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<h2> CHAPTER VIII — REVELATION OF BUNNING (I) </h2>
<h3> 1 </h3>
<p>On that evening the College Debating Society exercised its mind over the
question of Naval Defence.</p>
<p>One gentleman, timid of voice, uncertain in wit, easily dismayed by the
derisive laughter of the opposite party, asserted that "This House
considers the Naval policy of the present Government fatal to the
country's best interests." An eager politician, with a shrill voice and a
torrent of words, denied this statement. The College, with the exception
of certain gentlemen destined for the Church (they had been told by their
parents to speak on every possible public occasion in order to be ready
for a prospective pulpit), displayed a sublime and somnolent indifference.
The four gentlemen on the paper had prepared their speeches beforehand and
were armed with notes and a certain nervous fluency. For the rest, the
question was but slightly assisted. The prospective members of the Church
thought of many things to say until they rose to their feet when they
could only remember "that the last gentleman's speech bad been the most
preposterous thing they had ever had the pleasure of listening to—and
that, er—er—the Navy was all right, and, er—if the
gentleman who had spoken last but two thought it wasn't, well, all they—er—could
say was that it reminded them—er—of a story they had once
heard (here follows story without point, conclusion or brevity)—and—er—in
fact the Navy was all right. . . ."</p>
<p>The Debate, in short, was languishing when Dune and Cardillac entered the
room together. Here was an amazing thing.</p>
<p>It was well known that only last night Cardillac and Dune had both been
proposed for the office of President of the Wolves. The Wolves, a society
of twelve founded for the purpose of dining well and dressing beautifully,
was by far the smartest thing that Saul's possessed. It was famous
throughout the University for the noise and extravagance of its dinners,
and you might not belong to it unless you had played for the University on
at least one occasion in some game or another and unless, be it
understood, you were, in yourself, quite immensely desirable. Towards the
end of every Christmas term a President for the ensuing year was elected;
he must be a second year man, and it was considered by the whole college
that this was the highest honour that the gods could possibly, during your
stay at Cambridge, confer upon you. Even the members of the Christian
Union, horrified though they were by the amount of wine that was drunk on
dining occasions and the consequent peril to their own goods and chattels,
bowed to the shining splendour of the fortunate hero. It had never yet
been known that a President of the Wolves should also be a member of the
Christian Union, but one must never despair, and nets, the most attractive
and genial of nets, were flung to catch the great man.</p>
<p>On the present occasion it had been generally understood that Cardillac
would be elected without any possible opposition. Dune had not for a
moment occurred to any one. He had; during his first term, when his
football prowess had passed, swinging through the University, been elected
to the Wolves, but he had only attended one dinner and had then remained
severely and unpleasantly sober. There was no other possible rival to
Cardillac, to his distinction, his power of witty and malicious
after-dinner speaking, his wonderful clothes, his admirable football, his
haughty indifference. He would of course be elected.</p>
<p>And then, some three weeks ago, this wonderful, unexpected development of
Olva Dune had startled the world. His football, his sudden geniality (he
had been seen, it was asserted, at one of Med-Tetloe's revival meetings
with, of all people in the world, Bunning), his air of being able to do
anything whatever if he wished to exert himself, here was a character
indeed—so wonderful that it was felt, even by the most patriotic of
Saulines, that he ought, in reality, to have belonged to St. Martin's.</p>
<p>It became at once, of course, a case of rivalry between Dune and
Cardillac, and it was confidently expected that Dune would be victorious
in every part of the field.</p>
<p>Cardillac had reigned for a considerable period and there were many men to
whom he had been exceedingly offensive. Dune, although he admitted no one
to closer intimacy, was offensive never. If, moreover, you had seen him
play the other day against the Harlequins, you could but fall down on your
knees and worship. Here, too, he rivalled Cardillac. Tester, Buchan, and
Whymper were quite certain of their places in the University side—Whymper
because he was the greatest three-quarter that Cambridge had had for many
seasons, and Tester and Buchan because they had been at Fettes together
and Buchan had played inside right to Tester's outside since the very
tenderest age; they therefore understood one another backward. There
remained then only this fourth place, and Cardillac seemed certain enough
. . . until Dune's revival. And now it depended on Whymper. He would
choose, of the two men, the one who suited him the better. Cardillac had
played with him more than had Dune. Cardillac was safe, steady, reliable.
