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<h2> CHAPTER X—THE BATTLE OF THE UMBRELLA; “WHOM THE GODS WISH TO DESTROY....” </h2>
<h3> I. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>URING the month
that followed, the battle raged furiously, and within a week of that
original incident there was no one in the establishment who had not his or
her especial grievance against someone else. In the Senior common room, at
the middle morning hour, the whole staff might be seen, silent, grave,
bending with sheer resolution over the daily papers, eloquent backs turned
to their enemies, every now and again abstract sarcasm designed for some
very concrete resting-place.</p>
<p>That original umbrella had, long ago, been forgotten, or, rather the
original borrowing of it. It had now become a flag, a banner—something
that stood for any kind of principle that it might serve one's
purpose to support. One hated one's neighbor—well, let any
small detail be the provocation, the battle was the thing.</p>
<p>Imagine, moreover, the effect on the young generation, assembled to watch
and imitate the thoughts and actions of their elders and betters; what a
delightful and admirable system!—with their Greek accents and verbs
in with their principal parts of <i>savior</i> and <i>dire</i> and their
conclusive decisions concerning vulgar fractions and the imports and
exports of Sardinia, they should learn the delicate art of cutting your
neighbor, of hating your fellow-creatures, of malicious misconception—all
this within so small an area of ground, so slight a period of time, at so
wonderfully inconsiderable an expense.</p>
<p>The question at issue passed of course speedily to the very smallest boy
in the school, but here there was not so intense a division—there
was indeed scarcely a division at all, because there could not, on the
whole, be two opinions about it. When it came to choosing between Old
Pompous with his stupid manners and his uncertain temper, with all the
custom of his twenty years' stay at the school so that he was simply
a tiresome tradition that present fathers of grown families had once
accepted as a fearful authority—between this and the novel and
athletic Traill, with his splendid football and his easy fellowship...
why? There was nothing more to be said. Why should n't one take Old
Pompous's umbrella? Who was he to be so particular about his
property? He would n't hesitate to take someone else's things
if he wanted them.... Meanwhile there was an encouragement to rebellion
amongst all those who came beneath his discipline—as to the way that
he took this, there is more to be said later.</p>
<p>But the point about this month is not the question of individual quarrel
and disturbance. Of that there was enough and to spare, but there was
nothing extraordinary about its progress, and every successive term saw
something of the kind: the two questions as to whether Traill should have
taken Perrin's umbrella and whether Isabel Desart should, under the
circumstances, have allowed herself to be engaged to Traill, simply took
the place of other questions that had, in their time, served to rouse
combat. No—the peculiar fact about this month was that at the end of
it, when their quarrels and hatreds should have reached their climax, they
were sunk suddenly almost to the point of disappearance—they were
almost lost and forgotten—and the reason of this was that everyone
in the place, in some cases unconsciously and in nearly every instance
silently, was watching Perrin.... It had become during that time an issue
between two men, and one of those men was passive. It was being worked out
in silence—even the spectators themselves made no comment, but Mrs.
Comber afterwards put it into words when she said that “Everyone was
so afraid that talking about it might make it happen that no one said
anything at all”—and that indeed was the remarkable fact.</p>
<p>Amongst all the eyes that were turned on the developing incident those
most fitted for our purpose of elucidation belonged to Isabel Desart, and
her experience of it all will do very well for everyone else's
experience of it, because the only difference between herself and the rest
was that she was more acute in her judgment and had a more discerning
intuition.</p>
<p>In the first place she had very crucially indeed to fight her own battles.
It did not take her a day to discover that every lady in the place, with
the single exception of Mrs. Comber, was, for the time being at any rate,
up in arms against her. She ought not to have allowed herself to be
engaged to Mr. Traill—there were no two opinions about it. It was
not ladylike—she was allying herself, to disorder and tumult, she
was encouraging the stealing of things, and the knocking down of persons
in authority—above all, she was setting herself up, whatever that
might mean: all this was foreshadowed on the very first day in Mrs. Comber's
drawing-room.</p>
<p>These things did not, in the very least, surprise or dismay Isabel. She
loved a battle—she had never realized before how dearly she loved
it, she gave no quarter and she asked none. She went about with her head
up and her eyes flashing fire—she was quiet unless she was attacked;
but so soon as there were signs of the enemy, the armor would be buckled
on and the trumpet sounded. In a way—and it seemed to her curious
when she looked back upon it—this month of hers was stirring and
even rather delightful.</p>
<p>But there were other and more serious sides to it. She saw at once that
something had happened in the Comber family, and with all the tenderness
and gentleness that was so wonderfully hers she sought to put it right.
