Clare Cherrells wedding, in Hanover Square, was fashionable and would occupy with a list of names a quarter of a column in the traditional prints. As Dinny said:
So delightful for them!
With her father and mother Clare came to Mount Street from Condaford overnight. Busy with her younger sister to the last, and feeling an emotion humorously disguised, Dinny arrived with Lady Cherrell at the Church not long before the bride. She lingered to speak to an old retainer at the bottom of the aisle, and caught sight of Wilfrid. He was on the brides side, far back, gazing at her. She gave him a swift smile, then passed up the aisle to join her mother in the left front pew. Michael whispered as she went by:
People have rolled up, havent they?
They had. Clare was well known and popular, Jerry Corven even better known, if not so popular. Dinny looked round at the audience one could never credit a wedding with the word congregation. Irregular and with a good deal of character, their faces refused generalisation. They looked like people with convictions and views of their own. The men conformed to no particular type, having none of that depressing sameness which used to characterise the German officer caste. With herself and her mother in the front pew were Hubert and Jean, Uncle Lawrence and Aunt Em; in the pew behind sat Adrian with Diana, Mrs. Hilary, and Lady Alison. Dinny caught sight of Jack Muskham at the end of two or three rows back, tall, well-dressed, rather bored-looking. He nodded to her, and she thought: Odd, his remembering me!
On the Corven side of the aisle were people of quite as much diversity of face and figure. Except Jack Muskham, the bridegroom, and his best man, hardly a man gave the impression of being well- dressed or of having thought about his clothes. But from their faces Dinny received the impression that they were all safe in the acceptance of a certain creed. Not one gave her the same feeling that Wilfrids face brought of spiritual struggle and disharmony, of dreaming, suffering, and discovery. Im fanciful, she thought. And her eyes came to rest on Adrian, who was just behind her. He was smiling quietly above that goatee beard of his, which lengthened his thin brown visage. He has a dear face, she thought, not conceited, like the men who wear those pointed beards as a rule. He always will be the nicest man in the world. And she whispered: Fine collection of bones here, Uncle.
I should like your skeleton, Dinny.
I mean to be burned and scattered. Hssh!
The choir was coming in, followed by the officiating priests. Jerry Corven turned. Those lips smiling like a cats beneath that thin-cut moustache, those hardwood features and daring, searching eyes! Dinny thought with sudden dismay: How could Clare! But after all Id think the same of any face but one, just now. Im going potty. Then Clare came swaying up the aisle on her fathers arm! Looking a treat! Bless her! A gush of emotion caught Dinny by the throat, and she slipped her hand into her mothers. Poor mother! She was awfully pale! Really the whole thing was stupid! People would make it long and trying and emotional. Thank goodness Dads old black tail-coat really looked quite decent she had taken out the stains with ammonia; and he stood as she had seen him when reviewing troops. If Uncle Hilary happened to have a button wrong, Dad would notice it. Only there wouldnt be any buttons. She longed fervently to be beside Wilfrid away at the back. He would have nice unorthodox thoughts, and they would soothe each other with private smiles.
Now the bridesmaids! Hilarys two girls, her cousins Monica and Joan, slender and keen, little Celia Moriston, fair as a seraph (if that was female), Sheila Ferse, dark and brilliant; and little Anne a perfect dumpling!
Once on her knees, Dinny quietened down. She remembered how they used to kneel, night-gowned, against their beds, when Clare was a tiny of three and she herself a big girl of six. She used to hang on to the bed-edge by the chin so as to save the knees; and how ducky Clare had looked when she held her hands up like the child in the Reynolds picture! That man, thought Dinny, will hurt her! I know he will! Her thoughts turned again to Michaels wedding all those ten years ago. There she had stood, not three yards from where she was kneeling now, alongside a girl she didnt know some relative of Fleurs. And her eyes, taking in this and that with the fluttered eagerness of youth, had lighted on Wilfrid standing sideways, keeping watch on Michael. Poor Michael! He had seemed rather daft that day, from excessive triumph! She could remember quite distinctly thinking: Michael and his lost angel! There had been in Wilfrids face something which suggested that he had been cast out of happiness, a scornful and yet yearning look. That was only two years after the Armistice, and she knew now what utter disillusionment and sense of wreckage he had suffered after the war. He had been talking to her freely the last two days; had even dwelled with humorous contempt on his infatuation for Fleur eighteen months after that marriage which had sent him flying off to the East. Dinny, but ten when the war broke out, remembered it chiefly as meaning that mother had been anxious about father, had knitted all the time, and been a sort of sock depot; that everybody hated the Germans; that she had been forbidden sweets because they were made with saccharine, and finally the excitement and grief when Hubert went off to the war and letters from him didnt often come. From Wilfrid these last few days she had gathered more clearly and poignantly than ever yet what the war had meant to some who, like Michael and himself, had been in the thick of it for years. With his gift of expression he had made her feel the tearing away of roots, the hopeless change of values, and the gradual profound mistrust of all that age and tradition had decreed and sanctified. He had got over the war now, he said. He might think so, but there were in him still torn odds and ends of nerves not yet mended up. She never saw him without wanting to pass a cool hand over his forehead.
