Authors: William Faulkner
“He?”
“You said Donald expects it.”
“My dear girl, I said. . . .” He could see a nimbus of light in her hair and the shape of her, but her face he could not see. He rose. She did not move as he sat beside her. The divan sank luxuriously beneath his weight, sensuously enfolding him. She did not move, her hand lay palm up between them, but he ignored it. “Why don't you ask me how much I heard?”
“Heard? When?” Her whole attitude expressed ingenuous interest.
He knew that in her examination of his face there was calm speculation and probably contempt. He considered moving beyond her so that she must face the light and leave his own face in shadow. . . . The light in her hair, caressing the shape of her cheek. Her hand between them, naked and palm upward, grew to be a monstrous size: it was the symbol of her body. His hand a masculine body for hers to curl inside. Browning, is it? seeing noon become afternoon, becoming gold and slightly wearied among leaves like the limp hands of women. Her hand was a frail, impersonal barrier, restraining him.
“You attach a lot of importance to a kiss, don't you?” she asked at length. He shaped her unresponsive hand to his and she continued: “That's funny, in you.”
“Why, in me?”
“You've had lots of girls crazy about you, haven't you?”
“What makes you think that?”
“I don't know. The way youâeverything about you.” She could never decide exactly about him. The feminine predominated so in him, and the rest of him was feline: a woman with a man's body and eat's nature.
“I expect you're right. You are an authority regarding your own species yourseIf.” He released her hand saying, “Excuse me,” and lit his pipe again. Her hand remained lax impersonal between them: it might have been a handkerchief. He pushed the dead match through the screen and said:
“What makes you think I attach so much importance to a kiss?”
Light in her hair was the thumbed rim of a silver coin, the divan embraced her quietly and light quietly followed the long slope of her limbs. A wind came among leaves without the window, stroking them together. Noon was past.
“I mean, you think that whenever a woman kisses a man or tells him something that she means something by it.”
“She does mean something by it. Of course it never is what the poor devil thinks she means, but she means something.”
“Then you certainly don't blame the woman if the man chooses to think she meant something she didn't at all mean, do you?”
“Why not? It would be the devil of a chaotic world if you never could count on whether or not people mean what they say. You knew damn well what I meant when you let me kiss you that day.”
“But I don't know that you meant anything, anymore than I did. You are the one whoââ”
“Like hell you didn't,” Jones interrupted roughly. “You knew what I meant by it.”
“I think we are getting personal,” she told him, with faint distaste.
Jones sucked his pipe. “Certainly, we are. What else are we interested in except you and me?”
She crossed her knees. “Never in my lifeââ”
“In God's name, don't say it. I have heard that from so many women. I had expected better of someone as vain as I am.”
He would be fairly decent looking, she thought, if he were not so fatâand could dye his eyes another colour. After a while, she spoke.
“What do you think I mean when I do either of them?”
“I couldn't begin to say. You are a fast worker, too fast for me. I doubt if I could keep up with the men you kiss and lie to, let alone with what you mean in each case. I don't think you can yourself.”
“So you cannot imagine letting people make love to you and saying things to them without meaning anything by it?”
“I cannot. I always mean something by what I say or do.”
“For instance?” her voice was faintly interested, ironical.
Again he considered moving, so that her face would be in light and his in shadow. But then he would no longer be beside her. He said roughly: “I meant by that kiss that someday I intend to have your body.”
“Oh,” she said sweetly, “it's all arranged, then? How nice. I can now understand your sucess with us. Just a question of will power, isn't it? Look the beast in the eye and heâI mean sheâis yours. That must save a lot of your valuable time and trouble, I imagine?”
Jones's stare was calm, bold and contemplative, obscene as a goat's. “You don't believe I can?” he asked.
