Jack and Piet laughed at her; Martha was too disappointed to laugh. Seeing how she felt, Mrs Van turned at the door and said they would ring her that night from G—to tell her how the voting went.

  ‘I expect Anton’d be interested to hear too,’ added Mrs Van with a detachment that told Martha how much Mrs Van disapproved of Anton.

  The sound of Anton’s name made Piet’s face change. He said abruptly to Martha: ‘I’d like a word with you.’ Martha followed him into the hallway. Mrs Van and Jack went ahead with a tact which showed they knew what Piet had planned to say.

  Piet said: ‘Look here, Matty, I meant to do this formally, but there’s no time like the present, and I’ve got to the point where the less I see of your old man the better. ‘

  ‘Oh, Piet, why don’t you think it over?’ She had been expecting for some days that Piet and Marie would leave the group.

  ‘I’ve had enough,’ said Piet. His face was flaming with anger and with embarrassment. ‘It’s a bloody farce. Communists we call ourselves. The truth is, ordinary people wouldn’t even understand the language we speak. I’m telling you, when I go to one of the union meetings from one of our meetings, I’m scared stiff I might use some of the bloody jargon by accident – they’d think I’d gone off my rocker. There’s half a dozen of us, slaving ourselves to death, we could do exactly the same things if we weren’t group members at all.’

  ‘If you disapprove of party policy, the correct way is to stay inside and change it,’ said Martha, with earnestness.

  ‘Oh to hell,’ said Piet. ‘We’ve got to the point where we spend more time calling each other names than we do on real work. I’ve had it. Anyway, that’s all. And that goes for Marie too.’ A car hooted outside. ‘No hard feelings,’ he said, going out. ‘You’re going to take a formal decision I’m a fascist traitor, but no hard feelings as far as I’m concerned.’

  Martha went back to Maisie, who was now walking up and down the room, frowning with concentration.

  Maisie had lapsed from the group without any formal announcement. Marie and Piet had left, which meant that Tommy would too. Of the RAF men there was only Athen, and he would be leaving the Colony soon. Jasmine had gone to Johannesburg. The Communist Party of Southern Zambesia now consisted of Anton, Marjorie, herself and Colin. Colin had been warned by the head of his Department that he would not hold his job if he did not break his connection with the communists. He had said he could continue to consider himself a communist but he would no longer attend meetings.

  In short, the group was at an end. At this, Martha felt herself cut off from everything that had fed her imagination: until this moment she had been part of the grandeur of the struggle in Europe, part of the Red Army, the guerrillas in China, the French underground, and the partisans in Italy, Yugoslavia and Greece.

  She was recalled from her sense of futility by the sound of Maisie’s heavy breathing: the girl was marching up and down the room with her heavy rolling gait, the sweat pouring off her face.

  ‘Maisie, it’s no use getting yourself all tensed up so soon,’ Martha said, but helplessly, remembering how she herself had tensed up and been unable to prevent it. ‘What exactly did the nurse say?’

  ‘She said there was no hurry,’ Maisie said sullenly. ‘The pains started, or I thought they did …’ Maisie lowered herself on to the edge of the bed, and sat limp, her slender arms dangling. In other words it was probably a false alarm.

  ‘You’d better sleep,’ said Martha, trying not to resent Maisie for keeping her from the Congress. Maisie obediently laid herself on her side and shut her eyes. Martha drew the curtains. A thin threaded glare of white light lay across the bed, across the heavy body. An aeroplane roared overhead, making the hot air throb.

  ‘Sleep,’ said Martha again. The childish lashes lying on Maisie’s fat cheeks were trembling with the effort to sleep.

  Martha went upstairs to her flat. Anton was there. As she entered he said: ‘Well, my little one, I’m so happy you’re still here.’

  She said dryly: ‘I should have thought you would have wanted me to be at the Congress.’

  He said in the same fond voice: ‘Poor Maisie was so uncomfortable. I thought she would be happy to have you. And how is your patient?’ he added.

  ‘It seems it was a false alarm.’ She thought that very likely Anton had put it into Maisie’s head that her labour was starting. If so … She was acutely depressed. We’re all mad, she thought, trying to make it humorous. She recognized Marjorie’s dry and humorous tone, and thought: Why is it I listen for the echoes of other people in my voice and what I do all the time? The fact is, I’m not a person at all, I’m nothing yet – perhaps I never will be.