Dune was uncertain, capricious, suddenly indifferent. On the other hand
not Whymper himself could rival the brilliance of Dune's game against the
Harlequins. That was in a place by itself—let him play like that at
Queen's Club in December and no Oxford defence could stop him.</p>
<p>So it was argued, so discussed. Certain, at any rate, that Dune's
recrudescence threatened the ruin of Cardillac's two dearest ambitions,
and Cardillac did not easily either forget or forgive.</p>
<p>And yet behold them now, gravely, the gaze of the entire company, entering
together, sitting together by the fire, watching with serious eyes the
clumsy efforts of an unhappily ambitious Freshman to make clear his
opinions of the Navy, the Government and the British Islands generally—only,
ultimately, producing a tittering, stammering apology for having burdened
so long with his hapless clamour, the Debate.</p>
<h3> 2 </h3>
<p>Olva liked Cardillac—Cardillac liked Olva. They both in their
attitude to College affairs saw beyond the College gates into the wide and
bright world. Cardillac, when it had seemed that no danger could threaten
either his election to the Wolves or the acquisition of his Football Blue,
had regarded both honours quietly and with indifference. It amazed him now
when both these Prizes were seriously threatened that he should still
appreciate and even seek out Dune's company.</p>
<p>Had it been any other man in the College he would have been a very active
enemy, but here was the one man who had that larger air, that finer style
whose gravity was beautiful, whose soul was beyond Wolves and Rugby
football, whose future in the real world promised to be of a fine and
highly ordered kind. Cardillac wished eagerly that these things might yet
be his, but if he were to be beaten, then, of all men in the world, let it
be by Dune. In his own scant, cynical estimate of his fellow-beings Dune
alone demanded a wide and appreciative attention.</p>
<p>To Olva on this evening it mattered but little where he was or what he
did. The snow had ceased to fall, and now, under a starry sky, lay white
and glistening clear; but still with him storm seemed to hover, its snow
beating his body, its fury yieling him no respite.</p>
<p>And now there was no longer any doubt. He faced it with the most
matter-of-fact self-possession of which he was capable. Some-thing was
waiting for his surrender. He figured it, sitting quietly back in the
reading-room, listening to the Debate, watching the faces around him, as
the tracing of some one who was dearly loved. There was nothing stranger
in it all than his own certainty that the Power that pursued him was
tender. And here he crossed the division between the Real and the Unreal,
because his present consciousness of this Power was as actual as his
consciousness of the chairs and tables that filled the reading-room. That
was the essential thing that made the supreme gulf between himself and his
companions. It was not because he had murdered Carfax but because he was
now absolutely conscious of God that he was so alone. He could not touch
his human companions, he could scarcely see them. It was through this
isolation that God was driving him to confession. Now, in the outer Court,
huge against the white dazzling snow, the great shadow was hovering, its
head piercing the stars, its arms outstretched. Let him surrender and at
once there would be infinite peace, but with surrender must come
submission, confession . . . with confession he must lose the one thing
that he desired—Margaret Craven . . . that he might go and talk to
her, watch her, listen to her voice. Meanwhile he must not think. If he
allowed his brain, for an instant, to rest, it was flooded with the
sweeping consciousness of the Presence—always he must be doing
something, his football, his companions, and often at the end of it all,
calmly, quietly, betrayed—hearing above all the clatter that he
might make the gentle accents of that Voice. He remembered that peace that
he had had in St. Martin's Chapel on the day of the discovery of the body.
What he would give to reclaim that now!</p>
<p>Meanwhile he must battle; must quiet Craven's suspicions, must play
football, join company with men who seemed to him now like shadows. As he
glanced round at them—at Lawrence, Bunning, Galleon Cardillac—they
seemed to have far less existence than the grey shadow in the outer Court.
Sounds passed him like smoke—the lights grew faint in his eyes . . .
he was being drawn out into a world that was all of ice—black ice
stretching to every horizon; on the edge of it, vast against the night
sky, was the Grey Figure, waiting.</p>
<p>"Come to Me. Tell Me that you will follow Me. I spoke to you in the wood.
