irl of my year." "She hasn't changed." "You have, Charles. So lean and grim, not at all the pretty boy Sebastian brought home with him. Harder, too." "And you're softer." "Yes, I think so ... and very patient now." She was not yet thirty, but was approaching the zenith of her loveliness, all her rich promise abundantly fulfilled. She had lost that fashionable, spidery look; the head that I used to think Quattrocento, which had sat a little oddly on her, was now part of herself and not at all Florentine--not connected in any way with painting or the arts or with anything except herself, so that it would be idle to itemize and dissect her beauty, which was her own essence, and could only be known in her and by her authority and in the love I was soon to have for her. Time had wrought another change, too; not for her the sly, complacent smile of La Gioconda; the years had been more than "the sound of lyres and flutes," and had saddened her. She seemed to say, "Look at me. I have done my share. I am beautiful. It is something quite out of the ordinary, this beauty of mine. I am made for delight. But what do I get out of it? Where is my reward?" That was the change in her from ten years ago; that, indeed, was her reward, this haunting, magical sadness which spoke straight to the heart and struck silence; it was the completion of her beauty. "Sadder, too," I said. "Oh yes, much sadder." My wife was in exuberant spirits when, two hours later, I returned to the cabin. "I've had to do everything. How does it look?" We had been given, without paying more for it, a large suite of rooms, one so large, in fact, that it was seldom booked except by directors of the line, and on most voyages, the chief purser admitted, was given to those he wished to honour. (My wife was adept in achieving such small advantages, first impressing the impressionable with her chic and my celebrity and, superiority once firmly established, changing quickly to a pose of almost flirtatious affability.) In token of her appreciation the chief purser had been asked to our party and he, in token of his appreciation, had sent before him the life-size effigy of a swan, moulded in ice and filled with caviar. This chilly piece of magnificence now dominated the room, standing on a table in the centre, thawing gently, dripping at the beak into its silver dish. The flowers of the morning delivery hid as much as possible of the panelling (for this room was a miniature of the monstrous hall above). "You must get dressed at once. Where have you been all this time?" "Talking to Julia Mottram." "D'you know her? Oh, of course, you were a friend of the dipso brother. Goodness, her glamour!" "She greatly admires your looks, too." "She used to be a girl friend of Boy's." "Surely not?" "He always said so." "Have you considered," I asked, "how your guests are going to eat this caviar?" "I have. It's insoluble. But there's all this" -- she revealed some trays of glassy tit-bits -- "and anyway, people always find ways of eating things at parties. D'you remember we once ate potted shrimps with a paper knife?" "Did we?" "Darling, it was the night you popped the question." "As I remember, you popped." "Well, the night we got engaged. But you haven't said how you like the arrangements." The arrangements, apart from the swan and the flowers, consisted of a steward already inextricably trapped in the corner behind an improvised bar, and another steward, tray in hand, in comparative freedom. "A cinema actor's dream," I said. "Cinema actors," said my wife; "that's what I want to talk about." She came with me to my dressing-room and talked while I changed. It had occurred to her that, with my interest in architecture, my true metier was designing scenery for the films, and she had asked two Hollywood magnates to the party with whom she wished to ingratiate me. We returned to the sitting-room. "Darling, I believe you've taken against my bird. Don't be beastly about it in front of the purser. It was sweet of him to think of it. Besides, you know, if you had read about it in a description of a sixteenth-century banquet in Venice, you would have said those were the days to live." "In sixteenth-century Venice it would have been a somewhat different shape." "Here is Father Christmas. We were just in raptures over your swan." The chief purser came into the room and shook hands powerfully. "Dear Lady Celia," he said, "if you'll put on your warmest clothes and come an expedition into the cold storage with me to-morrow, I can show you a whole Noah's Ark of such objects. The toast will be along in a minute. They're keeping it hot." "Toast!" said my wife, as though this was something beyond the dreams of gluttony. "Do you hear that, Charles? Toast." Soon the guests began to arrive; there was nothing to delay them. "Celia," they