But she soon realized that it had all gone far too deep for any outside
help. She did not know what had occurred on that evening when she had
dined at the Squire's. Mrs. Comber told her nothing—she only
begged her not to speak to Freddie about the umbrella quarrel and not to
attempt to bring Archie to the house, at present at any rate.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Comber was now a different person—her animated volubility
had disappeared altogether, she went about her house very quietly with a
pale face and tired eyes, and she did not speak unless she was spoken to.
But the change in Freddie Comber was still more marked. Isabel had never
liked him so much before. His harsh dogmatism seemed to have disappeared.
He said very little to anybody, but in his own house at any rate he was
quiet, reserved, and even submissive. Isabel noticed that he was on the
watch to do things for his wife, and sometimes she saw that his eyes would
leave his work and stray about the room as though he were searching for
something. He scarcely seemed to notice her at all, and sometimes when she
spoke to him he would start and look at her curiously, almost
suspiciously, as though he were wondering how much she knew. He was not
kind and attentive to her, as he had been before—she felt sure that
he had now a great dislike for her. All this made her miserable, and she
loved to wonder sometimes what it was that held her back from speaking to
Mrs. Comber about it all—but something prevented her.</p>
<p>The masters, she knew, were divided about her. They were, she thought,
more occupied with their own quarrels and disputes than with any attitude
towards herself. At first she was amused by their divided camps—it
all seemed so childish and absurd, and for its very childishness it could
not have a serious conclusion; but as the days went on and she saw into it
all more deeply, the pathos of it caught her heart and she could have
cried to think of what men they might have been, of the things that they
might have done. Some of them seemed to seek her out now with a
courtliness and deference that they had never shown her before. Birkland,
of whom she had always been rather frightened, spoke to her now whenever
there was an opportunity, and his sharp, sarcastic eyes softened, and she
saw the sadness in their gray depths, and she felt in the pressure of his
hands that he wanted now to be friends with her. White, too, was different
now. He said very little to her, and he was so quiet that for him to speak
at all was a wonderful thing, but there were a few words about his
affection for Archie.</p>
<p>With all of this Isabel got a profound sense of its being her duty to do
something; as far as her own affairs were concerned she was perfectly able
to manage them, and if the matter in dispute had been simply her
engagement to Archie, there would be no difficulty—it was a case of
waiting, and then escaping; but things were more serious than that—something
was in the air, and she knew enough of that life and that atmosphere to be
afraid. But it was not until later than this that she began to be afraid
definitely of Mr. Perrin.</p>
<p>But this feeling that she had of the necessity of doing something grew
when she perceived the inertia of the others—inertia was perhaps
scarcely the word: it was rather, as the matter advanced, an increasing
impulse to sink their own quarrels and sit back in the chairs and wait for
the result.</p>
<p>And, with this before her, Isabel set out on a determined campaign, having
for its ultimate issue the hope of possible reconciliation—she could
not put it more optimistically than that—before the end of the term
came.</p>
<p>It was not at all a desire to do good that drove her—indeed, her
flashing disputes with Mrs. Dormer, her skirmishes with the younger Miss
Madder, were very far away from any evangelistic principles whatever—but
rather some hint of future trouble that was hard to explain. She wished to
prevent things happening, was the way that she herself would have put it;
but that did not hinder her from feeling a natural anxiety that Miss
Madder, Mrs. Dormer, and the rest should have some of their own shots back
before the end of the term was reached.</p>
<h3> II. </h3>
<p>But she began her campaign with her own Archie, and found him difficult.
Going down the hill by the village on one of those sharp, tightly drawn
days with the horizon set like marble and nothing moving save the brittle
leaves blowing like brown ghosts up and down, she tried to get him to see
the difficulties as she saw them, She attacked him at first on the
question of making peace with Mr. Perrin, and came up at once against a
bristling host of obstinacies and traditions that her ignorance of public
school and university laws had formerly hidden from her.</p>
<p>Perrin was a bounder, and young Traill's eyes were cold and hard as
he summed it all up in this sentence. He would do anything in the world
for Isabel, but she did n't probably altogether understand what a
fellow felt—there were things a man couldn't do. She found
that the laws of the Medes and Persians were nothing at all in comparison
with the stone tables of public school custom: “The man was a
bounder”—“There were things a fellow couldn't do.”</p>
<p>She had not expected him to go and beg for peace—she had not
probably altogether wished him to; but the way that he looked at it all
left her with a curious mixture of feelings: she felt that he was so
immensely young, and therefore to be—most delightful of duties—looked
after. Also she felt, for the first time, all the purpose and obstinacy of
his nature, so that she foresaw that there would in the future between
them be a great many tussles and battles.</p>
<p>But she was very much cleverer than he was, and dealt with him very
gently, and then suddenly gave him a sharp, little moral rap, and then
kissed him afterwards. She found, in fact, that this trouble with Mr.
