But at that moment in the street below
a barrel-organ struck up. Josephine and Constantia
sprang to their feet together.
“Run, Con,” said Josephine.
“Run quickly. There’s sixpence on
the—”
Then they remembered. It didn’t
matter. They would never have to stop the organ-grinder
again. Never again would she and Constantia be
told to make that monkey take his noise somewhere
else. Never would sound that loud, strange bellow
when father thought they were not hurrying enough.
The organ-grinder might play there all day and the
stick would not thump.
“It never will thump again,
It never will thump again,
played the barrel-organ.
What was Constantia thinking?
She had such a strange smile; she looked different.
She couldn’t be going to cry.
“Jug, Jug,” said Constantia
softly, pressing her hands together. “Do
you know what day it is? It’s Saturday.
It’s a week to-day, a whole week.”
“A week since father died,
A week since father died,”
cried the barrel-organ. And
Josephine, too, forgot to be practical and sensible;
she smiled faintly, strangely. On the Indian
carpet there fell a square of sunlight, pale red;
it came and went and came—and stayed, deepened—until
it shone almost golden.
“The sun’s out,”
said Josephine, as though it really mattered.
A perfect fountain of bubbling notes
shook from the barrel-organ, round, bright notes,
carelessly scattered.
Constantia lifted her big, cold hands
as if to catch them, and then her hands fell again.
She walked over to the mantelpiece to her favourite
Buddha. And the stone and gilt image, whose smile
always gave her such a queer feeling, almost a pain
and yet a pleasant pain, seemed to-day to be more
than smiling. He knew something; he had a secret.
“I know something that you don’t know,”
said her Buddha. Oh, what was it, what could
it be? And yet she had always felt there was…something.
The sunlight pressed through the windows,
thieved its way in, flashed its light over the furniture
and the photographs. Josephine watched it.
When it came to mother’s photograph, the enlargement
over the piano, it lingered as though puzzled to find
so little remained of mother, except the earrings
shaped like tiny pagodas and a black feather boa.
Why did the photographs of dead people always fade
so? wondered Josephine. As soon as a person was
dead their photograph died too. But, of course,
this one of mother was very old. It was thirty-five
years old. Josephine remembered standing on
a chair and pointing out that feather boa to Constantia
and telling her that it was a snake that had killed
their mother in Ceylon…Would everything have been
different if mother hadn’t died? She didn’t
see why. Aunt Florence had lived with them until
they had left school, and they had moved three times
and had their yearly holiday and…and there’d
been changes of servants, of course.
Some little sparrows, young sparrows
they sounded, chirped on the window-ledge.
“Yeep—eyeep—yeep.”
But Josephine felt they were not sparrows, not on
the window-ledge. It was inside her, that queer
little crying noise. “Yeep—eyeep—yeep.”
Ah, what was it crying, so weak and forlorn?
If mother had lived, might they have
married? But there had been nobody for them
to marry. There had been father’s Anglo-Indian
friends before he quarrelled with them. But
after that she and Constantia never met a single man
except clergymen. How did one meet men?
Or even if they’d met them, how could they
have got to know men well enough to be more than strangers?
One read of people having adventures, being followed,
and so on. But nobody had ever followed Constantia
and her. Oh yes, there had been one year at
Eastbourne a mysterious man at their boarding-house
who had put a note on the jug of hot water outside
their bedroom door! But by the time Connie had
found it the steam had made the writing too faint to
read; they couldn’t even make out to which of
them it was addressed. And he had left next
day. And that was all. The rest had been
looking after father, and at the same time keeping
out of father’s way. But now? But
now? The thieving sun touched Josephine gently.
She lifted her face. She was drawn over to
the window by gentle beams…
Until the barrel-organ stopped playing
Constantia stayed before the Buddha, wondering, but
not as usual, not vaguely. This time her wonder
was like longing. She remembered the times she
had come in here, crept out of bed in her nightgown
when the moon was full, and lain on the floor with
her arms outstretched, as though she was crucified.
Why? The big, pale moon had made her do it.
The horrible dancing figures on the carved screen
had leered at her and she hadn’t minded.
She remembered too how, whenever they were at the
seaside, she had gone off by herself and got as close
to the sea as she could, and sung something, something
she had made up, while she gazed all over that restless
water. There had been this other life, running
out, bringing things home in bags, getting things on
approval, discussing them with Jug, and taking them
back to get more things on approval, and arranging
father’s trays and trying not to annoy father.
But it all seemed to have happened in a kind of tunnel.
It wasn’t real. It was only when she
came out of the tunnel into the moonlight or by the
sea or into a thunderstorm that she really felt herself.
What did it mean? What was it she was always
wanting? What did it all lead to? Now?
Now?
She turned away from the Buddha with
one of her vague gestures. She went over to
where Josephine was standing. She wanted to say
something to Josephine, something frightfully important,
about—about the future and what…
“Don’t you think perhaps—”
she began.
But Josephine interrupted her.
“I was wondering if now—” she
murmured. They stopped; they waited for each
other.
“Go on, Con,” said Josephine.
“No, no, Jug; after you,” said Constantia.
“No, say what you were going to say. You
began,” said Josephine.
“I…I’d rather hear what you were going
to say first,” said Constantia.
“Don’t be absurd, Con.”
“Really, Jug.”
“Connie!”
“Oh, Jug!”
A pause. Then Constantia said
faintly, “I can’t say what I was going
to say, Jug, because I’ve forgotten what it
was…that I was going to say.”
Josephine was silent for a moment.
She stared at a big cloud where the sun had been.
Then she replied shortly, “I’ve forgotten
too.”