<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER TWO </h2>
<p>That was how it began. How it was that it ended, as we know it did end, is
not so easy to state precisely. It is very clear that Heyst was not
indifferent, I won't say to the girl, but to the girl's fate. He was the
same man who had plunged after the submerged Morrison whom he hardly knew
otherwise than by sight and through the usual gossip of the islands. But
this was another sort of plunge altogether, and likely to lead to a very
different kind of partnership.</p>
<p>Did he reflect at all? Probably. He was sufficiently reflective. But if he
did, it was with insufficient knowledge. For there is no evidence that he
paused at any time between the date of that evening and the morning of the
flight. Truth to say, Heyst was not one of those men who pause much. Those
dreamy spectators of the world's agitation are terrible once the desire to
act gets hold of them. They lower their heads and charge a wall with an
amazing serenity which nothing but an indisciplined imagination can give.</p>
<p>He was not a fool. I suppose he knew—or at least he felt—where
this was leading him. But his complete inexperience gave him the necessary
audacity. The girl's voice was charming when she spoke to him of her
miserable past, in simple terms, with a sort of unconscious cynicism
inherent in the truth of the ugly conditions of poverty. And whether
because he was humane or because her voice included all the modulations of
pathos, cheerfulness, and courage in its compass, it was not disgust that
the tale awakened in him, but the sense of an immense sadness.</p>
<p>On a later evening, during the interval between the two parts of the
concert, the girl told Heyst about herself. She was almost a child of the
streets. Her father was a musician in the orchestras of small theatres.
Her mother ran away from him while she was little, and the landladies of
various poor lodging-houses had attended casually to her abandoned
childhood. It was never positive starvation and absolute rags, but it was
the hopeless grip of poverty all the time. It was her father who taught
her to play the violin. It seemed that he used to get drunk sometimes, but
without pleasure, and only because he was unable to forget his fugitive
wife. After he had a paralytic stroke, falling over with a crash in the
well of a music-hall orchestra during the performance, she had joined the
Zangiacomo company. He was now in a home for incurables.</p>
<p>"And I am here," she finished, "with no one to care if I make a hole in
the water the next chance I get or not."</p>
<p>Heyst told her that he thought she could do a little better than that, if
it was only a question of getting out of the world. She looked at him with
special attention, and with a puzzled expression which gave to her face an
air of innocence.</p>
<p>This was during one of the "intervals" between the two parts of the
concert. She had come down that time without being incited thereto by a
pinch from the awful Zangiacomo woman. It is difficult to suppose that she
was seduced by the uncovered intellectual forehead and the long reddish
moustaches of her new friend. New is not the right word. She had never had
a friend before; and the sensation of this friendliness going out to her
was exciting by its novelty alone. Besides, any man who did not resemble
Schomberg appeared for that very reason attractive. She was afraid of the
hotel-keeper, who, in the daytime, taking advantage of the fact that she
lived in the hotel itself, and not in the Pavilion with the other
"artists" prowled round her, mute, hungry, portentous behind his great
beard, or else assailed her in quiet corners and empty passages with deep,
mysterious murmurs from behind, which, not withstanding their clear
import, sounded horribly insane somehow.</p>
<p>The contrast of Heyst's quiet, polished manner gave her special delight
and filled her with admiration. She had never seen anything like that
before. If she had, perhaps, known kindness in her life, she had never met
the forms of simple courtesy. She was interested by it as a very novel
experience, not very intelligible, but distinctly pleasurable.</p>
<p>"I tell you they are too many for me," she repeated, sometimes recklessly,
but more often shaking her head with ominous dejection.</p>
<p>She had, of course, no money at all. The quantities of "black men" all
about frightened her. She really had no definite idea where she was on the
surface of the globe. The orchestra was generally taken from the steamer
to some hotel, and kept shut up there till it was time to go on board
another steamer. She could not remember the names she heard.</p>
<p>"How do you call this place again?" she used to ask Heyst.</p>
<p>"Sourabaya," he would say distinctly, and would watch the discouragement
at the outlandish sound coming into her eyes, which were fastened on his
face.</p>
<p>He could not defend himself from compassion. He suggested that she might
go to the consul, but it was his conscience that dictated this advice, not
his conviction. She had never heard of the animal or of its uses. A
consul! What was it? Who was he? What could he do? And when she learned
that perhaps he could be induced to send her home, her head dropped on her
breast.</p>
<p>"What am I to do when I get there?" she murmured with an intonation so
just, with an accent so penetrating—the charm of her voice did not
fail her even in whispering—that Heyst seemed to see the illusion of
human fellowship on earth vanish before the naked truth of her existence,
and leave them both face to face in a moral desert as arid as the sands of
Sahara, without restful shade, without refreshing water.</p>
<p>She leaned slightly over the little table, the same little table at which
