<h2><SPAN name="XII" id="XII">XII</SPAN> <br/> BOMBASTES FURIOSO</h2>
<p>That year, Nineteen-Nineteen, threw up to the
surface, because of the storm and disorder of
its successive tidal waves, many strange fish; and of all
that I encountered, the strangest, most attractive, and,
I venture to think, the most typical of our times and
their uncertainties, was my friend Bombastes Furioso—otherwise
Benedick Jones.</p>
<p>I should certainly never have met him had it not been
for Peter Westcott. Westcott, somewhere in the spring
of Nineteen-Nineteen, took for a time the very handsome
rooms of Robsart, the novelist, at Hortons in Duke
Street, St. James's. It was strange to see Peter in
those over-grand, over-lavish rooms. I had known him
first in the old days when his <i>Reuben Hallard</i> and
<i>Stone House</i> had taken London by storm, and when
everything seemed "set fair" for his future. Then
everything crumbled: his child died, his wife ran away
with his best friend, and his books failed. I didn't hear
of him again until Nineteen-Fifteen, when somebody
saw him in France. His name was mentioned on several
occasions through the terrible years, but nobody
seemed to know him well. He kept away, apparently,
from everybody. Then on the very day that the Armistice
was signed, I met him in the crowd about Whitehall,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</SPAN></span>
looking just the same as in the old days—a little
older, a little stouter, stocky and resolved and aloof and
observant, in a world, as it had always seemed, to
which he only half belonged, a sailor on leave in a
country strange, dangerous, and interesting.</p>
<p>But this story is not about Westcott. To cut this
prologue short, then, he asked me to come and see him,
and I went to the magnificent Horton rooms, not once,
not twice, but many times. I had loved Peter in the
old days. I loved him much more now. The story of
those years of his life that immediately followed the
war is a wonderful story. I hope that one day he will
give it to the world; whether he does or no, I saw in
those summer months the beginning of the events that
were to lead him back to life again, to give him happiness
and self-confidence and optimism once more, to
make him the man he now is.</p>
<p>In the story of that recovery, Benedick Jones has
his share; but, I must repeat, this is Benedick Jones's
story and not Westcott's.</p>
<p>The first day that I saw Jones was one lovely evening
in April when Peter's (or rather, Robsart's) sitting-room
was lit with a saffron-purple glow, and the clouds
beyond the window were like crimson waves rolling
right down upon us across the pale, glassy sky. In the
middle of this splendour Jones stood, a whisky-and-soda
in one hand, and a large meerschaum pipe in the
other. He was, of course, orating about something.
The first thing that struck me was his size. It was
not only that he was well over six feet and broad in proportion,
but there seemed to be in his large mouth, his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</SPAN></span>
great head with its untidy mop of yellow hair, his big,
red hands, a spiritual size as well. He gave one always
the impression of having more fire within his soul than
he could possibly manage....</p>
<p>He was fat, but not unpleasantly so. His clothes
were comfortably loose, but not disorderly. His stomach
was too prominent, but the breadth of his chest
saved him from unsightliness. His face was a full
moon, red, freckled, light yellow eyebrows, light yellow,
rather ragged moustache. He was always laughing—sometimes
when he was astonished or indignant.</p>
<p>He was forever in the middle of the room orating
somebody or something, and his favourite attitude was
to stand with his legs wide apart, a pipe or a glass or a
book in his extended hand, his body swaying a little
with the rhythm of his eager talk.</p>
<p>On this afternoon, I remember, he really seemed to
fill the room—words were pouring from his mouth in a
torrent, and I stood, stopped by this flood, at the door.
Westcott, lying back in a leather chair, smoking, listened,
a smile on his generally grave face, something
of the indulgent look in his eyes that one might give
to a favoured and excited child.</p>
<p>"Hullo, Lester!" he cried, jumping up. "Come
along—This is Captain Jones. Bomb, let me introduce
you to Mr. Lester. I told you to read <i>To Paradise</i>
years ago in France, but of course you never have."</p>
<p>"No, I never have," cried Jones, turning round upon
me very suddenly, seizing my hand and shaking it up
and down like the handle of a pump. "How do you do!
How do you do! I'm just delighted to see you. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</SPAN></span>
don't read much, you know. Better for me if I read
more. But I've got to take exercise. I'm getting fat."
Then he wheeled round again. "But, Peter," he went
on, suddenly taking a great draught from his glass, "it
was the most extraordinary thing—I swear it was just
as I'm telling you—the girl gave the man a look, spat
at him, and ran for her life. There were three men
after her then, one a vicious-looking little devil——"</p>
<p>I sat down in the chair nearest to me and listened.
