THE MAN WITHOUT A TEMPERAMENT
HE stood at the hall door turning the ring, turning the heavy signet
ring upon his little finger while his glance travelled coolly, deliberately,
over the round tables and basket chairs scattered about the glassed-in
veranda. He pursed his lips–he might have been going to whistle–but
he did not whistle–only turned the ring–turned the ring
on his pink, freshly washed hands.
Over in the corner sat The Two Topknots, drinking a decoction they
always drank at this hour–something whitish, greyish, in glasses,
with little husks floating on the top–and rooting in a tin
full of paper shavings for pieces of speckled biscuit, which they
broke, dropped into the glasses and fished for with spoons. Their
two coils of knitting, like two snakes, slumbered beside the tray.
The American Woman sat where she always sat against the glass wall,
in the shadow of a great creeping thing with wide open purple eyes
that pressed–that flattened itself against the glass, hungrily
watching her. And she knoo it was there–she knoo it was looking
at her just that way. She played up to it; she gave herself little
airs. Sometimes she even pointed at it, crying: "Isn't that
the most terrible thing you've ever seen! Isn't that ghoulish!"
It was on the other side of the veranda, after all . . . and besides
it couldn't touch her, could it, Klaymongso? She was an American
Woman, wasn't she, Klaymongso, and she'd just go right away to her
Consul. Klaymongso, curled in her lap, with her torn antique brocade
bag, a grubby handkerchief, and a pile of letters from home on top
of him, sneezed for reply.
The other tables were empty. A glance passed between the American
and the Topknots. She gave a foreign little shrug; they waved an
understanding biscuit. But he saw nothing. Now he was still, now
from his eyes you saw he listened. "Hoo-e-zip-zoo-oo!"
sounded the lift. The iron cage clanged open. Light dragging steps
sounded across the hall, coming towards him. A hand, like a leaf,
fell on his shoulder. A soft voice said: "Let's go and sit
over there–where we can see the drive. The trees are so lovely."
And he moved forward with the hand still on his shoulder, and the
light, dragging steps beside his. He pulled out a chair and she
sank into it, slowly, leaning her head against the back, her arms
falling along the sides.
"Won't you bring the other up closer? It's such miles away."
But he did not move.
"Where's your shawl?" he asked.
"Oh!" She gave a little groan of dismay. "How silly
I am, I've left it upstairs on the bed. Never mind. Please don't
go for it. I shan't want it, I know I shan't."
"You'd better have it." And he turned and swiftly crossed
the veranda into the dim hall with its scarlet plush and gilt furniture–conjuror's
furniture–its Notice of Services at the English Church, its
green baize board with the unclaimed letters climbing the black
lattice, huge "Presentation" clock that struck the hours
at the half-hours, bundles of sticks and umbrellas and sunshades
in the clasp of a brown wooden bear, past the two crippled palms,
two ancient beggars at the foot of the staircase, up the marble
stairs three at a time, past the life-size group on the landing
of two stout peasant children with their marble pinnies full of
marble grapes, and along the corridor, with its piled-up wreckage
of old tin boxes, leather trunks, canvas holdalls, to their room.
The servant girl was in their room, singing loudly while she emptied
soapy water into a pail. The windows were open wide, the shutters
put back, and the light glared in. She had thrown the carpets and
the big white pillows over the balcony rails; the nets were looped
up from the beds; on the writing-table there stood a pan of fluff
and match-ends. When she saw him her small, impudent eyes snapped
and her singing changed to humming. But he gave no sign. His eyes
searched the glaring room. Where the devil was the shawl!
"Vous desirez, Monsieur? " mocked the servant girl.
No answer. He had seen it. He strode across the room, grabbed the
grey cobweb and went out, banging the door. The servant girl's voice
at its loudest and shrillest followed him along the corridor.
"Oh, there you are. What happened? What kept you? The tea's
here, you see. I've just sent Antonio off for the hot water. Isn't
it extraordinary? I must have told him about it sixty times at least,
and still he doesn't bring it. Thank you. That's very nice. One
does just feel the air when one bends forward."
"Thanks." He took his tea and sat down in the other chair.
"No, nothing to eat."
"Oh do! Just one, you had so little at lunch and it's hours
before dinner."