said, "what a grand cabin and what a beautiful swan!" and, for all that it was one of the largest in the ship, our room was soon painfully crowded; they began to put out their cigarettes in the little pool of ice-water which now surrounded the swan. The purser made a sensation, as sailors like to do, by predicting a storm. "How can you be so beastly?" asked my wife, conveying the flattering suggestion that not only the cabin and the caviar, but the waves, too, were at his command. "Anyway, storms don't affect a ship like this, do they?" "Might hold us back a bit." "But it wouldn't make us sick?" "Depends if you're a good sailor. I'm always sick in storms, ever since I was a boy." "I don't believe it. He's just being sadistic. Come over here, there's something I want to show you." It was the latest photograph of her children. "Charles hasn't even seen Caroline yet. Isn't it thrilling for him?" There were no friends of mine there, but I knew about a third of the party, and talked away civilly enough. An elderly woman said to me, "So you're Charles. I feel I know you through and through, Celia's talked so much about you." Through and through, I thought. Through and through is a long way, madam. Can you indeed see into those dark places where my own eyes seek in vain to guide me? Can you tell me, dear Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander -- if I am correct in thinking that is how I heard my wife speak of you -- why it is that at this moment, while I talk to you, here, about my forthcoming exhibition, I am thinking all the time only of when Julia will come? Why can I talk like this to you, but not to her? Why have I already set her apart from humankind, and myself with her? What is going on in those secret places of my spirit with which you make so free? What is cooking, Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander? Still Julia did not come, and the noise of twenty people in that tiny room, which was so large that no one hired it, was the noise of a multitude. Then I saw a curious thing. There was a little red-headed man whom no one seemed to know, a dowdy fellow quite unlike the general run of my wife's guests; he had been standing by the caviar for twenty minutes eating as fast as a rabbit. Now he wiped his mouth with his handkerchief and, on the impulse apparently, leaned forward and dabbed the beak of the swan, removing the drop of water that had been swelling there and would soon have fallen. Then he looked round furtively to see if he had been observed, caught my eye, and giggled nervously. "Been wanting to do that for a long time," he said. "Bet you don't know how many drops to the minute. I do, I counted." "I've no idea." "Guess. Tanner if you're wrong; half a dollar if you're right. That's fair." "Three," I said. "Coo, you're a sharp one. Been counting 'em yourself." But he showed no inclination to pay this debt. Instead he said: "How d'you figure this out? I'm an Englishman born and bred, but this is my first time on the Atlantic." "You flew out perhaps?" "No, nor over it." "Then I presume you went round the world and came across the Pacific." "You are a sharp one and no mistake. I've made quite a bit getting into arguments over that one." "What was your route?" I asked, wishing to be agreeable. "Ah, that'd be telling. Well, I must skedaddle. So long." "Charles," said my wife, "this is Mr. Kramm, of Interastral Films." "So you are Mr. Charles Ryder," said Mr. Kramm. "Yes." "Well, well, well." He paused. I waited. "The purser here says we're heading for dirty weather. What d'you know about that?" "Far less than the purser." "Pardon me, Mr. Ryder, I don't quite get you." "I mean I know less than the purser." "Is that so? Well, well, well. I've enjoyed our talk very much. I hope that it will be the first of many." An Englishwoman said: "Oh, that swan! Six weeks in America has given me an absolute phobia of ice. Do tell me, how did it feel meeting Celia again after two years? I know I should feel indecently bridal. But Celia's never quite got the orange blossom out of her hair, has she?" Another woman said: "Isn't it heaven saying good-bye and I knowing we shall meet again in half an hour and go on meeting every half-hour for days?" Our guests began to go, and each on leaving informed me ofj something my wife had promised to bring me to in the near future; it was the theme of the evening that we should all be seeing a lot of each other, that we had formed one of those molecular systems that physicists can illustrate. At last the swan was wheeled out, too, and I said to my wife, "Julia never came." "No, she telephoned. I couldn't hear what she said, there was such a noise going on--something about a dress. Quite lucky really, there wasn't room for a cat. It was a lovely party, wasn't it? Did you