I heard a most astonishing story. I'm afraid that I
cannot remember at this distance of time all the details
of it: it had murder in it, and rape and arson and every
sort of miraculous escape, and apparently, so far as I
could make it out, Jones had been a spectator of all
that he described. There were discrepancies in his narrative,
I remember, about which I should have liked to
question him, but the words came out so fast, and the
narrator's own personal conviction in the reality of his
story was so absolute, that questions seemed an impertinence.
He stopped at last, wiped his brow, collapsed
upon a chair, finished his whisky with a great sucking
smack of approval, dug his fingers into the bowl of his
pipe, struck matches that were, one by one, ineffective,
and lay scattered about him on the floor, and then
smiled at me with a beaming countenance.</p>
<p>"That's a very good story, Bomb," said Peter.</p>
<p>"Story!" cried Captain Jones, contemptuously.
"That ain't no story. That's God's own truth—every
word of it." He looked at me smiling all over his face.</p>
<p>"I've had some very remarkable experiences," he
said.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You must have had," I answered.</p>
<p>He did not, I think, on this occasion, stay very long.</p>
<p>When he had departed I looked at Westcott interrogatively.</p>
<p>"That's a prince of a man," said Peter enthusiastically.
"I don't know where I'd have been without him
in France. Everyone loved him there, and they were
right."</p>
<p>"What an experience he must have had there," I said,
a little breathless.</p>
<p>"Oh, that!" said Peter laughing. "That was all lies
from beginning to end."</p>
<p>"Lies!" I exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Westcott. "He's known among his
friends as Bombastes Furioso. That's an unfair name,
really, to give him, because he's gentle as any suckling
dove, and all his wonderful stories are about somebody
else's great deeds, never about his own. Young Harper
was saying the other day that if only he would
tell of some of his stories about himself, his lies wouldn't
be so tremendous, but his natural modesty prevents him.
He's a dear fellow, and the biggest liar in Europe."</p>
<p>"Well, of course," I said, rather doubtfully, "if he
<i>always</i> tells lies it isn't so bad. You know that you need
never believe him. It's the half-and-half liars that are
so tiresome——"</p>
<p>"No," Peter interrupted. "That isn't quite fair.
Lies isn't the true word. He's all imagination—far
more imagination than either you or I will ever have,
Lester. He simply can't write it down. If he could
he would be the greatest novelist of our time. I used<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</SPAN></span>
to tell him to try, but I've given that up now. He
can't string three sentences together. He can't write
an ordinary letter without misspelling every other word.
He never reads anything—that's why his imagination is
so untrammelled. And it isn't all untrue either. He
has been all the world over—South Seas, Africa, China,
South America, Russia, anywhere you like. All sorts
of wonderful things have happened to him, but it isn't
the real things he cares to tell of."</p>
<p>"Does he know he's lying?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Not the least in the world," Peter answered, laughing.
"And I fancy he'd be most indignant if you accused
him of it. And the really strange thing is that
no one ever does accuse him. I can't remember that a
single man in France ever challenged his stories, and
they'd pull anyone else up in a moment. You see, he
never does any harm. He's the most generous soul alive,
thinks the best of everybody, and all his stories go to
prove that people are better than they ever possibly
could be. I confess, Lester, I have him here deliberately
because he feeds my imagination. I'm beginning
to feel that I may get back to writing again, and
if I do it will be Bomb that will be responsible."</p>
<p>"How did he do in France?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Very well," Peter said. "But he never got the
jobs that he ought to have had. Fellows distrusted
him for responsible duty. They needn't have: he is
as efficient as he can be. His inventive fancy only
works over ground that he's never covered. In his own
job he's an absolute realist."</p>
<p>"Is he married?" I asked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"No. I don't think that women have much use for
him. He doesn't appeal to them. They like to have
the story-telling field to themselves. He's a man's man
absolutely. He had a pal in France to whom he was
entirely devoted, and when the boy was killed I think
something cracked in him that's not been mended since.
He's a colossal sentimentalist: cynicism and irony make
him sick. He thinks I'm a desperate cynic—so I am,
perhaps...."</p>
<p>Well, I saw a lot of Bomb Jones. He loved Westcott
more than I did, and admired him frantically. He
knew, too, something about Westcott's many troubles,
and the maternal spirit that is in every Englishman and
Scotchman came out beautifully in his attitude to him.