Her shawl dropped off as she bent forward to hand him the biscuits.
He took one and put it in his saucer.
"Oh, those trees along the drive," she cried. "I
could look at them for ever. They are like the most exquisite huge
ferns. And you see that one with the grey-silver bark and the clusters
of cream-coloured flowers, I pulled down a head of them yesterday
to smell, and the scent"–she shut her eyes at the memory
and her voice thinned away, faint, airy–"was like freshly
ground nutmegs." A little pause. She turned to him and smiled.
"You do know what nutmegs smell like–do you Robert?"
And he smiled back at her. "Now how am I going to prove to
you that I do?"
Back came Antonio with not only the hot water–with letters
on a salver and three rolls of paper.
"Oh, the post! Oh, how lovely! Oh, Robert, they mustn't be
all for you! Have they just come, Antonio?" Her thin hands
flew up and hovered over the letters that Antonio offered her, bending
forward.
"Just this moment, Signora," grinned Antonio. "I
took-a them from the postman myself. I made-a the postman give them
for me."
"Noble Antonio!" laughed she. "There–those
are mine, Robert; the rest are yours."
Antonio wheeled sharply, stiffened, the grin went out of his face.
His striped linen jacket and his flat gleaming fringe made him look
like a wooden doll.
Mr. Salesby put the letters into his pocket; the papers lay on
the table. He turned the ring, turned the signet ring on his little
finger and stared in front of him, blinking, vacant.
But she–with her teacup in one hand, the sheets of thin paper
in the other, her head tilted back, her lips open, a brush of bright
colour on her cheek-bones, sipped, sipped, drank . . . drank.
"From Lottie," came her soft murmur. "Poor dear
. . . such trouble . . . left foot. She thought . . . neuritis .
. . Doctor Blyth . . . flat foot . . . massage. So many robins this
year . . . maid most satisfactory . . . Indian Colonel . . . every
grain of rice separate . . . very heavy fall of snow." And
her wide lighted eyes looked up from the letter. "Snow, Robert!
Think of it!" And she touched the little dark violets pinned
on her thin bosom and went back to the letter.
. . . Snow. Snow in London. Millie with the early morning cup of
tea. "There's been a terrible fall of snow in the night, sir."
"Oh, has there, Millie?" The curtains ring apart, letting
in the pale, reluctant light. He raises himself in the bed; he catches
a glimpse of the solid houses opposite framed in white, of their
window boxes full of great sprays of white coral . . . . In the
bathroom–overlooking the back garden. Snow–heavy snow
over everything. The lawn is covered with a wavy pattern of cat's-paws;
there is a thick, thick icing on the garden table; the withered
pods of the laburnum tree are white tassels; only here and there
in the ivy is a dark leaf showing. . . . Warming his back at the
dining-room fire, the paper drying over a chair. Millie with the
bacon. "Oh, if you please, Sir, there's two little boys come
as will do the steps and front for a shilling, shall I let them?"
. . . And then flying lightly, lightly down the stairs–Jinnie.
"Oh, Robert, isn't it wonderful! Oh, what a pity it has to
melt. Where's the pussy-wee?" "I'll get him from Millie."
. . . "Millie, you might just hand me up the kitten if you've
got him down there." "Very good, sir." He feels the
little beating heart under his hand. "Come on, old chap, your
missus wants you." "Oh, Robert, do show him the snow–his
first snow. Shall I open the window and give him a little piece
on his paw to hold? . . . "
"Well, that's very satisfactory on the whole–very. Poor
Lottie! Darling Anne! How I only wish I could send them something
of this," she cried, waving her letters at the brilliant, dazzling
garden. "More tea, Robert? Robert dear, more tea?"
"No, thanks, no. It was very good," he drawled.
"Well, mine wasn't. Mine was just like chopped hay. Oh, here
comes the Honeymoon Couple."
Half striding, half running, carrying a basket between them and
rods and lines, they came up the drive, up the shallow steps.
"My! have you been out fishing?" cried the American Woman.
They were out of breath, they panted: "Yes, yes, we have been
out in a little boat all day. We have caught seven. Four are good
to eat. But three we shall give away. To the children."
