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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Spoils of Poynton, by Henry James
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  • Title: The Spoils of Poynton
  • Author: Henry James
  • Release Date: August 2, 2010 [EBook #33325]
  • Language: English
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  • The Spoils of Poynton
  • By Henry James
  • BOSTON AND NEW YORK
  • HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
  • The Riverside Press, Cambridge
  • 1897
  • Copyright, 1896,
  • By HENRY JAMES.
  • _All rights reserved._
  • _The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A._
  • Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. Houghton & Company.
  • THE SPOILS OF POYNTON
  • I
  • Mrs. Gereth had said she would go with the rest to church, but suddenly
  • it seemed to her that she should not be able to wait even till
  • church-time for relief: breakfast, at Waterbath, was a punctual meal,
  • and she had still nearly an hour on her hands. Knowing the church to be
  • near, she prepared in her room for the little rural walk, and on her way
  • down again, passing through corridors and observing imbecilities of
  • decoration, the æsthetic misery of the big commodious house, she felt a
  • return of the tide of last night's irritation, a renewal of everything
  • she could secretly suffer from ugliness and stupidity. Why did she
  • consent to such contacts, why did she so rashly expose herself? She had
  • had, heaven knew, her reasons, but the whole experience was to be
  • sharper than she had feared. To get away from it and out into the air,
  • into the presence of sky and trees, flowers and birds, was a necessity
  • of every nerve. The flowers at Waterbath would probably go wrong in
  • color and the nightingales sing out of tune; but she remembered to have
  • heard the place described as possessing those advantages that are
  • usually spoken of as natural. There were advantages enough it clearly
  • didn't possess. It was hard for her to believe that a woman could look
  • presentable who had been kept awake for hours by the wall-paper in her
  • room; yet none the less, as in her fresh widow's weeds she rustled
  • across the hall, she was sustained by the consciousness, which always
  • added to the unction of her social Sundays, that she was, as usual, the
  • only person in the house incapable of wearing in her preparation the
  • horrible stamp of the same exceptional smartness that would be
  • conspicuous in a grocer's wife. She would rather have perished than have
  • looked _endimanchée_.
  • She was fortunately not challenged, the hall being empty of the other
  • women, who were engaged precisely in arraying themselves to that dire
  • end. Once in the grounds, she recognized that, with a site, a view that
  • struck the note, set an example to its inmates, Waterbath ought to have
  • been charming. How she herself, with such elements to handle, would have
  • taken the fine hint of nature! Suddenly, at the turn of a walk, she came
  • on a member of the party, a young lady seated on a bench in deep and
  • lonely meditation. She had observed the girl at dinner and afterwards:
  • she was always looking at girls with an apprehensive or speculative
  • reference to her son. Deep in her heart was a conviction that Owen
  • would, in spite of all her spells, marry at last a frump; and this from
  • no evidence that she could have represented as adequate, but simply from
  • her deep uneasiness, her belief that such a special sensibility as her
  • own could have been inflicted on a woman only as a source of anguish. It
  • would be her fate, her discipline, her cross, to have a frump brought
  • hideously home to her. This girl, one of the two Vetches, had no beauty,
  • but Mrs. Gereth, scanning the dullness for a sign of life, had been
  • straightway able to classify such a figure as the least, for the moment,
  • of her afflictions. Fleda Vetch was dressed with an idea, though perhaps
  • with not much else; and that made a bond when there was none other,
  • especially as in this case the idea was real, not imitation. Mrs. Gereth
  • had long ago generalized the truth that the temperament of the frump is
  • amply consistent with a certain usual prettiness. There were five girls
  • in the party, and the prettiness of this one, slim, pale, and
  • black-haired, was less likely than that of the others ever to occasion
  • an exchange of platitudes. The two less developed Brigstocks, daughters
  • of the house, were in particular tiresomely "lovely." A second glance,
  • this morning, at the young lady before her conveyed to Mrs. Gereth the
  • soothing assurance that she also was guiltless of looking hot and fine.
  • They had had no talk as yet, but this was a note that would effectually
  • introduce them if the girl should show herself in the least conscious of
  • their community. She got up from her seat with a smile that but partly
  • dissipated the prostration Mrs. Gereth had recognized in her attitude.
  • The elder woman drew her down again, and for a minute, as they sat
  • together, their eyes met and sent out mutual soundings. "Are you safe?
  • Can I utter it?" each of them said to the other, quickly recognizing,
  • almost proclaiming, their common need to escape. The tremendous fancy,
  • as it came to be called, that Mrs. Gereth was destined to take to Fleda
  • Vetch virtually began with this discovery that the poor child had been
  • moved to flight even more promptly than herself. That the poor child no
  • less quickly perceived how far she could now go was proved by the
  • immense friendliness with which she instantly broke out: "Isn't it too
  • dreadful?"
  • "Horrible--horrible!" cried Mrs. Gereth, with a laugh, "and it's really
  • a comfort to be able to say it." She had an idea, for it was her
  • ambition, that she successfully made a secret of that awkward oddity,
  • her proneness to be rendered unhappy by the presence of the dreadful.
  • Her passion for the exquisite was the cause of this, but it was a
  • passion she considered that she never advertised nor gloried in,
  • contenting herself with letting it regulate her steps and show quietly
  • in her life, remembering at all times that there are few things more
  • soundless than a deep devotion. She was therefore struck with the
  • acuteness of the little girl who had already put a finger on her hidden
  • spring. What was dreadful now, what was horrible, was the intimate
  • ugliness of Waterbath, and it was of that phenomenon these ladies talked
  • while they sat in the shade and drew refreshment from the great tranquil
  • sky, from which no blue saucers were suspended. It was an ugliness
  • fundamental and systematic, the result of the abnormal nature of the
  • Brigstocks, from whose composition the principle of taste had been
  • extravagantly omitted. In the arrangement of their home some other
  • principle, remarkably active, but uncanny and obscure, had operated
  • instead, with consequences depressing to behold, consequences that took
  • the form of a universal futility. The house was bad in all conscience,
  • but it might have passed if they had only let it alone. This saving
  • mercy was beyond them; they had smothered it with trumpery ornament and
  • scrapbook art, with strange excrescences and bunchy draperies, with
  • gimcracks that might have been keepsakes for maid-servants and
  • nondescript conveniences that might have been prizes for the blind. They
  • had gone wildly astray over carpets and curtains; they had an infallible
  • instinct for disaster, and were so cruelly doom-ridden that it rendered
  • them almost tragic. Their drawing-room, Mrs. Gereth lowered her voice to
  • mention, caused her face to burn, and each of the new friends confided
  • to the other that in her own apartment she had given way to tears. There
  • was in the elder lady's a set of comic water-colors, a family joke by a
  • family genius, and in the younger's a souvenir from some centennial or
  • other Exhibition, that they shudderingly alluded to. The house was
  • perversely full of souvenirs of places even more ugly than itself and of
  • things it would have been a pious duty to forget. The worst horror was
  • the acres of varnish, something advertised and smelly, with which
  • everything was smeared; it was Fleda Vetch's conviction that the
  • application of it, by their own hands and hilariously shoving each
  • other, was the amusement of the Brigstocks on rainy days.
  • When, as criticism deepened, Fleda dropped the suggestion that some
  • people would perhaps see something in Mona, Mrs. Gereth caught her up
  • with a groan of protest, a smothered familiar cry of "Oh, my dear!" Mona
  • was the eldest of the three, the one Mrs. Gereth most suspected. She
  • confided to her young friend that it was her suspicion that had brought
  • her to Waterbath; and this was going very far, for on the spot, as a
  • refuge, a remedy, she had clutched at the idea that something might be
  • done with the girl before her. It was her fancied exposure at any rate
  • that had sharpened the shock; made her ask herself with a terrible chill
  • if fate could really be plotting to saddle her with a daughter-in-law
  • brought up in such a place. She had seen Mona in her appropriate setting
  • and she had seen Owen, handsome and heavy, dangle beside her; but the
  • effect of these first hours had happily not been to darken the prospect.
  • It was clearer to her that she could never accept Mona, but it was after
  • all by no means certain that Owen would ask her to. He had sat by
  • somebody else at dinner, and afterwards he had talked to Mrs. Firmin,
  • who was as dreadful as all the rest, but redeemingly married. His
  • heaviness, which in her need of expansion she freely named, had two
  • aspects: one of them his monstrous lack of taste, the other his
  • exaggerated prudence. If it should come to a question of carrying Mona
  • with a high hand there would be no need to worry, for that was rarely
  • his manner of proceeding.
  • Invited by her companion, who had asked if it weren't wonderful, Mrs.
  • Gereth had begun to say a word about Poynton; but she heard a sound of
  • voices that made her stop short. The next moment she rose to her feet,
  • and Fleda could see that her alarm was by no means quenched. Behind the
  • place where they had been sitting the ground dropped with a certain
  • steepness, forming a long grassy bank, up which Owen Gereth and Mona
  • Brigstock, dressed for church but making a familiar joke of it, were in
  • the act of scrambling and helping each other. When they had reached the
  • even ground Fleda was able to read the meaning of the exclamation in
  • which Mrs. Gereth had expressed her reserves on the subject of Miss
  • Brigstock's personality. Miss Brigstock had been laughing and even
  • romping, but the circumstance hadn't contributed the ghost of an
  • expression to her countenance. Tall, straight and fair, long-limbed and
  • strangely festooned, she stood there without a look in her eye or any
  • perceptible intention of any sort in any other feature. She belonged to
  • the type in which speech is an unaided emission of sound and the secret
  • of being is impenetrably and incorruptibly kept. Her expression would
  • probably have been beautiful if she had had one, but whatever she
  • communicated she communicated, in a manner best known to herself,
  • without signs. This was not the case with Owen Gereth, who had plenty of
  • them, and all very simple and immediate. Robust and artless, eminently
  • natural, yet perfectly correct, he looked pointlessly active and
  • pleasantly dull. Like his mother and like Fleda Vetch, but not for the
  • same reason, this young pair had come out to take a turn before church.
  • The meeting of the two couples was sensibly awkward, and Fleda, who was
  • sagacious, took the measure of the shock inflicted on Mrs. Gereth. There
  • had been intimacy--oh yes, intimacy as well as puerility--in the
  • horse-play of which they had just had a glimpse. The party began to
  • stroll together to the house, and Fleda had again a sense of Mrs.
  • Gereth's quick management in the way the lovers, or whatever they were,
  • found themselves separated. She strolled behind with Mona, the mother
  • possessing herself of her son, her exchange of remarks with whom,
  • however, remained, as they went, suggestively inaudible. That member of
  • the party in whose intenser consciousness we shall most profitably seek
  • a reflection of the little drama with which we are concerned received an
  • even livelier impression of Mrs. Gereth's intervention from the fact
  • that ten minutes later, on the way to church, still another pairing had
  • been effected. Owen walked with Fleda, and it was an amusement to the
  • girl to feel sure that this was by his mother's direction. Fleda had
  • other amusements as well: such as noting that Mrs. Gereth was now with
  • Mona Brigstock; such as observing that she was all affability to that
  • young woman; such as reflecting that, masterful and clever, with a great
  • bright spirit, she was one of those who impose themselves as an
  • influence; such as feeling finally that Owen Gereth was absolutely
  • beautiful and delightfully dense. This young person had even from
  • herself wonderful secrets of delicacy and pride; but she came as near
  • distinctness as in the consideration of such matters she had ever come
  • at all in now surrendering herself to the idea that it was of a pleasant
  • effect and rather remarkable to be stupid without offense--of a
  • pleasanter effect and more remarkable indeed than to be clever and
  • horrid. Owen Gereth at any rate, with his inches, his features, and his
  • lapses, was neither of these latter things. She herself was prepared, if
  • she should ever marry, to contribute all the cleverness, and she liked
  • to think that her husband would be a force grateful for direction. She
  • was in her small way a spirit of the same family as Mrs. Gereth. On that
  • flushed and huddled Sunday a great matter occurred; her little life
  • became aware of a singular quickening. Her meagre past fell away from
  • her like a garment of the wrong fashion, and as she came up to town on
  • the Monday what she stared at in the suburban fields from the train was
  • a future full of the things she particularly loved.
  • II
  • These were neither more nor less than the things with which she had had
  • time to learn from Mrs. Gereth that Poynton overflowed. Poynton, in the
  • south of England, was this lady's established, or rather her
  • disestablished home, having recently passed into the possession of her
  • son. The father of the boy, an only child, had died two years before,
  • and in London, with his mother, Owen was occupying for May and June a
  • house good-naturedly lent them by Colonel Gereth, their uncle and
  • brother-in-law. His mother had laid her hand so engagingly on Fleda
  • Vetch that in a very few days the girl knew it was possible they should
  • suffer together in Cadogan Place almost as much as they had suffered
  • together at Waterbath. The kind colonel's house was also an ordeal, but
  • the two women, for the ensuing month, had at least the relief of their
  • confessions. The great drawback of Mrs. Gereth's situation was that,
  • thanks to the rare perfection of Poynton, she was condemned to wince
  • wherever she turned. She had lived for a quarter of a century in such
  • warm closeness with the beautiful that, as she frankly admitted, life
  • had become for her a kind of fool's paradise. She couldn't leave her own
  • house without peril of exposure. She didn't say it in so many words, but
  • Fleda could see she held that there was nothing in England really to
  • compare to Poynton. There were places much grander and richer, but there
  • was no such complete work of art, nothing that would appeal so to those
  • who were really informed. In putting such elements into her hand fortune
  • had given her an inestimable chance; she knew how rarely well things had
  • gone with her and that she had tasted a happiness altogether rare.
  • There had been in the first place the exquisite old house itself, early
  • Jacobean, supreme in every part: it was a provocation, an inspiration, a
  • matchless canvas for the picture. Then there had been her husband's
  • sympathy and generosity, his knowledge and love, their perfect accord
  • and beautiful life together, twenty-six years of planning and seeking, a
  • long, sunny harvest of taste and curiosity. Lastly, she never denied,
  • there had been her personal gift, the genius, the passion, the patience
  • of the collector--a patience, an almost infernal cunning, that had
  • enabled her to do it all with a limited command of money. There wouldn't
  • have been money enough for any one else, she said with pride, but there
  • had been money enough for her. They had saved on lots of things in life,
  • and there were lots of things they hadn't had, but they had had in every
  • corner of Europe their swing among the Jews. It was fascinating to poor
  • Fleda, who hadn't a penny in the world nor anything nice at home, and
  • whose only treasure was her subtle mind, to hear this genuine English
  • lady, fresh and fair, young in the fifties, declare with gayety and
  • conviction that she was herself the greatest Jew who had ever tracked a
  • victim. Fleda, with her mother dead, hadn't so much even as a home, and
  • her nearest chance of one was that there was some appearance her sister
  • would become engaged to a curate whose eldest brother was supposed to
  • have property and would perhaps allow him something. Her father paid
  • some of her bills, but he didn't like her to live with him; and she had
  • lately, in Paris, with several hundred other young women, spent a year
  • in a studio, arming herself for the battle of life by a course with an
  • impressionist painter. She was determined to work, but her impressions,
  • or somebody's else, were as yet her only material. Mrs. Gereth had told
  • her she liked her because she had an extraordinary _flair_; but under
  • the circumstances a _flair_ was a questionable boon: in the dry places
  • in which she had mainly moved she could have borne a chronic catarrh.
  • She was constantly summoned to Cadogan Place, and before the month was
  • out was kept to stay, to pay a visit of which the end, it was agreed,
  • should have nothing to do with the beginning. She had a sense, partly
  • exultant and partly alarmed, of having quickly become necessary to her
  • imperious friend, who indeed gave a reason quite sufficient for it in
  • telling her there was nobody else who understood. From Mrs. Gereth there
  • was in these days an immense deal to understand, though it might be
  • freely summed up in the circumstance that she was wretched. She told
  • Fleda that she couldn't completely know why till she should have seen
  • the things at Poynton. Fleda could perfectly grasp this connection,
  • which was exactly one of the matters that, in their inner mystery, were
  • a blank to everybody else.
  • The girl had a promise that the wonderful house should be shown her
  • early in July, when Mrs. Gereth would return to it as to her home; but
  • even before this initiation she put her finger on the spot that in the
  • poor lady's troubled soul ached hardest. This was the misery that
  • haunted her, the dread of the inevitable surrender. What Fleda had to
  • sit up to was the confirmed appearance that Owen Gereth would marry Mona
  • Brigstock, marry her in his mother's teeth, and that such an act would
  • have incalculable bearings. They were present to Mrs. Gereth, her
  • companion could see, with a vividness that at moments almost ceased to
  • be that of sanity. She would have to give up Poynton, and give it up to
  • a product of Waterbath--that was the wrong that rankled, the humiliation
  • at which Fleda would be able adequately to shudder only when she should
  • know the place. She did know Waterbath, and she despised it--she had
  • that qualification for sympathy. Her sympathy was intelligent, for she
  • read deep into the matter; she stared, aghast, as it came home to her
  • for the first time, at the cruel English custom of the expropriation of
  • the lonely mother. Mr. Gereth had apparently been a very amiable man,
  • but Mr. Gereth had left things in a way that made the girl marvel. The
  • house and its contents had been treated as a single splendid object;
  • everything was to go straight to his son, and his widow was to have a
  • maintenance and a cottage in another county. No account whatever had
  • been taken of her relation to her treasures, of the passion with which
  • she had waited for them, worked for them, picked them over, made them
  • worthy of each other and the house, watched them, loved them, lived with
  • them. He appeared to have assumed that she would settle questions with
  • her son, that he could depend upon Owen's affection. And in truth, as
  • poor Mrs. Gereth inquired, how could he possibly have had a
  • prevision--he who turned his eyes instinctively from everything
  • repulsive--of anything so abnormal as a Waterbath Brigstock? He had been
  • in ugly houses enough, but had escaped that particular nightmare.
