he had no place in it! Whatever
spot he stood on, there he stood alone. From his
breast, from his mouth, sprang the endless space,
and it was there behind him, everywhere. The
people hurrying along the streets offered no obstruction
to the void in which he found himself. They were
small shadows whose footsteps and voices could be
heard, but in each of them the same night, the same
silence. He got off the car. In the country
all was dead still. Little stars shone high up;
little stars spread far away in the flood-waters,
a firmament below. Everywhere the vastness and
terror of the immense night which is roused and stirred
for a brief while by the day, but which returns, and
will remain at last eternal, holding everything in
its silence and its living gloom. There was no
Time, only Space. Who could say his mother had
lived and did not live? She had been in one place,
and was in another; that was all. And his soul
could not leave her, wherever she was. Now she
was gone abroad into the night, and he was with her
still. They were together. But yet there
was his body, his chest, that leaned against the stile,
his hands on the wooden bar. They seemed something.
Where was he?—one tiny upright speck of
flesh, less than an ear of wheat lost in the field.
He could not bear it. On every side the immense
dark silence seemed pressing him, so tiny a spark,
into extinction, and yet, almost nothing, he could
not be extinct. Night, in which everything was
lost, went reaching out, beyond stars and sun.
Stars and sun, a few bright grains, went spinning round
for terror, and holding each other in embrace, there
in a darkness that outpassed them all, and left them
tiny and daunted. So much, and himself, infinitesimal,
at the core a nothingness, and yet not nothing.
“Mother!” he whispered—“mother!”
She was the only thing that held him
up, himself, amid all this. And she was gone,
intermingled herself. He wanted her to touch him,
have him alongside with her.
But no, he would not give in.
Turning sharply, he walked towards the city’s
gold phosphorescence. His fists were shut, his
mouth set fast. He would not take that direction,
to the darkness, to follow her. He walked towards
the faintly humming, glowing town, quickly.
THE END