Authors: H.E. Bates
âCould I cut across the field?' he said.
âYou could,' she said, âif you want to land in the river. Which way did you come?'
âI walked from the station.'
âYou should have got the bus and asked,' she said. âThen they'd have put you down at Benacre.'
âI thought I'd like the walk,' he said.
She plunged the hay-fork into hot ash again, pulling half-burnt cakes of chaff out of the centre of the fire. One of them rolled like a slow fire-ball on to the singed ash-dusted stubble as she said:
âYou'd better stand back if you don't want to get your shoes burnt.'
That was the next thing she always looked for. Hands and hair and then shoes. Shoes were the things that had character. You could tell by the way a man laced his
shoes or polished them or kept them repaired or even by what shape they were whether he was a careful man or a mean one or just slovenly or vain.
His own were rather like his hair: town shoes, smooth and black and well-kept. They were already dusted by a fine powder of chaff-ash and she looked away in irritation. They were good, clean, well-tended shoes and she was annoyed by the dust on them as she might have been annoyed by the dust of his hair flaking down on his shoulders.
Looking away at the fire, she said:
âYou're looking for Jean Godden, aren't you?'
âThat's right. Howââ'
âI'm her sister,' she said. âI'm Doreen.'
He seemed to look at her for the first time. Her face was flushed under the pale blue eyes with blotches of redness from the bluster of wind and the heat of fire. She had a plain white scarf tied tightly back over her head, giving her hair the impression of being whipped severely and sternly back. Her legs were shapeless in short turn-down gum-boots, like a fisherwoman's, and in denim trousers the colour of light brown cow-hide.
âI wouldn't have known it,' he said.
The wind seemed to blow a shadow of fury across her face. No, you wouldn't have known it, she thought. I'm that much older. Nearly forty. On the shelf, past it: that's what you were thinking. She stabbed at the fire again, moving from one heap to another, rolling fireballs of chaff about the white-blue seething ashes and the running tongues of flame.
âI thought you were coming last Sunday?' she said.
âI was,' he said. âThen I couldn't get my day off. I had to work the week-end.'
âShe waited all day. She didn't know what to do with herself.'
âI had to work,' he said. âThere was no way of letting her know.'
âYou couldn't get away with that with some girls,' she said.
With me for instance, she thought.
He was standing too near the fire again and as she pushed past him, almost brushing him with the fork-handle, a turn of wind took all the smoke of the three fires upward in a single spiral column that turned in air and doubled back again, plunging down into the central core of ashes so that they grinned, red and teeth-like, in the fanning wind.
âShe knows I'm coming today, doesn't she?' he said.
âI expect so. She doesn't tell me everything.'
She looked up at the sky. Clouds were curling up against each other, low and dirty, not unlike reflections in deeper uglier blue of the descending smoke of the fires.
âThe wind's gone up the hill,' she said. âIt'll rain before you know where you are. You'd better get down to Benacre while it's dry.'
âAre you going down?'
âI shall do. In a bitââ'
âThen I'll wait for you,' he said.
She swung round and said:
âYou needn't wait for me. Get on while you've got the chance. I'm used to it. You can cut across to the gate thereââ'
âI'd rather wait,' he said. âI'm in no hurry.'
âThat's a compliment to somebody,' she said.
Her eyes, as she turned, were held in a frown. Then it lifted. Smoke blew across her face in a long wriggling just like the ghost of an escaping snake and when it cleared again her eyes were fixed with a sort of thoughtful transparence on the central grinning portions of fire. The glow seemed to consume some of her hardness and she said:
âWeren't you going to stay the night? Where are your things?'
âI left my bag over by the gate,' he said.
âYou deserve to get it picked up by somebody then, that's all. There's people going by there all the time. You never know who's about.'
âThere's nothing in it to matter much,' he said.
âOh! well,' she said, âif that's how you look at it.'
In a moment she was moving again from fire to fire, raking and stabbing, letting in wind that woke the chaff to grinning eyes and bright yellow flags of flame.