  • Nothing so perverse could have been expected to happen as that the heir
  • to the loveliest thing in England should be inspired to hand it over to
  • a girl so exceptionally tainted. Mrs. Gereth spoke of poor Mona's taint
  • as if to mention it were almost a violation of decency, and a person who
  • had listened without enlightenment would have wondered of what fault the
  • girl had been or had indeed not been guilty. But Owen had from a boy
  • never cared, had never had the least pride or pleasure in his home.
  • "Well, then, if he doesn't care!"--Fleda exclaimed, with some
  • impetuosity; stopping short, however, before she completed her sentence.
  • Mrs. Gereth looked at her rather hard. "If he doesn't care?"
  • Fleda hesitated; she had not quite had a definite idea. "Well--he'll
  • give them up."
  • "Give what up?"
  • "Why, those beautiful things."
  • "Give them up to whom?" Mrs. Gereth more boldly stared.
  • "To you, of course--to enjoy, to keep for yourself."
  • "And leave his house as bare as your hand? There's nothing in it that
  • isn't precious."
  • Fleda considered; her friend had taken her up with a smothered ferocity
  • by which she was slightly disconcerted. "I don't mean of course that he
  • should surrender everything; but he might let you pick out the things to
  • which you're most attached."
  • "I think he would if he were free," said Mrs. Gereth.
  • "And do you mean, as it is, that _she_'ll prevent him?" Mona Brigstock,
  • between these ladies, was now nothing but "she."
  • "By every means in her power."
  • "But surely not because she understands and appreciates them?"
  • "No," Mrs. Gereth replied, "but because they belong to the house and the
  • house belongs to Owen. If I should wish to take anything, she would
  • simply say, with that motionless mask: 'It goes with the house.' And day
  • after day, in the face of every argument, of every consideration of
  • generosity, she would repeat, without winking, in that voice like the
  • squeeze of a doll's stomach: 'It goes with the house--it goes with the
  • house.' In that attitude they'll shut themselves up."
  • Fleda was struck, was even a little startled with the way Mrs. Gereth
  • had turned this over--had faced, if indeed only to recognize its
  • futility, the notion of a battle with her only son. These words led her
  • to make an inquiry which she had not thought it discreet to make before;
  • she brought out the idea of the possibility, after all, of her friend's
  • continuing to live at Poynton. Would they really wish to proceed to
  • extremities? Was no good-humored, graceful compromise to be imagined or
  • brought about? Couldn't the same roof cover them? Was it so very
  • inconceivable that a married son should, for the rest of her days, share
  • with so charming a mother the home she had devoted more than a score of
  • years to making beautiful for him? Mrs. Gereth hailed this question with
  • a wan, compassionate smile; she replied that a common household, in such
  • a case, was exactly so inconceivable that Fleda had only to glance over
  • the fair face of the English land to see how few people had ever
  • conceived it. It was always thought a wonder, a "mistake," a piece of
  • overstrained sentiment; and she confessed that she was as little capable
  • of a flight of that sort as Owen himself. Even if they both had been
  • capable, they would still have Mona's hatred to reckon with. Fleda's
  • breath was sometimes taken away by the great bounds and elisions which,
  • on Mrs. Gereth's lips, the course of discussion could take. This was the
  • first she had heard of Mona's hatred, though she certainly had not
  • needed Mrs. Gereth to tell her that in close quarters that young lady
  • would prove secretly mulish. Later Fleda perceived indeed that perhaps
  • almost any girl would hate a person who should be so markedly averse to
  • having anything to do with her. Before this, however, in conversation
  • with her young friend, Mrs. Gereth furnished a more vivid motive for her
  • despair by asking how she could possibly be expected to sit there with
  • the new proprietors and accept--or call it, for a day, endure--the
  • horrors they would perpetrate in the house. Fleda reasoned that they
  • wouldn't after all smash things nor burn them up; and Mrs. Gereth
  • admitted when pushed that she didn't quite suppose they would. What she
  • meant was that they would neglect them, ignore them, leave them to
  • clumsy servants (there wasn't an object of them all but should be
  • handled with perfect love), and in many cases probably wish to replace
  • them by pieces answerable to some vulgar modern notion of the
  • convenient. Above all, she saw in advance, with dilated eyes, the
  • abominations they would inevitably mix up with them--the maddening
  • relics of Waterbath, the little brackets and pink vases, the sweepings
  • of bazaars, the family photographs and illuminated texts, the "household
  • art" and household piety of Mona's hideous home. Wasn't it enough simply
  • to contend that Mona would approach Poynton in the spirit of a
  • Brigstock, and that in the spirit of a Brigstock she would deal with her
  • acquisition? Did Fleda really see _her_, Mrs. Gereth demanded, spending
  • the remainder of her days with such a creature's elbow in her eye?
  • Fleda had to declare that she certainly didn't, and that Waterbath had
  • been a warning it would be frivolous to overlook. At the same time she
  • privately reflected that they were taking a great deal for granted, and
  • that, inasmuch as to her knowledge Owen Gereth had positively denied his
  • betrothal, the ground of their speculations was by no means firm. It
  • seemed to our young lady that in a difficult position Owen conducted
  • himself with some natural art; treating this domesticated confidant of
  • his mother's wrongs with a simple civility that almost troubled her
  • conscience, so deeply she felt that she might have had for him the air
  • of siding with that lady against him. She wondered if he would ever know
  • how little really she did this, and that she was there, since Mrs.
  • Gereth had insisted, not to betray, but essentially to confirm and
  • protect. The fact that his mother disliked Mona Brigstock might have
  • made him dislike the object of her preference, and it was detestable to
  • Fleda to remember that she might have appeared to him to offer herself
  • as an exemplary contrast. It was clear enough, however, that the happy
  • youth had no more sense for a motive than a deaf man for a tune, a
  • limitation by which, after all, she could gain as well as lose. He came
  • and went very freely on the business with which London abundantly
  • furnished him, but he found time more than once to say to her, "It's
  • awfully nice of you to look after poor Mummy." As well as his quick
  • speech, which shyness made obscure--it was usually as desperate as a
  • "rush" at some violent game--his child's eyes in his man's face put it
  • to her that, you know, this really meant a good deal for him and that he
  • hoped she would stay on. With a person in the house who, like herself,
  • was clever, poor Mummy was conveniently occupied; and Fleda found a
  • beauty in the candor and even in the modesty which apparently kept him
  • from suspecting that two such wiseheads could possibly be occupied with
  • Owen Gereth.
  • III
  • They went at last, the wiseheads, down to Poynton, where the palpitating
  • girl had the full revelation. "_Now_ do you know how I feel?" Mrs.
  • Gereth asked when in the wonderful hall, three minutes after their
  • arrival, her pretty associate dropped on a seat with a soft gasp and a
  • roll of dilated eyes. The answer came clearly enough, and in the rapture
  • of that first walk through the house Fleda took a prodigious span. She
  • perfectly understood how Mrs. Gereth felt--she had understood but
  • meagrely before; and the two women embraced with tears over the
  • tightening of their bond--tears which on the younger one's part were the
  • natural and usual sign of her submission to perfect beauty. It was not
  • the first time she had cried for the joy of admiration, but it was the
  • first time the mistress of Poynton, often as she had shown her house,
  • had been present at such an exhibition. She exulted in it; it quickened
  • her own tears; she assured her companion that such an occasion made the
  • poor old place fresh to her again and more precious than ever. Yes,
  • nobody had ever, that way, felt what she had achieved: people were so
  • grossly ignorant, and everybody, even the knowing ones, as they thought
  • themselves, more or less dense. What Mrs. Gereth had achieved was indeed
  • an exquisite work; and in such an art of the treasure-hunter, in
  • selection and comparison refined to that point, there was an element of
  • creation, of personality. She had commended Fleda's _flair_, and Fleda
  • now gave herself up to satiety. Preoccupations and scruples fell away
  • from her; she had never known a greater happiness than the week she
  • passed in this initiation.
  • Wandering through clear chambers where the general effect made
  • preferences almost as impossible as if they had been shocks, pausing at
  • open doors where vistas were long and bland, she would, even if she had
  • not already known, have discovered for herself that Poynton was the
  • record of a life. It was written in great syllables of color and form,
  • the tongues of other countries and the hands of rare artists. It was all
  • France and Italy, with their ages composed to rest. For England you
  • looked out of old windows--it was England that was the wide embrace.
  • While outside, on the low terraces, she contradicted gardeners and
  • refined on nature, Mrs. Gereth left her guest to finger fondly the
  • brasses that Louis Quinze might have thumbed, to sit with Venetian
  • velvets just held in a loving palm, to hang over cases of enamels and
  • pass and repass before cabinets. There were not many pictures--the
  • panels and the stuffs were themselves the picture; and in all the great
  • wainscoted house there was not an inch of pasted paper. What struck
  • Fleda most in it was the high pride of her friend's taste, a fine
  • arrogance, a sense of style which, however amused and amusing, never
  • compromised nor stooped. She felt indeed, as this lady had intimated to
  • her that she would, both a respect and a compassion that she had not
  • known before; the vision of the coming surrender filled her with an
  • equal pain. To give it all up, to die to it--that thought ached in her
  • breast. She herself could imagine clinging there with a closeness
  • separate from dignity. To have created such a place was to have had
  • dignity enough; when there was a question of defending it the fiercest
  • attitude was the right one. After so intense a taking of possession she
  • too was to give it up; for she reflected that if Mrs. Gereth's remaining
  • there would have offered her a sort of future--stretching away in safe
  • years on the other side of a gulf--the advent of the others could only
  • be, by the same law, a great vague menace, the ruffling of a still
  • water. Such were the emotions of a hungry girl whose sensibility was
  • almost as great as her opportunities for comparison had been small. The
  • museums had done something for her, but nature had done more.
  • If Owen had not come down with them nor joined them later, it was
  • because he still found London jolly; yet the question remained of
  • whether the jollity of London was not merely the only name his small
  • vocabulary yielded for the jollity of Mona Brigstock. There was indeed
  • in his conduct another ambiguity--something that required explaining so
  • long as his motive didn't come to the surface. If he was in love, what
  • was the matter? And what was the matter still more if he wasn't? The
  • mystery was at last cleared up: this Fleda gathered from the tone in
  • which, one morning at breakfast, a letter just opened made Mrs. Gereth
  • cry out. Her dismay was almost a shriek: "Why, he's bringing her
  • down--he wants her to see the house!" They flew, the two women, into
  • each other's arms and, with their heads together, soon made out that the
  • reason, the baffling reason why nothing had yet happened, was that Mona
  • didn't know, or Owen didn't, whether Poynton would really please her.
  • She was coming down to judge; and could anything in the world be more
  • like poor Owen than the ponderous probity which had kept him from
  • pressing her for a reply till she should have learned whether she
  • approved what he had to offer her? That was a scruple it had naturally
  • been impossible to impute. If only they might fondly hope, Mrs. Gereth
  • wailed, that the girl's expectations would be dashed! There was a fine
  • consistency, a sincerity quite affecting, in her arguing that the better
  • the place should happen to look and to express the conceptions to which
  • it owed its origin, the less it would speak to an intelligence so
  • primitive. How could a Brigstock possibly understand what it was all
  • about? How, really, could a Brigstock logically do anything but hate it?
  • Mrs. Gereth, even as she whisked away linen shrouds, persuaded herself
  • of the possibility on Mona's part of some bewildered blankness, some
  • collapse of admiration that would prove disconcerting to her swain--a
  • hope of which Fleda at least could see the absurdity and which gave the
  • measure of the poor lady's strange, almost maniacal disposition to
  • thrust in everywhere the question of "things," to read all behavior in
  • the light of some fancied relation to them. "Things" were of course the
  • sum of the world; only, for Mrs. Gereth, the sum of the world was rare
  • French furniture and Oriental china. She could at a stretch imagine
  • people's not having, but she couldn't imagine their not wanting and not
  • missing.
  • The young couple were to be accompanied by Mrs. Brigstock, and with a
  • prevision of how fiercely they would be watched Fleda became conscious,
  • before the party arrived, of an amused, diplomatic pity for them. Almost
  • as much as Mrs. Gereth's her taste was her life, but her life was
  • somehow the larger for it. Besides, she had another care now: there was
  • some one she wouldn't have liked to see humiliated even in the form of a
  • young lady who would contribute to his never suspecting so much
  • delicacy. When this young lady appeared Fleda tried, so far as the wish
  • to efface herself allowed, to be mainly the person to take her about,
  • show her the house, and cover up her ignorance. Owen's announcement had
  • been that, as trains made it convenient, they would present themselves
  • for luncheon and depart before dinner; but Mrs. Gereth, true to her
  • system of glaring civility, proposed and obtained an extension, a dining
  • and spending of the night. She made her young friend wonder against what
  • rebellion of fact she was sacrificing in advance so profusely to form.
  • Fleda was appalled, after the first hour, by the rash innocence with
  • which Mona had accepted the responsibility of observation, and indeed by
  • the large levity with which, sitting there like a bored tourist in fine
  • scenery, she exercised it. She felt in her nerves the effect of such a
  • manner on her companion's, and it was this that made her want to entice
  • the girl away, give her some merciful warning or some jocular cue. Mona
  • met intense looks, however, with eyes that might have been blue beads,
  • the only ones she had--eyes into which Fleda thought it strange Owen
  • Gereth should have to plunge for his fate and his mother for a
  • confession of whether Poynton was a success. She made no remark that
  • helped to supply this light; her impression at any rate had nothing in
  • common with the feeling that, as the beauty of the place throbbed out
  • like music, had caused Fleda Vetch to burst into tears. She was as
  • content to say nothing as if, Mrs. Gereth afterwards exclaimed, she had
  • been keeping her mouth shut in a railway-tunnel. Mrs. Gereth contrived
  • at the end of an hour to convey to Fleda that it was plain she was
  • brutally ignorant; but Fleda more subtly discovered that her ignorance
  • was obscurely active.
  • She was not so stupid as not to see that something, though she scarcely
  • knew what, was expected of her that she couldn't give; and the only mode
  • her intelligence suggested of meeting the expectation was to plant her
  • big feet and pull another way. Mrs. Gereth wanted her to rise, somehow
  • or somewhere, and was prepared to hate her if she didn't: very well, she
  • couldn't, she wouldn't rise; she already moved at the altitude that
  • suited her, and was able to see that, since she was exposed to the
  • hatred, she might at least enjoy the calm. The smallest trouble, for a
  • girl with no nonsense about her, was to earn what she incurred; so that,
  • a dim instinct teaching her she would earn it best by not being
  • effusive, and combining with the conviction that she now held Owen, and
  • therefore the place, she had the pleasure of her honesty as well as of
  • her security. Didn't her very honesty lead her to be belligerently blank
  • about Poynton, inasmuch as it was just Poynton that was forced upon her
  • as a subject for effusiveness? Such subjects, to Mona Brigstock, had an
  • air almost of indecency, and the house became uncanny to her through
  • such an appeal--an appeal that, somewhere in the twilight of her being,
  • as Fleda was sure, she thanked heaven she _was_ the girl stiffly to draw
  • back from. She was a person whom pressure at a given point infallibly
  • caused to expand in the wrong place instead of, as it is usually
  • administered in the hope of doing, the right one. Her mother, to make up
  • for this, broke out universally, pronounced everything "most striking,"
  • and was visibly happy that Owen's captor should be so far on the way to
  • strike: but she jarred upon Mrs. Gereth by her formula of admiration,
  • which was that anything she looked at was "in the style" of something
  • else. This was to show how much she had seen, but it only showed she had
  • seen nothing; everything at Poynton was in the style of Poynton, and
  • poor Mrs. Brigstock, who at least was determined to rise, and had
  • brought with her a trophy of her journey, a "lady's magazine" purchased
  • at the station, a horrible thing with patterns for antimacassars, which,
  • as it was quite new, the first number, and seemed so clever, she kindly
  • offered to leave for the house, was in the style of a vulgar old woman
  • who wore silver jewelry and tried to pass off a gross avidity as a sense
  • of the beautiful.
