Part 17 (1/2)
”So they say,” Mr. Topes repeated in his sad, apologetic voice, and helped himself in his turn.
”Personally,” said Mrs. Topes, with decision, ”I find all Italian cooking abominable. I don't like the oil--especially hot. No, thank you.” She recoiled from the proffered dish.
After the first mouthful Mr. Buzzacott put down his fork. ”In the Italian gardens of the thirteenth century,” he began again, making with his long, pale hand a curved and flowery gesture that ended with a clutch at his beard, ”a frequent and most felicitous use was made of green tunnels.”
”Green tunnels?” Barbara woke up suddenly from her tranced silence.
”Green tunnels?”
”Yes, my dear,” said her father. ”Green tunnels. Arched alleys covered with vines or other creeping plants. Their length was often very considerable.”
But Barbara had once more ceased to pay attention to what he was saying.
Green tunnels--the word had floated down to her, through profound depths of reverie, across great s.p.a.ces of abstraction, startling her like the sound of a strange-voiced bell. Green tunnels--what a wonderful idea.
She would not listen to her father explaining the phrase into dullness.
He made everything dull; an inverted alchemist, turning gold into lead.
She pictured caverns in a great aquarium, long vistas between rocks and scarcely swaying weeds and pale, discoloured corals; endless dim green corridors with huge lazy fishes loitering aimlessly along them.
Green-faced monsters with goggling eyes and mouths that slowly opened and shut. Green tunnels....
”I have seen them ill.u.s.trated in illuminated ma.n.u.scripts of the period,”
Mr. Buzzacott went on; once more he clutched his pointed brown beard--clutched and combed it with his long fingers.
Mr. Topes looked up. The gla.s.ses of his round owlish spectacles flashed as he moved his head. ”I know what you mean,” he said.
”I have a very good mind to have one, planted in my garden here.”
”It will take a long time to grow,” said Mr. Topes. ”In this sand, so close to the sea, you will only be able to plant vines. And they come up very slowly very slowly indeed.” He shook his head and the points of light danced wildly in his spectacles. His voice drooped hopelessly, his grey moustache drooped, his whole person drooped. Then, suddenly, he pulled himself up. A shy, apologetic smile appeared on his face. He wriggled uncomfortably. Then, with a final rapid shake of the head, he gave vent to a quotation:
_But at my back I always hear_ _Time's winged chariot hurrying near_.”
He spoke deliberately, and his voice trembled a little. He always found it painfully difficult to say something choice and out of the ordinary; and yet what a wealth of remembered phrase, what apt new coinages were always surging through his mind!
”They don't grow so slowly as all that,” said Mr. Buzzacott confidently.
He was only just over fifty, and looked a handsome thirty-five. He gave himself at least another forty years; indeed, he had not yet begun to contemplate the possibility of ever concluding.
”Miss Barbara will enjoy it, perhaps--your green tunnel.” Mr. Topes sighed and looked across the table at his host's daughter.
Barbara was sitting with her elbows on the table, her chin in her hands, staring in front of her. The sound of her own name reached her faintly.
She turned her head in Mr. Topes's direction and found herself confronted by the glitter of his round, convex spectacles. At the end of the green tunnel--she stared at the s.h.i.+ning circles--hung the eyes of a goggling fish. They approached, floating, closer and closer, along the dim submarine corridor.
Confronted by this fixed regard, Mr. Topes looked away. What thoughtful eyes! He couldn't remember ever to have seen eyes so full of thought.
There were certain Madonnas of Montagna, he reflected, very like hen mild little blonde Madonnas with slightly snub noses and very, very young. But he was old; it would be many years, in spite of Buzzacott, before the vines grew up into a green tunnel. He took a sip of wine; then, mechanically, sucked his drooping grey moustache.
”Arthur!”
At the sound of his wife's voice Mr. Topes started, raised his napkin to his mouth. Mrs. Topes did not permit the sucking of moustaches. It was only in moments of absent-mindedness that he ever offended, now.
”The Marchese Prampolini is coming here to take coffee,” said Mr.