they had sat when they first met each other; and with no other memories
but of the stones in the streets her childhood had known, in the distress
of the incoherent, confused, rudimentary impressions of her travels
inspiring her with a vague terror of the world she said rapidly, as one
speaks in desperation:</p>
<p>"<i>You</i> do something! You are a gentleman. It wasn't I who spoke to
you first, was it? I didn't begin, did I? It was you who came along and
spoke to me when I was standing over there. What did you want to speak to
me for? I don't care what it is, but you must do something."</p>
<p>Her attitude was fierce and entreating at the same time—clamorous,
in fact though her voice had hardly risen above a breath. It was clamorous
enough to be noticed. Heyst, on purpose, laughed aloud. She nearly choked
with indignation at this brutal heartlessness.</p>
<p>"What did you mean, then, by saying 'command me!'?" she almost hissed.</p>
<p>Something hard in his mirthless stare, and a quiet final "All right,"
steadied her.</p>
<p>"I am not rich enough to buy you out," he went on, speaking with an
extraordinary detached grin, "even if it were to be done; but I can always
steal you."</p>
<p>She looked at him profoundly, as though these words had a hidden and very
complicated meaning.</p>
<p>"Get away now," he said rapidly, "and try to smile as you go."</p>
<p>She obeyed with unexpected readiness; and as she had a set of very good
white teeth, the effect of the mechanical, ordered smile was joyous,
radiant. It astonished Heyst. No wonder, it flashed through his mind,
women can deceive men so completely. The faculty was inherent in them;
they seemed to be created with a special aptitude. Here was a smile the
origin of which was well known to him; and yet it had conveyed a sensation
of warmth, had given him a sort of ardour to live which was very new to
his experience.</p>
<p>By this time she was gone from the table, and had joined the other "ladies
of the orchestra." They trooped towards the platform, driven in
truculently by the haughty mate of Zangiacomo, who looked as though she
were restraining herself with difficulty from punching their backs.
Zangiacomo followed, with his great, pendulous dyed beard and short
mess-jacket, with an aspect of hang-dog concentration imparted by his
drooping head and the uneasiness of his eyes, which were set very close
together. He climbed the steps last of all, turned about, displaying his
purple beard to the hall, and tapped with his bow. Heyst winced in
anticipation of the horrible racket. It burst out immediately unabashed
and awful. At the end of the platform the woman at the piano, presenting
her cruel profile, her head tilted back, banged the keys without looking
at the music.</p>
<p>Heyst could not stand the uproar for more than a minute. He went out, his
brain racked by the rhythm of some more or less Hungarian dance music. The
forests inhabited by the New Guinea cannibals where he had encountered the
most exciting of his earlier futile adventures were silent. And this
adventure, not in its execution, perhaps, but in its nature, required even
more nerve than anything he had faced before. Walking among the paper
lanterns suspended to trees he remembered with regret the gloom and the
dead stillness of the forests at the back of Geelvink Bay, perhaps the
wildest, the unsafest, the most deadly spot on earth from which the sea
can be seen. Oppressed by his thoughts, he sought the obscurity and peace
of his bedroom; but they were not complete. The distant sounds of the
concert reached his ear, faint indeed, but still disturbing. Neither did
he feel very safe in there; for that sentiment depends not on extraneous
circumstances but on our inward conviction. He did not attempt to go to
sleep; he did not even unbutton the top button of his tunic. He sat in a
chair and mused. Formerly, in solitude and in silence, he had been used to
think clearly and sometimes even profoundly, seeing life outside the
flattering optical delusion of everlasting hope, of conventional
self-deceptions, of an ever-expected happiness. But now he was troubled; a
light veil seemed to hang before his mental vision; the awakening of a
tenderness, indistinct and confused as yet, towards an unknown woman.</p>
<p>Gradually silence, a real silence, had established itself round him. The
concert was over; the audience had gone; the concert-hall was dark; and
even the Pavilion, where the ladies' orchestra slept after its noisy
labours, showed not a gleam of light. Heyst suddenly felt restless in all
his limbs, as this reaction from the long immobility would not be denied,
he humoured it by passing quietly along the back veranda and out into the
grounds at the side of the house, into the black shadows under the trees,
where the extinguished paper lanterns were gently swinging their globes
like withered fruit.</p>
<p>He paced there to and fro for a long time, a calm, meditative ghost in his
white drill-suit, revolving in his head thoughts absolutely novel,
disquieting, and seductive; accustoming his mind to the contemplation of
his purpose, in order that by being faced steadily it should appear
praiseworthy and wise. For the use of reason is to justify the obscure
desires that move our conduct, impulses, passions, prejudices, and
follies, and also our fears.</p>
<p>He felt that he had engaged himself by a rash promise to an action big
with incalculable consequences. And then he asked himself if the girl had
understood what he meant. Who could tell? He was assailed by all sorts of
doubts. Raising his head, he perceived something white flitting between
the trees. It vanished almost at once; but there could be no mistake. He
was vexed at being detected roaming like this in the middle of the night.