  • By the day's end it was clear to Fleda Vetch that, however Mona judged,
  • the day had been determinant; whether or no she felt the charm, she felt
  • the challenge: at an early moment Owen Gereth would be able to tell his
  • mother the worst. Nevertheless, when the elder lady, at bedtime, coming
  • in a dressing-gown and a high fever to the younger one's room, cried
  • out, "She hates it; but what will she do?" Fleda pretended vagueness,
  • played at obscurity and assented disingenuously to the proposition that
  • they at least had a respite. The future was dark to her, but there was a
  • silken thread she could clutch in the gloom--she would never give Owen
  • away. He might give himself--he even certainly would; but that was his
  • own affair, and his blunders, his innocence, only added to the appeal he
  • made to her. She would cover him, she would protect him, and beyond
  • thinking her a cheerful inmate he would never guess her intention, any
  • more than, beyond thinking her clever enough for anything, his acute
  • mother would discover it. From this hour, with Mrs. Gereth, there was a
  • flaw in her frankness: her admirable friend continued to know everything
  • she did; what was to remain unknown was the general motive.
  • From the window of her room, the next morning before breakfast, the girl
  • saw Owen in the garden with Mona, who strolled beside him with a
  • listening parasol, but without a visible look for the great florid
  • picture that had been hung there by Mrs. Gereth's hand. Mona kept
  • dropping her eyes, as she walked, to catch the sheen of her
  • patent-leather shoes, which resembled a man's and which she kicked
  • forward a little--it gave her an odd movement--to help her see what she
  • thought of them. When Fleda came down Mrs. Gereth was in the
  • breakfast-room; and at that moment Owen, through a long window, passed
  • in alone from the terrace and very endearingly kissed his mother. It
  • immediately struck the girl that she was in their way, for hadn't he
  • been borne on a wave of joy exactly to announce, before the Brigstocks
  • departed, that Mona had at last faltered out the sweet word he had been
  • waiting for? He shook hands with his friendly violence, but Fleda
  • contrived not to look into his face: what she liked most to see in it
  • was not the reflection of Mona's big boot-toes. She could bear well
  • enough that young lady herself, but she couldn't bear Owen's opinion of
  • her. She was on the point of slipping into the garden when the movement
  • was checked by Mrs. Gereth's suddenly drawing her close, as if for the
  • morning embrace, and then, while she kept her there with the bravery of
  • the night's repose, breaking out: "Well, my dear boy, what _does_ your
  • young friend there make of our odds and ends?"
  • "Oh, she thinks they're all right!"
  • Fleda immediately guessed from his tone that he had not come in to say
  • what she supposed; there was even something in it to confirm Mrs.
  • Gereth's belief that their danger had dropped. She was sure, moreover,
  • that his tribute to Mona's taste was a repetition of the eloquent words
  • in which the girl had herself recorded it; she could indeed hear, with
  • all vividness, the pretty passage between the pair. "Don't you think
  • it's rather jolly, the old shop?" "Oh, it's all right!" Mona had
  • graciously remarked; and then they had probably, with a slap on a back,
  • run another race up or down a green bank. Fleda knew Mrs. Gereth had not
  • yet uttered a word to her son that would have shown him how much she
  • feared; but it was impossible to feel her friend's arm round her and not
  • become aware that this friend was now throbbing with a strange
  • intention. Owen's reply had scarcely been of a nature to usher in a
  • discussion of Mona's sensibilities; but Mrs. Gereth went on, in a
  • moment, with an innocence of which Fleda could measure the cold
  • hypocrisy: "Has she any sort of feeling for nice old things?" The
  • question was as fresh as the morning light.
  • "Oh, of course she likes everything that's nice." And Owen, who
  • constitutionally disliked questions--an answer was almost as hateful to
  • him as a "trick" to a big dog--smiled kindly at Fleda and conveyed that
  • she would understand what he meant even if his mother didn't. Fleda,
  • however, mainly understood that Mrs. Gereth, with an odd, wild laugh,
  • held her so hard that she hurt her.
  • "I could give up everything without a pang, I think, to a person I could
  • trust, I could respect." The girl heard her voice tremble under the
  • effort to show nothing but what she wanted to show, and felt the
  • sincerity of her implication that the piety most real to her was to be
  • on one's knees before one's high standard. "The best things here, as you
  • know, are the things your father and I collected, things all that we
  • worked for and waited for and suffered for. Yes," cried Mrs. Gereth,
  • with a fine freedom of fancy, "there are things in the house that we
  • almost starved for! They were our religion, they were our life, they
  • were _us_! And now they're only _me_--except that they're also _you_,
  • thank God, a little, you dear!" she continued, suddenly inflicting on
  • Fleda a kiss apparently intended to knock her into position. "There
  • isn't one of them I don't know and love--yes, as one remembers and
  • cherishes the happiest moments of one's life. Blindfold, in the dark,
  • with the brush of a finger, I could tell one from another. They're
  • living things to me; they know me, they return the touch of my hand. But
  • I could let them all go, since I have to, so strangely, to another
  • affection, another conscience. There's a care they want, there's a
  • sympathy that draws out their beauty. Rather than make them over to a
  • woman ignorant and vulgar, I think I'd deface them with my own hands.
  • Can't you see me, Fleda, and wouldn't you do it yourself?"--she appealed
  • to her companion with glittering eyes. "I couldn't bear the thought of
  • such a woman here--I _couldn't_. I don't know what she'd do; she'd be
  • sure to invent some deviltry, if it should be only to bring in her own
  • little belongings and horrors. The world is full of cheap gimcracks, in
  • this awful age, and they're thrust in at one at every turn. They'd be
  • thrust in here, on top of my treasures, my own. Who would save _them_
  • for me--I ask you who _would_?" and she turned again to Fleda with a
  • dry, strained smile. Her handsome, high-nosed, excited face might have
  • been that of Don Quixote tilting at a windmill. Drawn into the eddy of
  • this outpouring, the girl, scared and embarrassed, laughed off her
  • exposure; but only to feel herself more passionately caught up and, as
  • it seemed to her, thrust down the fine open mouth (it showed such
  • perfect teeth) with which poor Owen's slow cerebration gaped. "_You_
  • would, of course--only you, in all the world, because you know, you
  • feel, as I do myself, what's good and true and pure." No severity of the
  • moral law could have taken a higher tone in this implication of the
  • young lady who had not the only virtue Mrs. Gereth actively esteemed.
  • "_You_ would replace me, _you_ would watch over them, _you_ would keep
  • the place right," she austerely pursued, "and with you here--yes, with
  • you, I believe I might rest, at last, in my grave!" She threw herself on
  • Fleda's neck, and before Fleda, horribly shamed, could shake her off,
  • had burst into tears which couldn't have been explained, but which might
  • perhaps have been understood.
  • IV
  • A week later Owen Gereth came down to inform his mother that he had
  • settled with Mona Brigstock; but it was not at all a joy to Fleda,
  • conscious how much to himself it would be a surprise, that he should
  • find her still in the house. That dreadful scene before breakfast had
  • made her position false and odious; it had been followed, after they
  • were left alone, by a scene of her own making with her extravagant
  • friend. She notified Mrs. Gereth of her instant departure: she couldn't
  • possibly remain after being offered to Owen, that way, before her very
  • face, as his mother's candidate for the honor of his hand. That was all
  • he could have seen in such an outbreak and in the indecency of her
  • standing there to enjoy it. Fleda had on the prior occasion dashed out
  • of the room by the shortest course and in her confusion had fallen upon
  • Mona in the garden. She had taken an aimless turn with her, and they had
  • had some talk, rendered at first difficult and almost disagreeable by
  • Mona's apparent suspicion that she had been sent out to spy, as Mrs.
  • Gereth had tried to spy, into her opinions. Fleda was sagacious enough
  • to treat these opinions as a mystery almost awful; which had an effect
  • so much more than reassuring that at the end of five minutes the young
  • lady from Waterbath suddenly and perversely said: "Why has she never had
  • a winter garden thrown out? If ever I have a place of my own I mean to
  • have one." Fleda, dismayed, could see the thing--something glazed and
  • piped, on iron pillars, with untidy plants and cane sofas; a shiny
  • excrescence on the noble face of Poynton. She remembered at Waterbath a
  • conservatory where she had caught a bad cold in the company of a stuffed
  • cockatoo fastened to a tropical bough and a waterless fountain composed
  • of shells stuck into some hardened paste. She asked Mona if her idea
  • would be to make something like this conservatory; to which Mona
  • replied: "Oh no, much finer; we haven't got a winter garden at
  • Waterbath." Fleda wondered if she meant to convey that it was the only
  • grandeur they lacked, and in a moment Mona went on: "But we have got a
  • billiard-room--that I will say for us!" There was no billiard-room at
  • Poynton, but there would evidently be one, and it would have, hung on
  • its walls, framed at the "Stores," caricature-portraits of celebrities,
  • taken from a "society-paper."
  • When the two girls had gone in to breakfast it was for Fleda to see at a
  • glance that there had been a further passage, of some high color,
  • between Owen and his mother; and she had turned pale in guessing to what
  • extremity, at her expense, Mrs. Gereth had found occasion to proceed.
  • Hadn't she, after her clumsy flight, been pressed upon Owen in still
  • clearer terms? Mrs. Gereth would practically have said to him: "If
  • you'll take _her_, I'll move away without a sound. But if you take any
  • one else, any one I'm not sure of, as I am of her--heaven help me, I'll
  • fight to the death!" Breakfast, this morning, at Poynton, had been a
  • meal singularly silent, in spite of the vague little cries with which
  • Mrs. Brigstock turned up the underside of plates and the knowing but
  • alarming raps administered by her big knuckles to porcelain cups. Some
  • one had to respond to her, and the duty assigned itself to Fleda, who,
  • while pretending to meet her on the ground of explanation, wondered what
  • Owen thought of a girl still indelicately anxious, after she had been
  • grossly hurled at him, to prove by exhibitions of her fine taste that
  • she was really what his mother pretended. This time, at any rate, their
  • fate was sealed: Owen, as soon as he should get out of the house, would
  • describe to Mona that lady's extraordinary conduct, and if anything more
  • had been wanted to "fetch" Mona, as he would call it, the deficiency was
  • now made up. Mrs. Gereth in fact took care of that--took care of it by
  • the way, at the last, on the threshold, she said to the younger of her
  • departing guests, with an irony of which the sting was wholly in the
  • sense, not at all in the sound: "We haven't had the talk we might have
  • had, have we? You'll feel that I've neglected you, and you'll treasure
  • it up against me. _Don't_, because really, you know, it has been quite
  • an accident, and I've all sorts of information at your disposal. If you
  • should come down again (only you won't, ever,--I feel that!) I should
  • give you plenty of time to worry it out of me. Indeed there are some
  • things I should quite insist on your learning; not permit you at all, in
  • any settled way, _not_ to learn. Yes indeed, you'd put me through, and I
  • should put you, my dear! We should have each other to reckon with, and
  • you would see me as I really am. I'm not a bit the vague, mooning, easy
  • creature I dare say you think. However, if you won't come, you won't;
  • _n'en parlons plus_. It _is_ stupid here after what you're accustomed
  • to. We can only, all round, do what we can, eh? For heaven's sake, don't
  • let your mother forget her precious publication, the female magazine,
  • with the what-do-you-call-'em?--the grease-catchers. There!"
  • Mrs. Gereth, delivering herself from the doorstep, had tossed the
  • periodical higher in air than was absolutely needful--tossed it toward
  • the carriage the retreating party was about to enter. Mona, from the
  • force of habit, the reflex action of the custom of sport, had popped
  • out, with a little spring, a long arm and intercepted the missile as
  • easily as she would have caused a tennis-ball to rebound from a racket.
  • "Good catch!" Owen had cried, so genuinely pleased that practically no
  • notice was taken of his mother's impressive remarks. It was to the
  • accompaniment of romping laughter, as Mrs. Gereth afterwards said, that
  • the carriage had rolled away; but it was while that laughter was still
  • in the air that Fleda Vetch, white and terrible, had turned upon her
  • hostess with her scorching "How _could_ you? Great God, how _could_
  • you?" This lady's perfect blankness was from the first a sign of her
  • serene conscience, and the fact that till indoctrinated she didn't even
  • know what Fleda meant by resenting her late offense to every
  • susceptibility gave our young woman a sore, scared perception that her
  • own value in the house was just the value, as one might say, of a good
  • agent. Mrs. Gereth was generously sorry, but she was still more
  • surprised--surprised at Fleda's not having liked to be shown off to Owen
  • as the right sort of wife for him. Why not, in the name of wonder, if
  • she absolutely _was_ the right sort? She had admitted on explanation
  • that she could see what her young friend meant by having been laid, as
  • Fleda called it, at his feet; but it struck the girl that the admission
  • was only made to please her, and that Mrs. Gereth was secretly surprised
  • at her not being as happy to be sacrificed to the supremacy of a high
  • standard as she was happy to sacrifice her. She had taken a tremendous
  • fancy to her, but that was on account of the fancy--to Poynton of
  • course--Fleda herself had taken. Wasn't this latter fancy then so great
  • after all? Fleda felt that she could declare it to be great indeed when
  • really for the sake of it she could forgive what she had suffered and,
  • after reproaches and tears, asseverations and kisses, after learning
  • that she was cared for only as a priestess of the altar and a view of
  • her bruised dignity which left no alternative to flight, could accept
  • the shame with the balm, consent not to depart, take refuge in the thin
  • comfort of at least knowing the truth. The truth was simply that all
  • Mrs. Gereth's scruples were on one side and that her ruling passion had
  • in a manner despoiled her of her humanity. On the second day, after the
  • tide of emotion had somewhat ebbed, she said soothingly to her
  • companion: "But you _would_, after all, marry him, you know, darling,
  • wouldn't you, if that girl were not there? I mean of course if he were
  • to ask you," Mrs. Gereth had thoughtfully added.
  • "Marry him if he were to ask me? Most distinctly not!"
  • The question had not come up with this definiteness before, and Mrs.
  • Gereth was clearly more surprised than ever. She marveled a moment. "Not
  • even to have Poynton?"
  • "Not even to have Poynton."
  • "But why on earth?" Mrs. Gereth's sad eyes were fixed on her.
  • Fleda colored; she hesitated. "Because he's too stupid!" Save on one
  • other occasion, at which we shall in time arrive, little as the reader
  • may believe it, she never came nearer to betraying to Mrs. Gereth that
  • she was in love with Owen. She found a dim amusement in reflecting that
  • if Mona had not been there and he had not been too stupid and he verily
  • had asked her, she might, should she have wished to keep her secret,
  • have found it possible to pass off the motive of her action as a mere
  • passion for Poynton.
  • Mrs. Gereth evidently thought in these days of little but things
  • hymeneal; for she broke out with sudden rapture, in the middle of the
  • week: "I know what they'll do: they _will_ marry, but they'll go and
  • live at Waterbath!" There was positive joy in that form of the idea,
  • which she embroidered and developed: it seemed so much the safest thing
  • that could happen. "Yes, I'll have you, but I won't go _there_!" Mona
  • would have said with a vicious nod at the southern horizon: "we'll leave
  • your horrid mother alone there for life." It would be an ideal solution,
  • this ingress the lively pair, with their spiritual need of a warmer
  • medium, would playfully punch in the ribs of her ancestral home; for it
  • would not only prevent recurring panic at Poynton--it would offer them,
  • as in one of their gimcrack baskets or other vessels of ugliness, a
  • definite daily felicity that Poynton could never give. Owen might manage
  • his estate just as he managed it now, and Mrs. Gereth would manage
  • everything else. When, in the hall, on the unforgettable day of his
  • return, she had heard his voice ring out like a call to a terrier, she
  • had still, as Fleda afterwards learned, clutched frantically at the
  • conceit that he had come, at the worst, to announce some compromise; to
  • tell her she would have to put up with the girl, yes, but that some way
  • would be arrived at of leaving her in personal possession. Fleda Vetch,
  • whom from the first hour no illusion had brushed with its wing, now held
  • her breath, went on tiptoe, wandered in outlying parts of the house and
  • through delicate, muffled rooms, while the mother and son faced each
  • other below. From time to time she stopped to listen; but all was so
  • quiet she was almost frightened: she had vaguely expected a sound of
  • contention. It lasted longer than she would have supposed, whatever it
  • was they were doing; and when finally, from a window, she saw Owen
  • stroll out of the house, stop and light a cigarette and then pensively
  • lose himself in the plantations, she found other matter for trepidation
  • in the fact that Mrs. Gereth didn't immediately come rushing up into her
  • arms. She wondered whether she oughtn't to go down to her, and measured
  • the gravity of what had occurred by the circumstance, which she
  • presently ascertained, that the poor lady had retired to her room and
  • wished not to be disturbed. This admonition had been for her maid, with
  • whom Fleda conferred as at the door of a death-chamber; but the girl,
  • without either fatuity or resentment, judged that, since it could render
  • Mrs. Gereth indifferent even to the ministrations of disinterested
  • attachment, the scene had been tremendous.
