Chereads / WOMEN IN LOVES / Chapter 31 - CHAPTER 31. EXEUNT

Chapter 31 - CHAPTER 31. EXEUNT

When they brought the body home, the next morning, Gudrun was shut

up in her room. From her window she saw men coming along with a

burden, over the snow. She sat still and let the minutes go by.

There came a tap at her door. She opened. There stood a woman, saying

softly, oh, far too reverently:

'They have found him, madam!'

'Il est mort?'

'Yes—hours ago.'

Gudrun did not know what to say. What should she say? What should

she feel? What should she do? What did they expect of her? She was

coldly at a loss.

'Thank you,' she said, and she shut the door of her room. The woman

went away mortified. Not a word, not a tear—ha! Gudrun was cold, a cold

woman.

Gudrun sat on in her room, her face pale and impassive. What was she to

do? She could not weep and make a scene. She could not alter herself.

She sat motionless, hiding from people. Her one motive was to avoid

actual contact with events. She only wrote out a long telegram to Ursula

and Birkin.

In the afternoon, however, she rose suddenly to look for Loerke. She

glanced with apprehension at the door of the room that had been

Gerald's. Not for worlds would she enter there.

She found Loerke sitting alone in the lounge. She went straight up to

him.

'It isn't true, is it?' she said.

He looked up at her. A small smile of misery twisted his face. He

shrugged his shoulders.'True?' he echoed.

'We haven't killed him?' she asked.

He disliked her coming to him in such a manner. He raised his shoulders

wearily.

'It has happened,' he said.

She looked at him. He sat crushed and frustrated for the time being,

quite as emotionless and barren as herself. My God! this was a barren

tragedy, barren, barren.

She returned to her room to wait for Ursula and Birkin. She wanted to

get away, only to get away. She could not think or feel until she had got

away, till she was loosed from this position.

The day passed, the next day came. She heard the sledge, saw Ursula and

Birkin alight, and she shrank from these also.

Ursula came straight up to her.

'Gudrun!' she cried, the tears running down her cheeks. And she took her

sister in her arms. Gudrun hid her face on Ursula's shoulder, but still she

could not escape the cold devil of irony that froze her soul.

'Ha, ha!' she thought, 'this is the right behaviour.'

But she could not weep, and the sight of her cold, pale, impassive face

soon stopped the fountain of Ursula's tears. In a few moments, the

sisters had nothing to say to each other.

'Was it very vile to be dragged back here again?' Gudrun asked at length.

Ursula looked up in some bewilderment.

'I never thought of it,' she said.

'I felt a beast, fetching you,' said Gudrun. 'But I simply couldn't see

people. That is too much for me.'

'Yes,' said Ursula, chilled.

Birkin tapped and entered. His face was white and expressionless. She

knew he knew. He gave her his hand, saying:'The end of THIS trip, at any rate.'

Gudrun glanced at him, afraid.

There was silence between the three of them, nothing to be said. At

length Ursula asked in a small voice:

'Have you seen him?'

He looked back at Ursula with a hard, cold look, and did not trouble to

answer.

'Have you seen him?' she repeated.

'I have,' he said, coldly.

Then he looked at Gudrun.

'Have you done anything?' he said.

'Nothing,' she replied, 'nothing.'

She shrank in cold disgust from making any statement.

'Loerke says that Gerald came to you, when you were sitting on the

sledge at the bottom of the Rudelbahn, that you had words, and Gerald

walked away. What were the words about? I had better know, so that I

can satisfy the authorities, if necessary.'

Gudrun looked up at him, white, childlike, mute with trouble.

'There weren't even any words,' she said. 'He knocked Loerke down and

stunned him, he half strangled me, then he went away.'

To herself she was saying:

'A pretty little sample of the eternal triangle!' And she turned ironically

away, because she knew that the fight had been between Gerald and

herself and that the presence of the third party was a mere contingency—

an inevitable contingency perhaps, but a contingency none the less. But

let them have it as an example of the eternal triangle, the trinity of hate.

It would be simpler for them.

Birkin went away, his manner cold and abstracted. But she knew he

would do things for her, nevertheless, he would see her through. Shesmiled slightly to herself, with contempt. Let him do the work, since he

was so extremely GOOD at looking after other people.

Birkin went again to Gerald. He had loved him. And yet he felt chiefly

disgust at the inert body lying there. It was so inert, so coldly dead, a

carcase, Birkin's bowels seemed to turn to ice. He had to stand and look

at the frozen dead body that had been Gerald.