Mrs. Salesby turned her chair to look; the Topknots laid the snakes
down. They were a very dark young couple–black hair, olive
skin, brilliant eyes and teeth. He was dressed "English fashion"
in a flannel jacket, white trousers and shoes. Round his neck he
wore a silk scarf; his head, with his hair brushed back, was bare.
And he kept mopping his forehead, rubbing his hands with a brilliant
handkerchief. Her white skirt had a patch of wet; her neck and throat
were stained a deep pink. When she lifted her arms big half-hoops
of perspiration showed under her arm-pits; her hair clung in wet
curls to her cheeks. She looked as though her young husband had
been dipping her in the sea and fishing her out again to dry in
the sun and then–in with her again–all day.
"Would Klaymongso like a fish?" they cried. Their laughing
voices charged with excitement beat against the glassed-in veranda
like birds and a strange, saltish smell came from the basket.
"You will sleep well tonight," said a Topknot, picking
her ear with a knitting needle while the other Topknot smiled and
nodded.
The Honeymoon Couple looked at each other. A great wave seemed
to go over them. They gasped, gulped, staggered a little and then
came up laughing–laughing.
"We cannot go upstairs, we are too tired. We must have tea
just as we are. Here–coffee. No–tea. No–coffee.
Tea–coffee, Antonio!" Mrs. Salesby turned.
"Robert! Robert!" Where was he? He wasn't there. Oh,
there he was at the other end of the veranda, with his back turned,
smoking a cigarette. "Robert, shall we go for our little turn?"
"Right." He stumped the cigarette into an ash-tray and
sauntered over, his eyes on the ground. "Will you be warm enough?"
"Oh, quite."
"Sure?"
"Well," she put her hand on his arm, "perhaps"–and
gave his arm the faintest pressure–"it's not upstairs,
it's only in the hall–perhaps you'd get me my cape. Hanging
up."
He came back with it and she bent her small head while he dropped
it on her shoulders. Then, very stiff, he offered her his arm. She
bowed sweetly to the people of the veranda while he just covered
a yawn, and they went down the steps together.
"Vous avez voo ca! " said the American Woman.
"He is not a man," said the Two Topknots, "he is
an ox. I say to my sister in the morning and at night when we are
in bed, I tell her–No man is he, but an ox!"
Wheeling, tumbling, swooping, the laughter of the Honeymoon Couple
dashed against the glass of the veranda.
The sun was still high. Every leaf, every flower in the garden
lay open, motionless, as if exhausted, and a sweet, rich, rank smell
filled the quivering air. Out of the thick, fleshy leaves of a cactus
there rose an aloe stem loaded with pale flowers that looked as
though they had been cut out of butter; light flashed upon the lifted
spears of the palms; over a bed of scarlet waxen flowers some black
insects "zoom-zoomed"; a great, gaudy creeper, orange
splashed with jet, sprawled against the wall.
"I don't need my cape after all," said she. "It's
really too warm." So he took it off and carried it over his
arm. "Let us go down this path here. I feel so well today–marvellously
better. Good heavens–look at those children! And to think
it's November!"
In a corner of the garden there were two brimming tubs of water.
Three little girls, having thoughtfully taken off their drawers
and hung them on a bush, their skirts clasped to their waists, were
standing in the tubs and tramping up and down. They screamed, their
hair fell over their faces, they splashed one another. But suddenly,
the smallest, who had a tub to herself, glanced up and saw who was
looking. For a moment she seemed overcome with terror, then clumsily
she struggled and strained out of her tub, and still holding her
clothes above her waist, "The Englishman! The Englishman!"
she shrieked and fled away to hide. Shrieking and screaming the
other two followed her. In a moment they were gone; in a moment
there was nothing but the two brimming tubs and their little drawers
on the bush.
"How–very–extraordinary!" said she. "What
made them so frightened? Surely they were much too young to . .
. " She looked up at him. She thought he looked pale–but
wonderfully handsome with that great tropical tree behind him with
its long, spiked thorns.
For a moment he did not answer. Then he met her glance, and smiling
his slow smile, "Très rum!" said he.