Who could that be? It never occurred to him that perhaps the girl, too,
would not be able to sleep. He advanced prudently. Then he saw the white,
phantom-like apparition again; and the next moment all his doubts as to
the state of her mind were laid at rest, because he felt her clinging to
him after the manner of supplicants all the world over. Her whispers were
so incoherent that he could not understand anything; but this did not
prevent him from being profoundly moved. He had no illusions about her;
but his sceptical mind was dominated by the fulness of his heart.</p>
<p>"Calm yourself, calm yourself," he murmured in her ear, returning her
clasp at first mechanically, and afterwards with a growing appreciation of
her distressed humanity. The heaving of her breast and the trembling of
all her limbs, in the closeness of his embrace, seemed to enter his body,
to infect his very heart. While she was growing quieter in his arms, he
was becoming more agitated, as if there were only a fixed quantity of
violent emotion on this earth. The very night seemed more dumb, more
still, and the immobility of the vague, black shapes, surrounding him more
perfect.</p>
<p>"It will be all right," he tried to reassure her, with a tone of
conviction, speaking into her ear, and of necessity clasping her more
closely than before.</p>
<p>Either the words or the action had a very good effect. He heard a light
sigh of relief. She spoke with a calmed ardour.</p>
<p>"Oh, I knew it would be all right from the first time you spoke to me!
Yes, indeed, I knew directly you came up to me that evening. I knew it
would be all right, if you only cared to make it so; but of course I could
not tell if you meant it. 'Command me,' you said. Funny thing for a man
like you to say. Did you really mean it? You weren't making fun of me?"</p>
<p>He protested that he had been a serious person all his life.</p>
<p>"I believe you," she said ardently. He was touched by this declaration.
"It's the way you have of speaking as if you were amused with people," she
went on. "But I wasn't deceived. I could see you were angry with that
beast of a woman. And you are clever. You spotted something at once. You
saw it in my face, eh? It isn't a bad face—say? You'll never be
sorry. Listen—I'm not twenty yet. It's the truth, and I can't be so
bad looking, or else—I will tell you straight that I have been
worried and pestered by fellows like this before. I don't know what comes
to them—"</p>
<p>She was speaking hurriedly. She choked, and then exclaimed, with an accent
of despair:</p>
<p>"What is it? What's the matter?"</p>
<p>Heyst had removed his arms from her suddenly, and had recoiled a little.
"Is it my fault? I didn't even look at them, I tell you straight. Never!
Have I looked at you? Tell me. It was you that began it."</p>
<p>In truth, Heyst had shrunk from the idea of competition with fellows
unknown, with Schomberg the hotel-keeper. The vaporous white figure before
him swayed pitifully in the darkness. He felt ashamed of his
fastidiousness.</p>
<p>"I am afraid we have been detected," he murmured. "I think I saw somebody
on the path between the house and the bushes behind you."</p>
<p>He had seen no one. It was a compassionate lie, if there ever was one. His
compassion was as genuine as his shrinking had been, and in his judgement
more honourable.</p>
<p>She didn't turn her head. She was obviously relieved.</p>
<p>"Would it be that brute?" she breathed out, meaning Schomberg, of course.