  • She was absent from luncheon, where indeed Fleda had enough to do to
  • look Owen in the face; there would be so much to make that hateful in
  • their common memory of the passage in which his last visit had
  • terminated. This had been her apprehension at least; but as soon as he
  • stood there she was constrained to wonder at the practical simplicity of
  • the ordeal--a simplicity which was really just his own simplicity, the
  • particular thing that, for Fleda Vetch, some other things of course
  • aiding, made almost any direct relation with him pleasant. He had
  • neither wit, nor tact, nor inspiration: all she could say was that when
  • they were together the alienation these charms were usually depended on
  • to allay didn't occur. On this occasion, for instance, he did so much
  • better than "carry off" an awkward remembrance: he simply didn't have
  • it. He had clean forgotten that she was the girl his mother would have
  • fobbed off on him; he was conscious only that she was there in a manner
  • for service--conscious of the dumb instinct that from the first had made
  • him regard her not as complicating his intercourse with that personage,
  • but as simplifying it. Fleda found beautiful that this theory should
  • have survived the incident of the other day; found exquisite that
  • whereas she was conscious, through faint reverberations, that for her
  • kind little circle at large, whom it didn't concern, her tendency had
  • begun to define itself as parasitical, this strong young man, who had a
  • right to judge and even a reason to loathe her, didn't judge and didn't
  • loathe, let her down gently, treated her as if she pleased him, and in
  • fact evidently liked her to be just where she was. She asked herself
  • what he did when Mona denounced her, and the only answer to the question
  • was that perhaps Mona didn't denounce her. If Mona was inarticulate he
  • wasn't such a fool, then, to marry her. That he was glad Fleda was there
  • was at any rate sufficiently shown by the domestic familiarity with
  • which he said to her: "I must tell you I've been having an awful row
  • with my mother. I'm engaged to be married to Miss Brigstock."
  • "Ah, really?" cried Fleda, achieving a radiance of which she was
  • secretly proud. "How very exciting!"
  • "Too exciting for poor Mummy. She won't hear of it. She has been slating
  • her fearfully. She says she's a 'barbarian.'"
  • "Why, she's lovely!" Fleda exclaimed.
  • "Oh, she's all right. Mother must come round."
  • "Only give her time," said Fleda. She had advanced to the threshold of
  • the door thus thrown open to her and, without exactly crossing it, she
  • threw in an appreciative glance. She asked Owen when his marriage would
  • take place, and in the light of his reply read that Mrs. Gereth's
  • wretched attitude would have no influence at all on the event,
  • absolutely fixed when he came down, and distant by only three months. He
  • liked Fleda's seeming to be on his side, though that was a secondary
  • matter, for what really most concerned him now was the line his mother
  • took about Poynton, her declared unwillingness to give it up.
  • "Naturally I want my own house, you know," he said, "and my father made
  • every arrangement for me to have it. But she may make it devilish
  • awkward. What in the world's a fellow to do?" This it was that Owen
  • wanted to know, and there could be no better proof of his friendliness
  • than his air of depending on Fleda Vetch to tell him. She questioned
  • him, they spent an hour together, and, as he gave her the scale of the
  • concussion from which he had rebounded, she found herself saddened and
  • frightened by the material he seemed to offer her to deal with. It _was_
  • devilish awkward, and it was so in part because Owen had no imagination.
  • It had lodged itself in that empty chamber that his mother hated the
  • surrender because she hated Mona. He didn't of course understand why she
  • hated Mona, but this belonged to an order of mysteries that never
  • troubled him: there were lots of things, especially in people's minds,
  • that a fellow didn't understand. Poor Owen went through life with a
  • frank dread of people's minds: there were explanations he would have
  • been almost as shy of receiving as of giving. There was therefore
  • nothing that accounted for anything, though in its way it was vivid
  • enough, in his picture to Fleda of his mother's virtual refusal to move.
  • That was simply what it was; for didn't she refuse to move when she as
  • good as declared that she would move only with the furniture? It was the
  • furniture she wouldn't give up; and what was the good of Poynton without
  • the furniture? Besides, the furniture happened to be his, just as
  • everything else happened to be. The furniture--the word, on his lips,
  • had somehow, for Fleda, the sound of washing-stands and copious bedding,
  • and she could well imagine the note it might have struck for Mrs.
  • Gereth. The girl, in this interview with him, spoke of the contents of
  • the house only as "the works of art." It didn't, however, in the least
  • matter to Owen what they were called; what did matter, she easily
  • guessed, was that it had been laid upon him by Mona, been made in effect
  • a condition of her consent, that he should hold his mother to the
  • strictest accountability for them. Mona had already entered upon the
  • enjoyment of her rights. She had made him feel that Mrs. Gereth had been
  • liberally provided for, and had asked him cogently what room there would
  • be at Ricks for the innumerable treasures of the big house. Ricks, the
  • sweet little place offered to the mistress of Poynton as the refuge of
  • her declining years, had been left to the late Mr. Gereth, a
  • considerable time before his death, by an old maternal aunt, a good lady
  • who had spent most of her life there. The house had in recent times been
  • let, but it was amply furnished, it contained all the defunct aunt's
  • possessions. Owen had lately inspected it, and he communicated to Fleda
  • that he had quietly taken Mona to see it. It wasn't a place like
  • Poynton--what dower-house ever was?--but it was an awfully jolly little
  • place, and Mona had taken a tremendous fancy to it. If there were a few
  • things at Poynton that were Mrs. Gereth's peculiar property, of course
  • she must take them away with her; but one of the matters that became
  • clear to Fleda was that this transfer would be immediately subject to
  • Miss Brigstock's approval. The special business that she herself now
  • became aware of being charged with was that of seeing Mrs. Gereth safely
  • and singly off the premises.
  • Her heart failed her, after Owen had returned to London, with the
  • ugliness of this duty--with the ugliness, indeed, of the whole close
  • conflict. She saw nothing of Mrs. Gereth that day; she spent it in
  • roaming with sick sighs, in feeling, as she passed from room to room,
  • that what was expected of her companion was really dreadful. It would
  • have been better never to have had such a place than to have had it and
  • lose it. It was odious to _her_ to have to look for solutions: what a
  • strange relation between mother and son when there was no fundamental
  • tenderness out of which a solution would irrepressibly spring! Was it
  • Owen who was mainly responsible for that poverty? Fleda couldn't think
  • so when she remembered that, so far as he was concerned, Mrs. Gereth
  • would still have been welcome to have her seat by the Poynton fire. The
  • fact that from the moment one accepted his marrying one saw no very
  • different course for Owen to take made her all the rest of that aching
  • day find her best relief in the mercy of not having yet to face her
  • hostess. She dodged and dreamed and romanced away the time; instead of
  • inventing a remedy or a compromise, instead of preparing a plan by which
  • a scandal might be averted, she gave herself, in her sentient solitude,
  • up to a mere fairy tale, up to the very taste of the beautiful peace
  • with which she would have filled the air if only something might have
  • been that could never have been.
  • V
  • "I'll give up the house if they'll let me take what I require!" That, on
  • the morrow, was what Mrs. Gereth's stifled night had qualified her to
  • say, with a tragic face, at breakfast. Fleda reflected that what she
  • "required" was simply every object that surrounded them. The poor woman
  • would have admitted this truth and accepted the conclusion to be drawn
  • from it, the reduction to the absurd of her attitude, the exaltation of
  • her revolt. The girl's dread of a scandal, of spectators and critics,
  • diminished the more she saw how little vulgar avidity had to do with
  • this rigor. It was not the crude love of possession; it was the need to
  • be faithful to a trust and loyal to an idea. The idea was surely noble:
  • it was that of the beauty Mrs. Gereth had so patiently and consummately
  • wrought. Pale but radiant, with her back to the wall, she rose there
  • like a heroine guarding a treasure. To give up the ship was to flinch
  • from her duty; there was something in her eyes that declared she would
  • die at her post. If their difference should become public the shame
  • would be all for the others. If Waterbath thought it could afford to
  • expose itself, then Waterbath was welcome to the folly. Her fanaticism
  • gave her a new distinction, and Fleda perceived almost with awe that she
  • had never carried herself so well. She trod the place like a reigning
  • queen or a proud usurper; full as it was of splendid pieces, it could
  • show in these days no ornament so effective as its menaced mistress.
  • Our young lady's spirit was strangely divided; she had a tenderness for
  • Owen which she deeply concealed, yet it left her occasion to marvel at
  • the way a man was made who could care in any relation for a creature
  • like Mona Brigstock when he had known in any relation a creature like
  • Adela Gereth. With such a mother to give him the pitch, how could he
  • take it so low? She wondered that she didn't despise him for this, but
  • there was something that kept her from it. If there had been nothing
  • else it would have sufficed that she really found herself from this
  • moment the medium of communication with him.
  • "He'll come back to assert himself," Mrs. Gereth had said; and the
  • following week Owen in fact reappeared. He might merely have written,
  • Fleda could see, but he had come in person because it was at once
  • "nicer" for his mother and stronger for his cause. He didn't like the
  • row, though Mona probably did; if he hadn't a sense of beauty he had
  • after all a sense of justice; but it was inevitable he should clearly
  • announce at Poynton the date at which he must look to find the house
  • vacant. "You don't think I'm rough or hard, do you?" he asked of Fleda,
  • his impatience shining in his idle eyes as the dining-hour shines in
  • club-windows. "The place at Ricks stands there with open arms. And then
  • I give her lots of time. Tell her she can remove everything that belongs
  • to her." Fleda recognized the elements of what the newspapers call a
  • deadlock in the circumstance that nothing at Poynton belonged to Mrs.
  • Gereth either more or less than anything else. She must either take
  • everything or nothing, and the girl's suggestion was that it might
  • perhaps be an inspiration to do the latter and begin again on a clean
  • page. What, however, was the poor woman, in that case, to begin with?
  • What was she to do at all, on her meagre income, but make the best of
  • the _objets d'art_ of Ricks, the treasures collected by Mr. Gereth's
  • maiden aunt? She had never been near the place: for long years it had
  • been let to strangers, and after that the foreboding that it would be
  • her doom had kept her from the abasement of it. She had felt that she
  • should see it soon enough, but Fleda (who was careful not to betray to
  • her that Mona had seen it and had been gratified) knew her reasons for
  • believing that the maiden aunt's principles had had much in common with
  • the principles of Waterbath. The only thing, in short, that she would
  • ever have to do with the objets d'art of Ricks would be to turn them out
  • into the road. What belonged to her at Poynton, as Owen said, would
  • conveniently mitigate the void resulting from that demonstration.
  • The exchange of observations between the friends had grown very direct
  • by the time Fleda asked Mrs. Gereth whether she literally meant to shut
  • herself up and stand a siege, or whether it was her idea to expose
  • herself, more informally, to be dragged out of the house by constables.
  • "Oh, I prefer the constables and the dragging!" the heroine of Poynton
  • had answered. "I want to make Owen and Mona do everything that will be
  • most publicly odious." She gave it out that it was her one thought now
  • to force them to a line that would dishonor them and dishonor the
  • tradition they embodied, though Fleda was privately sure that she had
  • visions of an alternative policy. The strange thing was that, proud and
  • fastidious all her life, she now showed so little distaste for the
  • world's hearing of the squabble. What had taken place in her above all
  • was that a long resentment had ripened. She hated the effacement to
  • which English usage reduced the widowed mother: she had discoursed of it
  • passionately to Fleda; contrasted it with the beautiful homage paid in
  • other countries to women in that position, women no better than herself,
  • whom she had seen acclaimed and enthroned, whom she had known and
  • envied; made in short as little as possible a secret of the injury, the
  • bitterness she found in it. The great wrong Owen had done her was not
  • his "taking up" with Mona--that was disgusting, but it was a detail, an
  • accidental form: it was his failure from the first to understand what it
  • was to have a mother at all, to appreciate the beauty and sanctity of
  • the character. She was just his mother as his nose was just his nose,
  • and he had never had the least imagination or tenderness or gallantry
  • about her. One's mother, gracious heaven, if one were the kind of fine
  • young man one ought to be, the only kind Mrs. Gereth cared for, was a
  • subject for poetry, for idolatry. Hadn't she often told Fleda of her
  • friend Madame de Jaume, the wittiest of women, but a small, black,
  • crooked person, each of whose three boys, when absent, wrote to her
  • every day of their lives? She had the house in Paris, she had the house
  • in Poitou, she had more than in the lifetime of her husband (to whom, in
  • spite of her appearance, she had afforded repeated cause for jealousy),
  • because she had to the end of her days the supreme word about
  • everything. It was easy to see that Mrs. Gereth would have given again
  • and again her complexion, her figure, and even perhaps the spotless
  • virtue she had still more successfully retained, to have been the
  • consecrated Madame de Jaume. She wasn't, alas, and this was what she had
  • at present a magnificent occasion to protest against. She was of course
  • fully aware of Owen's concession, his willingness to let her take away
  • with her the few things she liked best; but as yet she only declared
  • that to meet him on this ground would be to give him a triumph, to put
  • him impossibly in the right. "Liked best"? There wasn't a thing in the
  • house that she didn't like best, and what she liked better still was to
  • be left where she was. How could Owen use such an expression without
  • being conscious of his hypocrisy? Mrs. Gereth, whose criticism was often
  • gay, dilated with sardonic humor on the happy look a dozen objects from
  • Poynton would wear and the charming effect they would conduce to when
  • interspersed with the peculiar features of Ricks. What had her whole
  • life been but an effort toward completeness and perfection? Better
  • Waterbath at once, in its cynical unity, than the ignominy of such a
  • mixture!
  • All this was of no great help to Fleda, in so far as Fleda tried to rise
  • to her mission of finding a way out. When at the end of a fortnight Owen
  • came down once more, it was ostensibly to tackle a farmer whose
  • proceedings had been irregular; the girl was sure, however, that he had
  • really come, on the instance of Mona, to see what his mother was doing.
  • He wished to satisfy himself that she was preparing her departure, and
  • he wished to perform a duty, distinct but not less imperative, in regard
  • to the question of the perquisites with which she would retreat. The
  • tension between them was now such that he had to perpetrate these
  • offenses without meeting his adversary. Mrs. Gereth was as willing as
  • himself that he should address to Fleda Vetch whatever cruel remarks he
  • might have to make: she only pitied her poor young friend for repeated
  • encounters with a person as to whom she perfectly understood the girl's
  • repulsion. Fleda thought it nice of Owen not to have expected her to
  • write to him; he wouldn't have wished any more than herself that she
  • should have the air of spying on his mother in his interest. What made
  • it comfortable to deal with him in this more familiar way was the sense
  • that she understood so perfectly how poor Mrs. Gereth suffered, and that
  • she measured so adequately the sacrifice the other side did take rather
  • monstrously for granted. She understood equally how Owen himself
  • suffered, now that Mona had already begun to make him do things he
  • didn't like. Vividly Fleda apprehended how _she_ would have first made
  • him like anything she would have made him do; anything even as
  • disagreeable as this appearing there to state, virtually on Mona's
  • behalf, that of course there must be a definite limit to the number of
  • articles appropriated. She took a longish stroll with him in order to
  • talk the matter over; to say if she didn't think a dozen pieces, chosen
  • absolutely at will, would be a handsome allowance; and above all to
  • consider the very delicate question of whether the advantage enjoyed by
  • Mrs. Gereth mightn't be left to her honor. To leave it so was what Owen
  • wished; but there was plainly a young lady at Waterbath to whom, on his
  • side, he already had to render an account. He was as touching in his
  • offhand annoyance as his mother was tragic in her intensity; for if he
  • couldn't help having a sense of propriety about the whole matter, so he
  • could as little help hating it. It was for his hating it, Fleda
  • reasoned, that she liked him so, and her insistence to his mother on the
  • hatred perilously resembled, on one or two occasions, a revelation of
  • the liking. There were moments when, in conscience, that revelation
  • pressed her; inasmuch as it was just on the ground of her not liking him
  • that Mrs. Gereth trusted her so much. Mrs. Gereth herself didn't in
  • these days like him at all, and she was of course and always on Mrs.
  • Gereth's side. He ended really, while the preparations for his marriage
  • went on, by quite a little custom of coming and going; but on no one of
  • these occasions would his mother receive him. He talked only with Fleda
  • and strolled with Fleda; and when he asked her, in regard to the great
  • matter, if Mrs. Gereth were really doing nothing, the girl usually
  • replied: "She pretends not to be, if I may say so; but I think she's
  • really thinking over what she'll take." When her friend asked her what
  • Owen was doing, she could have but one answer: "He's waiting, dear lady,
  • to see what _you_ do!"