His stories soon became part of the pattern of one's life,
and by no means the least interesting part. I quickly
understood why it was that his friends allowed him to
pursue his wild, untrammelled way without rudely pulling
him up. In the first place, truth and fiction were
curiously mingled. He had lived in San Francisco
for a number of years, and many of his tales were
drawn from that romantic city. He had obviously
known well such men as Frank Norris and Jack London,
and he had been in the place during the earthquake
and fire. His picture of Caruso running out of his
hotel in his night-shirt was a masterly one. He knew
Russia well, had had tea with Witte, in the old days,
and had once dined with Rasputin. He had shared
in the Boxer rising, run for his life in Constantinople,
and helped a revolution in Guatemala; and so on, and
so on....</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But as I have said, about his actual experiences he
had very little to say. It was his fairy stories, his
fantastic, fabricated romances, that gave him his remarkable
quality—and it was about London that these
were mostly invented. I say invented—but were they
invented or no?</p>
<p>There will, I think, be more men and women than
anyone now supposes who will look back to that year
Nineteen-Nineteen in London as a strangely fantastic
one. You might say with some justice that the years
during the war, with their air-raids and alarms and
excursions, newspaper rumours, and train-loads of
wounded and dying at Charing Cross station, must have
been infinitely more moving—I think not. In those
years, at any rate the stage was set for a play in which
we must all, as we knew, act our parts. That year that
followed the Armistice was uncanny, uncertain, unaccountable.
Many reports there were about cities during
war time—none at all, so far as we knew, about cities
just after war. London, contrary to all prophesy, was
just twice as full after the war as it had been before
it; there was nowhere to live, little place even for
sleeping. Everyone who had had money had lost it—many
who had been notoriously penniless now were
rich. London was moving uncertainly into some new
life whose forlorn form no one could foretell, and we
were all conscious of this, and all, perhaps, frightened
of it.</p>
<p>It was just this upon which Bomb Jones unwittingly
seized. I say "unwittingly," because he was the least
self-conscious of men, and the things that came to him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</SPAN></span>
arrived without any deliberate agency on his part—his
stories and anecdotes rising to his lips as naturally and
inevitably as the sun rises above the hill. He did not,
I think, care for me very greatly: I was dried up, desiccated
with a humour that he could only find morbid
and cynical.</p>
<p>He had too fine and open a nature to suffer greatly
from jealousy, but I fancy that he very much preferred
to be alone with Peter, and sighed a little when I made
an appearance.</p>
<p>He very soon found himself most happily at home
with all the staff of Hortons. Even Mr. Nix, the sacred
and rubicund head of the establishment, liked him, and
listened, wide-eyed, to his stories. Mr. Nix had met
so many strange characters in London and seen so many
odd sights that a story less or more did not affect him
very deeply.</p>
<p>Certainly Captain Jones flung his net with greater
success than was the general rule; never a day passed
but he returned with some strange prize.</p>
<p>It was amusing to see them together in the green hall
downstairs, with the grandfather clock ticking away at
them sarcastically. The little man, round as a ball,
neat and dapper, efficient, his bowler hat a little on one
side of his head; Jones, his great legs apart, his red face
ablaze with excitement, his large hands gesticulating.
They were great friends.</p>
<p>In spite of his withdrawal from me, he continued to
tell me his stories. I began to find it an amusing game
to divide the true from the false. This was a difficult
task, because he had a great love of circumstantial detail.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</SPAN></span>
He would begin—"Lester, what do you think of
this? An hour ago I was going down John Street,
Adelphi. You know the place behind the Strand there
where the Little Theatre used to be. You know there's
an alley there cutting up into the Strand. They sell
fruit there. Well, I was just climbing the steps when
I heard a woman's voice cry out for help. I looked
back; there was not a soul there—the street was as
empty as your hand. I heard the cry again, and there
was a woman's face at the open window. As I looked
she vanished. I ran back to the door of the house——"</p>
<p>Now this may appear somewhat commonplace. How
many stories in how many magazines have begun with
just such an incident? This, you would say, is the
cheapest invention. Not quite. Jones had always some
unexpected circumstantial detail that clamped his tale
down as his own. I think that he was, in reality, on
certain occasions involved in fights and quarrels that
were actual enough. I have seen him with a black
eye, and again with a long scratch down his cheek, and
once with a torn hand. But what he did was to create
behind him a completely new vision of the London scene.
One could not listen to his stories for long without seeing
London coloured, blazing with light, sinister with
calculated darkness, ringed about with gigantic buildings
that capped the clouds, inhabited by beings half
human, half magical, half angel, half beast.</p>
<p>I remember when I was young and credulous, getting
something of this impression from <i>The New Arabian
Nights</i>, but for me, at any rate, Stevenson never quite
joined the flats. I was never finally taken in by his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</SPAN></span>
invention, but felt to the last that he was having a
game with me. Bomb Jones's eloquence had the advantage
over the written word of being direct and personal.