âBeen threshing?' he said.
She wanted to say âIt looks like it, doesn't it?' then she was unpredictably restrained by something, and she remembered her sister, at home in the kitchen, ironing a brown and yellow dress. She said: âOh! weeks ago. We got done early. This was just the day for burning chaff, that's all.'
The dress was tight in the waist and had one of those wide black cummerbunds that women were wearing now. It was full about the hips and the ground-colour was a warm and lively brown, the colour of some autumn leaves, with sprigs of yellow tendril-borne
flowers all over it, very delicate and small. It was the sort of dress she could never have chosen for herself. She always went wrong somewhere. The brown would have looked like furniture polish and the yellow crude and brassy, like dandelions.
She hadn't the taste of her sister. Things never came off for her. She hadn't the luck either. She hadn't the way of not seeming to want men, the cool, aloof, irresponsible touch.
âThere's a spit of rain,' he said, and she laughed, very short and taunting, for the first time.
âYou'll look well if she's not there when you get there,' she said.
âOh! she'll be thereâshe said she would.'
âOh! will she? Supposing she isn't? You take yourself for granted, don't you? You let her down on Sunday.'
âI didn't let her down.'
âWell, something like it. It didn't make her feel any sweeter.'
âWhat would you do, then?' he said.
âI'd pitchfork anybody out, quick,' she said, âif they let me down,' and she made the gesture with her fork above the fire, scattering ash and smoke and chaff and a few flapping flames that seemed to turn dark orange, above the ash, in the darking afternoon.
He did not speak and she turned quickly to see if her taunting had touched him at all. His face was flushed. She felt amused in a confident sort of way about that. His hands were in his trousers' pockets, deep, so that she could not tell if they were clenched or open. Wind had disturbed his hair, raking up a few thin separate strands, exactly like the separations in a feather. His
shoes were almost white from dusty ash and she was suddenly uneasy about the changes in the image of him since he had first walked across the field. For a moment she lost all her hard, high taunting composure and she stabbed pointlessly at the fire again and said:
âYou mustn't mind me. You mustn't take any notice of me. Do you want to go? You do, don't you?'
Before he answered she heard the first spits of rain falling softly, piff! piff! into the heart of the fires.
âWhat about the fire?' he said. âI can wait for you.'
âOh! it'll burn itself out. It always does. Or the rain'll put it out.'
Her mackintosh and her tea-bag lay behind her. As she turned to pick them up he moved to help her but she was there first, grabbing the coat before he could touch it. Then she slung the tea-bag over her back and sloped the fork over her shoulder.
âCome on, we'd better go,' she said.
Rain in faster spits, sharply hissing as it struck down through the full sepia-orange of surrounding oaks, came out of the west as the two of them walked across the field. She found herself striding with head down, her big feet flat, her eyes looking at his shoes, ash-covered and now rain-pocked, their neatness gone.
âYou think she'll be there all right?' he said.
âI expect so. If you're fool enough to come I suppose she'll be fool enough to be there,' she said.
She could not resist that. And supposing she was not there? She always was; she liked the boys, she had all the luck with them. She was pretty enough, with all the taste, for anybody. But supposing she were not, this time? Rain came swishing faster through the dry golden-brown
oaks and made impression in her mind of thoughts rushing forward, herded and lost in disjointed confusion. What would she do if she were not there? Put on the green dress with the leather belt? And the flat shoes? And do her hair tightly up, in a coconut?
âWhere's your case?' she said.
âBehind the hedge,' he said. With head down against the rain he brought back a small brown week-end case he had left in the shelter of the hedge, by the gate to the field.
âHere, you have this mac,' she said.
âNo,' he said. âNo. I'm all right.'
âYou've got your best suit on,' she said. âYou'll get it wet through. You'll ruin it. Come on, you have the mac on.'
âNo, you. It's yours. You have it.'
âI don't want it,' she said. âI'm used to it. Come on.'
