Hall staked five crowns.
âDo you know a soprano, Miss Farrant? I'm held up for a soprano. Mrs Wisecock hasn't the stage sense.'
âThank the Lord,' Anthony said, âI've bought my tickets.'
âBought your tickets?' Hall said sharply.
âOtherwise there'd be no London for yours truly. Do they include food with the fare?'
âNo drinks, my boy,' Gullie said.
Kate said: âYou've bought the tickets?' She thought: He's beaten them after all: only this tune to remember then, because it would never be repeated. Tony happy, the mist rising, the firelight doubled by the panes, the thin hum of the electric power. âGive me five'; in his hand a straight flush. âI'll double you.' He'll remember this, Kate thought; year after year he'll talk about tonight, playing poker with Krogh, drawing five cards, drawing a straight flush. The story going round the world, in how many clubs, always unbelieved. âDouble.'
âI go down,' Gullie said.
But already she had begun to plan how they might be together again. She knew she might have prayed; the temptation was there, to fall back on eternity, on other people's God, the emotional cry in the dumb breast, the nudity of confession: I love him more than anything in the world; no, inexact, go nearer truth: I love no one, nothing but him; therefore give him me, let me keep him; never mind what he wants, save me, the all-important me, from pain: do I call it pain, agony, parting here, parting there, messages on post-cards, the storm, the wires down, no more thought in common. But she wouldn't pray, she took what comfort and credit she could for not praying; it wasn't that one disbelieved in prayer; one never lost all one's belief in magic. It was that she preferred to plan, it was fairer, it wasn't loading the dice.
âDouble again.'
âI'll put you up five.'
âI'll go down,' Krogh said.
âDouble.'
âI'll call you,' Hall said.
âWell, you can't beat a straight flush.'
âNo,' Hall said, âI can't beat that.'
Anthony said: âThis'll take me across. I'll be able to have a good blind on this.'
Hall began to shuffle the cards again.
âI'm out,' Gullie said.
âWe've had enough,' Kate said. âIt'll take you all night to win that back, Mr Hall. Let's have another drink and go to bed.' Something in the sight of him sitting there, his prominent cuffs, his thin hands clutching the cards, irritated her. She said: âCheer up. You'll win it back another day. Was he always like this, Erik?' she asked. âAlways so serious?' She explained to Captain Gullie: âThey were almost boys together.'
âI've seen him in a false nose,' Krogh said, âbut I don't think it altered him.'
âWere the police after you, Mr Hall?'
Hall said sullenly: âIt was those festas they have. I believe in doing in Rome as the Romans â'
âMr Hall's getting classical,' Kate said. His malice across the table, like a small oppressive flame, danced in the corner of the eye. One wanted either to put it out or fan it to something larger.
Hall said: âI'm going home. Good night, Miss Farrant.'
âI'll walk back with you,' Anthony said.
âStay a bit, Captain Gullie. It's still quite early. Have another drink. Tell me, tell me,' Kate said, âoh, tell me about tartans, Captain Gullie.'
âThat reminds me,' Gullie said, dropping his voice, âof something that fellow Minty was telling me.'
âMinty?' Krogh asked. He rose from the table and joined them. âWhat's that about Minty?'
Hall stood in the doorway buttoning his coat. It was a little too tight in the waist; it constrained him. He said sharply: âDon't you worry, Mr Krogh.'
âAn odd untrustworthy fellow. Runs the old Harrovian Club here. Don't know how it got into his hands. The Minister can't stand him. He was trying to make out you were MacDonalds. Well, of course, I looked it up.'
âGood old Minty,' Anthony said. âGood-bye, Kate. I'm off early.'
âGood-bye.'
âGood-bye, Mr Krogh, and thanks for your help. You didn't really need me here. Good-bye, Gullie. See you in London one of these days, I expect.'
But she had no plan, and she couldn't let him go. She caught him up by the lift. Hall went down before him and he waited for her.