Although you might be sure that what he was
telling you was not true, nevertheless you felt that behind
his stories some facts must be lying. I know that
soon I began to discover that London was changing
under my eyes. My own drab and dull flat in Kensington
took a romantic glow. I would look from my
window down the long street to the far distance filled
by the solemn blocks of the museum, and would imagine
that the figures that crossed the grey spaces were busied
on errands about which fates of empires might hang—ludicrous
for a man of my age who might be said to
have experienced all the disillusionment of life. Well,
ludicrous or no, I walked the streets with a new observation,
a new expectation, a new pleasure, and to Bomb
Jones I owed it.</p>
<p>However, it is not of his effect on myself that I want
to speak. I was too far gone for any very permanent
revival. It was Jones's effect on Peter that was the
important thing. I saw that a new life, a new interest,
a new eagerness was coming into Peter's life. He
laughed at Jones, but he liked him and listened to him.
Gradually, slowly, as stealthily as, after the rains, the
water creeps back over the dry bed of the sun-baked
river, so did Peter's desire for life come back to him.</p>
<p>"I know that Bomb's stories are all nonsense," he
said to me. "A hundred times a day I'm tempted to
break out and ask him how he dares to put such stuff
over on us, but, after all, there may be something in it.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</SPAN></span>
Do you know, Lester, I can't go through Leicester
Square without wondering whether a murderer isn't
coming out of the Turkish Baths, an Eastern Prince
out of 'Thurston's,' or the Queen of the Genii peeping
at me from a window of the Alhambra! I've tried several
times to get back into things here. I tried the
Vers Librists, and I tried the drunkards down in
Adelphi, and I've tried the Solemn Ones up in Hampstead,
and the good commonplace ones in Kensington,
and it was all no use until Bomb came along. I hope
to Heaven he won't stop his stories for another month
or two. There's a book beginning to move in my head—again,
after ten years! Just think of it, Lester!
Dead for ten years—I never thought it would come back,
and now Bomb and his stories——"</p>
<p>"It's all right," I said. "He'll never stop till he
dies."</p>
<p>But I'd reckoned without one thing—something that
had never entered my poor brain, and, as always happens
in life, it was the one thing that occurred—Bomb fell
in love.</p>
<p>It is, of course, a commonplace that you can never
discover the reasons that drive human beings towards
one another—even the good old law of the universal
attraction of opposite for opposite does not always hold
good, but I may say that both Peter and I had the surprise
of our lives when we discovered that Bomb Jones
cared for Helen Cather. Helen was a friend of Bobby
Galleon's, who was a friend of Peter's. Alice Galleon,
Bobby's wife, had been with her on some War Committee,
and the orderliness of her mind, her quiet when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</SPAN></span>
the other women were pushing and quarrelling, her clean
serenity upon which nothing, however violent, seemed
to make the slightest stain, appealed to Alice. She
took Helen home to dinner, and discovered that she was
a very well-read, politically-minded, balanced woman.
"Too blamed balanced for me," said Bobby, who believed
in spontaneity and rash mistakes and good red
blood. He thought, however, that she would be good
for Peter, so he took her to see him. Helen and Peter
made friends, and this in itself was odd, because Helen
at once asserted that all Peter's ideas about modern
literature were wrong. She said that Peter was a
Romantic, and that to be a Romantic in these days was
worse than being dead. She talked in her calm, incisive,
clear-cut way about the Novel, and said that the
only thing for any novelist to do to-day was to tell the
truth; and when Peter asked her whether invention
and imagination were to go for nothing, she said that
they went for very little, because we'd got past them
and grown too old for them; and Peter said thank God
he hadn't and never would, and he talked about Stevenson
and Dumas until Helen was sick.</p>
<p>She dug up Peter's poor old novels, and disembowelled
their corpses and praised Miss Somebody or other
Smith's who wrote only about what it felt like to be
out of a job on a wet day when you had only enough
money in your pocket to eat a boiled egg in an <i>A.B.C.</i>
shop.</p>
<p>"You're sentimental, Westcott," she said, "and you're
sloppy and worst of all, you're sprightly. You've no
artistic conscience at all."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Peter laughed at her and liked her, and she liked
him. I don't think that I was at all taken with my
first view of her. She was thin and pale, with pince-nez
and a very faint moustache on her upper lip. Her best
feature was her eyes, which were good, grey, steady,
kindly, and even at times they twinkled. She was
neatness and tidiness itself, and she sat in her chair,
quite still, her hands folded on her lap, and her neat
little shoes crossed obstinately in front of her.</p>
<p>I shall never, of course, forget the day when she first
met Bomb. It was one evening in Peter's flat. A
number of people sat about talking, smoking and drinking.