You have broken My law. . . ."</p>
<p>"Lot of piffle," he heard Cardillac's voice from a great distance. "These
freshers are always gassing." The electric light, seen through a cloud of
tobacco smoke, came slowly back to him, dull globes of colour.</p>
<p>"It's so hot—I'm cutting," he whispered to Cardillac, and slipped
out of the room.</p>
<p>He climbed to his room, flung back his door and saw that his light was
turned on.</p>
<p>Facing him, waiting for him, was Bunning.</p>
<h3> 3 </h3>
<p>"If you don't want me——" he began with his inane giggle.</p>
<p>"Sit down." Olva pulled out the whisky and two siphons of soda. "If I
didn't want you I'd say so."</p>
<p>He filled himself a strong glass of whisky and soda and began feverishly
to drink.</p>
<p>Bunning sat down.</p>
<p>"Don't be such a blooming fool. Take off your gown if you're going to
stop."</p>
<p>Bunning meekly took off his gown. His spectacles seemed so large that they
swallowed up the rest of his face; the spectacles and the enormous
flat-toed boots were the principal features of Bunning's attire. He sat
down again and gazed at Olva with the eyes of a devoted dog. Olva looked
at him. Over Bunning's red wrists the brown ends of a Jaeger vest
protruded from under the shirt.</p>
<p>"I say, why don't you dress properly?"</p>
<p>"I don't know—-" began Bunning.</p>
<p>"Well, the sleeves of your vest needn't come down like that. It looks
horribly dirty. Turn 'em up."</p>
<p>Bunning, blushing almost to tears, turned them back.</p>
<p>"There's no need to make yourself worse than you are, you know," Olva
finished his whisky and poured out some more. "Why do you come here? . . .
I'm always beastly to you."</p>
<p>"As long as you let me come—I don't mind how beastly you are."</p>
<p>"But what do you get from it?"</p>
<p>Bunning looked down at his huge boots.</p>
<p>"Everything. But it isn't that—it is that, without being here, I
haven't got anything else."</p>
<p>"Well, you needn't wear such boots as that—and your shirts and
things aren't clean. . . . You don't mind my telling you, do you?"</p>
<p>"No, I like it, Nobody's ever told me."</p>
<p>Here obviously was a new claim for intimacy and this Olva hurriedly
disavowed.</p>
<p>"Oh! It's only for your own good, you know. Fellows will like you better
if you're decently dressed. Why hasn't any one ever told you?"</p>
<p>"They'd given me up at home." Bunning heaved a great sigh.</p>
<p>"Why? Who are your people?"</p>
<p>"My father's a parson in Yorkshire. They're all clergymen in my family—uncles,
cousins, everybody—my elder brother. I was to have been a
clergyman."</p>
<p>"<i>Was</i> to have been? Aren't you going to be one now?"</p>
<p>"No—not since I met you."</p>
<p>"Oh, but you mustn't take such a step on my account. I don't want to
prevent you. I've nothing to do with it. I should think you'd make a very
good parson."</p>
<p>Olva was brutal. He felt that in Bunning's moist devoted eyes there was a
dim pain. But he was brutal because his whole soul revolted against
sentimentality, not at all because his soul revolted against Bunning.</p>
<p>"No, I shouldn't make a good parson. I never wanted to be one really. But
when your house is full of it, as our house was, you're driven. When it
wasn't relations it was all sorts of people in the parish—helpers
and workers—women mostly. I hated them."</p>
<p>Here was a real note of passion! Bunning seemed, for an instant, to be
quite vigorous.</p>
<p>"That's why I'm so untidy now," Bunning went desperately on; "nobody cared
how I looked. I was stupid at school, my reports were awful, and I was a
day boy. It is very bad for any one to be a day boy—very!" he added
reflectively, as though he were recalling scenes and incidents.</p>
<p>"Yes?" said Olva encouragingly. He was being drawn by Bunning's artless
narration away from the Shadow. It was still there, its arm outstretched
above the snowy court, but Bunning seemed, in some odd way, to intervene.</p>
<p>"I always wanted to find God in those days. It sounds a stupid thing to
say, but they used to speak about Him—mother and the rest—just
as though He lived down the street. They knew all about Him and I used to
wonder why I didn't know too. But I didn't. It wasn't real to me. I used
to make myself think that it was, but it wasn't."</p>
<p>"Why didn't you talk to your mother about it?—</p>
<p>"I did. But they were always too busy with missions and things. And then
there was my elder brother. <i>He</i> understood about God and went to all
the Bible meetings and things, and he was always so neat-never dirty—I
used to wonder how he did it . . . always so neat."</p>
<p>Bunning took off his great spectacles and wiped them with a very dirty
handkerchief.</p>
<p>"And had you no friends?"</p>
<p>"None—nobody. I didn't want them after a bit. I was afraid of
everybody. I used to go down all the side-streets between school and home
for fear lest I should meet some one. I was always very nervous as a boy—very.
I still am."</p>
<p>"Nervous of people?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of everybody. And of things, too—things. I still am. You'd be
surprised. . . . It's odd because none of the other Bunnings are nervous.
I used to have fancies about God."</p>
<p>"What sort of fancies?"</p>
<p>"I used to see Him when I was in bed like a great big shadow, all up
against the wall. A grey shadow with his head ever so high. That's how I
used to think of Him. I expect that all sounds nonsense to you."</p>
<p>"No, not at all!" said Olva.</p>
<p>"I think they thought me nearly an idiot at home—not sane at all.