  She sat on her bed under the window and looked up into the full, hot blue sky where, very high up, a couple of tiny silver insects glittered. Anton was watching her over the top of his book.

  ‘Piet’s just told me he and Marie are leaving the Party,’ she remarked.

  He said: ‘So? It does not surprise me. I heard he’s becoming a builder on his own account – he’s going to be a boss now.’ He sounded full of contempt.

  ‘All the same,’ Martha said, in the same dry humorous tone: ‘there are three of us left now. It seems we ought to discuss whether or not we’ve been wrong.’

  ‘Yes, yes, as communists we ought always to admit our faults and correct them.’ There was a very long silence. Martha was thinking: That’s another two years of my life gone. The phrase two years seemed meaningless: they had been years of such hard work, excitement, happiness and learning that they seemed more important than all the time she had lived before. She thought: Well, that’s over. She wanted desperately to sleep, but she was following in her mind the car in which Piet, Mrs Van, Jack, and whoever Mrs Van had found to replace herself, were speeding towards the Congress.

  She remarked: ‘I wonder which side is going to win?’

  ‘Yes, yes, thse social democrats always take themselves so seriously.’

  After a pause he added: ‘I remember that joke Grete used to make – I remember she used to say …’

  Martha found herself saying: ‘For God’s sake, will you shut up about Grete!’

  He said with cold reproof: ‘She was a very good comrade.’

  ‘I dare say she was,’ said Martha.

  He waited for her to apologize, but since she did not, lifted his book and shut her out with it.

  Martha went downstairs to Maisie, who was asleep.

  She came upstairs again, and waited out the long afternoon until the telephone rang. The Congress had come to a sudden end. The ‘Red’ faction having won on a vote, that the African Branch should remain, the losing side had there and then split off and formed a new party. In other words the ‘Left’, such as it was, was fragmented: there were two parties, the Social Democratic Party, representing, or at least giving tokens of goodwill towards, the Africans; and the newborn Labour Party, representing white Labour. Any chance of either defeating the Government at the next election was over.

  Anton, hearing the news, remarked: ‘Yes, the development in this country accurately reflects the same development in the Union of South Africa, and it is proof of the necessity for a communist party.’

  ‘But Anton, there are only three of us left.’ Martha was examining two very clear convictions that existed simultaneously in her mind. One, it was inevitable that everything should have happened in exactly the way it had happened: no one could have behaved differently. Two, that everything which had happened was unreal, grotesque, and irrelevant.

  ‘Yes, yes, but that is because of the objective political situation. We must make a fresh analysis of the position and begin again.’

  But it’s not possible that both can be true, Martha thought. She was overwhelmed with futility. She lay down on the bed, her back to Anton, who was already freshly analysing the situation, and allowed herself to slide into sleep like a diver weighted with lead.

  About the Author

  DORIS
LESSING was born of British parents in Persia in 1919 and moved with her family to Southern Rhodesia when she was five years old. She went to England in 1949 and has lived there ever since. She is the author of more than thirty books—novels, stories, reportage, poems, and plays. Doris Lessing lives in London.

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

  Praise

  “There can’t, I suppose, be anyone left who reads modern fiction at all and isn’t aware of the importance of Doris Lessing’s work …. Lessing knows just what she is doing and a real, densely imagined, completely credible world emerges.”

  —JOHN WAIN

  Martha Quest, the embattled heroine of the Children of Violence series, has been acclaimed as one of the greatest fictional creations in the English language. In A Ripple from the Storm, Doris Lessing charts Martha Quest’s personal and political adventures in race-torn British Africa, following Martha through World War II, a grotesque second marriage, and an excursion into Communism. This wise and startling novel perceptively reveals the paradoxes, passions, and ironies rooted in the life of twentieth-century Anglo-Africa.

  A Ripple from the Storm is the third novel in Doris Lessing’s classic Children of Violence sequence of novels, each a masterpiece in its own right, and, taken together, an incisive and all-encompassing vision of our world in the twentieth century.