The Galleons were there, Maradick, large and
red-faced, an old friend of Peter's, Robin Trojan and
his wife, and so on. Bomb was late. He burst into
the room, large, untidy and, as usual, excited.</p>
<p>"I say," he began at once. "I've just come from
Penter's. There's been a fellow there who's the most
remarkable man I've ever seen. He's going round
England with a circus, and three of his elephants escaped
this afternoon and were found examining Cleopatra's
Needle half an hour ago and being fed with
buns by a lot of street boys. This chap wasn't a bit
alarmed, and said they'd be sure to turn up at Howarton
or somewhere where he's got his circus, if he gave
them time. He says that one of the elephants is the
most intelligent——"</p>
<p>Now this story happened, as we discovered in the
morning, to be quite, or almost, true, but you can fancy
how Helen Cather was struck with it.</p>
<p>"Elephants!" she said, turning round upon him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, you don't know one another," said Peter, hastily.
"Bomb, this is Miss Cather. Miss Cather—Captain
Jones."</p>
<p>Bomb has since declared that he fell in love with
his Helen at first sight. Why? I can't conceive.
There was nothing romantic about her. She certainly
looked upon him on that first occasion with eyes of
extreme disapproval. Everything about him must have
seemed dreadful to her. "A red-hot liar," she described
him to Alice Galleon afterwards. I remember on that
very evening wishing that he had stopped for a moment
before he came into the room and tidied himself up a
little. His hair wasn't brushed, his face was hot and
perspiring, his waistcoat was minus a button, and his
boots were soiled. He didn't care, of course, but sat
down quite close to Miss Cather, smiled upon her, and
poured into her ears all that evening a remarkable
series of narratives, each one more tremendous than the
last.</p>
<p>Peter was amused. Next day he said: "Wasn't it
fun seeing Helen Cather and Bomb together? Fire
and water. She thought he'd drunk too much, I presume.
She can look chilly when she likes, too."</p>
<p>It was not more than three days after this eventful
meeting that the great surprise was sprung upon
me.</p>
<p>I had been given two tickets for the first night of
Arnold Bennett's <i>Judith</i>. We arrived late, and it was
not until the first interval that Peter could deliver
to me his astounding news.</p>
<p>"What do you think has happened?" he cried. "I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</SPAN></span>
give you three guesses, but you may as well resign at
once. If I gave you a hundred, you'd never guess."</p>
<p>"What is it?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Bomb is in love with Helen Cather."</p>
<p>I was, of course, incredulous.</p>
<p>"But that's absurd," I answered; "that's worse than
any of Bomb's best stories."</p>
<p>"It's true, all the same," he assured me. "He came
in this afternoon. He can think of nothing else. His
stories have for the moment all deserted him. He told
me that he's been awake three nights thinking of her.
He says that he loved her the first moment he saw her.
He says that he's never loved a woman before, which is,
I expect, true enough, and that he's going to marry
her."</p>
<p>"Well, that last isn't true, anyway," I answered.
"Miss Cather hated him at first sight."</p>
<p>My impression that night was that this was simply
one of Bomb's exuberant, romantic fancies, and that it
would pass away from his heart and brain as quickly
as many of his stories had done. I was, of course,
completely wrong.</p>
<p>He said very little about it to me, because he didn't
like me, and was less naturally himself with me, I think,
than with anyone. But he talked to everyone else,
and to Peter he never ceased pouring out his soul.</p>
<p>A week later he proposed to her. She refused him,
of course. He was not in the least disturbed. He
would propose to her again very shortly, and then again
and again to the end of time....</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I fancied, however, that that first refusal would he
the end of it.</p>
<p>He would see in a little how absurd his pursuit was,
and would abandon it. I must confess that I looked
forward to that abandonment. This sudden passion
had not from my point of view, improved him. It
made him a little absurd, and it had checked absolutely
for the moment the flow of his stories. I was surprised
to find how seriously I missed them.</p>
<p>Then one morning my telephone rang, and, answering
it, I recognised Miss Cather's voice.</p>
<p>"May I come and have tea with you this afternoon?"
she asked.</p>
<p>"Why, of course," I answered. "I'll be delighted.
Whom shall I invite?"</p>
<p>"Nobody," she answered. "I want to talk to you."</p>
<p>I was flattered and pleased. Any widower of over
fifty is pleased when any woman wants to come and
have tea with him alone. Besides, I liked Miss Cather—liked
her surprisingly. In the first place, she liked
me, found my mind "truly realistic" and my brain well
balanced. But in reality I liked her, I think, because
I was beginning to discover in her a certain freshness
and childishness and even <i>naïveté</i> of soul which I had
certainly not expected at first. But seriousness and
balance and austerity of manner did not go nearly as
deep as it pretended. She knew not nearly as much
about life as she herself fancied.</p>
<p>When she came she had some difficulty in beginning.
At last it was out. Captain Jones had proposed to her.