But they didn't think of me very often. They used to apologise for me when
people came to tea. I wasn't clever, of course—that's why they
thought I'd make a good parson."</p>
<p>He paused—then very nervously he went on. "But now I've met you I
shan't be. Nothing can make me. I've always watched you. I used to look at
you in chapel. You're just as different from me as any one can be, and
that's why you're like God to me. I don't want you to be decent to me. I
think I'd rather you weren't. But I like to come in sometimes and hear you
say that I'm dirty and untidy. That shows that you've noticed."</p>
<p>"But I'm not at all the sort of person to make a hero of," Olva said
hurriedly. "I don't want you to feel like that about we. That's all
sentimentality. You mustn't feel like that about anybody. You must stand
on your own legs."</p>
<p>"I never have," said Burning, very solemnly, "and I never will. I've
always had somebody to make a hero of. I would love to die for you, I
would really. It's the only sort of thing that I can do, because I'm not
clever. I know you think me very stupid."</p>
<p>"Yes, I do," said Olva, "and you mustn't talk like a schoolgirl. If we're
friends and I let you come in here, you mustn't let your vest come over
your cuffs and you must take those spots off your waistcoat, and brush
your hair and clean your nails, and you must just be sensible and have a
little humour. Why don't you play football?"</p>
<p>"I can't play games, I'm very shortsighted."</p>
<p>"Well, you must take some sort of exercise. Run round Parker's Piece or
something, or go and run at Fenner's. You'll get so fat."</p>
<p>"I <i>am</i> getting fat. I don't think it matters much what I look like."</p>
<p>"It matters what every one looks like. And now you'd better cut. I've got
to go out and see a man."</p>
<p>Burning submissively rose. He said no more but bundled out of the door in
his usual untidy fashion. Olva came after him and banged his "oak" behind
him. In Outer Court, looking now so vast and solemn in the silence of its
snow, Bunning, stopping, pointed to the grey buildings that towered over
them.</p>
<p>"It was against a wall like that that I used to imagine God—on a
night like this—you'll think that very silly." He hurriedly added,
"There's Marshall coming. I know he'll be at me about those Christian
Union Cards. Good-night." He vanished.</p>
<p>But it was not Marshall. It was Rupert Craven. The boy was walking
hurriedly, his eyes on the ground. He was suddenly conscious of some one
and looked up. The change in him was extraordinary. His eyes had the
heavy, dazed look of one who has not slept for weeks. His face was a
yellow white, his hair unbrushed, and his mouth moved restlessly. He
started when he saw Olva.</p>
<p>"Hallo, Craven. You're looking seedy. What's the matter?"</p>
<p>"Nothing, thanks. . . . Good-night."</p>
<p>"No, but wait a minute. Come up to my rooms and have some coffee. I
haven't seen you for days."</p>
<p>A fortnight ago Craven would have accepted with joy. Now he shook his
head.</p>
<p>"No, thanks. I'm tired: I haven't been sleeping very well."</p>
<p>"Why's that? Overwork?"</p>
<p>"No, it's nothing. I don't know why it is."</p>
<p>"You ought to see somebody. I know what not sleeping means."</p>
<p>"Why? . . . Are <i>you</i> sleeping badly?" Craven's eyes met Olva's.</p>
<p>"No, I'm splendid, thanks. But I had a bout of insomnia years ago. I
shan't forget it."</p>
<p>"You <i>look</i> all right." Cravan's eyes were busily searching Olva's
face. Then suddenly they dropped.</p>
<p>"I'm all right," he said hurriedly. "Tired, that's all."</p>
<p>"Why do you never come and see me now?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I will come—sometime. I'm busy."</p>
<p>"What about?"</p>
<p>Olva stood, a stern dark figure, against the snow.</p>
<p>"Oh, just busy." Craven suddenly looked up as though he were going to ask
Olva a question. Then he apparently changed his mind, muttered a
good-night and disappeared round the corner of the building.</p>
<p>Olva was alone in the Court. From some room came the sound of voices and
laughter, from some other room a piano—some one called a name in
Little Court. A sheet of stars drew the white light from the snow to
heaven.</p>
<p>Olva turned very slowly and entered his black stairway.</p>
<p>In his heart he was crying, "How long can I stand this? Another day?
Another hour? This loneliness. . . . I must break it. I must tell some
one. I <i>must</i> tell some one."</p>
<p>As he entered his room he thought that he saw against the farther wall an
old gilt mirror and in the light of it a dark figure facing him; a voice,
heavy with some great overburdening sorrow, spoke to him.</p>
<p>"How terrible a thing it is to be alone with God!"</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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