hate it very much? You behaved beautifully and looked so distinguished. Who was your red-baked chum?" "No chum of mine." "How very peculiar! Did you say anything to Mr. Kramm about working in Hollywood?" "Of course not." "Oh, Charles, you are a worry to me. It's not enough just to stand about looking distinguished and a martyr for Art. Let's go to dinner. We're at the Captain's table. I don't suppose he'll dine down to-night, but it's polite to be fairly punctual." By the time that we reached the table the rest of the party had arranged themselves. On either side of the Captain's empty chair sat Julia and Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander; besides them there were an English diplomat and his wife, Senator Stuyvesant Oglander, and an American clergyman at present totally isolated between two pairs of empty chairs. This clergyman later described himself -- redundantly it seemed -- as an Episcopalian Bishop. Husbands and wives sat together here. My wife was confronted with a quick decision, and although the steward attempted to direct us otherwise, sat so that she had the Senator and I the Bishop. Julia gave us both a little dismal signal of sympathy. "I'm miserable about the party," she said, "my beastly maid totally disappeared with every dress I have. She only turned up half an hour ago. She'd been playing ping-pong." "I've been telling the Senator what he missed," said Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander. "Wherever Celia is, you'll find she knows all the significant people." "On my right," said the Bishop, "a significant couple are expected. They take all their meals in their cabin except when they have been informed in advance that the Captain will be present." We were a gruesome circle; even my wife's high social spirit faltered. At moments I heard bits of her conversation. "... an extraordinary little red-haired man. Captain Foulenough in person." "But I understood. you to say, Lady Celia, that you unacquainted with him." "I mean he was like Captain Foulenough." "I begin to comprehend. He impersonated this friend of yourtl in order to come to your party." "No, no. Captain Foulenough is simply a comic character." "There seems to have been nothing very amusing about this other man. Your friend is a comedian?" "No, no. Captain Foulenough is an imaginary character in an English paper. You know, like your 'Popeye.'" The Senator laid down knife and fork. "To recapitulate: an impostor came to your party and you admitted him because of a fancied resemblance to a fictitious character in a cartoon." "Yes, I suppose that was it really." The Senator looked at his wife as much as to say: "Significant" people, huh!" I heard Julia across the table trying to trace, for the benefit of the diplomat, the marriage-connections of her Hungarian and Italian cousins. The diamonds in her hair and on her fingers flashed with fire, but her hands were nervously rolling little balls, of crumb, and her starry head drooped in despair. The Bishop told me of the goodwill mission on which he was travelling to Barcelona ... "a very, very valuable work of clearance has been performed, Mr. Ryder. The time has now come to rebuild on broader foundations. I have made it my aim to reconcile the so-called Anarchists and the so-called Communists, and with that in view I and my committee have digested all the available literature of the subject. Our conclusion, Mr. Ryder, is unanimous. There is no fundamental diversity between the two ideologies. It is a matter of personalities, Mr. Ryder, and what personalities have put asunder personalities can unite. . . ." On the other side I heard: -- "And may I make so bold as to ask what institutions sponsored your husband's expedition?" The diplomat's wife bravely engaged the Bishop across the gulf that separated them. "And what language will you speak when you get to Barcelona?" "The language of Reason and Brotherhood, madam," and, turning back to me, "The speech of the coming century is in thoughts not in words. Do you not agree, Mr. Ryder?" "Yes," I said. "Yes." "What are words?" said the Bishop. "What indeed?" "Mere conventional symbols, Mr. Ryder, and this is an age rightly sceptical of conventional symbols." My mind reeled; after the parrot-house fever of my wife's party, and the deep, unplumbed emotions of the afternoon, after all the exertions of my wife's pleasures in New York, after the months of solitude in the steaming, green shadows of the jungle, this was too much. I felt like Lear on the heath, like the Duchess of Main bayed by madmen. I summoned cataracts and hurri-canoes, and as if by conjUry the call was immediately answered. For some time now, though whether it was a mere trick of the nerves I did not then know, I had felt a recurrent and persistently growing motion -- a heave