  “I read the Children of Violence novels and began to understand how a person could write about the problems of the world in a compelling and beautiful way. And it seemed to me that was the most important thing I could ever do.” —BARBARA KINGSOLVER

  “Doris Lessing, of all the postwar English novelists, is the foremost creative descendant of that ‘great tradition’ which includes George Eliot and D. H. Lawrence.’

  —New York Times Book Review

  “Absorbing reading … Lessing conveys [with great clarity] the emotions, aspirations and constant self-questing of Martha Quest, her most powerful character.”

  —Sunday Times (London)

  “She is a mature and valuable artist, adventurous in the mysteries of daily life, thoughtful, passionate, true.” —STANLEY KAUFFMANN

  ALSO BY DORIS LESSING

  NOVELS

  The Gran Is Singing

  The Golden Notebook

  Briefing for a Descent into Hell

  The Summer Before the Dark

  The Memoirs of a Survivor

  The Diaries of Jane Somers:

  The Diary of a Good Neighbor

  If the Old Could …

  The Good Terrorist

  The Fifth Child

  “CANOPUS IN ARGOS: ARCHIVES” SERIES

  Re: Colonized Planet 5-Shikasta

  The Marriages Between Zones Three, Four, and Five

  The Sirian Experiments

  The Making of the Representative for Planet Eight

  Documents Relating to the Sentimental Agents in the Volyen Empire

  “CHILDREN OF VIOLENCE” SERIES

  Martha Quest

  A Proper Marriage

  A Ripple from the Storm

  Landlocked

  The Four-Gated City

  SHORT STORIES

  This Was the Old Chiefs Country

  The Habit of Loving

  A Man and Two Women

  The Temptation of Jack Orkney and Other Stories

  Stories

  African Stories

  The Real Thing: Stories and Sketches

  OPERA

  The Making of the Representative for Planet Eight (Music by Philip Glass)

  POETRY

  Fourteen Poems

  NONFICTION

  In Pursuit of the English

  Particularly Cats

  Going Home

  A Small Personal Voice

  Prisons We Choose to Live Inside

  The Wind Blows Away Our Words

  Particularly Cats … And Rufus

  African Laughter

  The Doris Lessing Reader

  WORKS BY DORIS LESSING

  Winner of the Nobel Prize

  NONFICTION

  AFRICAN LAUGHTER: Four Visits to Zimbabwe

  GOING HOME

  IN PURSUIT OF THE ENGLISH: A Documentary

  PRISONS WE CHOOSE TO LIVE INSIDE

  TIME BITES: Views and Reviews

  UNDER MY SKIN: Volume One of My Autobiography, to 1949

  WALKING IN THE SHADE: Volume Two of My Autobiography, 1949-1962

  FICTION

  BEN, IN THE WORLD: The Sequel to The Fifth Child

  THE CLEFT: A Novel

  THE GOLDEN NOTEBOOK

  THE GRANDMOTHERS: Four Short Novels

  THE GRASS IS SINGING: A Novel

  LOVE AGAIN: A Novel

  MARA AND DANN: An Adventure

  THE REAL THING: Stories and Sketches

  THE STORY OF GENERAL DANN AND MARA’S DAUGHTER, GRIOT AND THE SNOW DOG: A Novel

  THE SWEETEST DREAM: A Novel

  THE CHILDREN OF VIOLENCE SERIES

  MARTHA QUEST

  A PROPER MARRIAGE

  A RIPPLE FROM THE STORM

  LANDLOCKED

  THE FOUR-GATED CITY

  Copyright

  A Ripple From the Storm was first published in the United Kingdom by Michael Joseph in 1958. First U.S. edition (in one volume together with Landlocked) was published by Simon & Schuster in 1966.

  A RIPPLE FROM THE STORM. Copyright © 1958, 1966 by Doris Lessing.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  EPub Edition © SEPTEMBER 2010 ISBN: 978-0-062-04792-2

  First HarperPerennial edition published 1995.

  * * *

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Lessing, Doris May, 1919–

  A ripple from the storm: a novel / Doris Lessing.

  p. cm. — (Children of violence)

  ISBN 978-0-06-097664-4

  I. Title. II. Series: Lessing, Doris May, 1919– Children of violence.

  (PR6023.E833R5 1995)

  823’.914—dc20 95-31488

  * * *

  07 08 09 10 RRD 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3

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  Doris Lessing, A Ripple From the Storm

 


 

 
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