The ring was on now, the fateful words said, the exhortations over; they were going to the vestry. Her mother and Hubert followed. Dinny sat motionless, her eyes fixed on the East window. Marriage! What an impossible state, except with a single being.
A voice in her ear said:
Lend me your hanky, Dinny. Mines soakin, and your uncles is blue.
Dinny passed her a scrap of lawn, and surreptitiously powdered her own nose.
Be done at Condaford, Dinny, continued her aunt. All these people so fatiguin, rememberin who they arent. That was his mother, wasnt it? She isnt dead, then.
Dinny was thinking: Shall I get another look at Wilfrid?
When I was married everybody kissed me, whispered her aunt, so promiscuous. I knew a girl who married to get kissed by his best man. Aggie Tellusson. I wonder. Theyre comin back!
Yes! How well Dinny knew that brides smile! How could Clare feel it, not married to Wilfrid! She fell in behind her father and mother, alongside Hubert, who whispered: Buck up, old girl, it might be a lot worse! Divided from him by a secret that absorbed her utterly, Dinny squeezed his arm. And, even as she did so, saw Wilfrid, with his arms folded, looking at her. Again she gave him a swift smile, and then all was hurly-burly, till she was back at Mount Street and Aunt Em saying to her, just within the drawing- room door:
Stand by me, Dinny, and pinch me in time. Then came the entry of the guests and her aunts running commentary.
It is his mother kippered. Heres Hen Bentworth!...Hen, Wilmets here, shes got a bone to pick...How dyou do? Yes, isnt it so tirin...How dyou do? The ring was so well done, dont you think? Conjurers!...Dinny, whos this?...How do you do? Lovely! No! Cherrell. Not as its spelled, you know so awkward!...The presents are over there by the man with the boots, tryin not to. Silly, I think! But they will...How dyou do? You are Jack Muskham? Lawrence dreamed the other night you were goin to burst...Dinny, get me Fleur, too, she knows everybody.
Dinny went in search of Fleur and found her talking to the bridegroom.
As they went back to the door Fleur said: I saw Wilfrid Desert in the church. How did he come there?
Really Fleur was too sharp for anything!
Here you are! said Lady Mont. Which of these three comin is the Duchess? The scraggy one. Ah!...How dyou do? Yes, charmin. Such a bore, weddins! Fleur, take the Duchess to have some presents...How dyou do? No, my brother Hilary. He does it well, dont you think? Lawrence says he keeps his eye on the ball. Do have an ice, theyre downstairs...Dinny, is this one after the presents, dyou think? Oh! How dyou do, Lord Beevenham? My sister-in-law ought to be doin this. She ratted. Jerrys in there...Dinny, who was it said: The drink, the drink! Hamlet? He said such a lot. Not Hamlet?...Oh! How dyou do?...How dyou do?...How dyou do, or dont you? Such a crush!...Dinny, your hanky!
Ive put some powder on it, Auntie.
There! Have I streaked?...How dyou do? Isnt it silly, the whole thing? As if they wanted anybody but themselves, you know...Oh! Heres Adrian! Your ties on one side, dear. Dinny, put it right. How dyou do? Yes, they are. I dont like flowers at funerals poor things, lyin there, and dyin...Hows your dear dog? You havent one? Quite!...Dinny, you ought to have pinched me...How dyou do? How dyou do? I was tellin my niece she ought to pinch me. Do you get faces right? No. How nice! How dyou do? How dyou do? How dyou do?...Thats three! Dinny, whos the throwback just comin? Oh!...How dyou do? So you got here? I thought you were in China...Dinny, remind me to ask your uncle if it was China. He gave me such a dirty look. Could I give the rest a miss? Who is its always sayin that? Tell Blore the drink, Dinny. Heres a covey!...How dyou do?...How de do?...How do?...Do!...Do!...How?...So sweet!...Dinny, I want to say: Blast!