and shudder of the large dining-room as of the breast of a man in deep sleep. Now my wife turned to me and said: "Either I am a little drunk or it's getting rough," and even as she spoke we found ourselves leaning sideways in our chairs; there was a crash and tinkle of falling cutlery by the wall, and on our table the wine-glasses all together toppled and rolled over, while each of us steadied the plate and forks and looked at the others with expressions that varied between frank horror in the diplomat's wife and relief in Julia. The gale which, unheard, unseen, unfelt, in our enclosed and insulated world, had for an hour been-mounting over us, had now veered and fallen full on our bows. Silence followed the crash, then a high, nervous babble of laughter. Stewards laid napkins on the pools of spilt wineJ We tried to resume the conversation, but all were waiting, as the little ginger man had watched the drop swell and fall from the swan's beak, for the next great blow; it came, heavier than the last. "This is where I say good-night to you all," said the diplomat's wife, rising. Her husband led her to their cabin. The dining-room was emptying fast. Soon only Julia, my wife and I were left at the table, and telepathically, Julia said, "Like King Lear." "Only each of us is all three of them." "What can you mean?" asked my wife. "Lear, Kent, Fool." "Oh, dear, it's like that agonizing Foulenough conversation over again. Don't try and explain." "I doubt if I could," I said. Another climb, another vast drop. The stewards were at work making things fast, shutting things up, hustling away unstable ornaments. "Well, we've finished dinner and set a fine example of British phlegm," said my wife. "Let's go and see what's on." Once on our way to the lounge we had all three to cling to a pillar; when we got there we found it almost deserted; the band played but no one danced; the tables were set for tombola but no one bought a card, and the ship's officer, who made a ' specialty of calling the numbers with all the patter of the lower j deck -- "sweet sixteen and never been kissed -- key of the door, twenty-one -- clickety-click, sixty-six" -- was idly talking to his i colleagues; there were a score of scattered novel readers, a few games of bridge, some brandy drinking in the smoking-room, but all our guests of two hours before had disappeared. The three of us sat for a little by the empty dance floor; my wife was full of schemes by which, without impoliteness, we could move to another table in the dining-room. "It's crazy to go to the restaurant," she said, "and pay extra for exactly the same dinner. Only film people go there, anyway. I don't see why we should be made to." Presently she said: "It's making my head ache and I'm tired, anyway. I'm going to bed." Julia went with her. I walked round the ship, on one of the covered decks where the wind howled and the spray leaped up from the darkness and smashed white and brown against the glass screen; men were posted to keep the passengers off the open decks. Then I, too, went below. In my dressing-room everything breakable had been stowed away, the door to the cabin was hooked open, and my wife called plaintively from within. "I feel terrible. I didn't know a ship of this size could pitch like this," she said, and her eyes were full of consternation and resentment, like those of a woman who, at the end of her time, at length realizes that however luxurious the nursing home, and however well paid the doctor, her labour is inevitable; and the lift and fall of the ship came regularly as the pains of childbirth. I slept next door; or, rather, I lay there between dreaming and waking. In a narrow bunk, on a hard mattress, there might have been rest, but here the beds were broad and buoyant; I collected what cushions I could find and tried to wedge myself firm, but through the night I turned with each swing and twist of the ship -- she was rolling now as well as pitching -- and my head rang with the creak and thud which now succeeded the hum of fine weather. Once, an hour before dawn, my wife appeared like a ghost in the doorway, supporting herself with either hand on the jambs, saying: "Are you awake? Can't you do something? Can't you get something from the doctor?" I rang for the night steward, who had a draught ready prepared, which comforted her a little. And all night between dreaming and waking I thought of Julia; in my brief dreams she took a hundred fantastic and terrible and obscene forms, but in my waking thoughts she returned with her sad, starry head just as I had seen her at dinner. After first light I slept for an hour or two, then awoke clearheaded, with a joyous sense of anticipation. The wind had dropped a little, the steward told me, but was still blowing hard and there was a very heavy swell; "which