She had lived upon her inexhaustible love for Miles. She had also lived on something which was perhaps not inexhaustible, her dream picture of herself. Making the house had taken her years and within it she had occupied years in posing. She posed in a silk afternoon dress in the drawing room, in a nylon negligee in the bedroom. While doing the flowers she posed as a lady doing the flowers. She made up her face through solitary afternoons. Miles hated social life and they hardly ever entertained. She was like a prostitute waiting among the toys and trinkets of her trade, only the man she was waiting for was her husband.
Like a religious, she had meditated for years upon her luck in getting Miles. She had never dreamed of so distinguished, so aristocratic a catch. She would even have been contented with much less. Her father was dead, but she still visited her elderly mother in the house where she had been brought up, and she was kind to the old lady, but could not help contemplating with satisfaction the gap between her mother’s life and her own. Miles, without even noticing it, had lifted her across. She set herself to make a beautiful and elegant burrow for them both and within it over the years they grew together like two animals that come to develop a single telepathic personality.
She had played the passionate exacting mistress to Miles with the more conscious abandon since she knew that she was for him a second best. The idea of Parvati did not distress her, on the contrary. She charmed herself with her role of healer. She was not the damsel heroine in the castle, she was the mysterious lady of the fountain who heals the wound of the wandering knight, the wound which has defied all other touches. The role was the more grateful since the damsel heroine was long ago dead, not forgotten, but mercifully absent. There was only the fountain lady now. And the memory of the lost one remained as a guarantee of her husband’s fidelity. The dead Parvati reigned felicitously over their marriage.
Lisa, poor Lisa, had come to be an occupation too, as she had been long ago in Diana’s childhood, when Lisa’s idealism and lack of common sense had constantly landed her in scrapes with which Diana had had to deal. Diana was devoted to her sister and enjoyed both admiring and patronizing her, and had always been helped and supported by Lisa’s return of unquestioning love. With Lisa she had enjoyed by nature that animal closeness and identity which with Miles she had after many years achieved. Adult life parted them and at their rarer meetings they had had increasingly less to say to each other, though something of the old closeness still remained. Diana was glad that Miles liked Lisa; and after Lisa’s illness it had seemed natural for the married pair to ask her, for the time at any rate, to make her home with them. How she and Miles argued! It was all a novelty and somehow a felicitous one.
Diana felt infinitely sorry for Lisa, mediating her compassion through her sense of the utter alienness of her sister, through her sense of her own temperamental luck. Diana was a cheerful unanxious person, endowed with good looks and an aura of self-satisfaction. The faintly enigmatic smile which hovered about her lips like a resident cupid was really a very simple smile of satisfaction, a radiant outward sign of a totality of plump, healthy, gratified, successfully incarnate being. Lisa was without beauty, and such handsomeness as she had once had had gone with her illness. She was clever of course, and on the evidence she was tougher than she seemed. She held down a job as a schoolmistress at a school in the East End one visit to which had made Diana feel quite sick. Yet in spite of this she appeared to Diana as a doomed girl. Diana had been surprised at her sister’s recovery. “Lisa wants death,” she had said to Miles. “She certainly wants to suffer,” Miles had replied. “That isn’t quite the same thing.”
”She’s a mystic,” Diana had concluded. “She wants to be nothinged.”
”She is certainly a masochist,” Miles had agreed.
I am middle-aged, thought Diana, looking round the ballroom at the dreamy couples who were so far from young. I belong with these people. The novelty of Lisa had worn off. Had Diana now reached an age where there had to be, at last, one novelty after another? Was this a kind of wickedness? She could not feel it. She could only feel an excited sense of rejuvenation and funniness in the unexpected advent of Danby. Of course she had thought about Bruno and she had thought about Danby, only imagining him quite unreflectively in terms of Miles’s picture. Even after Miles’s recent interview with Danby she had listened quite simple-heartedly to Miles’s exclamations about that fat dolt and that grinning buffoon. She had not expected to be instantly captivated. The sheer surprise of it was life-giving. Danby’s smooth brown humorous face, his drooping crest of white hair, his strong confident smile, hovered in her mind as she told Miles, in somewhat curtailed terms, of Danby’s visit, and while she listened in silence to Miles’s stream of sarcasm. The images accompanied her to bed.
”The contact of bodies is the contact of minds.”
”You are a philosopher, Danby.”
”Think of all the ridiculous years we haven’t known each other.”
”I feel I’ve known you for ages.”
”I feel that too. I think we’re each other’s type. Yes?”
”Maybe. You’re someone I can be entirely light-hearted with without feeling worried. It’s not so easy for a woman of my age to take this kind of-holiday.”
”Light-hearted. You don’t mean frivolous, cynical?”
”No, light-hearted. You make me laugh.”
”Well, that’s all right. Let’s have a love affair.”
”No, Danby, nothing like that. I love my husband. I’m permanently hooked.”
”Oh. I think it’s rather bad form for a woman to say that when she’s illicitly dancing with another man.”
”I’m afraid it’s true, my dear.”
”Let me pay you the tribute of saying that your remark has caused me pain.”
”Let me pay you the tribute of saying that I survey your pain with pleasure.”
”We might get somewhere on that basis.”
”No, no-“
”You said no last time and then yes, so I’ll go on hoping.”
”Don’t. I’m glad you wanted to dance with me, that’s all.”
”That isn’t all, since we’re here together in this awfully deliriously wicked place.”
”It is rather an image of sin, isn’t it.”
”Let’s give the image some substance then.”
”Have you got anybody, Danby?”
”A girl, no.”
”You’re not queer, are you?”
”Good God no! Diana, you make me feel quite faint!”
”All alone?”
”All alone. There was someone, but she went to Australia.
I mope.”
”Poor Danby. But really I think one’s thoughts and feelings are not all that important.”
”Mine are. I am thinking and feeling that I want you. What are you going to do about it? You realize that you’ve led me on?”
”I’m nearly fifty. It doesn’t apply.’
”I’m over fifty. It does.”
”Don’t make difficulties. Just for the moment really I feel young again.”
”It’s the music. This place belongs to the past. It’s something to do with movement, repetition. I feel young too, timeless, rather.”