âI'm all right,' he said.
âAre we going to quarrel over a mac?' she said. âYou've ruined your shoes already.'
Queer how the thought of the ruined shoes upset her. As he looked down at them she put the mac over his shoulders. They were standing in the road now and suddenly rain came beating down in white sheets on the black metal surface, at the same time tearing pale brown clouds of leaves that fell wetly across the slate-blue sky and its lighter drifts of low blue smoke from the fires.
When he spoke again his voice was sharp and annoyed.
âNow give me your tea-bag and hold the mac over your head,' he said. âGo on. Hold one side while I hold the other. I don't know what we're arguing about.
Put the mac over your head. Go on. There's enough for both of us.'
She was quiet. She put the mac over her head and stared down at her big boots slapping in the wet, leaf-printed road, side by side with the neat half-spoilt shoes she liked so much. She did not know what to say and she wished suddenly that it was night-time, with nobody on the road, so that there was no way of seeing her face.
Presently she could bear it no longer and stopped and swung round to look back across the fields at the fires. The wind was blowing chaff and smoke and dust and flame into darkening rain from the three yellow heaps that were like solitary pyres.
âKeep the mac over your head,' he said. âWhat are you looking at now?'
âJust the fires,' she said.
âOh! come on, they'll burn out. You said they would.'
âAll right. I know.'
âThat's the trouble with some people,' he said. âThey always know. They always think they know.'
She did not answer. She walked with head still further down, watching the two pairs of feet. The rain beating on her lowered face made her feel dry and tired inside. What did she know? What were the sort of things she was supposed to know?
She was a fool and there was nothing, she thought, that she did knowânothing but the falling rain, the queer odour of the mac on her head, the fading smell of fire and smoke and falling leaf, and the chaff driving in the wind.
The girl and her mother had driven down from the mountains in August, by way of Cortina and the Vale de Cembra and the towns of Lombardy, at the time when the wild cyclamen were in bloom. It was still hot, with distances of smoky glass, when they reached the lakes in September.
âWhat dish is this? Do you speak English? What do you call it?'
Mrs Carey poked with her knife at the main luncheon dish so that the flash of sun on steel made white winks on the under-bellies of the terrace umbrellas.
âIt is a sort of pasta, madame. A sort ofââ'
âA sort of what? What is this green material? Why is it green?'
âThat is the pasta itself, madame. Pasta Verdi. Green macaroni.'
âIt looks most extraordinary.' Mrs Carey poked at it again.
âIt is very good, madame,' the waiter said. âYou will like it, I'm sureââ'
âGive us both a very small portion.' Mrs Carey waved her knife again as if to sever the dish into even smaller segments than those the waiter was spooning. âSmallerâsmallerânot so much as that. We do not like large portions. You understand? We don't eat much. We do not like large portions.'
âYes, madame.'
âNo cheese. No cheese. We do not like cheese.'
With pale eyes the girl sat staring at the lake. The water was a strong blue-green, with distances of molten rose, and above it a sky of misty torrid blue in which the edges of the horizon were completely dissolved. Below the terrace a few people were still swimming; she saw a flash of brown arms on a diving board.
âThe lake looks lovelyââ'
âEat your food while it's hot. The lake is very deep,' Mrs Carey said. âIt is fourteen hundred and fifty feet deep in one place. I was reading about it yesterday.'
The face of the girl had the soft colourless plumpness of a big summer apple that has grown unexposed to sun. With unresistant eyes she stared at the lake, eating slowly. She had seen Cortina and Verona and Bellagio and Como and Ponte Tresa, or rather she had been shown them all; but she could not help feeling that Maggiore, now, was the most beautiful of them all.
âIt would be nice to stay hereââ'
âWell, I don't know. We shall see. We shall see what this place is like.' Mrs Carey peered with spectacled intensity at something among the macaroni. âThose are pieces of spinach stalk. They've not been sieved properly. Put them on the side of your plate if you don't want them.'