  • Mrs. Gereth, a month after she had received her great shock, did
  • something abrupt and extraordinary: she caught up her companion and went
  • to have a look at Ricks. They had come to London first and taken a train
  • from Liverpool Street, and the least of the sufferings they were armed
  • against was that of passing the night. Fleda's admirable dressing-bag
  • had been given her by her friend. "Why, it's charming!" she exclaimed a
  • few hours later, turning back again into the small prim parlor from a
  • friendly advance to the single plate of the window. Mrs. Gereth hated
  • such windows, the one flat glass, sliding up and down, especially when
  • they enjoyed a view of four iron pots on pedestals, painted white and
  • containing ugly geraniums, ranged on the edge of a gravel-path and doing
  • their best to give it the air of a terrace. Fleda had instantly averted
  • her eyes from these ornaments, but Mrs. Gereth grimly gazed, wondering
  • of course how a place in the deepest depths of Essex and three miles
  • from a small station could contrive to look so suburban. The room was
  • practically a shallow box, with the junction of the walls and ceiling
  • guiltless of curve or cornice and marked merely by the little band of
  • crimson paper glued round the top of the other paper, a turbid gray
  • sprigged with silver flowers. This decoration was rather new and quite
  • fresh; and there was in the centre of the ceiling a big square beam
  • papered over in white, as to which Fleda hesitated about venturing to
  • remark that it was rather picturesque. She recognized in time that this
  • remark would be weak and that, throughout, she should be able to say
  • nothing either for the mantelpieces or for the doors, of which she saw
  • her companion become sensible with a soundless moan. On the subject of
  • doors especially Mrs. Gereth had the finest views: the thing in the
  • world she most despised was the meanness of the single flap. From end to
  • end, at Poynton, there were high double leaves. At Ricks the entrances
  • to the rooms were like the holes of rabbit-hutches.
  • It was all, none the less, not so bad as Fleda had feared; it was faded
  • and melancholy, whereas there had been a danger that it would be
  • contradictious and positive, cheerful and loud. The house was crowded
  • with objects of which the aggregation somehow made a thinness and the
  • futility a grace; things that told her they had been gathered as slowly
  • and as lovingly as the golden flowers of Poynton. She too, for a home,
  • could have lived with them: they made her fond of the old maiden-aunt;
  • they made her even wonder if it didn't work more for happiness not to
  • have tasted, as she herself had done, of knowledge. Without resources,
  • without a stick, as she said, of her own, Fleda was moved, after all, to
  • some secret surprise at the pretensions of a shipwrecked woman who could
  • hold such an asylum cheap. The more she looked about the surer she felt
  • of the character of the maiden-aunt, the sense of whose dim presence
  • urged her to pacification: the maiden-aunt had been a dear; she would
  • have adored the maiden-aunt. The poor lady had had some tender little
  • story; she had been sensitive and ignorant and exquisite: that too was a
  • sort of origin, a sort of atmosphere for relics and rarities, though
  • different from the sorts most prized at Poynton. Mrs. Gereth had of
  • course more than once said that one of the deepest mysteries of life was
  • the way that, by certain natures, hideous objects could be loved; but it
  • wasn't a question of love, now, for these: it was only a question of a
  • certain practical patience. Perhaps some thought of that kind had stolen
  • over Mrs. Gereth when, at the end of a brooding hour, she exclaimed,
  • taking in the house with a strenuous sigh: "Well, something can be done
  • with it!" Fleda had repeated to her more than once the indulgent fancy
  • about the maiden-aunt--she was so sure she had deeply suffered. "I'm
  • sure I hope she did!" was, however, all that Mrs. Gereth had replied.
  • VI
  • It was a great relief to the girl at last to perceive that the dreadful
  • move would really be made. What might happen if it shouldn't had been
  • from the first indefinite. It was absurd to pretend that any violence
  • was probable--a tussel, dishevelment, shrieks; yet Fleda had an
  • imagination of a drama, a "great scene," a thing, somehow, of indignity
  • and misery, of wounds inflicted and received, in which indeed, though
  • Mrs. Gereth's presence, with movements and sounds, loomed large to her,
  • Owen remained indistinct and on the whole unaggressive. He wouldn't be
  • there with a cigarette in his teeth, very handsome and insolently quiet:
  • that was only the way he would be in a novel, across whose interesting
  • page some such figure, as she half closed her eyes, seemed to her to
  • walk. Fleda had rather, and indeed with shame, a confused, pitying
  • vision of Mrs. Gereth with her great scene left in a manner on her
  • hands, Mrs. Gereth missing her effect and having to appear merely hot
  • and injured and in the wrong. The symptoms that she would be spared even
  • that spectacle resided not so much, through the chambers of Poynton, in
  • an air of concentration as in the hum of buzzing alternatives. There was
  • no common preparation, but one day, at the turn of a corridor, she found
  • her hostess standing very still, with the hanging hands of an invalid
  • and the active eyes of an adventurer. These eyes appeared to Fleda to
  • meet her own with a strange, dim bravado, and there was a silence,
  • almost awkward, before either of the friends spoke. The girl afterwards
  • thought of the moment as one in which her hostess mutely accused her of
  • an accusation, meeting it, however, at the same time, by a kind of
  • defiant acceptance. Yet it was with mere melancholy candor that Mrs.
  • Gereth at last sighingly exclaimed: "I'm thinking over what I had better
  • take!" Fleda could have embraced her for this virtual promise of a
  • concession, the announcement that she had finally accepted the problem
  • of knocking together a shelter with the small salvage of the wreck.
  • It was true that when after their return from Ricks they tried to
  • lighten the ship, the great embarrassment was still immutably there, the
  • odiousness of sacrificing the exquisite things one wouldn't take to the
  • exquisite things one would. This immediately made the things one
  • wouldn't take the very things one ought to, and, as Mrs. Gereth said,
  • condemned one, in the whole business, to an eternal vicious circle. In
  • such a circle, for days, she had been tormentedly moving, prowling up
  • and down, comparing incomparables. It was for that one had to cling to
  • them and their faces of supplication. Fleda herself could judge of these
  • faces, so conscious of their race and their danger, and she had little
  • enough to say when her companion asked her if the whole place,
  • perversely fair on October afternoons, looked like a place to give up.
  • It looked, to begin with, through some effect of season and light,
  • larger than ever, immense, and it was filled with the hush of sorrow,
  • which in turn was all charged with memories. Everything was in the
  • air--every history of every find, every circumstance of every struggle.
  • Mrs. Gereth had drawn back every curtain and removed every cover; she
  • prolonged the vistas, opened wide the whole house, gave it an appearance
  • of awaiting a royal visit. The shimmer of wrought substances spent
  • itself in the brightness; the old golds and brasses, old ivories and
  • bronzes, the fresh old tapestries and deep old damasks threw out a
  • radiance in which the poor woman saw in solution all her old loves and
  • patiences, all her old tricks and triumphs.
  • Fleda had a depressed sense of not, after all, helping her much: this
  • was lightened indeed by the fact that Mrs. Gereth, letting her off
  • easily, didn't now seem to expect it. Her sympathy, her interest, her
  • feeling for everything for which Mrs. Gereth felt, were a force that
  • really worked to prolong the deadlock. "I only wish I bored you and my
  • possessions bored you," that lady, with some humor, declared; "then
  • you'd make short work with me, bundle me off, tell me just to pile
  • certain things into a cart and have done." Fleda's sharpest difficulty
  • was in having to act up to the character of thinking Owen a brute, or at
  • least to carry off the inconsistency of seeing him when he came down. By
  • good fortune it was her duty, her function, as well as a protection to
  • Mrs. Gereth. She thought of him perpetually, and her eyes had come to
  • rejoice in his manly magnificence more even than they rejoiced in the
  • royal cabinets of the red saloon. She wondered, very faintly at first,
  • why he came so often; but of course she knew nothing about the business
  • he had in hand, over which, with men red-faced and leather-legged, he
  • was sometimes closeted for an hour in a room of his own that was the one
  • monstrosity of Poynton: all tobacco-pots and bootjacks, his mother had
  • said--such an array of arms of aggression and castigation that he
  • himself had confessed to eighteen rifles and forty whips. He was
  • arranging for settlements on his wife, he was doing things that would
  • meet the views of the Brigstocks. Considering the house was his own,
  • Fleda thought it nice of him to keep himself in the background while his
  • mother remained; making his visits, at some cost of ingenuity about
  • trains from town, only between meals, doing everything to let it press
  • lightly upon her that he was there. This was rather a stoppage to her
  • meeting Mrs. Gereth on the ground of his being a brute; the most she
  • really at last could do was not to contradict her when she repeated that
  • he was watching--just insultingly watching. He _was_ watching, no doubt;
  • but he watched somehow with his head turned away. He knew that Fleda
  • knew at present what he wanted of her, so that it would be gross of him
  • to say it over and over. It existed as a confidence between them, and
  • made him sometimes, with his wandering stare, meet her eyes as if a
  • silence so pleasant could only unite them the more. He had no great flow
  • of speech, certainly, and at first the girl took for granted that this
  • was all there was to be said about the matter. Little by little she
  • speculated as to whether, with a person who, like herself, could put
  • him, after all, at a sort of domestic ease, it was not supposable that
  • he would have more conversation if he were not keeping some of it back
  • for Mona.
  • From the moment she suspected he might be thinking what Mona would say
  • to his chattering so to an underhand "companion," who was all but paid,
  • this young lady's repressed emotion began to require still more
  • repression. She grew impatient of her situation at Poynton; she
  • privately pronounced it false and horrid. She said to herself that she
  • had let Owen know that she had, to the best of her power, directed his
  • mother in the general sense he desired; that he quite understood it and
  • that he also understood how unworthy it was of either of them to stand
  • over the good lady with a notebook and a lash. Wasn't this practical
  • unanimity just practical success? Fleda became aware of a sudden desire,
  • as well as of pressing reasons, to bring her stay at Poynton to a close.
  • She had not, on the one hand, like a minion of the law, undertaken to
  • see Mrs. Gereth down to the train and locked, in sign of her abdication,
  • into a compartment; neither had she on the other committed herself to
  • hold Owen indefinitely in dalliance while his mother gained time or dug
  • a counter-mine. Besides, people _were_ saying that she fastened like a
  • leech on other people--people who had houses where something was to be
  • picked up: this revelation was frankly made her by her sister, now
  • distinctly doomed to the curate and in view of whose nuptials she had
  • almost finished, as a present, a wonderful piece of embroidery,
  • suggested, at Poynton, by an old Spanish altar-cloth. She would have to
  • exert herself still further for the intended recipient of this offering,
  • turn her out for her marriage with more than that drapery. She would go
  • up to town, in short, to dress Maggie; and their father, in lodgings at
  • West Kensington, would stretch a point and take them in. He, to do him
  • justice, never reproached her with profitable devotions; so far as they
  • existed he consciously profited by them. Mrs. Gereth gave her up as
  • heroically as if she had been a great bargain, and Fleda knew that she
  • wouldn't at present miss any visit of Owen's, for Owen was shooting at
  • Waterbath. Owen shooting was Owen lost, and there was scant sport at
  • Poynton.
  • The first news she had from Mrs. Gereth was news of that lady's having
  • accomplished, in form at least, her migration. The letter was dated from
  • Ricks, to which place she had been transported by an impulse apparently
  • as sudden as the inspiration she had obeyed before. "Yes, I've literally
  • come," she wrote, "with a bandbox and a kitchen-maid; I've crossed the
  • Rubicon, I've taken possession. It has been like plumping into cold
  • water: I saw the only thing was to do it, not to stand shivering. I
  • shall have warmed the place a little by simply being here for a week;
  • when I come back the ice will have been broken. I didn't write to you to
  • meet me on my way through town, because I know how busy you are and
  • because, besides, I'm too savage and odious to be fit company even for
  • you. You'd say I really go too far, and there's no doubt whatever I do.
  • I'm here, at any rate, just to look round once more, to see that certain
  • things are done before I enter in force. I shall probably be at Poynton
  • all next week. There's more room than I quite measured the other day,
  • and a rather good set of old Worcester. But what are space and time,
  • what's even old Worcester, to your wretched and affectionate A. G.?"
  • The day after Fleda received this letter she had occasion to go into a
  • big shop in Oxford Street--a journey that she achieved circuitously,
  • first on foot and then by the aid of two omnibuses. The second of these
  • vehicles put her down on the side of the street opposite her shop, and
  • while, on the curbstone, she humbly waited, with a parcel, an umbrella,
  • and a tucked-up frock, to cross in security, she became aware that,
  • close beside her, a hansom had pulled up short, in obedience to the
  • brandished stick of a demonstrative occupant. This occupant was Owen
  • Gereth, who had caught sight of her as he rattled along and who, with an
  • exhibition of white teeth that, from under the hood of the cab, had
  • almost flashed through the fog, now alighted to ask her if he couldn't
  • give her a lift. On finding that her destination was only over the way
  • he dismissed his vehicle and joined her, not only piloting her to the
  • shop, but taking her in; with the assurance that his errands didn't
  • matter, that it amused him to be concerned with hers. She told him she
  • had come to buy a trimming for her sister's frock, and he expressed an
  • hilarious interest in the purchase. His hilarity was almost always out
  • of proportion to the case, but it struck her at present as more so than
  • ever; especially when she had suggested that he might find it a good
  • time to buy a garnishment of some sort for Mona. After wondering an
  • instant whether he gave the full satiric meaning, such as it was, to
  • this remark, Fleda dismissed the possibility as inconceivable. He
  • stammered out that it was for _her_ he would like to buy something,
  • something "ripping," and that she must give him the pleasure of telling
  • him what would best please her: he couldn't have a better opportunity
  • for making her a present--the present, in recognition of all she had
  • done for Mummy, that he had had in his head for weeks.
  • Fleda had more than one small errand in the big bazaar, and he went up
  • and down with her, pointedly patient, pretending to be interested in
  • questions of tape and of change. She had now not the least hesitation in
  • wondering what Mona would think of such proceedings. But they were not
  • her doing--they were Owen's; and Owen, inconsequent and even
  • extravagant, was unlike anything she had ever seen him before. He broke
  • off, he came back, he repeated questions without heeding answers, he
  • made vague, abrupt remarks about the resemblances of shopgirls and the
  • uses of chiffon. He unduly prolonged their business together, giving
  • Fleda a sense that he was putting off something particular that he had
  • to face. If she had ever dreamed of Owen Gereth as nervous she would
  • have seen him with some such manner as this. But why should he be
  • nervous? Even at the height of the crisis his mother hadn't made him so,
  • and at present he was satisfied about his mother. The one idea he stuck
  • to was that Fleda should mention something she would let him give her:
  • there was everything in the world in the wonderful place, and he made
  • her incongruous offers--a traveling-rug, a massive clock, a table for
  • breakfast in bed, and above all, in a resplendent binding, a set of
  • somebody's "works." His notion was a testimonial, a tribute, and the
  • "works" would be a graceful intimation that it was her cleverness he
  • wished above all to commemorate. He was immensely in earnest, but the
  • articles he pressed upon her betrayed a delicacy that went to her heart:
  • what he would really have liked, as he saw them tumbled about, was one
  • of the splendid stuffs for a gown--a choice proscribed by his fear of
  • seeming to patronize her, to refer to her small means and her
  • deficiencies. Fleda found it easy to chaff him about his exaggeration of
  • her deserts; she gave the just measure of them in consenting to accept a
  • small pin-cushion, costing sixpence, in which the letter F was marked
  • out with pins. A sense of loyalty to Mona was not needed to enforce this
  • discretion, and after that first allusion to her she never sounded her
  • name. She noticed on this occasion more things in Owen Gereth than she
  • had ever noticed before, but what she noticed most was that he said no
  • word of his intended. She asked herself what he had done, in so long a
  • parenthesis, with his loyalty or at least his "form;" and then reflected
  • that even if he had done something very good with them the situation in
  • which such a question could come up was already a little strange. Of
  • course he wasn't doing anything so vulgar as making love to her; but
  • there was a kind of punctilio for a man who was engaged.
  • That punctilio didn't prevent Owen from remaining with her after they
  • had left the shop, from hoping she had a lot more to do, and from
  • pressing her to look with him, for a possible glimpse of something she
  • might really let him give her, into the windows of other establishments.
  • There was a moment when, under this pressure, she made up her mind that
  • his tribute would be, if analyzed, a tribute to her insignificance. But
  • all the same he wanted her to come somewhere and have luncheon with him:
  • what was that a tribute to? She must have counted very little if she
  • didn't count too much for a romp in a restaurant. She had to get home
  • with her trimming, and the most, in his company, she was amenable to was
  • a retracing of her steps to the Marble Arch and then, after a discussion
  • when they had reached it, a walk with him across the Park. She knew Mona
  • would have considered that she ought to take the omnibus again; but she
  • had now to think for Owen as well as for herself--she couldn't think for
  • Mona. Even in the Park the autumn air was thick, and as they moved
  • westward over the grass, which was what Owen preferred, the cool
  • grayness made their words soft, made them at last rare and everything
  • else dim. He wanted to stay with her--he wanted not to leave her: he had
  • dropped into complete silence, but that was what his silence said. What
  • was it he had postponed? What was it he wanted still to postpone? She
  • grew a little scared as they strolled together and she thought. It was
  • too confused to be believed, but it was as if somehow he felt
  • differently. Fleda Vetch didn't suspect him at first of feeling
  • differently to _her_, but only of feeling differently to Mona; yet she
  • was not unconscious that this latter difference would have had something
  • to do with his being on the grass beside her. She had read in novels
  • about gentlemen who on the eve of marriage, winding up the past, had
  • surrendered themselves for the occasion to the influence of a former
  • tie; and there was something in Owen's behavior now, something in his
  • very face, that suggested a resemblance to one of those gentlemen. But
  • whom and what, in that case, would Fleda herself resemble? She wasn't a
  • former tie, she wasn't any tie at all; she was only a deep little person
  • for whom happiness was a kind of pearl-diving plunge. It was down at the
  • very bottom of all that had lately happened; for all that had lately
  • happened was that Owen Gereth had come and gone at Poynton. That was the
  • small sum of her experience, and what it had made for her was her own
  • affair, quite consistent with her not having dreamed it had made a
  • tie--at least what _she_ called one--for Owen. The old one, at any rate,
  • was Mona--Mona whom he had known so very much longer.