Très rum! Oh, she felt quite faint. Oh, why should she love
him so much just because he said a thing like that. Très
rum! That was Robert all over. Nobody else but Robert could ever
say such a thing. To be so wonderful, so brilliant, so learned,
and then to say in that queer, boyish voice . . . She could have
wept.
"You know you're very absurd, sometimes," said she.
"I am," he answered. And they walked on.
But she was tired. She had had enough. She did not want to walk
any more.
"Leave me here and go for a little constitutional, won't you?
I'll be in one of these long chairs. What a good thing you've got
my cape; you won't have to go upstairs for a rug. Thank you, Robert,
I shall look at that delicious heliotrope. . . . You won't be gone
long?"
"No–no. You don't mind being left?"
"Silly! I want you to go. I can't expect you to drag after
your invalid wife every minute . . . . How long will you be?"
He took out his watch. "It's just after half-past four. I'll
be back at a quarter-past five."
"Back at a quarter-past five," she repeated, and she
lay still in the long chair and folded her hands.
He turned away. Suddenly he was back again. "Look here, would
you like my watch?" And he dangled it before her.
"Oh!" She caught her breath. "Very, very much."
And she clasped the watch, the warm watch, the darling watch in
her fingers. "Now go quickly."
The gates of the Pension Villa Excelsior were open wide, jammed
open against some bold geraniums. Stooping a little, staring straight
ahead, walking swiftly, he passed through them and began climbing
the hill that wound behind the town like a great rope looping the
villas together. The dust lay thick. A carriage came bowling along
driving towards the Excelsior. In it sat the General and the Countess;
they had been for his daily airing. Mr. Salesby stepped to one side
but the dust beat up, thick, white, stifling like wool. The Countess
just had time to nudge the General.
"There he goes," she said spitefully.
But the General gave a loud caw and refused to look.
"It is the Englishman," said the driver, turning round
and smiling. And the Countess threw up her hands and nodded so amiably
that he spat with satisfaction and gave the stumbling horse a cut.
On–on–past the finest villas in the town, magnificent
palaces, palaces worth coming any distance to see, past the public
gardens with the carved grottoes and statues and stone animals drinking
at the fountain, into a poorer quarter. Here the road ran narrow
and foul between high lean houses, the ground floors of which were
scooped and hollowed into stables and carpenters' shops. At a fountain
ahead of him two old hags were beating linen. As he passed them
they squatted back on their haunches, stared, and then their "A-hak-kak-kak!"
with the slap, slap, of the stone on the linen sounded after him.
He reached the top of the hill; he turned a corner and the town
was hidden. Down he looked into a deep valley with a dried-up river
bed at the bottom. This side and that was covered with small dilapidated
houses that had broken stone verandas where the fruit lay drying,
tomato lanes in the garden and from the gates to the doors a trellis
of vines. The late sunlight, deep, golden, lay in the cup of the
valley; there was a smell of charcoal in the air. In the gardens
the men were cutting grapes. He watched a man standing in the greenish
shade, raising up, holding a black cluster in one hand, taking the
knife from his belt, cutting, laying the bunch in a flat boat-shaped
basket. The man worked leisurely, silently, taking hundreds of years
over the job. On the hedges on the other side of the road there
were grapes small as berries, growing among the stones. He leaned
against a wall, filled his pipe, put a match to it. . . .
Leaned across a gate, turned up the collar of his mackintosh. It
was going to rain. It didn't matter, he was prepared for it. You
didn't expect anything else in November. He looked over the bare
field. From the corner by the gate there came the smell of swedes,
a great stack of them, wet, rank coloured. Two men passed walking
towards the straggling village. "Good day!" "Good
day!" By Jove! he had to hurry if he was going to catch that
train home. Over the gate, across a field, over the stile, into
the lane, swinging along in the drifting rain and dusk .. . . Just
home in time for a bath and a change before supper. . . . In the
drawing-room; Jinnie is sitting pretty nearly in the fire. "Oh,
Robert, I didn't hear you come in. Did you have a good time? How
nice you smell! A present?" "Some bits of blackberry I
picked for you. Pretty colour." "Oh, lovely, Robert! Dennis
and Beaty are coming to supper." Supper–cold beef, potatoes
in their jackets, claret, household bread. They are gay– everybody's
laughing. "Oh, we all know Robert," says Dennis, breathing
on his eyeglasses and polishing them. "By the way, Dennis,
I picked up a very jolly little edition of . . . "
A clock struck. He wheeled sharply. What time was it. Five? A quarter
past? Back, back the way he came. As he passed through the gates
he saw her on the look-out. She got up, waved and slowly she came
to meet him, dragging the heavy cape. In her hand she carried a
spray of heliotrope.