there's nothing worse than a heavy swell," he said, "for the If enjoyment of the passengers. There's not many breakfasts wanted this morning." I looked in at my wife, found her sleeping, and closed the door I between us; then I ate salmon kedgeree and cold Bradenham ham and telephoned for a barber to come and shave me. "There's a lot of stuff in the sitting-room for the lady," said the steward; "shall I leave it for the time?" I went to see. There was a second delivery of cellophane parcels from the shops on board, some ordered by radio from ' 1 friends in New York whose secretaries had failed to remind them of our departure in time, some by our guests as they left the cocktail party. It was no day for flower vases; I told him to leave them on the floor and then, struck by the thought, removed the car^ from Mr. Kramm's roses and sent them with my love to Julia. She telephoned while I was being shaved. "What a deplorable thing to do, Charles! How unlike you!" "Don't you like them?" "What can I do with roses on a day like this?" "Smell them." There was a pause and a rustle of unpacking. "They've absolutely no smell at all." "What have you had for breakfast?" "Muscat grapes and cantaloup." "When shall I see you?" "Before lunch. I'm busy till then with a masseuse." "A masseuse?" "Yes, isn't it peculiar. I've never had one before, except once when I hurt my shoulder hunting. What is it about being on a boat that makes everyone behave like a film star?" "I don't." "How about these very embarrassing roses ?" The barber did his work with extraordinary dexterity -- indeed, with agility, for he stood like a swordsman in a ballet sometimes on the point of one foot, sometimes on the other, lightly flicking the lather off his blade and swooping back to my chin as the ship righted herself; I should not have dared use a safety razor on myself. The telephone rang again. It was my wife. "How are you, Charles ?" "Tired." "Aren't you coming to see me ?" "I came once. I'll be in again." I .brought her the flowers from the sitting-room; they completed the atmosphere of a maternity ward which she had managed to create in the cabin; the stewardess had the air of a midwife, standing by the bed, a pillar of starched linen and composure. My wife turned her head on the pillow and smiled wanly; she stretched out a bare arm and caressed with the tips of her fingers the cellophane and silk ribbons of the largest bouquet. "How sweet people are," she said faintly, as though the gale were a private misfortune of her own which the world in its love was condoling. "I take it you're not getting up." "Oh no, Mrs. Clark is being so sweet." She was always quick to get servants' names. "Don't 'bother. Come in sometimes and tell me what's going on." "Now, now, dear," said the stewardess, "the less we are disturbed to-day the better." My wife seemed to make a sacred, female rite even of seasickness. Julia's cabin, I knew, was somewhere below ours. I waited for her by the lift on the main deck; when she came we walked once round the promenade; I held the rail, she took my other arm. It was hard going; through the streaming glass we saw a distorted world of grey sky and black water. When the ship rolled heavily I swung her round so that she could hold the rail with her other hand; the howl of the wind was subdued, but the whole ship creaked with strain. We made the circuit once; then Julia said: "It's no good. That woman beat hell out of me, and I feel limp, anyway. Let's sit down." The great bronze doors of the lounge had torn away from their hooks and were swinging free with the roll of the ship; regularly and, it seemed, irresistibly, first one, then the other, opened and shut; they paused at the completion of each half circle, began to move slowly and finished fast with a resounding-clash. There was no real risk in passing them, except of slipping and being caught by that swift, final blow; there was ample time to walk through unhurried, but there was something forbidding in the sight of that great weight of uncontrolled metal, flapping to and fro, which might have made a timid man flinch or skip through too quickly; I rejoiced to feel Julia's hand perfectly steady on my arm and know, as I walked beside her, that she was wholly undismayed. "Bravo," said a man sitting near by. "I confess I went round the other way. I didn't like the look of those doors somehow. They've been trying to fix them all the morning." There were few people about that day, and that few seemed bound together by a camaraderie of reciprocal esteem; they did nothing except sit rather glumly in their armchairs, drink occasionally and exchange congratulations on not being seasick. "You're the first lady I've seen," said the man. "I'm very lucky." "We are very lucky," he said, with a movement which began