She shrugged delicately, nervously, and her lax hand between them grew again like a flower: it was as if her whole body became her hand. The symbol of a delicate, body less lust. Her hand seemed to melt into his yet remain without volition, her hand unawaked in his and her body also yet sleeping, crushed softly about with her fragile clothing. Her long legs, not for locomotion, but for the studied completion of a rhythm to its nth: compulsion of progress, movement; her body created for all men to dream after. A poplar, vain and pliant, trying attitude after attitude, gesture after gestureâ“a girl trying gown after gown, perplexed but in pleasure.” Her unseen face nimbused with light and her body, which was no body, crumpling a dress that had been dreamed. Not for maternity, not even for love: a thing for the eye and the mind. Epicene, he thought, feeling her slim bones, the bitter nervousness latent in her flesh.
“If I really held you close you'd pass right through me like a ghost, I am afraid,” he said and his clasp was loosely about her .
“Quite a job,” she said coarsely. “Why are you so fat?”
“Hush,” he told her, “you'll spoil it.”
His embrace but touched her and she, with amazing tact, suffered him. Her skin was neither warm nor cool, her body in the divan's embrace was nothing, her limbs only an indication of crushed texture. He refused to hear her breath as he refused to feel a bodily substance in his arms. Not an ivory carving: this would have body, rigidity; not an animal that eats and digestsâthis is the heart's desire purged of flesh. “Be quiet,” he told himself as much as her, “don't spoil it.”
The trumpets in his blood, the symphony of living, died away. The golden sand of hours bowled by day ran through the narrow neck of time into the corresponding globe of night, to be inverted and so flow back again. Jones felt the slow, black sand of time marking life away. “Hush,” he said, “don't spoil it.”
The sentries in her blood lay down, but they lay down near the ramparts with their arms in their hands, waiting the alarm, the inevitable stand-to, and they sat clasped in the vaguely gleaned twilight of the room; Jones a fat Mirandola in a chaste Platonic nympholepsy, a religio-sentimental orgy in grey tweed, shaping an insincere, fleeting articulation of damp clay to an old imperishable desire, building himself a papier-maché Virgin: and Cecily Saunders wondering what, how much, he had heard, frightened and determined. What manner of man was this? she thought alertly, wanting George to be there and put an end to this situation, how she did not know; wondering if the fact of his absence were significant.
Outside the window leaves stirred and cried soundlessly. Noon was past. And under the bowled pale sky, trees and grass, hills and valleys, somewhere the sea, regretted him, with relief.
No, no, he thought, with awakened despair, don't spoil it. But she had moved and her hair brushed his face. Hair. Everyone, anyone, has hair. (To hold it, to hold it.) But it was hair and here was a body in his arms, fragile and delicate it might be, but still a body, a woman: something to answer the call of his flesh, to retreat pausing, touching him tentatively, teasing and retreating, yet still answering the call of his flesh. Impalpable and dominating. He removed his arm.
“You little fool, don't you know you had me?”
Her position had not changed. The divan embraced her in its impersonal clasp. Light like the thumbed rim of a coin about her indistinct face, her long legs crushed to her dress. Her hand, relaxed, lay slim and lax between them. But he ignored it.
“Tell me what you heard,” she said.
He rose. “Good-bye,” he said. “Thanks for lunch, or dinner, or whatever you call it.”
“Dinner,” she told him. “We are common people.” She rose also and studiedly leaned her hip against the arm of a chair. His yellow eyes washed over her warm and clear as urine, and he said, “God damn you.” She sat down again leaning back into the corner of the divan and as he sat beside her, seemingly without moving, she came to him.
“Tell me what you heard.”
He embraced her, silent and morose. She moved slightly and he knew that she was offering her mouth.
“How do you prefer a proposal?” he asked.
“How?”
“Yes. What form do you like it in? You have had two or three in the last few days, haven't you?”
“Are you proposing?”
“That was my humble intention. Sorry I'm dull. That was why I asked for information.”
“So when you can't get your women any other way, you marry them, then?”
“Dammit, do you think all a man wants of you is your body?” She was silent and he continued: “I am not going to tell on you, you know.” Her tense body, her silence, was a question. “What I heard, I mean.”