"You're late," she cried gaily. "You're three minutes
late. Here's your watch, it's been very good while you were away.
Did you have a nice time? Was it lovely? Tell me. Where did you
go?"
"I say–put this on," he said, taking the cape from
her. "Yes, I will. Yes, it's getting chilly. Shall we go up
to our room?"
When they reached the lift she was coughing. He frowned.
"It's nothing. I haven's been out too late. Don't be cross."
She sat down on one of the red plush chairs while he rang and rang,
and then, getting no answer, kept his finger on the bell.
"Oh, Robert, do you think you ought to?"
"Ought to what?"
The door of the salon opened. "What is that? Who is making
that noise?" sounded from within. Klaymongso began to yelp.
"Caw! Caw! Caw!" came from the General. A Topknot darted
out with one hand to her ear, opened the staff door, "Mr. Queet!
Mr. Queet!" she bawled. That brought the manager up at a run.
"Is that you ringing the bell, Mr. Salesby? Do you want the
lift? Very good, sir. I'll take you up myself. Antonio wouldn't
have been a minute, he was just taking off his apron–"
And having ushered them in, the oily manager went to the door of
the salon. "Very sorry you should have been troubled, ladies
and gentlemen." Salesby stood in the cage, sucking in his cheeks,
staring at the ceiling and turning the ring, turning the signet
ring on his little finger. . . .
Arrived in their room he went swiftly over to the washstand, shook
the bottle, poured her out a dose and brought it across.
"Sit down. Drink it. And don't talk." And he stood over
her while she obeyed. Then he took the glass, rinsed it and put
it back in its case. "Would you like a cushion?"
"No, I'm quite all right, come over here. Sit down by me just
a minute, will you, Robert? Ah, that's very nice." She turned
and thrust the piece of heliotrope in the lapel of his coat. "That,"
she said, "is most becoming." And then she leaned her
head against his shoulder and he put his arm round her.
"Robert–" her voice like a sigh–like a breath.
"Yes–"
They sat there for a long while. The sky flamed, paled; the two
white beds were like two ships . . . . At last he heard the servant
girl running along the corridor with the hot-water cans, and gently
he released her and turned on the light.
"Oh, what time is it? Oh, what a heavenly evening. Oh, Robert,
I was thinking while you were away this afternoon . . . "
They were the last couple to enter the dining-room. The Countess
was there with her lorgnette and her fan, the General was there
with his special chair and the air cushion and the small rug over
his knees. The American Woman was there showing Klaymongso a copy
of the Saturday Evening Post . . . "We're having a feast of
reason and a flow of soul." The Two Topknots were there feeling
over the peaches and the pears in their dish of fruit and putting
aside all they considered unripe or overripe to show to the manager,
and the Honeymoon Couple leaned across the table, whispering, trying
not to burst out laughing.
Mr. Queet, in everyday clothes and white canvas shoes, served the
soup, and Antonio, in full evening dress, handed it round.
"No," said the American Woman, "take it away, Antonio.
We can't eat soup. We can't eat anything mushy, can we, Klaymongso?"
"Take them back and fill them to the rim!" said the Topknots,
and they turned and watched while Antonio delivered the message.
"What is it? Rice? Is it cooked?" The Countess peered
through her lorgnette. "Mr. Queet, the General can have some
of this soup if it is cooked."
"Very good, Countess."
The Honeymoon Couple had their fish instead.
"Give me that one. That's the one I caught. No, it's not.
Yes, it is. No, it's not. Well, it's looking at me with its eye,
so it must be. Tee! Hee! Hee!" Their feet were locked together
under the table.
"Robert, you're not eating again. Is anything the matter?"
"No. Off food, that's all."
"Oh, what a bother. There are eggs and spinach coming. You
don't like spinach, do you. I must tell them in future . . . "
An egg and mashed potatoes for the General.