Perrin was worrying him dreadfully. He hid it as well as he could, and hid
it on the whole very successfully; but Isabel dragged it all out and saw
that he hated quarreling with anybody, and that he now dimly discovered
that he was the center of a vulgar dispute and that people were taking
sides about him—all this was horrible.</p>
<p>He also felt very strongly the injustice of it. “I never meant to
knock the fellow down. I never knew I'd taken his beastly umbrella—all
this fuss!”—which was, Isabel thought, so very like a man,
because the thing was done and there was no more to be said about it. He
thought a great deal about her in the matter and was very anxious to stand
up for her; indeed, that was the only aspect of the affair that gave him
any satisfaction—that they should be fighting shoulder to shoulder
against the “low, bounding” world, and he declared, as he
looked at her, that he loved her more and more every day.</p>
<p>But all of this did not touch on his relations with Perrin, and his eyes
with regard to that gentleman could only look one way—he would not
make advances.</p>
<p>The more Isabel felt his determination, the more, curiously enough, she
felt Mr. Perrin's pathos. She had not yet arrived at the definite
watching of him that was to come upon them all soon so curiously; but when
she thought of him she thought of Archie's definition of him, and
she realized, as she had not realized before, that that would be a great
many other persons' definition of him also. Whatever he was—cross,
irritable, violent, even wicked—he was, at any rate, lonely, and
that was enough to make Isabel sorry, and more than sorry.</p>
<p>She could not, of course, make Archie see that. “The fellow's
always wanted to be lonely—thinks himself much too good for other
people's society, that's the fact, and if a man behaves like a
beast, he must expect to be left alone.”</p>
<p><i>That</i> did not worry Archie. The whole of his annoyance arose from
the fact that there should be such a fuss. He had never really quarreled
with anyone before—people <i>never</i> did quarrel with him; and now
suddenly here were Comber and West and the little French worm Pons, stiff
and sulky whenever they met him, and Moy-Thompson bullying him whenever he
got the opportunity.</p>
<p>Of course he wasn't going to stay! he couldn't stay under
these circumstances—but it was all unpleasant and disagreeable.
Isabel herself was only too anxious to take him out of it all as soon as
possible. He wasn't wearing well under it. He had been full of light
and sunshine at the beginning of the term, pleasant to everyone, equable,
comfortable, a splendid creature to be with. Now the boys of his class
found that nothing pleased him, little things roused him to a fury, and he
snapped at people when they spoke to him. With Isabel he was always
gentle, but his eager eyes were tired, and once he wasn't very far
away from tears.</p>
<p>But she did not allow any of these things to worry her. She was proud with
Miss Madder, haughty with Moy-Thompson, gentle with Mrs. Comber, always
amusing and cheerful with Archie. But when she had gone to bed and was at
last alone, she would lie there, trying to puzzle it all out, afraid of
what the future might bring, and praying that she might drag Archie out of
it all before they had damaged him. He was such a boy, and all this
discussion was so new to him; but she felt that she herself was ninety at
least, and she would wonder sometimes that all men's difficult
education seemed to leave them just where they began, which was several
stages earlier than the place where women commenced. Love and death were
very simple things, it seemed to her, beside the tangled daily worries of
people getting along together. Her present feeling was something akin to
Alice's sensation at the Croquet party when the hoops (being
flamingoes) would walk away and climb up trees, and the balls (being
hedge-hogs) would wander off the ground. They were all flamingoes and
hedge-hogs at Moffatt's.</p>
<h3> III. </h3>
<p>But towards the end of this month, Isabel became suddenly conscious of Mr.
