'No,' said Helen, after a little hesitation. 'Do you?'
'No.'
So they were still for another moment, but then started to walk again: back, at first, the way they had come; back to the bottom of Ludgate Hill. But here, without debate, they turned, and headed up towards St Paul 's.
The streets grew quieter again and, once they'd passed under the railway bridge, the mood of the city seemed transformed. There was a sense-for it could not be seen, so much as felt-of exposed ground, unnatural space. The pavements were edged with fences and hoardings, but Helen found her thoughts slipping past the the flimsy panels of wood to the rubble, the burnt and broken things, the uncovered girders and yawning basements and smashed brick, beyond… She and Julia walked without speaking, awed by the strangeness of the place. They stopped at the base of the cathedral steps and Helen looked up, trying to trace the outline of the huge, irregular silhouette against the dark of the sky.
'I looked at this, this afternoon,' she said, 'from Parliament Hill.' She didn't say she had also looked, anxiously, for Mecklenburgh Square; she'd forgotten it herself, for the moment. 'How it seemed to loom over London! Like a great big toad.'
'Yes,' said Julia. She seemed to shudder. 'I'm never very sure I like it here. Everyone says how grateful they are, that St Paul 's hasn't been touched, but- I don't know, it seems freakish to me.'
Helen looked at her. 'You can't wish it had been bombed?'
'I'd rather it had been bombed, naturally, than a family in Croydon or Bethnal Green. Meanwhile it sits here, like-not like a toad, but like some great Union Jack, or-like Churchill, “ Britain can take it”, all of that-somehow making it all right that the war's still going on…'
'It does make it all right, though-doesn't it?' asked Helen quietly. 'In the sense, I mean, that while we've still got St Paul 's- I'm not talking about Churchill, or flags. But while we've still got this and all it stands for: I mean, elegance, and reason, and-and great beauty-then the war is still worth fighting. Isn't it?'
'Is that what this war's about?' asked Julia.
'What do you think it's about?'
'I think it's about our love of savagery, rather than our love of beauty. I think the spirit that went into the building of St Paul 's has shown itself to be thin: it's like gold leaf, and now it's rising, peeling away. If it couldn't keep us from the last war, and it couldn't keep us from this-from Hitler and Hitlerism, from Jew-hatred, from the bombing of women and children in cities and towns-what use is it? If we have to fight so hard to keep it-if we have to have elderly men patrolling the roofs of churches, to sweep incendiaries from them with little brushes!-how valuable can it be? How much at the centre of the human heart?'
Helen shivered-impressed, suddenly, by the awful sadness of Julia's words; and glimpsing a sort of darkness in her-a frightening, baffling darkness. She touched her arm.
'If I thought like that, Julia,' she said softly, 'I'd want to die.'
Julia was still for a moment; then moved-took a step, swept her foot, kicked gravel. 'I suppose,' she said, in a lighter voice, 'I don't think like it, really; or I'd want to die, too. It's a thing one can't think, can one? Instead one concentrates one's mind'-she must have been remembering the men and women they'd seen going into the Underground with pillows-'on the price of combs; on pork and onions. On cigarettes.-Do you want one, by the way?'
They laughed, and the darkness passed. Helen drew back her hand. Julia brought out a packet from her pocket, fumbling slightly because of her gloves. She struck a match, and her face sprang startlingly into life, yellow and black. Helen bent her head to the flame, then straightened up and made to move on. The light had made her feel blind again. When Julia tugged at her arm, she let herself be led.
Then she saw where Julia was heading: eastwards, towards the ground beyond St Paul 's. 'This way?' she asked, in surprise.
'Why not?' answered Julia. 'There's somewhere, now, I'd like to take you. If we keep to the road, I think we'll be all right.'
So they left the cathedral behind and started on the line of stone and broken tarmac that had once been Cannon Street, but was now more like the idea or the ghost of a road, on a landscape that might have been flat open country. Within a minute or two the sky seemed to have expanded over their heads, giving the illusion of light; as before, however, they could not see so much as sense the devastation that lay about them: they tried to peer into the utter darkness of the ground, and their gazes slid about. Two or three times Helen put her hand to her eyes as if to wipe veils or cobwebs from them. They might have been walking through murky water, so absolutely strange and dense was the quality of the night here, and so freighted with violence and loss.
They kept the beams of their torches very low, following the whitened line of the kerb. Every time a car or a lorry passed they slowed their step, pressed themselves against the feeble-seeming fences that had been put there to separate pavement from rubble, and felt earth and bramble and broken stone beneath their shoes. When they spoke, they spoke in murmurs.
Julia said, 'I remember making this walk, on New Year's Day in 1941. The road was almost impassable, even on foot. I came to look at the damaged churches. I think even more have gone since then. Back there'-she nodded over her left shoulder-'must be the remains of St Augustine 's. It was bad enough when I saw it then; it was bombed again, wasn't it, right at the end of the last blitz?'
'I don't know,' said Helen.
'I think it was. And ahead of us, there-can you see?' She gestured. 'You can just make it out-that must be all that's left of St Mildred, Bread Street. That was awfully sad…'
She named more churches as they walked: St Mary-le-Bow, St Mary Aldermary, St James, St Michael; she seemed to be able to identify, quite clearly, the shapes of their battered towers and attenuated spires, while Helen struggled to pick them out at all. Now and then she flicked the beam of her torch across the waste-ground, to guide Helen's eye; the light caught fragments of broken glass, patches of frost, and found colour: the green and brown and silver of nettle, bracken, thistle. Once it lit up the eyes of some creature.
'Look, there!'
'Is it a cat?'
'It's a fox! Look at its red tail!'
They watched it dart, as quick and fluid as racing water; they tried to follow it with their torch-beams as it ran. Then they turned their torches off and listened-heard the rustling of leaves and the shifting of earth. But that soon became unnerving. They thought of rats, adders, vagrants. They went on, more quickly-heading away from the open ground to the shelter of the streets behind Cannon Street Station.
The buildings here were offices and banks: some had been gutted in 1940 and left unrepaired, some were still in use, but at this sort of hour on a Saturday night it was impossible to tell the exact condition of any of them, they all had an equally haunted look-more weird, in its way, than the heath-like feel of the blasted place where buildings had been lost completely.
If the streets around Ludgate Circus had been quiet, here they seemed utterly deserted. Only now and then, from deep beneath the broken pavements, came the rumbling of the Underground; as if herds of great, complaining creatures were hurling themselves through the city sewers-as, in a way, thought Helen, they were.
She gripped Julia's arm more tightly. It was always disconcerting, in a black-out, leaving the places you knew best. A particular feeling started to creep over you, a mixture of panic and dread: as if you were walking through a rifle-range with a target on your back… 'We must be mad, Julia,' she whispered, 'to be here!'
'It was your idea.'
'I know, but-'
'Are you frightened?'
'Yes! Anyone could come at us out of the dark.'