It was the frozen carcase of a dead male. Birkin remembered a rabbit

which he had once found frozen like a board on the snow. It had been

rigid like a dried board when he picked it up. And now this was Gerald,

stiff as a board, curled up as if for sleep, yet with the horrible hardness

somehow evident. It filled him with horror. The room must be made

warm, the body must be thawed. The limbs would break like glass or like

wood if they had to be straightened.

He reached and touched the dead face. And the sharp, heavy bruise of ice

bruised his living bowels. He wondered if he himself were freezing too,

freezing from the inside. In the short blond moustache the life-breath

was frozen into a block of ice, beneath the silent nostrils. And this was

Gerald!

Again he touched the sharp, almost glittering fair hair of the frozen body.

It was icy-cold, hair icy-cold, almost venomous. Birkin's heart began to

freeze. He had loved Gerald. Now he looked at the shapely, strange-

coloured face, with the small, fine, pinched nose and the manly cheeks,

saw it frozen like an ice-pebble—yet he had loved it. What was one to

think or feel? His brain was beginning to freeze, his blood was turning to

ice-water. So cold, so cold, a heavy, bruising cold pressing on his arms

from outside, and a heavier cold congealing within him, in his heart and

in his bowels.

He went over the snow slopes, to see where the death had been. At last

he came to the great shallow among the precipices and slopes, near the

summit of the pass. It was a grey day, the third day of greyness and

stillness. All was white, icy, pallid, save for the scoring of black rocks that

jutted like roots sometimes, and sometimes were in naked faces. In the

distance a slope sheered down from a peak, with many black rock-slides.

It was like a shallow pot lying among the stone and snow of the upper

world. In this pot Gerald had gone to sleep. At the far end, the guides haddriven iron stakes deep into the snow-wall, so that, by means of the great

rope attached, they could haul themselves up the massive snow-front,

out on to the jagged summit of the pass, naked to heaven, where the

Marienhutte hid among the naked rocks. Round about, spiked, slashed

snow-peaks pricked the heaven.

Gerald might have found this rope. He might have hauled himself up to

the crest. He might have heard the dogs in the Marienhutte, and found

shelter. He might have gone on, down the steep, steep fall of the south-

side, down into the dark valley with its pines, on to the great Imperial

road leading south to Italy.

He might! And what then? The Imperial road! The south? Italy? What

then? Was it a way out? It was only a way in again. Birkin stood high in

the painful air, looking at the peaks, and the way south. Was it any good

going south, to Italy? Down the old, old Imperial road?

He turned away. Either the heart would break, or cease to care. Best

cease to care. Whatever the mystery which has brought forth man and

the universe, it is a non-human mystery, it has its own great ends, man is

not the criterion. Best leave it all to the vast, creative, non-human

mystery. Best strive with oneself only, not with the universe.

'God cannot do without man.' It was a saying of some great French

religious teacher. But surely this is false. God can do without man. God

could do without the ichthyosauri and the mastodon. These monsters

failed creatively to develop, so God, the creative mystery, dispensed with

them. In the same way the mystery could dispense with man, should he

too fail creatively to change and develop. The eternal creative mystery

could dispose of man, and replace him with a finer created being. Just as

the horse has taken the place of the mastodon.

It was very consoling to Birkin, to think this. If humanity ran into a CUL

DE SAC and expended itself, the timeless creative mystery would bring

forth some other being, finer, more wonderful, some new, more lovely

race, to carry on the embodiment of creation. The game was never up.

The mystery of creation was fathomless, infallible, inexhaustible, forever.

Races came and went, species passed away, but ever new species arose,

more lovely, or equally lovely, always surpassing wonder. The fountain-

head was incorruptible and unsearchable. It had no limits. It could bringforth miracles, create utter new races and new species, in its own hour,

new forms of consciousness, new forms of body, new units of being. To

be man was as nothing compared to the possibilities of the creative

mystery. To have one's pulse beating direct from the mystery, this was

perfection, unutterable satisfaction. Human or inhuman mattered

nothing. The perfect pulse throbbed with indescribable being,

miraculous unborn species.

Birkin went home again to Gerald. He went into the room, and sat down

on the bed. Dead, dead and cold!

Imperial Caesar dead, and turned to clay

Would stop a hole to keep the wind away.

There was no response from that which had been Gerald. Strange,

congealed, icy substance—no more. No more!