Perrin in a very different way. It was now only three weeks before the end
of term, and in another week examinations would begin. That something in
the atmosphere that signified the coming of examinations was busy about
the place. People were very quiet, and then suddenly in the most singular
way would break out; there was continual quarreling in the common room,
strange rumors were carried of things that people had said—it was
all a question of strain.</p>
<p>There came, it now being the first week in December, the first day of
snow, and the light, feathery flakes fell throughout the afternoon, and
when the sun set there was a soft, white world with the buildings black
and grim and a sky of hurrying gray cloud. Isabel and Mrs. Comber sat in
Mrs. Comber's little drawing-room over a roaring fire, and there was
no other light in the room.</p>
<p>Mrs. Comber sat, as she so often sat now, with her chin resting in her
hand, silently staring at the fire.</p>
<p>Isabel was unhappy; the silent whiteness of the world outside, the
consciousness of Miss Madder's rudeness to her that afternoon, the
trouble that she had seen in Archie's eyes when she had said good
night to him after Chapel, above all, a general sense of strain and nerves
stretched to breaking-point—all this overwhelmed her. She had never
felt so strongly before that she and Archie, if they were to keep anything
at all of their vitality, must escape at once... to-night... to-morrow; it
might be too late.</p>
<p>She knew that Archie had lost his temper with West that afternoon, that he
had called him a “rotten little counter-jumper,” and that West
had made an allusion to “stealing things.” Where were they
all? What were they all doing to be fighting like this?</p>
<p>They sat in silence opposite to one another, one on each side of the fire,
and the ticking of the clock, and every now and again a tumbling coal,
were the only sounds. Then suddenly Isabel broke out.</p>
<p>“Oh! I can't stand it any longer; I feel as though I should go
mad. What is the matter with everybody? Why are we all fighting like this?
Oh! I <i>do</i> want to be pleasant to somebody again, just for a change.
For the last three weeks, ever since that wretched quarrel, there has been
no peace at all.”</p>
<p>“I know,” Mrs. Comber answered without raising her eyes from
the fire; “I am very tired, too, and it's a good thing there
are only three weeks more of the term, because I 'm sure that
somebody would be cutting somebody's throat if it lasted any longer,
and I wouldn't mind very much if somebody would cut mine.” She
gave a little choke in her throat, and then suddenly her head fell forward
into her hands, and she burst into passionate sobbing.</p>
<p>Isabel said nothing, but came over to her and knelt down by her chair and
took her other hand. They stayed together in silence for a long time, and
the burning fire flung great shadows on the walls, and the snow had begun
to fall again and rustled very softly and gently against the window.</p>
<p>At last Mrs. Comber looked up and wiped her eyes, and tried to smile.</p>
<p>“Ah! my dear! you are so good to me. I don't know what I
should have done this terrible term if you hadn't been, and now my
eyes are a perfect sight, and Freddie will be coming in; but I could n't
help it. Things only seem to get worse and worse and worse, and I've
stood it as long as I can, and I can't stand it any longer. I think
I shall go away and be a nun or a hospital nurse or something where you
're let alone.”</p>
<p>“Dear Mrs. Comber;” said Isabel, still holding her hand,
“do tell me about these last few weeks, if it would help you. Of
course, I 've seen that something 's happened between you and
Mr. Comber. I can see that he is most dreadfully sorry about something,
and I know that he wants to make it up. But this silence is worse than
anything, and if you 'd only have it out, both of you, I'm
sure it would get all right.”</p>
<p>“No, dear.” Mrs. Comber shook her head and wiped her eyes.
“It's not that so much. Freddie and I will get all right
again, I expect, and even be better together than we were be-for; but all
this business has shown me, my dear, that I'm a failure. I 've
known it really all the time, and I used to pretend that if one was nice
enough to people one could n't be altogether a failure, because they
wanted one to like them—and that's the truth. Nobody wants me
to like them, and I'm the loneliest woman in the world. I'm
not grumbling about it, because I suppose I'm careless and silly and
untidy, but I don't think anyone's wanted friends quite so
badly as I have, and some people have such a lot. I used to think it was
all just accidents, but now I know it's really me; and now you
're going to be married there's an end of you, the only person
I had.”</p>
<p>“Archie and I,” said Isabel softly, “will care for you
to the end of your days, and you will come and stay with us, won't
you? And you know that Freddie loves you. Why, I 've seen him
looking at you during these last weeks as though he could die for you, and
then he's been afraid to say anything. It's only this horrid
place that has got in the way so dreadfully.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Comber caught her hand eagerly. “Do you really think so, my
dear? Oh! if I could only think that, because I have fancied he's
been different lately, and he's such a dear when he likes to be and
is n't worried about his form; but things are always worse at
examination time, and I always pray that the two weeks may be got through
as quickly as possible; and something <i>dreadful did</i> happen the other
day, and I know he was ashamed of himself, the poor dear.... Perhaps
things will be all right.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Comber gave a great sigh and looked a little more cheerful. Then,
after a pause, she began again, but a little doubtfully: “You know,
Isabel dear, there's something else. I don't want to frighten
you, but Mrs. Dormer noticed it as well, and I know it's silly of
me, but I don't quite like it—”</p>
<p>“Like what?” said Isabel. “Well, Mr. Perrin; he's
been looking so queer ever since that quarrel with your Archie. I daresay
you haven't noticed anything, and I daresay it may be all my own
imaginations, and I'm sure in a place like this one might imagine
anything—”</p>
<p>“How does he look queer,” said Isabel quietly.</p>
<p>“Well, it's his eyes, I suppose, and the things the boys say
about him. You know, my dear, I've wondered since whether perhaps he
didn't care about you rather a great deal, and whether that isn't
another reason for his disliking Archie—”</p>
<p>“Care about me?” said Isabel laughing; “why, no, of
course not. He's only spoken to me once or twice.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Mrs. Comber, “I've seen him looking
at you in the strangest way in chapel. And his face has got so white and
thin and drawn, I'm really quite sorry for the poor man. And his
eyes are so odd, as though he was trying to see something that wasn't
there. And the boys say that he's so strange in class sometimes and
stops suddenly in the middle of a lesson and forgets where he is; and Mr.
