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Michael had an impulse to leave Brother Aloysius, but his self-consciousness prevented him from acting on it, and he kept the picker company in silence while the blackberries dropped lusciously into the basket.
"Feel my hand," said Brother Aloysius suddenly. "It's as hot as h.e.l.l."
This time Michael stared in frank astonishment.
"Well, you needn't look so frightened," said the monk. "You don't look so very good yourself."
"Well, of course I'm not good," said Michael. "Only I think it's funny for a monk to swear. You don't mind my saying so, do you?"
"I don't mind. I don't mind anything," said Brother Aloysius.
Tension succeeded this statement, a tension that Michael longed to break; but he could do no more than continue to pick the blackberries.
"I suppose you wonder why I'm a monk?" demanded Brother Aloysius.
Michael looked at his questioner's pale face, at the uncomfortable eyes gleaming blue, at the full stained mouth and the long feverish hands dyed with purple juice.
"Why are you?" he asked.
"Well, I thought I'd try if anything could make me feel good, and then you looked at me in Chapel and set me off again."
"I set you off?" stammered Michael.
"Yes, you with your big girl's eyes, just like a girl I used to live with. Oh, you needn't look so proper. I expect you've often thought about girls. I did at your age. Three months with girls, three months with priests. Girls and priests--that's my life. When I was tired of women, I became religious, and when I was tired of Church, I took to women. It was a priest told me to come here to see if this would cure me, and now, d.a.m.n you, you come into Chapel and stare and set me thinking of the Seven Sisters Road on that wet night I saw her last.
That's where she lives, and you look exactly like her. G.o.d! you're the image of her. You might almost be her ghost incarnate."
Brother Aloysius caught hold of Michael's arm and spoke through clenched teeth. In Michael's struggle to free himself the basket of blackberries was upset, and they trod the spilt fruit into the gra.s.s. Michael broke away finally and gasped angrily:
"Look here, I'm not going to stay here. You're mad."
He ran from the monk into the depths of the wood, not stopping until he reached a silent glade. Here on the moss he sat panting, horrified. Yet when he came to compose the sentences in which he should tell Dom Cuthbert of his experience with the new monk, he found himself wis.h.i.+ng that he had stayed to hear more. He actually enjoyed in retrospect the humiliation of the man, and his heart beat with the excitement of hearing more. Slowly he turned to seek again Brother Aloysius.
"You may as well tell me some more, now you've begun," said Michael.
For three or four days Michael was always in the company of Brother Aloysius, plying him with questions that sounded abominable to himself, when he remembered with what indignation he had rejected Garrod's offer of knowledge. Brother Aloysius spared no blushes, whether of fiery shame or furtive desire, and piece by piece Michael learned the fabric of vice. He was informed coldly of facts whose existence he had hitherto put down to his own most solitary and most intimate imaginations. Every vague evil that came wickedly before sleep was now made real with concrete examples; the vilest ideas, that hitherto he had considered peculiar to himself and perhaps a few more sadly tempted dreamers tossing through the vulnerable hours of the night, were commonplace to Brother Aloysius, whose soul was twisted, whose mind was debased to such an extent that he could boast of his delight in making the very priest writhe and wince in the Confessional.
Conversations with Brother Aloysius were sufficiently thrilling journeys, and Michael was always ready to follow his footsteps as one might follow a noctambulatory cat. The Seven Sisters Road was the scene of most of his adventures, if adventures they could be called, these dissolute pilgrimages. Michael came to know this street as one comes to know the street of a familiar dream. He walked along it in lavender sunrises watching the crenellated horizon of housetops; he sauntered through it slowly on dripping midnights, and on foggy November afternoons he speculated upon the windows with their aqueous sheen of incandescent gas. On summer dusks he pushed his way through the fetid population that thronged it, smelling the odour of stale fruit exposed for sale, and on sad grey Sabbaths he saw the ill-corseted servant girls treading down the heels of their ugly boots, and plush-clad children who continually dropped Sunday-school books in the mud.
And not only was Michael cognizant of the sordid street's exterior. He heard the creak of bells by blistered doors, he tripped over mats in narrow gloomy pa.s.sages and felt his way up stale rickety stairs. Michael knew many rooms in this street of dreams: but they were all much alike with their muslin and patchouli, their aspidistras and yellowing photographs. The ribbed pianos tintinnabulated harshly with songs cut from the squalid sheets of Sunday papers: in unseen bas.e.m.e.nts children whined, while on the mantelpiece garish vases rattled to the vibration of traffic.
Michael was also aware of the emotional crises that occur in the Seven Sisters Road, from the muttered curses of the old street-walkers with their c.r.a.pe bonnets c.o.c.ked awry and their draggled musty skirts to Brother Aloysius himself shaken with excess of sin in colloquy with a ghostly voice upon a late winter dawn.
