“It is so,” said Ursula.
Roy went on to say that we could not save Willy for Hans, but we might still save Hans from another disaster. Both Roy and the little dancer were afraid that he was embezzling money, to squander it on Willy. Ursula sighed.
“It is bad,” she said, “to have to buy love.”
“It can be frightful,” said Roy.
“It is bad to have to run after love.”
“Have you seen him today?” said Roy, gently, clearly, directly.
“No. He was too busy.” “He” was an elderly producer in a ramshackle theatre. Ursula’s eyes were full of tears.
“I’m sorry, my dear.”
“Perhaps I shall see him tomorrow. Perhaps he will be free.”
She smiled, lips quivering, at Roy, and he took her hand.
“I wish I could help,” he said.
“You do help. You are so kind and gentle.” Suddenly she gazed at him. “Roy, why are you unhappy? When you have so many who love you. Have you not all of us who love you?”
He kissed her. It was entirely innocent. Theirs was a strange tenderness. The little dancer wiped her eyes, plucked up her hope and courage, and went off to find another drink.
The air was whirling with smoke, and was growing hot. Roy flung open the window, and leaned out into the cold air. Over the houses at the bottom of the road there hung a livid greenish haze: it was light diffused from the mercury-vapour lamps of the Berlin streets.
“I like those lamps,” said Roy quietly.
He added: “I’ve walked under them so often in the winter. I felt I was absolutely — anonymous. I don’t think I’ve ever been so free. I used to put up my coat collar and walk through the streets under those lamps, and I was sure that no one knew me.”
28: Self-Hatred
In Cambridge that May, the days were cold and bright. Roy played cricket for the first time since the old Master’s death; I watched him one afternoon, and was surprised to see that his eye was in. His beautiful off-drive curled through the covers, he was hooking anything short with seconds to spare, he played a shot of his own, off the back foot past point; yet I knew, though he did not wake me nowadays, that his nights were haunted. He was working as he used in the blackest times; I believed he was drinking alone, and once or twice I had heard in his voice the undertone of frantic gaiety. Usually he sat grave and silent in hall, though he still bestirred himself to cheer up a visitor whom everyone else was ignoring. Several nights, he scandalised some of our friends by his remarks on Germany.
Towards the end of May, he had a letter from Rosalind, in which she said that she would soon be announcing her engagement to Ralph Udal. When he told me, I wondered for an instant whether she was playing a last card. Had she put Roy right out of her mind? Or did she allow herself a vestige of hope that he would swoop down and stop the marriage?
He smiled at the news. Yet I thought he was not quite indifferent. He had been wretched when the letter came, and he smiled with a kind of scathing, humorous fondness. But Rosalind had been able to rouse his jealousy, as no other woman could. In their time together, she had often behaved like a bitch and he like a frail and ordinary lover. Even now, in the midst of the most frightening griefs, he was sharply moved by the thought of losing her for good. He wrote to Ralph and to her. Somehow, the fact that she should have chosen Ralph added to Roy’s feeling of loss and loneliness, added to an entirely unheroic pique. He said that he had told Rosalind to call on him some time. “I expect she’ll come with her husband,” said Roy with irritated sadness. “It will be extremely awkward for everyone. I’ve never talked to her politely. It’s absurd.”
The announcement was duly published in The Times. Roy read it in the combination room, and Arthur Brown asked him inquisitively: “I see your friend Udal is getting married, Roy. I rather fancied that I remembered the name of the young woman. Isn’t it someone you introduced me to in your rooms quite a while ago?”
“Just so,” said Roy.
“From what I remember of her,” said Brown, “of course it was only a glimpse, I shouldn’t have regarded her as particularly anxious to settle down as a parson’s wife in a nice quiet country living.”
“No?” said Roy blankly. He did not like the sight of their names in print: he was not going to be drawn.
But, annoyed though he was at the news, he could not help chuckling with laughter at a letter from Lady Muriel. It was the only time in those dark weeks that I saw him utterly unshadowed. He had written several times to Lady Muriel about that time; for the Boscastles were visiting Cambridge in June, to mark the end of Humphrey’s last term at Magdalene, and Roy had been persuading Lady Muriel to come with them. So far as I knew, he had not asked Joan — I was not certain what had happened between them, but I was afraid that it was the final, irreparable break.
Roy showed me Lady Muriel’s letter. She was delighted that he was pressing her to come to Cambridge; since she left the Lodge, she had been curiously diffident about appearing in the town. Perhaps it was because, after domineering in the Lodge, she could not bear taking a dimmer place. But she was willing to accompany the Boscastles, now that Roy had invited her. She went on: “You will have seen this extraordinary action on the part of our vicar. I am compelled to take very strong exception to it. Unfortunate is too mild a word. I know this young woman used to be a friend of yours, but that was a different matter. You may sometimes have thought I was old-fashioned, but I realise men have their temptations. That cannot however be regarded as any excuse for a clergyman. He is in a special position, and I have never for a single moment contemplated such an outrage from any vicar of our own church. I do not know what explanations to give to our tenants, and I find Helen no help in this, and very remiss in performing her proper duties. I have found it necessary to remind her of her obligations (though naturally I am always very careful about keeping myself in the background). I consider our vicar has put me in an impossible position. I do not see how I can receive this woman in our house. Hugh says it is your fault for bullying him into giving the living to our present vicar — but I defend you, and tell him that it takes a woman to understand women, and that I knew this woman was a designing hussy from the first moment I set eyes on her. Men are defenceless against such creatures. I have noticed it all my life, or certainly since Hugh got married. I shall be most surprised,” Lady Muriel finished in magnificent rage, “if this woman does not turn out to be barren.”
“Now just why has Lady Mu decided that?” cried Roy.
It gave him an hour’s respite. But the days were dragging by in black searing fears and ravaged nights, in anguish from the moment when, after he had lain awake through the white hours of the early morning, he roused himself exhaustedly to open the daily paper. The news glared at him — for his melancholy was the melancholy of his nature, but it had drawn into him the horror of war.
Most of the college were uncomfortable and strained about the prospect of war; only one or two of the very old escaped. Several men were torn, though not so deeply and tragically as Roy. They were solid conservatives, men of property, used to the traditional way of life; they were not fools, they knew a war must destroy many of their comforts and perhaps much else; they had hated communism for twenty years, in their hearts they still hated it more than national socialism; yet, with the obstinate patriotic sense of their class and race, they were slowly coming to feel that they might have to fight Germany. They felt it with extreme reluctance. Even now, they were chary of the prospect of letting “that man Churchill” into the cabinet. There might still be time for a compromise. In May, that was the position which Arthur Brown took up. He was just as stubborn as he was in college politics: he was appreciably more anti-German than most of the college right. Some were much more willing to appease at almost any cost.