"He's getting too forward with me now. What can you expect? Only this
evening, after supper, he—but I slipped away. You don't mind him, do
you? Why, I could face him myself now that I know you care for me. A girl
can always put up a fight. You believe me? Only it isn't easy to stand up
for yourself when you feel there's nothing and nobody at your back.
There's nothing so lonely in the world as a girl who has got to look after
herself. When I left poor dad in that home—it was in the country,
near a village—I came out of the gates with seven shillings and
threepence in my old purse, and my railway ticket. I tramped a mile, and
got into a train—"</p>
<p>She broke off, and was silent for a moment.</p>
<p>"Don't you throw me over now," she went on. "If you did, what should I do?
I should have to live, to be sure, because I'd be afraid to kill myself,
but you would have done a thousand times worse than killing a body. You
told me you had been always alone, you had never had a dog even. Well,
then, I won't be in anybody's way if I live with you—not even a
dog's. And what else did you mean when you came up and looked at me so
close?"</p>
<p>"Close? Did I?" he murmured unstirring before her in the profound
darkness. "So close as that?"</p>
<p>She had an outbreak of anger and despair in subdued tones.</p>
<p>"Have you forgotten, then? What did you expect to find? I know what sort
of girl I am; but all the same I am not the sort that men turn their backs
on—and you ought to know it, unless you aren't made like the others.
Oh, forgive me! You aren't like the others; you are like no one in the
world I ever spoke to. Don't you care for me? Don't you see—?"</p>
<p>What he saw was that, white and spectral, she was putting out her arms to
him out of the black shadows like an appealing ghost. He took her hands,
and was affected, almost surprised, to find them so warm, so real, so
firm, so living in his grasp. He drew her to him, and she dropped her head
on his shoulder with a deep-sigh.</p>
<p>"I am dead tired," she whispered plaintively.</p>
<p>He put his arms around her, and only by the convulsive movements of her
body became aware that she was sobbing without a sound. Sustaining her, he
lost himself in the profound silence of the night. After a while she
became still, and cried quietly. Then, suddenly, as if waking up, she
asked:</p>
<p>"You haven't seen any more of that somebody you thought was spying about?"</p>
<p>He started at her quick, sharp whisper, and answered that very likely he
had been mistaken.</p>
<p>"If it was anybody at all," she reflected aloud, "it wouldn't have been
anyone but that hotel woman—the landlord's wife."</p>
<p>"Mrs. Schomberg," Heyst said, surprised.</p>
<p>"Yes. Another one that can't sleep o' nights. Why? Don't you see why?
Because, of course, she sees what's going on. That beast doesn't even try
to keep it from her. If she had only the least bit of spirit! She knows
how I feel, too, only she's too frightened even to look him in the face,
let alone open her mouth. He would tell her to go hang herself."</p>
<p>For some time Heyst said nothing. A public, active contest with the
hotel-keeper was not to be thought of. The idea was horrible. Whispering
gently to the girl, he tried to explain to her that as things stood, an
open withdrawal from the company would be probably opposed. She listened
to his explanation anxiously, from time to time pressing the hand she had
sought and got hold of in the dark.</p>
<p>"As I told you, I am not rich enough to buy you out so I shall steal you
as soon as I can arrange some means of getting away from here. Meantime it
would be fatal to be seen together at night. We mustn't give ourselves
away. We had better part at once. I think I was mistaken just now; but if,
as you say, that poor Mrs. Schomberg can't sleep of nights, we must be
more careful. She would tell the fellow."</p>
<p>The girl had disengaged herself from his loose hold while he talked, and
now stood free of him, but still clasping his hand firmly.</p>
<p>"Oh, no," she said with perfect assurance. "I tell you she daren't open
her mouth to him. And she isn't as silly as she looks. She wouldn't give
us away. She knows a trick worth two of that. She'll help—that's
what she'll do, if she dares do anything at all."</p>
<p>"You seem to have a very clear view of the situation," said Heyst, and
received a warm, lingering kiss for this commendation.</p>
<p>He discovered that to part from her was not such an easy matter as he had
supposed it would be.</p>
<p>"Upon my word," he said before they separated, "I don't even know your
name."</p>
<p>"Don't you? They call me Alma. I don't know why. Silly name! Magdalen too.