"A ghost?" he echoed incredulously.
"It's true. I heard a voice telling me to go back. And when I went back, there she was sitting in the arm-chair with the antimaca.s.sar round her shoulders because it was cold, and the carving-knife across her knees, waiting up to do for the fellow that was keeping her. I reckon it was G.o.d sent me back to save her."
Even Michael in his vicious mood could not tolerate this hysterical blasphemy, and he scoffed at the supernatural explanation. But Brother Aloysius did not care whether he was believed or not. He himself was sufficient audience to himself, ready to applaud and condemn with equal exaggeration of feeling.
After a week of self-revelation Brother Aloysius suddenly had spiritual qualms about his behaviour, and announced to Michael that he must go to Confession and free himself from the oppressive responsibility of his sin. Michael did not like the thought of Dom Cuthbert being aware of the way in which his last days at the monastery had been spent, and hoped that Brother Aloysius would confess in as general a manner as possible.
Yet even so he feared that the perspicacious Abbot would guess the partner of his penitent, and, notwithstanding the sacred impersonality of the Confessional, regard Michael with an involuntary disgust.
However, the confession, with all its attendant pangs of self-reproach, pa.s.sed over, and Michael was unable to detect the slightest alteration in Dom Cuthbert's att.i.tude towards him. But he avoided Brother Aloysius so carefully during the remainder of his stay, that it was impossible to test the Abbot's knowledge as directly as he could have wished.
The night before Michael was to leave the monastery, a great gale blew from the south-west and kept him wide awake hour after hour until the bell for Matins. He felt that on this his last night it would be in order for him to attend the Office. So he dressed quickly and hurried through the wind-swept corridor into the Chapel. Here, in a severity of long droning psalms, he tried to purge his mind of all it had acquired from the shamelessness of Brother Aloysius. He was so far successful that he could look Dom Cuthbert fearlessly in the face when he bade him good-bye next day, and as he coasted over the downs through the calm September sunlight, he to himself seemed like the country washed by the serene radiance of the tempest's aftermath.
Chapter VIII: _Mirrors_
Michael somehow felt shy when he heard his mother's voice telling him to come into her room. He had run upstairs and knocked excitedly at her door before the shyness overwhelmed him, but it was too late not to enter, and he sat down to give her the account of his holidays. Rather dull it seemed, and robbed of all vitality by the barrier which both his mother and he hastened to erect between themselves.
"Well, dear, did you enjoy yourself at this Monastery?"
"Oh, rather."
"Is the--what do you call him?--the head monk a nice man?"
"Oh, yes, awfully decent."
"And your friend Chator, did he enjoy himself?"
"Oh, rather. Only he had to go before me. Did you enjoy yourself abroad, mother?"
"Very much, dear, thank you. We had lovely weather all the time."
"We had awfully ripping weather too."
"Have you got everything ready for school in the morning?"
"There's nothing much to get. I suppose I'll go into Cray's--the Upper Fifth. Do you want me now, mother?"
"No, dear, I have one or two letters to write."
"I think I'll go round and see if Chator's home yet. You don't mind?"
"Don't be late for dinner."
"Oh, no, rather not."
Going downstairs from his mother's room, Michael had half an impulse to turn back and confide in her the real account of his holidays. But on reflection he protested to himself that his mother looked upon him as immaculate, and he felt unwilling to disturb by such a revolutionary step the approved tranquillities of maternal ignorance.
Mr. Cray, his new form-master, was a man of distinct personality, and possessed a considerable amount of educative ability; but unfortunately for Michael the zest of cla.s.sics had withered in his heart after his disappointment over the Oxford and Cambridge Certificate. Therefore Mr.
Cray with his bright archaeology and chatty scholars.h.i.+p bored Michael more profoundly than any of his masters so far had bored him. Mr. Cray resented this att.i.tude very bitterly, being used to keenness in his form, and Michael's dreary indolence, which often came nearer to insolence, irritated him. As for the plodding, inky sycophants who fawned upon Mr. Cray's informativeness, Michael regarded them with horror and contempt. He sat surrounded by the b.u.t.ts and bugbears of his school-life. All the boys whose existence he had deplored seemed to have clambered arduously into the Upper Fifth just to enrage him with the sight of their industrious propinquity. There they sat with their scraggy wrists protruding from shrinking coat-sleeves, with ambitious noses glued to their books, with pens and pencils neatly disposed for demonstrative annotation, and nearly all of them conscious of having figured in the school-list with the printed bubble of the Oxford and Cambridge Higher Certificate beside their names. Contemplating them in the ma.s.s, Michael scarcely knew how he would endure another dusty year of school.
"And now we come to the question of the Homeric gate--the Homeric gate, Fane, when you can condescend to our level," said Mr. Cray severely.
"I'm listening, sir," said Michael wearily.