  • They walked far, to the southwest corner of the great Gardens, where, by
  • the old round pond and the old red palace, when she had put out her hand
  • to him in farewell, declaring that from the gate she must positively
  • take a conveyance, it seemed suddenly to rise between them that this was
  • a real separation. She was on his mother's side, she belonged to his
  • mother's life, and his mother, in the future, would never come to
  • Poynton. After what had passed she wouldn't even be at his wedding, and
  • it was not possible now that Mrs. Gereth should mention that ceremony to
  • the girl, much less express a wish that the girl should be present at
  • it. Mona, from decorum and with reference less to the bridegroom than to
  • the bridegroom's mother, would of course not invite any such girl as
  • Fleda. Everything therefore was ended; they would go their different
  • ways; this was the last time they would stand face to face. They looked
  • at each other with the fuller sense of it and, on Owen's part, with an
  • expression of dumb trouble, the intensification of his usual appeal to
  • any interlocutor to add the right thing to what he said. To Fleda, at
  • this moment, it appeared that the right thing might easily be the wrong.
  • He only said, at any rate: "I want you to understand, you know--I want
  • you to understand."
  • What did he want her to understand? He seemed unable to bring it out,
  • and this understanding was moreover exactly what she wished not to
  • arrive at. Bewildered as she was, she had already taken in as much as
  • she should know what to do with; the blood also was rushing into her
  • face. He liked her--it was stupefying--more than he really ought: that
  • was what was the matter with him and what he desired her to assimilate;
  • so that she was suddenly as frightened as some thoughtless girl who
  • finds herself the object of an overture from a married man.
  • "Good-bye, Mr. Gereth--I _must_ get on!" she declared with a
  • cheerfulness that she felt to be an unnatural grimace. She broke away
  • from him sharply, smiling, backing across the grass and then turning
  • altogether and moving as fast as she could. "Good-bye, good-bye!" she
  • threw off again as she went, wondering if he would overtake her before
  • she reached the gate; conscious with a red disgust that her movement was
  • almost a run; conscious too of just the confused, handsome face with
  • which he would look after her. She felt as if she had answered a
  • kindness with a great flouncing snub, but at any rate she had got away,
  • though the distance to the gate, her ugly gallop down the Broad Walk,
  • every graceless jerk of which hurt her, seemed endless. She signed from
  • afar to a cab on the stand in the Kensington Road and scrambled into it,
  • glad of the encompassment of the four-wheeler that had officiously
  • obeyed her summons and that, at the end of twenty yards, when she had
  • violently pulled up a glass, permitted her to recognize the fact that
  • she was on the point of bursting into tears.
  • VII
  • As soon as her sister was married she went down to Mrs. Gereth at
  • Ricks--a promise to this effect having been promptly exacted and given;
  • and her inner vision was much more fixed on the alterations there,
  • complete now, as she understood, than on the success of her plotting and
  • pinching for Maggie's happiness. Her imagination, in the interval, had
  • indeed had plenty to do and numerous scenes to visit; for when on the
  • summons just mentioned it had taken a flight from West Kensington to
  • Ricks, it had hung but an hour over the terrace of painted pots and then
  • yielded to a current of the upper air that swept it straight off to
  • Poynton and to Waterbath. Not a sound had reached her of any supreme
  • clash, and Mrs. Gereth had communicated next to nothing; giving out
  • that, as was easily conceivable, she was too busy, too bitter, and too
  • tired for vain civilities. All she had written was that she had got the
  • new place well in hand and that Fleda would be surprised at the way it
  • was turning out. Everything was even yet upside down; nevertheless, in
  • the sense of having passed the threshold of Poynton for the last time,
  • the amputation, as she called it, had been performed. Her leg had come
  • off--she had now begun to stump along with the lovely wooden substitute;
  • she would stump for life, and what her young friend was to come and
  • admire was the beauty of her movement and the noise she made about the
  • house. The reserve of Poynton and Waterbath had been matched by the
  • austerity of Fleda's own secret, under the discipline of which she had
  • repeated to herself a hundred times a day that she rejoiced at having
  • cares that excluded all thought of it. She had lavished herself, in act,
  • on Maggie and the curate, and had opposed to her father's selfishness a
  • sweetness quite ecstatic. The young couple wondered why they had waited
  • so long, since everything was after all so easy. She had thought of
  • everything, even to how the "quietness" of the wedding should be
  • relieved by champagne and her father kept brilliant on a single bottle.
  • Fleda knew, in short, and liked the knowledge, that for several weeks
  • she had appeared exemplary in every relation of life.
  • She had been perfectly prepared to be surprised at Ricks, for Mrs.
  • Gereth was a wonder-working wizard, with a command, when all was said,
  • of good material; but the impression in wait for her on the threshold
  • made her catch her breath and falter. Dusk had fallen when she arrived,
  • and in the plain square hall, one of the few good features, the glow of
  • a Venetian lamp just showed, on either wall, the richness of an
  • admirable tapestry. This instant perception that the place had been
  • dressed at the expense of Poynton was a shock: it was as if she had
  • abruptly seen herself in the light of an accomplice. The next moment,
  • folded in Mrs. Gereth's arms, her eyes were diverted; but she had
  • already had, in a flash, the vision of the great gaps in the other
  • house. The two tapestries, not the largest, but those most splendidly
  • toned by time, had been on the whole its most uplifted pride. When she
  • could really see again she was on a sofa in the drawing-room, staring
  • with intensity at an object soon distinct as the great Italian cabinet
  • that, at Poynton, had been in the red saloon. Without looking, she was
  • sure the room was occupied with other objects like it, stuffed with as
  • many as it could hold of the trophies of her friend's struggle. By this
  • time the very fingers of her glove, resting on the seat of the sofa, had
  • thrilled at the touch of an old velvet brocade, a wondrous texture that
  • she could recognize, would have recognized among a thousand, without
  • dropping her eyes on it. They stuck to the cabinet with a kind of
  • dissimulated dread, while she painfully asked herself whether she should
  • notice it, notice everything, or just pretend not to be affected. How
  • could she pretend not to be affected, with the very pendants of the
  • lustres tinkling at her and with Mrs. Gereth, beside her and staring at
  • her even as she herself stared at the cabinet, hunching up a back like
  • Atlas under his globe? She was appalled at this image of what Mrs.
  • Gereth had on her shoulders. That lady was waiting and watching her,
  • bracing herself, and preparing the same face of confession and defiance
  • she had shown the day, at Poynton, she had been surprised in the
  • corridor. It was farcical not to speak; and yet to exclaim, to
  • participate, would give one a bad sense of being mixed up with a theft.
  • This ugly word sounded, for herself, in Fleda's silence, and the very
  • violence of it jarred her into a scared glance, as of a creature
  • detected, to right and left. But what again the full picture most showed
  • her was the far-away empty sockets, a scandal of nakedness in high, bare
  • walls. She at last uttered something formal and incoherent--she didn't
  • know what: it had no relation to either house. Then she felt Mrs.
  • Gereth's hand once more on her arm. "I've arranged a charming room for
  • you--it's really lovely. You'll be very happy there." This was spoken
  • with extraordinary sweetness and with a smile that meant, "Oh, I know
  • what you're thinking; but what does it matter when you're so loyally on
  • my side?" It had come indeed to a question of "sides," Fleda thought,
  • for the whole place was in battle array. In the soft lamplight, with one
  • fine feature after another looming up into sombre richness, it defied
  • her not to pronounce it a triumph of taste. Her passion for beauty
  • leaped back into life; and was not what now most appealed to it a
  • certain gorgeous audacity? Mrs. Gereth's high hand was, as mere great
  • effect, the climax of the impression.
  • "It's too wonderful, what you've done with the house!"--the visitor met
  • her friend's eyes. They lighted up with joy--that friend herself so
  • pleased with what she had done. This was not at all, in its accidental
  • air of enthusiasm, what Fleda wanted to have said: it offered her as
  • stupidly announcing from the first minute on whose side she was. Such
  • was clearly the way Mrs. Gereth took it: she threw herself upon the
  • delightful girl and tenderly embraced her again; so that Fleda soon went
  • on, with a studied difference and a cooler inspection: "Why, you brought
  • away absolutely everything!"
  • "Oh no, not everything; I saw how little I could get into this scrap of
  • a house. I only brought away what I required."
  • Fleda had got up; she took a turn round the room. "You 'required' the
  • very best pieces--the _morceaux de musée_, the individual gems!"
  • "I certainly didn't want the rubbish, if that's what you mean." Mrs.
  • Gereth, on the sofa, followed the direction of her companion's eyes;
  • with the light of her satisfaction still in her face, she slowly rubbed
  • her large, handsome hands. Wherever she was, she was herself the great
  • piece in the gallery. It was the first Fleda had heard of there being
  • "rubbish" at Poynton, but she didn't for the moment take up this
  • insincerity; she only, from where she stood in the room, called out, one
  • after the other, as if she had had a list in her hand, the pieces that
  • in the great house had been scattered and that now, if they had a fault,
  • were too much like a minuet danced on a hearth-rug. She knew them each,
  • in every chink and charm--knew them by the personal name their
  • distinctive sign or story had given them; and a second time she felt
  • how, against her intention, this uttered knowledge struck her hostess as
  • so much free approval. Mrs. Gereth was never indifferent to approval,
  • and there was nothing she could so love you for as for doing justice to
  • her deep morality. There was a particular gleam in her eyes when Fleda
  • exclaimed at last, dazzled by the display: "And even the Maltese cross!"
  • That description, though technically incorrect, had always been applied,
  • at Poynton, to a small but marvelous crucifix of ivory, a masterpiece of
  • delicacy, of expression, and of the great Spanish period, the existence
  • and precarious accessibility of which she had heard of at Malta, years
  • before, by an odd and romantic chance--a clue followed through mazes of
  • secrecy till the treasure was at last unearthed.
  • "'Even' the Maltese cross?" Mrs. Gereth rose as she sharply echoed the
  • words. "My dear child, you don't suppose I'd have sacrificed _that_! For
  • what in the world would you have taken me?"
  • "A _bibelot_ the more or the less," Fleda said, "could have made little
  • difference in this grand general view of you. I take you simply for the
  • greatest of all conjurers. You've operated with a quickness--and with a
  • quietness!" Her voice trembled a little as she spoke, for the plain
  • meaning of her words was that what her friend had achieved belonged to
  • the class of operation essentially involving the protection of darkness.
  • Fleda felt she really could say nothing at all if she couldn't say that
  • she knew what the danger had been. She completed her thought by a
  • resolute and perfectly candid question: "How in the world did you get
  • off with them?"
  • Mrs. Gereth confessed to the fact of danger with a cynicism that
  • surprised the girl. "By calculating, by choosing my time. I _was_ quiet,
  • and I _was_ quick. I manoeuvred; then at the last rushed!" Fleda drew
  • a long breath: she saw in the poor woman something much better than
  • sophistical ease, a crude elation that was a comparatively simple state
  • to deal with. Her elation, it was true, was not so much from what she
  • had done as from the way she had done it--by as brilliant a stroke as
  • any commemorated in the annals of crime. "I succeeded because I had
  • thought it all out and left nothing to chance: the whole process was
  • organized in advance, so that the mere carrying it into effect took but
  • a few hours. It was largely a matter of money: oh, I was horribly
  • extravagant--I had to turn on so many people. But they were all to be
  • had--a little army of workers, the packers, the porters, the helpers of
  • every sort, the men with the mighty vans. It was a question of arranging
  • in Tottenham Court Road and of paying the price. I haven't paid it yet;
  • there'll be a horrid bill; but at least the thing's done! Expedition
  • pure and simple was the essence of the bargain. 'I can give you two
  • days,' I said; 'I can't give you another second.' They undertook the
  • job, and the two days saw them through. The people came down on a
  • Tuesday morning; they were off on the Thursday. I admit that some of
  • them worked all Wednesday night. I had thought it all out; I stood over
  • them; I showed them how. Yes, I coaxed them, I made love to them. Oh, I
  • was inspired--they found me wonderful. I neither ate nor slept, but I
  • was as calm as I am now. I didn't know what was in me; it was worth
  • finding out. I'm very remarkable, my dear: I lifted tons with my own
  • arms. I'm tired, very, very tired; but there's neither a scratch nor a
  • nick, there isn't a teacup missing." Magnificent both in her exhaustion
  • and in her triumph, Mrs. Gereth sank on the sofa again, the sweep of her
  • eyes a rich synthesis and the restless friction of her hands a clear
  • betrayal. "Upon my word," she laughed, "they really look better here!"
  • Fleda had listened in awe. "And no one at Poynton said anything? There
  • was no alarm?"
  • "What alarm should there have been? Owen left me almost defiantly alone:
  • I had taken a time that I had reason to believe was safe from a
  • descent." Fleda had another wonder, which she hesitated to express: it
  • would scarcely do to ask Mrs. Gereth if she hadn't stood in fear of her
  • servants. She knew, moreover, some of the secrets of her humorous
  • household rule, all made up of shocks to shyness and provocations to
  • curiosity--a diplomacy so artful that several of the maids quite yearned
  • to accompany her to Ricks. Mrs. Gereth, reading sharply the whole of her
  • visitor's thought, caught it up with fine frankness. "You mean that I
  • was watched--that he had his myrmidons, pledged to wire him if they
  • should see what I was 'up to'? Precisely. I know the three persons you
  • have in mind: I had them in mind myself. Well, I took a line with
  • them--I settled them."
  • Fleda had had no one in particular in mind; she had never believed in
  • the myrmidons; but the tone in which Mrs. Gereth spoke added to her
  • suspense. "What did you do to them?"
  • "I took hold of them hard--I put them in the forefront. I made them
  • work."
  • "To move the furniture?"
  • "To help, and to help so as to please me. That was the way to take them;
  • it was what they had least expected. I marched up to them and looked
  • each straight in the eye, giving him the chance to choose if he'd
  • gratify me or gratify my son. He gratified _me_. They were too stupid!"
  • Mrs. Gereth massed herself there more and more as an immoral woman, but
  • Fleda had to recognize that she too would have been stupid and she too
  • would have gratified her. "And when did all this take place?"
  • "Only last week; it seems a hundred years. We've worked here as fast as
  • we worked there, but I'm not settled yet: you'll see in the rest of the
  • house. However, the worst is over."
  • "Do you really think so?" Fleda presently inquired. "I mean, does he,
  • after the fact, as it were, accept it?"
  • "Owen--what I've done? I haven't the least idea," said Mrs. Gereth.
  • "Does Mona?"
  • "You mean that she'll be the soul of the row?"
  • "I hardly see Mona as the 'soul' of anything," the girl replied. "But
  • have they made no sound? Have you heard nothing at all?"
  • "Not a whisper, not a step, in all the eight days. Perhaps they don't
  • know. Perhaps they're crouching for a leap."
  • "But wouldn't they have gone down as soon as you left?"
  • "They may not have known of my leaving." Fleda wondered afresh; it
  • struck her as scarcely supposable that some sign shouldn't have flashed
  • from Poynton to London. If the storm was taking this term of silence to
  • gather, even in Mona's breast, it would probably discharge itself in
  • some startling form. The great hush of every one concerned was strange;
  • but when she pressed Mrs. Gereth for some explanation of it, that lady
  • only replied, with her brave irony: "Oh, I took their breath away!" She
  • had no illusions, however; she was still prepared to fight. What indeed
  • was her spoliation of Poynton but the first engagement of a campaign?
  • All this was exciting, but Fleda's spirit dropped, at bedtime, in the
  • chamber embellished for her pleasure, where she found several of the
  • objects that in her earlier room she had most admired. These had been
  • reinforced by other pieces from other rooms, so that the quiet air of it
  • was a harmony without a break, the finished picture of a maiden's bower.