Of course, it was quite absurd, and of course, she had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</SPAN></span>
refused him. He didn't know her at all, and she knew
quite enough about <i>him</i> to be sure that they would never
get on. Nevertheless—nevertheless—What did I—did
I know?—At least, what she meant was that she liked
Captain Jones, had liked him from the beginning, but
there were certain things about him that puzzled her—Now
I knew him well. Would I tell her?</p>
<p>"I don't know him well," I interrupted her. "That's
a mistake—we're not intimate at all, but I do know
him well enough to be sure that he's a good man. He's
a splendid man!" I ended with perhaps a little more
enthusiasm than I had myself expected.</p>
<p>She talked a little more, and then I challenged her.</p>
<p>"The fact of the matter is, Miss Cather," I said,
"that you're in love with him and intend to marry him."</p>
<p>At this she shook her head indignantly. No, that
was not true at all. She did not love him—of course
she did not. But there was something about him—difficult
for her to describe—his childishness, his simplicity—he
needed looking after—Oh, he <i>did</i> need looking
after!</p>
<p>As she said that the whole of the sweetness that was
in her nature shone in her eyes and made her austere,
unyielding, almost plain as she was, for the moment
divine.</p>
<p>"Of course you're going to marry him," I repeated.
She shook her head, but this time less surely.</p>
<p>Then, looking me full in the face, and speaking with
great solemnity as though she were uttering a profound
and supremely important truth, she remarked:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Any woman who did marry him would have to stop
that lying."</p>
<p>"Lying!" I repeated feebly.</p>
<p>"Yes, lying—the stories he tells."</p>
<p>"But they aren't lies," I said. "At least, not
exactly."</p>
<p>She emptied then all the vials of her wrath upon my
head. Not lies? And what were they then? <i>What</i>
were those romances if they were not lies? Was I trying
to defend lies in general or only Captain Jones's
lies in particular? Did I not realise the harm that he
did with his stories? What had we all been about that
we had not pulled him up long ago?</p>
<p>"Can't you conceive it as possible, Miss Cather," I
asked her, "that lies should occasionally do good rather
than harm? I don't mean really <i>bad</i> lies, of course—lies
told to hurt people—but gorgeous lies, magnificent
lies; lies that keep your sense of fantasy, your
imagination alive; lies that paint your house a fairy
palace and your wife a goddess?"</p>
<p>"I don't know what you're talking about, Mr. Lester,"
she answered me. "I must confess I'm disappointed
in you, but I suppose one never knows with a novelist—But
never mind—thank you for your tea—I can
only assure you that any woman who marries Captain
Jones will have to reform him first. Good-night."</p>
<p>Even after this I did not realise the situation that
was upon us. I saw now what I had not seen before,
that she did, in truth, care for Bomb Jones—that that
same affection would affect all our lives I had not yet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</SPAN></span>
perceived. Then, two days later, came the next development.</p>
<p>I was sitting in Peter's flat waiting for his return,
when Bomb burst in. He was a creature transfigured,
whether by triumph or rage I could not immediately
tell. He stood there, out of breath, swelling out his
chest, struggling for words, panting. At last they
came.</p>
<p>"Where's Peter? Oh, <i>where's</i> Peter? Not back.
But he must be back. It's always his time to be here
just now. He must be here! Lester, I'm dumbfounded.
I've no strength left in me. I'm finished. What do
you think? Oh, but you'll never guess—you
couldn't——"</p>
<p>"Miss Cather's accepted you," I interrupted.</p>
<p>"How did you know? How the devil——" He
stared at me as though his eyes were struggling with an
unaccustomed light—"Well, she has, if you want to
know, and that's remarkable enough, but that's not the
only thing—She—she——"</p>
<p>He paused, then flung it at me with the strangest
burst of mingled rage, incredulity, bewilderment, and
wonder—"She says I'm a liar!"</p>
<p>He looked at me, waiting.</p>
<p>"A liar?" I feebly repeated.</p>
<p>"A liar! She says she'll only marry me on one condition—that
I stop my lying. When she first said it I
thought she was laughing at me, then I suddenly saw
that she was in the deadliest earnest. I asked her what
she meant. She said that she couldn't conceive that I
didn't know, that I <i>must</i> know, how wicked it was to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</SPAN></span>
tell the untruthful stories that I did, the harm that they
worked and so on. I! A liar! I!—Why, you might
say it about some fellows, but about me!... Why,
Lester, she simply didn't believe that I'd had any of
the fun, been to any of the places, seen anything....
Of course, I see what it is. She's never been anywhere,
seen anything herself. Everything's strange to her.