On her errand to Blore Dinny passed Jean talking to Michael, and wondered how anyone so vivid and brown had patience to stand about in this crowd. Having found Blore, she came back. Michaels queer face, which she thought grew pleasanter every year, as if from the deepening impress of good feeling, looked strained and unhappy.
I dont believe it, Jean, she heard him say.
Well, said Jean, the bazaars do buzz with rumour. Still, without fire of some sort theres never smoke.
Oh! yes, there is plenty. Hes back in England, anyway. Fleur saw him in the church to-day. I shall ask him.
I wouldnt, said Jean: if its true hell probably tell you, and if it isnt, itll only worry him for nothing.
So! They were talking of Wilfrid. How find out why without appearing to take interest? And suddenly she thought: Even if I could, I wouldnt. Anything that matters he must tell me himself. I wont hear it from anyone else. But she felt disturbed, for instinct was always warning her of something heavy and strange on his mind.
When that long holocaust of sincerity was over and the bride had gone, she subsided into a chair in her uncles study, the only room which showed no signs of trouble. Her father and mother had started back to Condaford, surprised that she wasnt coming too. It was not like her to cling to London when the tulips were out at home, the lilacs coming on, the apple blossom thickening every day. But the thought of not seeing Wilfrid daily had become a positive pain.
I have got it badly, she thought, worse than I ever believed was possible. Whatever is going to happen to me?
She was lying back with her eyes closed when her uncles voice said:
Ah! Dinny, how pleasant after those hosts of Midian! The mandarin in full feather! Did you know a quarter of them? Why do people go to weddings? A registrars, or under the stars, theres no other way of preserving decency. Your poor aunt has gone to bed. Theres a lot to be said for Mohammedanism, except that its the fashion now to limit it to one wife, and she not in Purdah. By the way, theres a story going round that young Deserts become a Moslem. Did he say anything to you about it?
Dinny raised her startled head.
Ive only twice known it happen to fellows in the East, and they were Frenchmen and wanted harems.
Moneys the only essential for that, Uncle.
Dinny, youre getting cynical. Men like to have the sanction of religion. But that wouldnt be Deserts reason; a fastidious creature, if I remember.
Does religion matter, Uncle, so long as people dont interfere with each other?
Well, some Moslems notions of womans rights are a little primitive. Hes liable to wall her up if shes unfaithful. There was a sheikh when I was in Marakesh gruesome.
Dinny shuddered.
From time immemorial, as they say, went on Sir Lawrence, religion has been guilty of the most horrifying deeds that have happened on this earth. I wonder if young Desert has taken up with it to get him access to Mecca. I shouldnt think he believes anything. But you never know its a queer family.
Dinny thought: I cant and wont talk about him.
What proportion of people in these days do you think really have religion, Uncle?
In northern countries? Very difficult to say. In this country ten to fifteen per cent of the adults, perhaps. In France and southern countries, where theres a peasantry, more, at least on the surface.
What about the people who came this afternoon?
Most of them would be shocked if you said they werent Christians, and most of them would be still more shocked if you asked them to give half their goods to the poor, and that would only make them well disposed Pharisees, or was it Sadducees?
Are you a Christian, Uncle Lawrence?
No, my dear; if anything a Confucian, who, as you know, was simply an ethical philosopher. Most of our caste in this country, if they only knew it, are Confucian rather than Christian. Belief in ancestors, and tradition, respect for parents, honesty, moderation of conduct, kind treatment of animals and dependents, absence of self-obtrusion, and stoicism in face of pain and death.
What more, murmured Dinny, wrinkling her nose, does one want except the love of beauty?
Beauty? Thats a matter of temperament.
But doesnt it divide people more than anything?
Yes, but willy nilly. You cant make yourself love a sunset.
You are wise, Uncle Lawrence, the young niece said. I shall go for a walk and shake the wedding-cake down.
And I shall stay here, Dinny, and sleep the champagne off.
Dinny walked and walked. It seemed an odd thing to be doing alone. But the flowers in the Park were pleasing, and the waters of the Serpentine shone and were still, and the chestnut trees were coming alight. And she let herself go on her mood, and her mood was of love.
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