“Do you think I care? You have told me yourself that women say one thing and mean another. So I don't have to worry about what you heard. You said so yourself.” Her body became a direct challenge, yet she had not moved. “Didn't you?”
“Don't do that,” he said sharply. “What makes you so beautiful and disturbing and so godammed dull?”
“What do you mean? I am not usedââ”
“Oh, I give up. I can't explain to you. And you wouldn't understand, anyway. I know I am temporarily a fool, so if you tell me I am, I'll kill you.”
“Who knows? I may like that,” Her soft, coarse voice was quiet.
Light in her hair, her mouth speaking and the vague, crushed shape of her body. “Atthis,” he said.
“What did you call me?”
He told her. “âFor a moment, an aeon, I pause plunging above the narrow precipice of thy breast' and on and on and on. Do you know how falcons make love? They embrace at an enormous height and fall locked, beak to beak, plunging: an unbearable ecstasy. While we have got to assume all sorts of ludicrous postures, knowing our own sweat. The falcon breaks his clasp and swoops away swift and proud and lonely, while a man must rise and take his hat and walk out.”
She was not listening, hadn't heard him. “Tell me what you heard,” she repeated. Where she touched him was a cool fire; he moved but she followed like water. “Tell me what you heard.”
“What difference does it make, what I heard? I don't care anything about your jellybeans. You can have all the Georges and Donalds you want. Take them all for lovers if you like. I don't want your body. If you can just get that through your beautiful thick head, if you will just let me alone, I will never want it again.”
“But you proposed to me. What do you want of me?”
“You wouldn't understand if I tried to tell you.”
“Then if I did marry you, how would I know how to act toward you? I think you are crazy.”
“That's what I have been trying to tell you,” Jones answered in a calm fury. “You won't have to act anyway toward me. I will do that. Act with your Donalds and Georges, I tell you.”
She was like a light globe from which the current has been shut. “I think you're crazy,” she repeated.
“I know I am.” He rose abruptly. “Good-bye. Shall I see your mother, or will you thank her for lunch for me?”
Without moving she said: “Come here.”
In the hall, he could hear Mrs. Saunders's chair as it creaked to her rocking, through the front door he saw trees, the lawn and the street. She said Come here again. Her body was a vague white shape as he entered the room again and light was the thumbed rim of a coin about her head. He said:
“If I come back, you know what it means.”
“But I can't marry you. I am engaged.”
“I wasn't talking about that.”
“Then what do you mean?”
“Good-bye,” he repeated. At the front door he could hear Mr. and Mrs. Saunders talking but from the room he had left came a soft movement, louder than any other sound. He thought she was following him, but the door remained empty and when he looked into the room again she sat as he had left her. He could not even tell if she were looking at him.
“I thought you had gone,” she remarked.
After a time he said: “Men have lied to you a lot, haven't they?”
“What makes you say that?”
He looked at her a long moment. Then he turned to the door again. “Come here,” she repeated quickly.
She made no movement, save to slightly avert her face as he embraced her. “I'm not going to kiss you,” he told her.
“I'm not so sure of that.” Yet his clasp was impersonal.
“Listen. You are a shallow fool, but at least you can do as you are told. And that is, let me alone about what I heard. Do you understand? You've got that much sense, haven't you? I'm not going to hurt you: I don't even want to see you again. So just let me alone about it. If I heard anything I have already forgotten itâand it's damn seldom I do anything this decent. Do you hear?”
She was cold and pliant as a young tree in his arms and against his jaw she said: “Tell me what you heard.”
“All right then,” he said savagely. His hand cupped her shoulder, holding her powerless and his other hand ruthlessly brought her face around. She resisted, twisting her face against his fat palm.
“No, no; tell me first.”
He dragged her face up brutally and she said in a smothered whisper: “You are hurting me!”
“I don't give a damn. That might go with George, but not with me.”
He saw her eyes go dark, saw the red print of his fingers on her cheek and chin. He held her face where the light could fall on it, examining it with sybaritish anticipation. She exclaimed quickly, staring at him: “Here comes daddy! Stop!”