Clinton was telling me that he never speaks to Archie, but sometimes when
Archie's there he gets very white and shakes all over and leaves the
room. I only want you to warn Archie to be careful, because when a man's
lonely like that and begins to think about things, he might do anything.”</p>
<p>“Why, what could he do?” Isabel said, with a little catch in
her breath.</p>
<p>“Well, I don't know, dear,” Mrs. Comber said rather
uncertainly. “Only when examinations come on they do seem to get
into the men's heads so, and it's only that I thought that
Archie might be careful and ready if Mr. Perrin seemed odd at all...”</p>
<p>Mrs. Comber left it all very uncertain, and as they sat silently in the
room with the fire turning from a roaring blaze into a golden cavern and
the shadows on the wall growing smaller and smaller as the fire fell,
Isabel seemed to feel the cold black and white of the world outside gather
ominously about her.</p>
<p>She said good night very quietly, and the two women clung to each other a
moment longer than usual, as though they did not wish to leave each other.</p>
<p>“At any rate,” said Isabel, “whatever else this place
may do, it can't alter our being together. You 've always got
me, you know.”</p>
<p>But from this moment Isabel was afraid. Perhaps her nerves were strained,
perhaps she saw a great deal more than there was to be seen; but she
longed for the end of the term with a passionate eagerness, and she could
not sleep at nights.</p>
<p>And then, curiously, on the very next morning Mr. Perrin came and spoke to
her.</p>
<p>She always afterwards remembered him as she saw him that day. She was just
turning out of the black gate to go down the hill to the village; there
was a very pale blue sky; the ground was white with gray and purple
shadows, and the houses were brown and sharply edged, as though cut out of
paper, in the distance; the hills were a gray-white against the sky. He
came towards her very slowly, and she saw that he wanted to speak to her,
so she stopped and waited for him. When he came up to her—with his
gown hanging loosely about him and his heavy, black mortar-board, with his
thin, haggard cheeks, and staring eyes, with his straggly, unkept mustache—she
had a moment of ungovernable fear. She could give no reason for it, but
she knew that her impulse was to turn and run away, anywhere so that she
might escape from him.</p>
<p>Then she controlled herself and turned and faced him, and smiled and held
out her hand.</p>
<p>She could see him staring beyond her, over her shoulder, with eyes that
didn't see her at all. She saw that his hand was shaking.</p>
<p>“How do you do, Mr. Perrin? I haven't seen you for quite a
long time. Isn't this snow delightful? If it will only stay like
this.”</p>
<p>Suddenly he came quite close to her, looking into her eyes; he grasped her
hand and held it.</p>
<p>“I 've been wanting to say...” he said in an odd voice,
and there he stopped and stood staring at her.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said gently.</p>
<p>His throat was moving convulsively, and he put his hand up to his face
with a helpless gesture and pulled his mustache.</p>
<p>“I've wanted to say—um, ah—to congratulate you...”</p>
<p>He cleared his throat, and suddenly she saw tears in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Oh! thank you!” she said impulsively, coming up to him and
putting her hand on his arm. “Thank you so very much!” and
then she could say no more.</p>
<p>He moved his arm away, and his eyes passed her again, out of the distant
horizon. Then he said very rapidly, as though he were reciting a speech
that he had learnt, “I wanted to congratulate you on your
engagement. I hope you 'll be very happy. I'm sure you will. I'm
afraid I 'm a little late in my good wishes. I'm afraid I'm
a little late. Yes. Good morning!”</p>
<p>Then, before she could say any more, he had moved away and gone down the
path.</p>
<p>As she watched his black gown waving a little behind him she knew that her
vague fears of the night before had taken definite form.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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