But to say that everyone <i>knew</i> I was a liar.... Lester,
tell me. You've been about. You know I'm not
a liar, don't you?"</p>
<p>His astonishment was the most genuine thing I'd
ever faced. I admit that I was staggered by it. I
had not, of course, supposed that he had deliberately
said to himself: "Now to-day I'm going to tell a lie
so as to astonish those fellows," but I <i>had</i> imagined
that he knew quite well it had not all been true.</p>
<p>But here, in the face of his most ingenuous astonishment,
what was I to say?</p>
<p>"No, Jones, of course not—lies is the wrong word
altogether, but I do think that sometimes you've exaggerated."</p>
<p>He stared at me.</p>
<p>"Do they all think that?"</p>
<p>"Well, yes, they do——"</p>
<p>He resembled then nothing so much as a balloon from
which the air has suddenly been withdrawn. He sat
down.</p>
<p>"My God," he said, suddenly dropping his head between
his great red hands. "It's true then."</p>
<p>It was at that moment that I saw the catastrophe
that was upon us. I saw what Bomb would be without<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</SPAN></span>
his tales: he would be dull, ordinary, colourless—nothing.
The salient thing, the life, the salt, the savour
would be withdrawn from him. And not only Bomb,
but all of us—myself, Peter, young Gale, Alice Galleon,
even Maradick. I saw, by my own experience, how we
should suffer. I saw slipping away from under my
very nose the whole of that magical world that Bomb
had created; and above all, that magical London, the
fairy palaces, the streets paved with gold, the walls of
amethyst; the dark, shuttered windows opened for an
instant to betray the gleaming, anxious eyes; the bearded
foreigner conveying his sacred charge through the traffic
of Trafalgar Square; the secrets and mysteries of the
Bond Street jewellers.... I saw all that and more.
But, after all, that was not the heart of the matter. We
could get on without our entertainment; even Peter
had been brought to life again whether Bomb went on
with him or no. The tragedy was in Bomb's own soul;
Helen Cather was slaying him as surely as though she
stuck a dagger into his heart. And she did not know it—She
did not know that she was probably marrying him
for that very energy of imagination that she was bent
upon destroying. Only, months after she had married
him, she would discover, with a heavy and lifeless Bomb
upon her hands, what it was that she had done.</p>
<p>"Look here, Jones," I said. "Don't take it too seriously.
Miss Cather didn't know what she was saying.
Don't you promise her anything. She'll forget——"</p>
<p>"Don't promise her!" He looked up at me wildly.
"I have promised her! Of course I have—Don't I
love her? Didn't I love her the first moment that I saw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</SPAN></span>
her? I'm never going to tell anyone about anything
again."</p>
<p>Well, all my worst anticipations were at once fulfilled.
You may think that this story is about a very small
affair, but I ask you to take some friend of yours and
be aware that he is in process, before your eyes, of dying
from some slow poison skilfully administered by someone.
You may not in the beginning have cared very
greatly for the man, but the poignancy of the drama
is such that before long you are drawn into the very
heart of it; it is like a familiar nightmare; you are held
there paralysed, longing to rush in and prevent the murder
and unable to move.</p>
<p>In no time at all I had developed quite an affection
for Jones, so pathetic a figure was he.</p>
<p>Beneath the stern gaze of his beloved Helen ("not
quite of Troy," as someone said of her) he became a
commonplace, dull, negligible creature, duller, save for
the pathos of his position, than human. Very quickly
we lost any sense of chagrin or disappointment at our
own penalties in the absorption of "longing to do something
for Bomb." Again and again we discussed the
affair. Bomb's soul must be saved; but how? Before
our eyes a tragedy was developing. In another month
they would be married; Helen Cather would marry the
greatest bore in Europe, and about six months after
marriage would discover that she had done so.</p>
<p>Bomb was already miserable, sitting there silent and
morose, his tongue-tied, adoring Helen, but saying nothing
to her lest he should be accused of "romancing."</p>
<p>At last Peter insisted that I should speak to her—she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</SPAN></span>
liked me better than she did the others—she would
listen to me. Needless to say, she did not. Not only
did she not listen, but turned on me ferociously.</p>
<p>"I'm proud of Benedick!" she cried. "I've cured
him of the only fault he had. If you think I'm going
to turn him back into a liar again, Mr. Lester, just
for the entertainment of yourself and your friends,
you're greatly mistaken. You have a strange notion
of morality."</p>
<p>She was proud, but she was uneasy. She realised
that he was not happy, that, in one way or another,
the spring had gone out of him—yes, thank God, she
was uneasy.</p>
<p>Well, there was the situation. There was apparently
nothing to be done, no way out. This is simply the
story, after all, of our blindness. Just as we had not
seen the influence that was to check our Bomb, so we
did not see the influence that would make his fancy
flow again. It's a wonderful world, thank God!</p>
<p>About a week before the wedding Peter Westcott said
to me:</p>
<p>"Lester, don't you think that Bomb's reviving a little
again?" I fancied I had seen something. Bomb was
a little brighter, a little less heavy ... yes, I <i>had</i>
noticed.</p>
<p>"His fancy is being fed again somewhere," said Peter
again. "Where? He tells <i>us</i> no stories."</p>
<p>No, he certainly did not. His determination to
achieve perfect accuracy was painful. It was a case
of——</p>
<p>"Where have you been, Bomb?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, just down to the bank to cash a cheque. The
Joint Stock branch in Wigmore Street. I took a bus
up Regent Street and got off at the Circus——" and so
on, and so on.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, he was reviving. The Old Man was
being blown back into him just as surely as one prick of
Helen Cather's determination had let it out. Where
was he feeding his imagination? How had he got
round his Helen's autocracy without her knowing it?