Terribly weary, Birkin went away, about the day's business. He did it all

quietly, without bother. To rant, to rave, to be tragic, to make

situations—it was all too late. Best be quiet, and bear one's soul in

patience and in fullness.

But when he went in again, at evening, to look at Gerald between the

candles, because of his heart's hunger, suddenly his heart contracted, his

own candle all but fell from his hand, as, with a strange whimpering cry,

the tears broke out. He sat down in a chair, shaken by a sudden access.

Ursula who had followed him, recoiled aghast from him, as he sat with

sunken head and body convulsively shaken, making a strange, horrible

sound of tears.

'I didn't want it to be like this—I didn't want it to be like this,' he cried to

himself. Ursula could but think of the Kaiser's: 'Ich habe as nicht

gewollt.' She looked almost with horror on Birkin.

Suddenly he was silent. But he sat with his head dropped, to hide his

face. Then furtively he wiped his face with his fingers. Then suddenly he

lifted his head, and looked straight at Ursula, with dark, almost vengeful

eyes.'He should have loved me,' he said. 'I offered him.'

She, afraid, white, with mute lips answered:

'What difference would it have made!'

'It would!' he said. 'It would.'

He forgot her, and turned to look at Gerald. With head oddly lifted, like a

man who draws his head back from an insult, half haughtily, he watched

the cold, mute, material face. It had a bluish cast. It sent a shaft like ice

through the heart of the living man. Cold, mute, material! Birkin

remembered how once Gerald had clutched his hand, with a warm,

momentaneous grip of final love. For one second—then let go again, let

go for ever. If he had kept true to that clasp, death would not have

mattered. Those who die, and dying still can love, still believe, do not die.

They live still in the beloved. Gerald might still have been living in the

spirit with Birkin, even after death. He might have lived with his friend, a

further life.

But now he was dead, like clay, like bluish, corruptible ice. Birkin looked

at the pale fingers, the inert mass. He remembered a dead stallion he had

seen: a dead mass of maleness, repugnant. He remembered also the

beautiful face of one whom he had loved, and who had died still having

the faith to yield to the mystery. That dead face was beautiful, no one

could call it cold, mute, material. No one could remember it without

gaining faith in the mystery, without the soul's warming with new, deep

life-trust.

And Gerald! The denier! He left the heart cold, frozen, hardly able to

beat. Gerald's father had looked wistful, to break the heart: but not this

last terrible look of cold, mute Matter. Birkin watched and watched.

Ursula stood aside watching the living man stare at the frozen face of the

dead man. Both faces were unmoved and unmoving. The candle-flames

flickered in the frozen air, in the intense silence.

'Haven't you seen enough?' she said.

He got up.

'It's a bitter thing to me,' he said.'What—that he's dead?' she said.

His eyes just met hers. He did not answer.

'You've got me,' she said.

He smiled and kissed her.

'If I die,' he said, 'you'll know I haven't left you.'

'And me?' she cried.

'And you won't have left me,' he said. 'We shan't have any need to

despair, in death.'

She took hold of his hand.

'But need you despair over Gerald?' she said.

'Yes,' he answered.

They went away. Gerald was taken to England, to be buried. Birkin and

Ursula accompanied the body, along with one of Gerald's brothers. It

was the Crich brothers and sisters who insisted on the burial in England.

Birkin wanted to leave the dead man in the Alps, near the snow. But the

family was strident, loudly insistent.

Gudrun went to Dresden. She wrote no particulars of herself. Ursula

stayed at the Mill with Birkin for a week or two. They were both very

quiet.

'Did you need Gerald?' she asked one evening.

'Yes,' he said.

'Aren't I enough for you?' she asked.

'No,' he said. 'You are enough for me, as far as a woman is concerned.

You are all women to me. But I wanted a man friend, as eternal as you

and I are eternal.'

'Why aren't I enough?' she said. 'You are enough for me. I don't want

anybody else but you. Why isn't it the same with you?''Having you, I can live all my life without anybody else, any other sheer

intimacy. But to make it complete, really happy, I wanted eternal union

with a man too: another kind of love,' he said.

'I don't believe it,' she said. 'It's an obstinacy, a theory, a perversity.'

'Well—' he said.

'You can't have two kinds of love. Why should you!'

It seems as if I can't,' he said. 'Yet I wanted it.'

'You can't have it, because it's false, impossible,' she said.

'I don't believe that,' he answered.