as a bow and ended as a lurch forward to his knees, as the blotting-paper floor dipped steeply between us. The roll carried us away from him, clinging together but still on our feet, and we quickly sat where our dance led us, on the further side, in isolation; a web of life-lines had been stretched across the lounge, and we seemed like boxers, roped into the ring. The steward approached. "Your usual, sir? Whiskey and tepid water, I think. And for the lady? Might I suggest a nip of champagne?" "D'you know, the awful thing is I would like champagne very much?" said Julia. "What a life of pleasure -- roses, half an hour with a female pugilist, and now champagne!" "I wish you wouldn't go on about the roses. It wasn't my idea in the first place. Someone sent them to Celia." "Oh, that's quite different. It lets you out completely. But it makes my massage worse." "I was shaved in bed." "I'm glad about the roses," said Julia. "Frankly, they were a shock. They made me think we were starting the day on quite the wrong footing." I knew what she meant, and in that moment felt as though I had shaken off some of the dust and grit of ten dry years; then and always, however she spoke to me -- in half sentences, single words, stock phrases of contemporary jargon, in scarcely perceptible movements of eyes or lips or hands -- however inexpressible her thought, however quick and far it had glanced from the matter in hand, however deep it had plunged, as it often did, straight from the surface to the depths, I knew; even that day when I still stood on the extreme verge of love, I knew what she meant. We drank our wine and soon our new friend came lurching towards us down the life-line. "Mind if I join you? Nothing like a bit of rough weather for bringing people together. This is my tenth crossing, and I've never seen anything like it. I can see you are an experienced sailor, young lady." "No. As a matter of fact, I've never been at sea before except coming to New York and, of course, crossing the Channel. I don't feel sick, thank God, but I feel tired. I thought at first it was only the massage, but I'm coming to the conclusion it's the ship." "My wife's in a terrible way. She's an experienced sailor. Only shows, doesn't it?" He joined us at luncheon, and I did not mind his being there; he had clearly taken a fancy to Julia, and he thought we were man and wife; this misconception and his gallantry seemed.in some way to bring her and me closer together. "Saw you two last night at the Captain's table," he said, "with all the nobs." "Very, dull nobs." "If you ask me, nobs always are. When you get a storm like this you find out what people are really made of." "You have a predilection for good sailors?" "Well, put like that I don't know that I do--what I mean is, it makes for getting together." "Yes." "Take us for example. But for this we might never have met. I've had some very romantic encounters at sea in my time. If the lady will excuse me, I'd like to tell you about a little adventure I had in the Gulf of Lyons when I was younger than I am now." We were both weary; lack of sleep, the incessant din and the strain every movement required, wore us down. We spent that afternoon apart in our cabins. I slept, and when I awoke the sea was as high as ever, inky clouds swept over us and the glass streamed still with water, but I had grown used to the storm in my sleep, had made its rhythm mine, had become part of it, so that I arose strongly and confidently and found Julia already up and in the same temper. "What d'you think?" she said. "That man's giving a little 'get-together party' to-night in the smoking-room for all the good sailors. He asked me to bring my husband." "Are we going?" "Of course. ... I wonder if I ought to feel like the lady our friend met on the way to Barcelona. I don't, Charles, not a bit'." There were eighteen people at the "get-together party"; we had nothing in common except immunity from seasickness. We drank champagne, and presently our host said: "Tell you what, I've got a roulette wheel. Trouble is we can't go to my cabin on account of the wife, and we aren't allowed to play in public." So the party adjourned to my sitting-room and we played for low stakes until late into the night, when Julia left and our host had drunk too much wine to be surprised that she and I were not in the same quarters. When all but he had gone he fell asleep in his chair, and I left him there. It was the last I saw of him, for later, so the steward told me when he came from returning the roulette things to the man's cabin, he broke his collar-bone, falling in the corridor, and was taken to the ship's hospital. All next day Julia and I spent together without interruption; talking, scarcely moving, held in our chairs by the swell of the sea. After luncheon the last