"Mr. Queet! Mr. Queet!"
"Yes, Countess."
"The General's egg's too hard again."
"Caw! Caw! Caw!"
"Very sorry, Countess. Shall I have you another cooked, General?"
. . . They are the first to leave the dining-room. She rises, gathering
her shawl and he stands aside, waiting for her to pass, turning
the ring, turning the signet ring on his little finger. In the hall
Mr. Queet hovers. "I thought you might not want to wait for
the lift. Antonio's just serving the finger bowls. And I'm sorry
the bell won't ring, it's out of order. I can't think what's happened."
"Oh, I do hope . . . " from her.
"Get in," says he.
Mr. Queet steps after them and slams the door . . . .
. . . "Robert, do you mind if I go to bed very soon? Won't
you go down to the salon or out into the garden? Or perhaps you
might smoke a cigar on the balcony. It's lovely out there. And I
like cigar smoke. I always did. But if you'd rather . . . "
"No, I'll sit here."
He takes a chair and sits on the balcony. He hears her moving about
in the room, lightly, lightly, moving and rustling. Then she comes
over to him. "Good night, Robert."
"Good night." He takes her hand and kisses the palm.
"Don't catch cold."
The sky is the colour of jade. There are a great many stars; an
enormous white moon hangs over the garden. Far away lightning flutters–flutters
like a wing–flutters like a broken bird that tries to fly
and sinks again and again struggles.
The lights from the salon shine across the garden path and there
is the sound of a piano. And once the American Woman, opening the
French window to let Klaymongso into the garden, cries: "Have
you seen this moon?" But nobody answers.
He gets very cold sitting there, staring at the balcony rail. Finally
he comes inside. The moon–the room is painted white with moonlight.
The light trembles in the mirrors; the two beds seem to float. She
is asleep. He sees her through the nets, half sitting, banked up
with pillows, her white hands crossed on the sheet, her white cheeks,
her fair hair pressed against the pillow, are silvered over. He
undresses quickly, stealthily and gets into bed. Lying there, his
hands clasped behind his head . . .
. . . In his study. Late summer. The virginia creeper just on the
turn . . . .
"Well, my dear chap, that's the whole story. That's the long
and the short of it. If she can't cut away for the next two years
and give a decent climate a chance she don't stand a dog's–h'm–show.
Better be frank about these things." "Oh, certainly .
. . . " "And hang it all, old man, what's to prevent you
going with her? It isn't as though you've got a regular job like
us wage earners. You can do what you do wherever you are–"
"Two years." "Yes, I should give it two years. You'll
have no trouble about letting this house, you know. As a matter
of fact . . . "
. . . He is with her. "Robert, the awful thing is–I
suppose it's my illness–I simply feel I could not go alone.
You see–you're everything. You're bread and wine, Robert,
bread and wine. Oh, my darling–what am I saying? Of course
I could, of course I won't take you away. . . . "
He hears her stirring. Does she want something?
"Boogles?"
Good Lord! She is talking in her sleep. They haven't used that
name for years.
"Boogles. Are you awake?"
"Yes, do you want anything?"
"Oh, I'm going to be a bother. I'm so sorry. Do you mind?
There's a wretched mosquito inside my net–I can hear him singing.
Would you catch him? I don't want to move because of my heart."
"No, don't move. Stay where you are." He switches on
the light, lifts the net. "Where is the little beggar? Have
you spotted him?"
"Yes, there, over by the corner. Oh, I do feel such a fiend
to have dragged you out of bed. Do you mind dreadfully?"
"No, of course not." For a moment he hovers in his blue
and white pyjamas. Then, "got him," he said.
"Oh, good. Was he a juicy one?"
"Beastly." He went over to the washstand and dipped his
fingers in water. "Are you all right now? Shall I switch off
the light?"
"Yes, please. No. Boogles! Come back here a moment. Sit down
by me. Give me your hand." She turns his signet ring. "Why
weren't you asleep? Boogles, listen. Come closer. I sometimes wonder–do
you mind awfully being out here with me?"
He bends down. He kisses her. He tucks her in, he smooths the pillow.
"Rot!" he whispers.
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