  • It was the sweetest Louis Seize, all assorted and combined--old
  • chastened, figured, faded France. Fleda was impressed anew with her
  • friend's genius for composition. She could say to herself that no girl
  • in England, that night, went to rest with so picked a guard; but there
  • was no joy for her in her privilege, no sleep even for the tired hours
  • that made the place, in the embers of the fire and the winter dawn, look
  • gray, somehow, and loveless. She couldn't care for such things when they
  • came to her in such ways; there was a wrong about them all that turned
  • them to ugliness. In the watches of the night she saw Poynton
  • dishonored; she had cared for it as a happy whole, she reasoned, and the
  • parts of it now around her seemed to suffer like chopped limbs. Before
  • going to bed she had walked about with Mrs. Gereth and seen at whose
  • expense the whole house had been furnished. At poor Owen's, from top to
  • bottom--there wasn't a chair he hadn't sat upon. The maiden aunt had
  • been exterminated--no trace of her to tell her tale. Fleda tried to
  • think of some of the things at Poynton still unappropriated, but her
  • memory was a blank about them, and in trying to focus the old
  • combinations she saw again nothing but gaps and scars, a vacancy that
  • gathered at moments into something worse. This concrete image was her
  • greatest trouble, for it was Owen Gereth's face, his sad, strange eyes,
  • fixed upon her now as they had never been. They stared at her out of the
  • darkness, and their expression was more than she could bear: it seemed
  • to say that he was in pain and that it was somehow her fault. He had
  • looked to her to help him, and this was what her help had been. He had
  • done her the honor to ask her to exert herself in his interest,
  • confiding to her a task of difficulty, but of the highest delicacy.
  • Hadn't that been exactly the sort of service she longed to render him?
  • Well, her way of rendering it had been simply to betray him and hand him
  • over to his enemy. Shame, pity, resentment oppressed her in turn; in the
  • last of these feelings the others were quickly submerged. Mrs. Gereth
  • had imprisoned her in that torment of taste; but it was clear to her for
  • an hour at least that she might hate Mrs. Gereth.
  • Something else, however, when morning came, was even more intensely
  • definite: the most odious thing in the world for her would be ever again
  • to meet Owen. She took on the spot a resolve to neglect no precaution
  • that could lead to her going through life without that accident. After
  • this, while she dressed, she took still another. Her position had
  • become, in a few hours, intolerably false; in as few more hours as
  • possible she would therefore put an end to it. The way to put an end to
  • it would be to inform Mrs. Gereth that, to her great regret, she
  • couldn't be with her now, couldn't cleave to her to the point that
  • everything about her so plainly urged. She dressed with a sort of
  • violence, a symbol of the manner in which this purpose was precipitated.
  • The more they parted company the less likely she was to come across
  • Owen; for Owen would be drawn closer to his mother now by the very
  • necessity of bringing her down. Fleda, in the inconsequence of distress,
  • wished to have nothing to do with her fall; she had had too much to do
  • with everything. She was well aware of the importance, before breakfast
  • and in view of any light they might shed on the question of motive, of
  • not suffering her invidious expression of a difference to be accompanied
  • by the traces of tears; but it none the less came to pass, downstairs,
  • that after she had subtly put her back to the window, to make a mystery
  • of the state of her eyes, she stupidly let a rich sob escape her before
  • she could properly meet the consequences of being asked if she wasn't
  • delighted with her room. This accident struck her on the spot as so
  • grave that she felt the only refuge to be instant hypocrisy, some
  • graceful impulse that would charge her emotion to the quickened sense of
  • her friend's generosity--a demonstration entailing a flutter round the
  • table and a renewed embrace, and not so successfully improvised but that
  • Fleda fancied Mrs. Gereth to have been only half reassured. She had been
  • startled, at any rate, and she might remain suspicious: this reflection
  • interposed by the time, after breakfast, the girl had recovered
  • sufficiently to say what was in her heart. She accordingly didn't say it
  • that morning at all: she had absurdly veered about; she had encountered
  • the shock of the fear that Mrs. Gereth, with sharpened eyes, might
  • wonder why the deuce (she often wondered in that phrase) she had grown
  • so warm about Owen's rights. She would doubtless, at a pinch, be able to
  • defend them on abstract grounds, but that would involve a discussion,
  • and the idea of a discussion made her nervous for her secret. Until in
  • some way Poynton should return the blow and give her a cue, she must
  • keep nervousness down; and she called herself a fool for having
  • forgotten, however briefly, that her one safety was in silence.
  • Directly after luncheon Mrs. Gereth took her into the garden for a
  • glimpse of the revolution--or at least, said the mistress of Ricks, of
  • the great row--that had been decreed there; but the ladies had scarcely
  • placed themselves for this view before the younger one found herself
  • embracing a prospect that opened in quite another quarter. Her attention
  • was called to it, oddly, by the streamers of the parlor-maid's cap,
  • which, flying straight behind the neat young woman who unexpectedly
  • burst from the house and showed a long red face as she ambled over the
  • grass, seemed to articulate in their flutter the name that Fleda lived
  • at present only to catch. "Poynton--Poynton!" said the morsels of
  • muslin; so that the parlor-maid became on the instant an actress in the
  • drama, and Fleda, assuming pusillanimously that she herself was only a
  • spectator, looked across the footlights at the exponent of the principal
  • part. The manner in which this artist returned her look showed that she
  • was equally preoccupied. Both were haunted alike by possibilities, but
  • the apprehension of neither, before the announcement was made, took the
  • form of the arrival at Ricks, in the flesh, of Mrs. Gereth's victim.
  • When the messenger informed them that Mr. Gereth was in the
  • drawing-room, the blank "Oh!" emitted by Fleda was quite as precipitate
  • as the sound on her hostess's lips, besides being, as she felt, much
  • less pertinent. "I thought it would be somebody," that lady afterwards
  • said; "but I expected on the whole a solicitor's clerk." Fleda didn't
  • mention that she herself had expected on the whole a pair of constables.
  • She was surprised by Mrs. Gereth's question to the parlor-maid.
  • "For whom did he ask?"
  • "Why, for _you_, of course, dearest friend!" Fleda interjected, falling
  • instinctively into the address that embodied the intensest pressure. She
  • wanted to put Mrs. Gereth between her and her danger.
  • "He asked for Miss Vetch, mum," the girl replied, with a face that
  • brought startlingly to Fleda's ear the muffled chorus of the kitchen.
  • "Quite proper," said Mrs. Gereth austerely. Then to Fleda: "Please go to
  • him."
  • "But what to do?"
  • "What you always do--to see what he wants." Mrs. Gereth dismissed the
  • maid. "Tell him Miss Vetch will come." Fleda saw that nothing was in the
  • mother's imagination at this moment but the desire not to meet her son.
  • She had completely broken with him, and there was little in what had
  • just happened to repair the rupture. It would now take more to do so
  • than his presenting himself uninvited at her door. "He's right in asking
  • for you--he's aware that you're still our communicator; nothing has
  • occurred to alter that. To what he wishes to transmit through you I'm
  • ready, as I've been ready before, to listen. As far as _I_'m concerned,
  • if I couldn't meet him a month ago, how am I to meet him to-day? If he
  • has come to say, 'My dear mother, you're here, in the hovel into which
  • I've flung you, with consolations that give me pleasure,' I'll listen to
  • him; but on no other footing. That's what you're to ascertain, please.
  • You'll oblige me as you've obliged me before. There!" Mrs. Gereth turned
  • her back and, with a fine imitation of superiority, began to redress the
  • miseries immediately before her. Fleda meanwhile hesitated, lingered for
  • some minutes where she had been left, feeling secretly that her fate
  • still had her in hand. It had put her face to face with Owen Gereth, and
  • it evidently meant to keep her so. She was reminded afresh of two
  • things: one of which was that, though she judged her friend's rigor, she
  • had never really had the story of the scene enacted in the great
  • awestricken house between the mother and the son weeks before--the day
  • the former took to her bed in her over-throw; the other was, that at
  • Ricks as at Poynton, it was before all things her place to accept
  • thankfully a usefulness not, she must remember, universally
  • acknowledged. What determined her at the last, while Mrs. Gereth
  • disappeared in the shrubbery, was that, though she was at a distance
  • from the house and the drawing-room was turned the other way, she could
  • absolutely see the young man alone there with the sources of his pain.
  • She saw his simple stare at his tapestries, heard his heavy tread on his
  • carpets and the hard breath of his sense of unfairness. At this she went
  • to him fast.
  • VIII
  • "I asked for you," he said when she stood there, "because I heard from
  • the flyman who drove me from the station to the inn that he had brought
  • you here yesterday. We had some talk, and he mentioned it."
  • "You didn't know I was here?"
  • "No. I knew only that you had had, in London, all that you told me, that
  • day, to do; and it was Mona's idea that after your sister's marriage you
  • were staying on with your father. So I thought you were with him still."
  • "I am," Fleda replied, idealizing a little the fact. "I'm here only for
  • a moment. But do you mean," she went on, "that if you had known I was
  • with your mother you wouldn't have come down?"
  • The way Owen hung fire at this question made it sound more playful than
  • she had intended. She had, in fact, no consciousness of any intention
  • but that of confining herself rigidly to her function. She could already
  • see that, in whatever he had now braced himself for, she was an element
  • he had not reckoned with. His preparation had been of a different
  • sort--the sort congruous with his having been careful to go first and
  • lunch solidly at the inn. He had not been forced to ask for her, but she
  • became aware, in his presence, of a particular desire to make him feel
  • that no harm could really come to him. She might upset him, as people
  • called it, but she would take no advantage of having done so. She had
  • never seen a person with whom she wished more to be light and easy, to
  • be exceptionally human. The account he presently gave of the matter was
  • that he indeed wouldn't have come if he had known she was on the spot;
  • because then, didn't she see? he could have written to her. He would
  • have had her there to let fly at his mother.
  • "That would have saved me--well, it would have saved me a lot. Of course
  • I would rather see you than her," he somewhat awkwardly added. "When the
  • fellow spoke of you, I assure you I quite jumped at you. In fact I've no
  • real desire to see Mummy at all. If she thinks I _like_ it--!" He sighed
  • disgustedly. "I only came down because it seemed better than any other
  • way. I didn't want her to be able to say I hadn't been all right. I dare
  • say you know she has taken everything; or if not quite everything, why,
  • a lot more than one ever dreamed. You can see for yourself--she has got
  • half the place down. She has got them crammed--you can see for
  • yourself!" He had his old trick of artless repetition, his helpless
  • iteration of the obvious; but he was sensibly different, for Fleda, if
  • only by the difference of his clear face, mottled over and almost
  • disfigured by little points of pain. He might have been a fine young man
  • with a bad toothache; with the first even of his life. What ailed him
  • above all, she felt, was that trouble was new to him: he had never known
  • a difficulty; he had taken all his fences, his world wholly the world of
  • the personally possible, rounded indeed by a gray suburb into which he
  • had never had occasion to stray. In this vulgar and ill-lighted region
  • he had evidently now lost himself. "We left it quite to her honor, you
  • know," he said ruefully.
  • "Perhaps you've a right to say that you left it a little to mine." Mixed
  • up with the spoils there, rising before him as if she were in a manner
  • their keeper, she felt that she must absolutely dissociate herself. Mrs.
  • Gereth had made it impossible to do anything but give her away. "I can
  • only tell you that, on my side, I left it to her. I never dreamed either
  • that she would pick out so many things."
  • "And you don't really think it's fair, do you? You _don't_!" He spoke
  • very quickly; he really seemed to plead.
  • Fleda faltered a moment. "I think she has gone too far." Then she added:
  • "I shall immediately tell her that I've said that to you."
  • He appeared puzzled by this statement, but he presently rejoined: "You
  • haven't then said to mamma what you think?"
  • "Not yet; remember that I only got here last night." She appeared to
  • herself ignobly weak. "I had had no idea what she was doing; I was taken
  • completely by surprise. She managed it wonderfully."
  • "It's the sharpest thing I ever saw in _my_ life!" They looked at each
  • other with intelligence, in appreciation of the sharpness, and Owen
  • quickly broke into a loud laugh. The laugh was in itself natural, but
  • the occasion of it strange; and stranger still, to Fleda, so that she
  • too almost laughed, the inconsequent charity with which he added: "Poor
  • dear old Mummy! That's one of the reasons I asked for you," he went
  • on--"to see if you'd back her up."
  • Whatever he said or did, she somehow liked him the better for it. "How
  • can I back her up, Mr. Gereth, when I think, as I tell you, that she has
  • made a great mistake?"
  • "A great mistake! That's all right." He spoke--it wasn't clear to her
  • why--as if this declaration were a great point gained.
  • "Of course there are many things she hasn't taken," Fleda continued.
  • "Oh yes, a lot of things. But you wouldn't know the place, all the
  • same." He looked about the room with his discolored, swindled face,
  • which deepened Fleda's compassion for him, conjuring away any smile at
  • so candid an image of the dupe. "You'd know this one soon enough,
  • wouldn't you? These are just the things she ought to have left. Is the
  • whole house full of them?"
  • "The whole house," said Fleda uncompromisingly. She thought of her
  • lovely room.
  • "I never knew how much I cared for them. They're awfully valuable,
  • aren't they?" Owen's manner mystified her; she was conscious of a return
  • of the agitation he had produced in her on that last bewildering day,
  • and she reminded herself that, now she was warned, it would be
  • inexcusable of her to allow him to justify the fear that had dropped on
  • her. "Mother thinks I never took any notice, but I assure you I was
  • awfully proud of everything. Upon my honor, I _was_ proud, Miss Vetch."
  • There was an oddity in his helplessness; he appeared to wish to persuade
  • her and to satisfy himself that she sincerely felt how worthy he really
  • was to treat what had happened as an injury. She could only exclaim,
  • almost as helplessly as himself: "Of course you did justice! It's all
  • most painful. I shall instantly let your mother know," she again
  • declared, "the way I've spoken of her to you." She clung to that idea as
  • to the sign of her straightness.
  • "You'll tell her what you think she ought to do?" he asked with some
  • eagerness.
  • "What she ought to do?"
  • "_Don't_ you think it--I mean that she ought to give them up?"
  • "To give them up?" Fleda hesitated again.
  • "To send them back--to keep it quiet." The girl had not felt the impulse
  • to ask him to sit down among the monuments of his wrong, so that,
  • nervously, awkwardly, he fidgeted about the room with his hands in his
  • pockets and an effect of returning a little into possession through the
  • formulation of his view. "To have them packed and dispatched again,
  • since she knows so well how. She does it beautifully"--he looked close
  • at two or three precious pieces. "What's sauce for the goose is sauce
  • for the gander!"
  • He had laughed at his way of putting it, but Fleda remained grave. "Is
  • that what you came to say to her?"
  • "Not exactly those words. But I did come to say"--he stammered, then
  • brought it out--"I did come to say we must have them right back."
  • "And did you think your mother would see you?"
  • "I wasn't sure, but I thought it right to try--to put it to her kindly,
  • don't you see? If she won't see me, then she has herself to thank. The
  • only other way would have been to set the lawyers at her."
  • "I'm glad you didn't do that."
  • "I'm dashed if I want to!" Owen honestly declared. "But what's a fellow
  • to do if she won't meet a fellow?"
  • "What do you call meeting a fellow?" Fleda asked, with a smile.
  • "Why, letting _me_ tell her a dozen things she can have."
  • This was a transaction that Fleda, after a moment, had to give up trying
  • to represent to herself. "If she won't do that--?" she went on.
  • "I'll leave it all to my solicitor. _He_ won't let her off: by Jove, I
  • know the fellow!"
  • "That's horrible!" said Fleda, looking at him in woe.
  • "It's utterly beastly!"
  • His want of logic as well as his vehemence startled her; and with her
  • eyes still on his she considered before asking him the question these
  • things suggested. At last she asked it. "Is Mona very angry?"
  • "Oh dear, yes!" said Owen.
  • She had perceived that he wouldn't speak of Mona without her beginning.
  • After waiting fruitlessly now for him to say more, she continued: "She
  • has been there again? She has seen the state of the house?"
  • "Oh dear, yes!" Owen repeated.
  • Fleda disliked to appear not to take account of his brevity, but it was
  • just because she was struck by it that she felt the pressure of the
  • desire to know more. What it suggested was simply what her intelligence
  • supplied, for he was incapable of any art of insinuation. Wasn't it at
  • all events the rule of communication with him to say for him what he
  • couldn't say? This truth was present to the girl as she inquired if Mona
  • greatly resented what Mrs. Gereth had done. He satisfied her promptly;
  • he was standing before the fire, his back to it, his long legs apart,
  • his hands, behind him, rather violently jiggling his gloves. "She hates
  • it awfully. In fact, she refuses to put up with it at all. Don't you
  • see?--she saw the place with all the things."
  • "So that of course she misses them."
  • "Misses them--rather! She was awfully sweet on them." Fleda remembered
  • how sweet Mona had been, and reflected that if that was the sort of plea
  • he had prepared it was indeed as well he shouldn't see his mother. This
  • was not all she wanted to know, but it came over her that it was all she
  • needed. "You see it puts me in the position of not carrying out what I
  • promised," Owen said. "As she says herself"--he hesitated an
  • instant--"it's just as if I had obtained her under false pretenses."
