164
were sent for cleaning?), he took their dirty clothes out of the basket in
case something had been overlooked at the bottom. He went on hands
and knees through the kitchen to look under the gas stove, and - once
when he found a piece of paper wrapped around a pipe, he exclaimed in
a kind of triumph, but it was nothing at all — a plumber's relic. The
afternoon post rattled through the letterbox and Julia called to him from
the hall—"Oh good, you never told me you took in the French
Vogue."
"I don't."
"Sorry, there's a kind of Christmas card in another envelope. A
subscription's been taken out for us by Miss Josephine Heckstall-Jones. I
do call that sweet of her."
"She's sold a series of drawings to them. I won't look at it."
"Darling, you are being childish. Do you expect her to stop reading
your books?"
"I only want to be left alone with you. Just for a few weeks. It's not
so much to ask."
"You're a bit of an egoist, darling."
He felt quiet and tired that evening, but a little relieved in mind.
His search had been very thorough. In the middle of dinner he had
remembered the wedding-presents, still crated in a box-cupboard for
lack of room, and insisted on making sure between the courses that they
were still nailed down — he knew Josephine would never have used a
screwdriver for fear of injuring her fingers, and she was terrified of
hammers. The peace of a solitary evening at last descended on them: the
delicious calm which they knew either of them could alter at any
moment with a touch of the hand. Lovers cannot postpone as married
people can.
"I am grown peaceful
as old age tonight," he quoted to her.
"Who wrote that?"
"Browning."
"I don't know Browning.
17
Read me some."
He loved to read Browning aloud—he had a good voice for poetry,
it was his small harmless narcissism.
"Would you really like it?"
"Yes."
"I used to read to Josephine," he warned her.
"What do I care? We can't help doing some of the same things, can
we, darling?"
"Here is something I never read to Josephine. Even though I was
in love with her, it wasn't suitable. We weren't—permanent." He began:
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How well I know what I mean to do
When the
long dark
Autumn evenings come...
He was deeply moved by his own reading. He had never loved
Julia so much as at this moment. Here was home — nothing else had
been other than a caravan.
. . . I will speak now,
No longer watch you as you sit
Reading by firelight, that
great brow
-
And the spirit-small hand propping it,
Mutely, my heart knows how—
He rather wished that Julia had really been reading, but then of
course she wouldn't have been listening to, him with such adorable
attention.
If you join two lives, there is oft a scar,
They are one and one, with a shadowy third,
One near one is too far...
He turned the page and there lay a sheet of paper (he would have
discovered it at once, before reading, if she had put it in an envelope),
with the black neat handwriting.
Dearest Philip, only to say goodnight to you between the pages of
your favourite book—and mine. We are so lucky to have ended in the
way we have. With memories in common we shall for ever be a little in
touch.
Love, Josephine
He flung the book and the paper on the floor. He said, "The bitch.
The bloody bitch."
"I won't have you talk of her like that," Julia said with surprising
strength. She picked up the paper and read it.
"What's wrong with that?" she demanded. "Do you have
memories? What's going to happen to our memories?"
"But don't you see the trick she's playing? Don't you understand?
Are you an idiot, Julia?"
That night they lay in bed on opposite sides. Neither slept much. In
the morning Carter found a letter in the most obvious place of all which
he had somehow neglected: between the leaves of the unused single-
lined foolscap on which he always wrote his stories. It began:
"Darling.
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