It doesn't matter; you can call me by whatever name you choose. Yes, you
give me a name. Think of one you would like the sound of—something
quite new. How I should like to forget everything that has gone before, as
one forgets a dream that's done with, fright and all! I would try."</p>
<p>"Would you really?" he asked in a murmur. "But that's not forbidden. I
understand that women easily forget whatever in their past diminishes them
in their eyes."</p>
<p>"It's your eyes that I was thinking of, for I'm sure I've never wished to
forget anything till you came up to me that night and looked me through
and through. I know I'm not much account; but I know how to stand by a
man. I stood by father ever since I could understand. He wasn't a bad
chap. Now that I can't be of any use to him, I would just as soon forget
all that and make a fresh start. But these aren't things that I could talk
to you about. What could I ever talk to you about?"</p>
<p>"Don't let it trouble you," Heyst said. "Your voice is enough. I am in
love with it, whatever it says."</p>
<p>She remained silent for a while, as if rendered breathless by this quiet
statement.</p>
<p>"Oh! I wanted to ask you—"</p>
<p>He remembered that she probably did not know his name, and expected the
question to be put to him now; but after a moment of hesitation she went
on:</p>
<p>"Why was it that you told me to smile this evening in the concert-room
there—you remember?"</p>
<p>"I thought we were being observed. A smile is the best of masks. Schomberg
was at a table next but one to us, drinking with some Dutch clerks from
the town. No doubt he was watching us—watching you, at least. That's
why I asked you to smile."</p>
<p>"Ah, that's why. It never came into my head!"</p>
<p>"And you did it very well, too—very readily, as if you had
understood my intention."</p>
<p>"Readily!" she repeated. "Oh, I was ready enough to smile then. That's the
truth. It was the first time for years I may say that I felt disposed to
smile. I've not had many chances to smile in my life, I can tell you;
especially of late."</p>
<p>"But you do it most charmingly—in a perfectly fascinating way."</p>
<p>He paused. She stood still, waiting for more with the stillness of extreme
delight, wishing to prolong the sensation.</p>
<p>"It astonished me," he added. "It went as straight to my heart as though
you had smiled for the purpose of dazzling me. I felt as if I had never
seen a smile before in my life. I thought of it after I left you. It made
me restless."</p>
<p>"It did all that?" came her voice, unsteady, gentle, and incredulous.</p>
<p>"If you had not smiled as you did, perhaps I should not have come out here
tonight," he said, with his playful earnestness of tone. "It was your
triumph."</p>
<p>He felt her lips touch his lightly, and the next moment she was gone. Her
white dress gleamed in the distance, and then the opaque darkness of the
house seemed to swallow it. Heyst waited a little before he went the same
way, round the corner, up the steps of the veranda, and into his room,
where he lay down at last—not to sleep, but to go over in his mind
all that had been said at their meeting.</p>
<p>"It's exactly true about that smile," he thought. There he had spoken the
truth to her; and about her voice, too. For the rest—what must be
must be.</p>
<p>A great wave of heat passed over him. He turned on his back, flung his
arms crosswise on the broad, hard bed, and lay still, open-eyed under the
mosquito net, till daylight entered his room, brightened swiftly, and
turned to unfailing sunlight. He got up then, went to a small
looking-glass hanging on the wall, and stared at himself steadily. It was
not a new-born vanity which induced this long survey. He felt so strange
that he could not resist the suspicion of his personal appearance having
changed during the night. What he saw in the glass, however, was the man
he knew before. It was almost a disappointment—a belittling of his
recent experience. And then he smiled at his naiveness; for, being over
five and thirty years of age, he ought to have known that in most cases
the body is the unalterable mask of the soul, which even death itself
changes but little, till it is put out of sight where no changes matter
any more, either to our friends or to our enemies.</p>
<p>Heyst was not conscious of either friends or of enemies. It was the very
essence of his life to be a solitary achievement, accomplished not by
hermit-like withdrawal with its silence and immobility, but by a system of
restless wandering, by the detachment of an impermanent dweller amongst
changing scenes. In this scheme he had perceived the means of passing
through life without suffering and almost without a single care in the
world—invulnerable because elusive.</p>
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