hardy passengers went to rest and we were alone as though the place had been cleared for us, as though tact on a Titanic scale had sent everyone tiptoeing out to leave us to one another. The bronze doors of the lounge had been fixed, but not before two seamen had been injured and removed to the sick-bay. They had tried various devices, lashing with ropes and, later, when these failed, with steel hawsers, but there was nothing to which they could be made fast; finally, they drove wooden wedges under them, catching them in the brief moment of repose when they were full open, and these held them. When, before dinner, she went to her cabin to get ready (no one dressed that night) and I came with her, uninvited, unopposed, expected, and behind closed doors took her in my arms and first kissed her, there was no alteration from the mood of the afternoon. Later, turning it over in my mind, as I turned in my bed with the rise and fall of the ship, through the long, lonely, drowsy night, I recalled the courtships of the past, dead, ten years; how, knotting my tie before setting out, putting the gardenia in my buttonhole, I would plan my evening and think, At such and such a time, at such and such an opportunity, I shall cross the start-line and open my attack for better or worse; this phase of the battle has gone on long enough, I would think; a decision must be reached. With Julia there were no phases, no start-line, no tactics at all. But later that night when she went to bed and I followed her to her door she stopped me. "No, Charles, not yet. Perhaps never. I don't know. I don't know if I want love." Then something, some surviving ghost from those dead ten years--for one cannot die, even for a little, without some loss -- made me say, "Love? I'm not asking for love." "Oh yes, Charles, you are," she said, and putting up her hand gently stroked my cheek; then shut her door. And I reeled back, first on one wall, then on the other, of the long, softly lighted, empty corridor; for the storm, it appeared, had the form of a ring. All day we had been sailing through its still centre; now we were once more in the full fury of the wind -- and that night was to be rougher than the one before. Ten hours of talking: what had we to say? Plain fact mostly, the record of our two lives, so long widely separate, now being knit to one. Through all that storm-tossed night I rehearsed what she had told me; she was no longer the alternate succubus and starry vision of the night before; she had given all that was transferable of her past into my keeping. She told me, as I have already retold, of her courtship and marriage; she told me, as though fondly turning the pages of an old nursery-book, of her childhood; and I lived long, sunny days with her in the meadows, with Nanny Hawkins on her camp stool and Cordelia asleep in the pram, slept quiet nights under the dome with the religious pictures fading round the cot as the nightlight burned low and the embers settled in the grate. She told me of her life with Rex and of the secret, vicious, disastrous escapade that had taken her to New York. She, too, had had her dead years. She told me of her long struggle with Rex as to whether she should have a child; at first she wanted one, but learned after a year that an operation was needed to make it possible; by that time Rex and she were out of love, but he still wanted his child, and when at last she consented, it was born dead. "Rex has never been unkind to me intentionally," she said. "It's just that he isn't a real person at all; he's just a few faculties of a man highly developed; the rest simply isn't there. He couldn't imagine why it hurt me to find, two months after we came back to London from our honeymoon, that he was still keeping up with Brenda Champion." "I was glad when I found Celia was unfaithful," I said. "I felt it was all right for me to dislike her." "Is she? Do you? I'm glad. I don't like her either. Why did you marry her?" "Physical attraction. Ambition. Everyone agrees she's the ideal wife for a painter. Loneliness, missing Sebastian." "You loved him, didn't you?" "Oh yes. He was the forerunner." Julia understood. The ship creaked and shuddered, rose and fell. My wife called to me from the next room: "Charles, are you there?" "Yes." "I've been asleep such a long while. What time is it?" "Half-past three." "It's no better, is it?" "Worse." "I feel a little better, though. D'you think they'd bring me some tea or something if I rang the bell?" I got her some tea and biscuits from the night steward. "Did you have an amusing evening?" "Everyone's seasick." "Poor Charles. It was going to have been such a lovely trip, too. It may be better to-morrow." I turned out the light and shut the door between us. Waking and dreaming, through the strain and creak and