âWhat's up, old thing?'
Kate said: âThere are things I want to talk to you about.' She thought: Every day he'll forget her, but the idea gave her no comfort. (Every day he'll forget me.) She said: âI haven't seen much of you. There was a lot I wanted to say to you,' with desperate sentiment, âabout the old days.'
âThis time,' Anthony said, âI'll be a faithful correspondent. Three pages every Sunday.'
His bonhomie infuriated her; it flashed back at her from the long mirror-lined corridor, it grimaced sideways at her from the mirrored stairs, it sparkled from the lift's chromium doors. She said: âThat's the best I get, three weekly pages, when I've worked for you for years. Everything I've done was to help you, and now because a little bitch â' she despised her own tears; they were too cheap an appeal; she wouldn't dry them, wouldn't call attention to them, just let them drip across her face as if she'd walked through a storm without her hat.
âBut, Kate,' Anthony said, âI'm fond of you.' He glanced with hurried embarrassment down the lift shaft. âHall's waiting for me. I must be off.' He grabbed weakly at her hand. âI love you, Kate. Really I do. More than anyone in the world. But Loo. I'm in love with her. I'm crazy about her. You'd like her if you knew her, Kate.' He became reasonable and sententious. âLove and in love, Kate. There's the difference.'
âOh, go to hell,' Kate said, and ran back up the passage, smearing away her tears with her hand as she ran. She heard him shout: âComing, Hall,' down the shaft, ring for the lift. She stopped outside the door, cleaned and prepared her face as if she were wiping it free of Anthony.
When she opened the door, Krogh said: âWhere's Hall?' She was surprised by his sharpness and anxiety. She said: âHe's gone with Anthony.'
âIt's stuffy in here,' Krogh said. âHall smokes such bad cigarettes.' He threw up the double panes and leant out of the window. âI wanted Hall.'
âWell, I ought to be making tracks,' Captain Gullie remarked weakly, twisting his empty glass, drooping over the card-table, the ivory chips, the deep ash-tray crammed with damp butts.
âDon't go,' Kate said. âHave another drink.' She poured out three glasses, but Krogh didn't come. âHere's how,' she said like an echo of Anthony.
âFoggy,' Krogh said.
âYou might have sent them home in the car.'
He said sharply: âHall wanted to walk. He told me he wanted to walk.' He pulled down the window.
âA car's no good in one of these fogs,' Gullie said. âIt's quicker to walk. You might drive over into the lake before you knew where you were.' He began to deal out some cards. âDo you know the Imp of Mischief Patience, Miss Farrant?'
âI don't like Patience.'
âYou'll like this one. You've got to cover the knaves first, do you see? They are the Imps, ha, ha.'
âWhose note-case is that? Is it Anthony's?' Kate asked.
âNo,' Krogh said, âthat's Hall's. I saw it too late.'
âI shouldn't have thought Hall was one to leave his money about,' Gullie said. âDid you see how he held his cards, ha, ha. Close-fisted, what?' The idea tickled him no end; anything tickled Gullie; he enjoyed himself wherever he went with the reckless abandonment of a child; any table could set Gullie in a roar.
âThere'll be tears before night,' Kate said.
âEh, what's that?' Gullie said. He swerved gallantly away from the Imps of Mischief. âWhat's that, Miss Farrant?'
âWhat's the matter, Erik?' Kate said. âHave a drink. You're tired.'
âI'll buzz off,' Gullie said. âImp of Mischief, ha, ha.'
âNo, don't go,' Krogh said. âI don't want to go to bed yet. It's early.'
âThere's the lift.'
âHall's coming back for his money,' Gullie said. âLet's hide it.'
Kate said with bitter irritation: âWhat a little Imp of Mischief you are.'
But the lift stopped at the floor below.
âNearly got it out that time,' Gullie said, reshuffling the cards. âTried to teach a Frenchman once. Wasn't a bit of good. He always cheated. Can't see the fun of playing Patience if you cheat.'