Because she did not know. She was completely satisfied—she
was even more than satisfied, she was—— I
watched her. Something was happening to her, too.
She was dressing differently. Her austerity was dropping
from her. She did her hair in a new way, no
longer pulling it back, harsh and austere, from her
forehead, but letting it have freedom and colour. She
had very pretty hair....</p>
<p>She was wearing bright colours and pretty hats....</p>
<p>What was happening?</p>
<p>The day came when the problem was solved. Bomb's
old mother came up to town, a dear old lady of nearly
eighty, who adored Bomb and thought him perfection.
She came up for the wedding. She was to see Helen
for the first time. It was agreed that the meeting
should be at Hortons, a nice, central spot. We were
gathered there waiting—old Mrs. Jones with her lace
cap and bright pink cheeks, Peter, Bomb, and myself.
Helen was late.</p>
<p>"You know, Benedick," said the old lady in a voice
like a withering canary, "you've told me very little
about Helen. I've no real idea of her at all."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>A moment's pause, and Bomb had sprung to his feet.
Peter and I, spiritually, so to speak, rushed towards
one another. This was the old attitude. We had not
seen Bomb stand like this, his legs spread apart, his
chest out, his eyes flashing, for weeks. The old attitude,
the old voice, the old Bomb.</p>
<p>"Helen, mother!" he cried, and he was off.</p>
<p>The picture that he drew! It was about as much
like the real Helen Cather as the Venus de Milo is
like Miss Mary Pickford in the pictures; but it was a
glorious picture, the portrait of a goddess, a genius, a
Sappho. The phrases tumbled from his lips in the
good old way—it was all the old times come back again.
And how his imagination worked! How magnificently
he flung his colours about, with what abandon he
splashed and sprawled! For a breathless ten minutes
we listened.</p>
<p>"Dear me," said old Mrs. Jones, "I do hope she's a
good girl as well."</p>
<p>For myself I sat there entranced. The old Bomb was
not lost. He had found, or Fate had found him, a
safe outlet after all. He could see Helen as before he
had seen the whole world, and it would do for him as
well. His soul was saved.</p>
<p>The one question that now remained was how would
Helen take this glorification of herself? Would she
not resent it as deeply as she had resented the earlier
"lies"?</p>
<p>On the answer to that question hung the whole of
the future of their married life.</p>
<p>I was soon to have my answer. Helen came in. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</SPAN></span>
did not perceive that old Mrs. Jones felt very deeply
the contrast between reality and her son's picture. Her
son was all that she saw.</p>
<p>He took her home. I walked away with Helen. Before
we parted she turned to me. Happiness was
burning in her face.</p>
<p>"Mr. Lester," she said, "you've been a good friend
to both of us. You were all wrong about Benedick,
but I know that you meant it well." She hesitated a
little. "I'm terribly happy, almost too happy to be safe.
Of course, I know that Benedick is a little absurd about
me, has rather an exaggerated idea of me. But that's
good for me, really it is. Nobody ever has before, you
know, and it's only Benedick who's seen what I really
am. I knew that I had all sorts of things in me that
ought to come out, but no one encouraged them. Everyone
laughed at them. But Benedick has seen them,
and I'm going to be what he sees me. I feel free!
Free for the first time in my life! You don't know
how wonderful that is!"</p>
<p>She pulled the bright purple scarf more closely over
her shoulders.</p>
<p>"We've done something for one another, he and I,
really, haven't we? He's freed me, and I—well, I've
stopped those terrible untruths of his in spite of you all.
I don't believe he'll ever tell a lie again! Good-night.
We'll see lots of you after we're married, won't we?
Oh, we're going to be so happy——"</p>
<p>"Yes—<i>now</i> I believe you are," I answered.</p>
<p>"What do you mean, <i>now</i>?" she asked. "Didn't you
always think so?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"There was a moment when I wasn't sure," I said.
"But I was wrong. You're going to be splendidly
happy."</p>
<p>And so they are....</p>
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