heave of the long night, flat on my back with my arms and legs spread wide to check the roll, and my eyes open to the darkness, I lay thinking of Julia. ". . . We thought Papa might come back to England after Mummy died, or that he might marry again, but he lives just as he did. Rex and I often go to see him now. I've grown fond of him. . . . Sebastian's disappeared completely . . . Cordelia's in Spain with an ambulance . . . Bridey leads his own extraordinary life. He wanted to shut Brideshead after Mummy died, but Papa wouldn't have it for some reason, so Rex and I live there now, and Bridey has two rooms up in the dome, next to Nanny Hawkins, part of the old nurseries. He's like a character from Chekhov. One meets him sometimes coming out of the library or on the stairs -- I never know when he's at home -- and now and then- he suddenly comes in to dinner like a ghost quite unexpectedly. , ". . . Oh, Rex's parties! Politics and money. They can't do anything except for money; if they walk round the lake they have to make bets about how many swans they see ... sitting up till two, amusing Rex's girls, hearing them gossip, rattling away endlessly on the backgammon board while the men play cards and smoke cigars. The cigar smoke ... I can smell it in my hair when I wake up in the morning; it's in my clothes when I dress at night. Do I smell of it now? D'you think that woman who rubbed me felt it in my skin? ". . . At first I used to stay away with Rex in his friends' houses. He doesn't make me any more. He was ashamed of me when he found I didn't cut the kind of figure he wanted, ashamed of himself for having been taken in. I wasn't at all the article he'd bargained for. He can't see the point of me, but whenever v he's made up his mind there isn't a point and he's begun to feel comfortable, he gets a surprise -- some man, or even woman, he respects takes a fancy to me and he suddenly sees that there is a whole world of things we understand and he doesn't. . . . He was upset when I went away. He'll be delighted to have me , back. I was faithful to him until this last thing came along. There's nothing like a good upbringing. Do you know last year, when I thought I was going to have a child, I'd decided to have it brought up a Catholic? I hadn't thought about religion before; I haven't since; but just at that time, when I was waiting for the birth, I thought, 'That's one thing I can give her. It doesn't seem to have done me much good, but my child shall have it.' It was odd, wanting to give something one had lost oneself. Then, in the end, I couldn't even give that: I couldn't even give her life. I never saw her; I was too ill to know what was going on, and afterwards for a long time, until now, I didn't want to speak about her -- she was a daughter, so Rex didn't so much mind her being dead. "I've been punished a little for marrying Rex. You see, I can't get all that sort of thing out of my mind, quite -- Death, Judgment, Heaven, Hell, Nanny Hawkins, and the Catechism. It becomes part of oneself, if they give it one early enough. And yet I wanted my child to have it. ... Now I suppose I shall be punished for what I've just done. Perhaps that is why you and I are here together like this . . . part of a plan." That was almost the last thing she said to me -- "part of a plan" -- before we went below and parted at her cabin door. Next day the wind had again dropped, and again we were wallowing in the swell. The talk was less of seasickness now than of broken bones; people had been thrown about in the night, and there had been many nasty accidents on bathroom floors. That day, because we had talked so much the day before and because what we had to say needed few words, we spoke little. We had books; Julia found a game she liked. When after long silences we spoke, our thoughts, we found, had kept pace together side by side. Once I said, "You are standing guard over your sadness." "It's all I have earned. You said yesterday. My wages." "An I.O.U. from life. A promise to pay on demand." Rain ceased at midday; at evening the clouds dispersed and the sun, astern of us, suddenly broke into the lounge where we sat, putting all the lights to shame. "Sunset," said Julia, "the end of our day." She rose and, though the roll and pitch of the ship seemed unabated, led me up to the boat-deck. She put her arm through mine and her hand into mine, in my great-coat pocket. The deck was dry and empty, swept only by the wind of the ship's speed. As we made our halting, laborious way forward, away from the 1 flying smuts of the smoke-stack, we were alternately jostled together, then strained, nearly sundered, arms and fingers interlocked as I held the rail and Julia clung to me, thrust together again, drawn apart; then, in a plunge deeper than the rest, I found myself