Krogh suddenly slid open the great folding doors, walked through to his study, his bedroom. They could see him, past the collected editions, past the Milles sculpture, taking aspirin. âWhat is it, Erik?' Kate said.
âA headache.' He turned back towards them, tooth-mug in hand, and called through the two rooms: âWhat's this parcel?'
âTies,' Kate said.
âI've got enough ties, haven't I?'
âTony chose them for you this afternoon.'
âTony?' he said.
âOpen it. They are good ties if Tony chose them.'
âI don't need them. Send them back.'
âHe paid for them.'
Krogh said: âHe shouldn't have done that. You ought to have stopped him, Kate.'
âHe's grateful to you. He wanted to do something.'
Krogh said: âWhy does everyone give me things? I can buy them, can't I? Hall gives me cuff-links. I've got enough cuff-links.'
âAll right,' Kate said, âI'll send them back.' She came through to the bedroom and took the parcel. âYou've emptied the aspirin bottle. What's the matter, Erik?'
âOnly a headache.'
âLet me see what he bought.' She opened the parcel; they lay there in striped discretion; he had good taste in clothes. âYou might as well wear them.'
âNo. I've got enough. Send them back.'
She carried them through to her own room and laid them in a drawer between her vests. A lift-bell rang, she could hear Gullie in the drawing-room click the cards; she thought: I haven't a plan, he's gone, the last thing I said was âGo to hell.' Sadly she reproached herself for a lack of care: from childhood she had been brought up by servants who told fortunes in tea-cups, by nurses who threw salt over the left shoulder, to be careful of last words. Quarrel if you must, but make it up before night. âGo to hell,' that was for the beginning of an evening, not the end, for greeting, not for parting. In childhood one had been more careful; death was closer; one hadn't this hard grip on life. She touched the ties tenderly, tucking them in.
âThere's Hall,' Gullie said to them as they came back together, âwhat did I say? I knew he'd come back.' The lift stopped; it was Hall.
He came in hat in hand, thin and cold, narrow and unfriendly, the fog like dust in his red eyes. It had got in his throat. He was hoarse when he said: âI left my note-case.'
âThere it is, Hall,' Krogh said. He didn't seem to want to take it, smoothing his throat with his yellow-gloved hand; it was as if he wanted to say something, but no one would give him the cue.
âI'll walk home with you, Hall,' Gullie said, but it wasn't that.
âDid Anthony come back with you?' Kate said. She had the impression as he smoothed his throat of some great pain hopelessly demanding sympathy even from her, but she distrusted him and wouldn't give it. âIsn't he here?'
âNo,' Hall said, âI left him and came back.'
âHave a drink, Hall,' Krogh said.
âThank you,' Hall said. âIt gets your throat, out there. But here, with a drink,' he sketched a smile at them, roughly, unconvincingly, âeverything's all right again, everything's O.K.'
âHe'll be home now,' Kate said. âI'll just give him a ring.'
âDo you play Patience, Hall?' Gullie asked, laying out the Imps of Mischief.
âPatience? No,' Hall said, and âno,' the voice said, coming up the wire, âCaptain Farrant's not come in.'
âTell him,' she said, âto give me a ring when he comes in. His sister. Even if he's late. Tell him I'm waiting up to speak to him. Yes, however late.' She excused herself to them. âIt's a superstition.' She said with sad affection: âIt beats all. He's calling himself a captain now.'
PART VII
M
INTY
stood at the door, took the names, noted the wreaths: the huge wreath from Krogh, the small one from Laurin; he noticed that there was none from Kate, none from Hall. The coffin slid smoothly along its runway beneath the angular crucifix. The doors opened to receive it; the flapping of the flames was picked up by the microphone beside the altar and dispersed through the great bleak building. Minty crossed himself: they might just as well have left the body in the water. He had a horror of this death by fire.