  • Just before, when he spoke with more drollery than he knew, it had left
  • Fleda serious; but now his own clear gravity had the effect of exciting
  • her mirth. She laughed out, and he looked surprised, but went on: "She
  • regards it as a regular sell."
  • Fleda was silent; but finally, as he added nothing, she exclaimed: "Of
  • course it makes a great difference!" She knew all she needed, but none
  • the less she risked, after another pause, an interrogative remark. "I
  • forget when it is that your marriage takes place?"
  • Owen came away from the fire and, apparently at a loss where to turn,
  • ended by directing himself to one of the windows. "It's a little
  • uncertain; the date isn't quite fixed."
  • "Oh, I thought I remembered that at Poynton you had told me a day, and
  • that it was near at hand."
  • "I dare say I did; it was for the 19th. But we've altered that--she
  • wants to shift it." He looked out of the window; then he said: "In fact,
  • it won't come off till Mummy has come round."
  • "Come round?"
  • "Put the place as it was." In his offhand way he added: "You know what I
  • mean!"
  • He spoke not impatiently, but with a kind of intimate familiarity, the
  • sweetness of which made her feel a pang for having forced him to tell
  • her what was embarrassing to him, what was even humiliating. Yes indeed,
  • she knew all she needed: all she needed was that Mona had proved apt at
  • putting down that wonderful patent-leather foot. Her type was misleading
  • only to the superficial, and no one in the world was less superficial
  • than Fleda. She had guessed the truth at Waterbath and she had suffered
  • from it at Poynton; at Ricks the only thing she could do was to accept
  • it with the dumb exaltation that she felt rising. Mona had been prompt
  • with her exercise of the member in question, for it might be called
  • prompt to do that sort of thing before marriage. That she had indeed
  • been premature who should say save those who should have read the matter
  • in the full light of results? Neither at Waterbath nor at Poynton had
  • even Fleda's thoroughness discovered all that there was--or rather, all
  • that there was not--in Owen Gereth. "Of course it makes all the
  • difference!" she said in answer to his last words. She pursued, after
  • considering: "What you wish me to say from you then to your mother is
  • that you demand immediate and practically complete restitution?"
  • "Yes, please. It's tremendously good of you."
  • "Very well, then. Will you wait?"
  • "For Mummy's answer?" Owen stared and looked perplexed; he was more and
  • more fevered with so much vivid expression of his case. "Don't you think
  • that if I'm here she may hate it worse--think I may want to make her
  • reply bang off?"
  • Fleda thought. "You don't, then?"
  • "I want to take her in the right way, don't you know?--treat her as if I
  • gave her more than just an hour or two."
  • "I see," said Fleda. "Then, if you don't wait--good-bye."
  • This again seemed not what he wanted. "Must _you_ do it bang off?"
  • "I'm only thinking she'll be impatient--I mean, you know, to learn what
  • will have passed between us."
  • "I see," said Owen, looking at his gloves. "I can give her a day or two,
  • you know. Of course I didn't come down to sleep," he went on. "The inn
  • seems a horrid hole. I know all about the trains--having no idea you
  • were here." Almost as soon as his interlocutress he was struck with the
  • absence of the visible, in this, as between effect and cause. "I mean
  • because in that case I should have felt I could stop over. I should have
  • felt I could talk with you a blessed sight longer than with Mummy."
  • "We've already talked a long time," smiled Fleda.
  • "Awfully, haven't we?" He spoke with the stupidity she didn't object to.
  • Inarticulate as he was, he had more to say; he lingered perhaps because
  • he was vaguely aware of the want of sincerity in her encouragement to
  • him to go. "There's one thing, please," he mentioned, as if there might
  • be a great many others too. "Please don't say anything about Mona."
  • She didn't understand. "About Mona?"
  • "About its being _her_ that thinks she has gone too far." This was still
  • slightly obscure, but now Fleda understood. "It mustn't seem to come
  • from _her_ at all, don't you know? That would only make Mummy worse."
  • Fleda knew exactly how much worse, but she felt a delicacy about
  • explicitly assenting: she was already immersed moreover in the deep
  • consideration of what might make "Mummy" better. She couldn't see as yet
  • at all; she could only clutch at the hope of some inspiration after he
  • should go. Oh, there was a remedy, to be sure, but it was out of the
  • question; in spite of which, in the strong light of Owen's troubled
  • presence, of his anxious face and restless step, it hung there before
  • her for some minutes. She felt that, remarkably, beneath the decent
  • rigor of his errand, the poor young man, for reasons, for weariness, for
  • disgust, would have been ready not to insist. His fitness to fight his
  • mother had left him--he wasn't in fighting trim. He had no natural
  • avidity and even no special wrath; he had none that had not been taught
  • him, and it was doing his best to learn the lesson that had made him so
  • sick. He had his delicacies, but he hid them away like presents before
  • Christmas. He was hollow, perfunctory, pathetic; he had been girded by
  • another hand. That hand had naturally been Mona's, and it was heavy even
  • now on his strong, broad back. Why then had he originally rejoiced so in
  • its touch? Fleda dashed aside this question, for it had nothing to do
  • with her problem. Her problem was to help him to live as a gentleman and
  • carry through what he had undertaken; her problem was to reinstate him
  • in his rights. It was quite irrelevant that Mona had no intelligence of
  • what she had lost--quite irrelevant that she was moved not by the
  • privation, but by the insult: she had every reason to be moved, though
  • she was so much more movable, in the vindictive way, at any rate, than
  • one might have supposed--assuredly more than Owen himself had imagined.
  • "Certainly I shall not mention Mona," Fleda said, "and there won't be
  • the slightest necessity for it. The wrong's quite sufficiently yours,
  • and the demand you make is perfectly justified by it."
  • "I can't tell you what it is to me to feel you on my side!" Owen
  • exclaimed.
  • "Up to this time," said Fleda, after a pause, "your mother has had no
  • doubt of my being on hers."
  • "Then of course she won't like your changing."
  • "I dare say she won't like it at all."
  • "Do you mean to say you'll have a regular kick-up with her?"
  • "I don't exactly know what you mean by a regular kick-up. We shall
  • naturally have a great deal of discussion--if she consents to discuss
  • the matter at all. That's why you must decidedly give her two or three
  • days."
  • "I see you think she _may_ refuse to discuss it at all," said Owen.
  • "I'm only trying to be prepared for the worst. You must remember that to
  • have to withdraw from the ground she has taken, to make a public
  • surrender of what she has publicly appropriated, will go uncommonly hard
  • with her pride."
  • Owen considered; his face seemed to broaden, but not into a smile. "I
  • suppose she's tremendously proud, isn't she?" This might have been the
  • first time it had occurred to him.
  • "You know better than I," said Fleda, speaking with high extravagance.
  • "I don't know anything in the world half so well as you. If I were as
  • clever as you I might hope to get round her." Owen hesitated; then he
  • went on: "In fact I don't quite see what even you can say or do that
  • will really fetch her."
  • "Neither do I, as yet. I must think--I must pray!" the girl pursued,
  • smiling. "I can only say to you that I'll try. I _want_ to try, you
  • know--I want to help you." He stood looking at her so long on this that
  • she added with much distinctness: "So you must leave me, please, quite
  • alone with her. You must go straight back."
  • "Back to the inn?"
  • "Oh no, back to town. I'll write to you to-morrow."
  • He turned about vaguely for his hat.
  • "There's the chance, of course, that she may be afraid."
  • "Afraid, you mean, of the legal steps you may take?"
  • "I've got a perfect case--I could have her up. The Brigstocks say it's
  • simple stealing."
  • "I can easily fancy what the Brigstocks say!" Fleda permitted herself to
  • remark without solemnity.
  • "It's none of their business, is it?" was Owen's unexpected rejoinder.
  • Fleda had already noted that no one so slow could ever have had such
  • rapid transitions.
  • She showed her amusement. "They've a much better right to say it's none
  • of mine."
  • "Well, at any rate, you don't call her names."
  • Fleda wondered whether Mona did; and this made it all the finer of her
  • to exclaim in a moment: "You don't know what I shall call her if she
  • holds out!"
  • Owen gave her a gloomy glance; then he blew a speck off the crown of his
  • hat. "But if you do have a set-to with her?"
  • He paused so long for a reply that Fleda said: "I don't think I know
  • what you mean by a set-to."
  • "Well, if she calls _you_ names."
  • "I don't think she'll do that."
  • "What I mean to say is, if she's angry at your backing me up--what will
  • you do then? She can't possibly like it, you know."
  • "She may very well not like it; but everything depends. I must see what
  • I shall do. You mustn't worry about me."
  • She spoke with decision, but Owen seemed still unsatisfied. "You won't
  • go away, I hope?"
  • "Go away?"
  • "If she does take it ill of you."
  • Fleda moved to the door and opened it. "I'm not prepared to say. You
  • must have patience and see."
  • "Of course I must," said Owen--"of course, of course." But he took no
  • more advantage of the open door than to say: "You want me to be off, and
  • I'm off in a minute. Only, before I go, please answer me a question. If
  • you _should_ leave my mother, where would you go?"
  • Fleda smiled again. "I haven't the least idea."
  • "I suppose you'd go back to London."
  • "I haven't the least idea," Fleda repeated.
  • "You don't--a--live anywhere in particular, do you?" the young man went
  • on. He looked conscious as soon as he had spoken; she could see that he
  • felt himself to have alluded more grossly than he meant to the
  • circumstance of her having, if one were plain about it, no home of her
  • own. He had meant it as an allusion of a tender sort to all that she
  • would sacrifice in the case of a quarrel with his mother; but there was
  • indeed no graceful way of touching on that. One just couldn't be plain
  • about it.
  • Fleda, wound up as she was, shrank from any treatment at all of the
  • matter, and she made no answer to his question. "I _won't_ leave your
  • mother," she said. "I'll produce an effect on her; I'll convince her
  • absolutely."
  • "I believe you will, if you look at her like that!"
  • She was wound up to such a height that there might well be a light in
  • her pale, fine little face--a light that, while, for all return, at
  • first, she simply shone back at him, was intensely reflected in his own.
  • "I'll make her see it--I'll make her see it!" She rang out like a silver
  • bell. She had at that moment a perfect faith that she should succeed;
  • but it passed into something else when, the next instant, she became
  • aware that Owen, quickly getting between her and the door she had
  • opened, was sharply closing it, as might be said, in her face. He had
  • done this before she could stop him, and he stood there with his hand on
  • the knob and smiled at her strangely. Clearer than he could have spoken
  • it was the sense of those seconds of silence.
  • "When I got into this I didn't know you, and now that I know you how can
  • I tell you the difference? And _she_'s so different, so ugly and vulgar,
  • in the light of this squabble. No, like _you_ I've never known one. It's
  • another thing, it's a new thing altogether. Listen to me a little: can't
  • something be done?" It was what had been in the air in those moments at
  • Kensington, and it only wanted words to be a committed act. The more
  • reason, to the girl's excited mind, why it shouldn't have words; her one
  • thought was not to hear, to keep the act uncommitted. She would do this
  • if she had to be horrid.
  • "Please let me out, Mr. Gereth," she said; on which he opened the door
  • with an hesitation so very brief that in thinking of these things
  • afterwards--for she was to think of them forever--she wondered in what
  • tone she could have spoken. They went into the hall, where she
  • encountered the parlor-maid, of whom she inquired whether Mrs. Gereth
  • had come in.
  • "No, miss; and I think she has left the garden. She has gone up the back
  • road." In other words, they had the whole place to themselves. It would
  • have been a pleasure, in a different mood, to converse with that
  • parlor-maid.
  • "Please open the house-door," said Fleda.
  • Owen, as if in quest of his umbrella, looked vaguely about the
  • hall--looked even wistfully up the staircase--while the neat young woman
  • complied with Fleda's request. Owen's eyes then wandered out of the open
  • door. "I think it's awfully nice here," he observed; "I assure you I
  • could do with it myself."
  • "I should think you might, with half your things here! It's Poynton
  • itself--almost. Good-bye, Mr. Gereth," Fleda added. Her intention had
  • naturally been that the neat young woman, opening the front door, should
  • remain to close it on the departing guest. That functionary, however,
  • had acutely vanished behind a stiff flap of green baize which Mrs.
  • Gereth had not yet had time to abolish. Fleda put out her hand, but Owen
  • turned away--he couldn't find his umbrella. She passed into the open
  • air--she was determined to get him out; and in a moment he joined her in
  • the little plastered portico which had small resemblance to any feature
  • of Poynton. It was, as Mrs. Gereth had said, like the portico of a house
  • in Brompton.
  • "Oh, I don't mean with all the things here," he explained in regard to
  • the opinion he had just expressed. "I mean I could put up with it just
  • as it was; it had a lot of good things, don't you think? I mean if
  • everything was back at Poynton, if everything was all right." He brought
  • out these last words with a sort of smothered sigh. Fleda didn't
  • understand his explanation unless it had reference to another and more
  • wonderful exchange--the restoration to the great house not only of its
  • tables and chairs, but of its alienated mistress. This would imply the
  • installation of his own life at Ricks, and obviously that of another
  • person. Such another person could scarcely be Mona Brigstock. He put out
  • his hand now; and once more she heard his unsounded words: "With
  • everything patched up at the other place, I could live here with _you_.
  • Don't you see what I mean?"
  • Fleda saw perfectly, and, with a face in which she flattered herself
  • that nothing of this vision appeared, gave him her hand and said:
  • "Good-bye, good-bye."
  • Owen held her hand very firmly and kept it even after an effort made by
  • her to recover it--an effort not repeated, as she felt it best not to
  • show she was flurried. That solution--of her living with him at
  • Ricks--disposed of him beautifully, and disposed not less so of herself;
  • it disposed admirably too of Mrs. Gereth. Fleda could only vainly wonder
  • how it provided for poor Mona. While he looked at her, grasping her
  • hand, she felt that now indeed she was paying for his mother's
  • extravagance at Poynton--the vividness of that lady's public plea that
  • little Fleda Vetch was the person to insure the general peace. It was to
  • that vividness poor Owen had come back, and if Mrs. Gereth had had more
  • discretion little Fleda Vetch wouldn't have been in a predicament. She
  • saw that Owen had at this moment his sharpest necessity of speech, and
  • so long as he didn't release her hand she could only submit to him. Her
  • defense would be perhaps to look blank and hard; so she looked as blank
  • and as hard as she could, with the reward of an immediate sense that
  • this was not a bit what he wanted. It even made him hang fire, as if he
  • were suddenly ashamed of himself, were recalled to some idea of duty and
  • of honor. Yet he none the less brought it out. "There's one thing I dare
  • say I ought to tell you, if you're going so kindly to act for me; though
  • of course you'll see for yourself it's a thing it won't do to tell
  • _her_." What was it? He made her wait for it again, and while she
  • waited, under firm coercion, she had the extraordinary impression that
  • Owen's simplicity was in eclipse. His natural honesty was like the scent
  • of a flower, and she felt at this moment as if her nose had been brushed
  • by the bloom without the odor. The allusion was undoubtedly to his
  • mother; and was not what he meant about the matter in question the
  • opposite of what he said--that it just _would_ do to tell her? It would
  • have been the first time he had said the opposite of what he meant, and
  • there was certainly a fascination in the phenomenon, as well as a
  • challenge to suspense in the ambiguity. "It's just that I understand
  • from Mona, you know," he stammered; "it's just that she has made no
  • bones about bringing home to me--" He tried to laugh, and in the effort
  • he faltered again.
  • "About bringing home to you?"--Fleda encouraged him.
  • He was sensible of it, he achieved his performance. "Why, that if I
  • don't get the things back--every blessed one of them except a few
  • _she_'ll pick out--she won't have anything more to say to me."
  • Fleda, after an instant, encouraged him again. "To say to you?"
  • "Why, she simply won't marry me, don't you see?"
  • Owen's legs, not to mention his voice, had wavered while he spoke, and
  • she felt his possession of her hand loosen so that she was free again.
  • Her stare of perception broke into a lively laugh. "Oh, you're all
  • right, for you _will_ get them. You will; you're quite safe; don't
  • worry!" She fell back into the house with her hand on the door.
  • "Good-bye, good-bye." She repeated it several times, laughing bravely,
  • quite waving him away and, as he didn't move and save that he was on the
  • other side of it, closing the door in his face quite as he had closed
  • that of the drawing-room in hers. Never had a face, never at least had
  • such a handsome one, been so presented to that offense. She even held
  • the door a minute, lest he should try to come in again. At last, as she
  • heard nothing, she made a dash for the stairs and ran up.
  • IX
  • In knowing a while before all she needed, Fleda had been far from
  • knowing as much as that; so that once upstairs, where, in her room, with
  • her sense of danger and trouble, the age of Louis Seize suddenly struck
  • her as wanting in taste and point, she felt that she now for the first
  • time knew her temptation. Owen had put it before her with an art beyond
  • his own dream. Mona would cast him off if he didn't proceed to
  • extremities; if his negotiation with his mother should fail he would be
  • completely free. That negotiation depended on a young lady to whom he
  • had pressingly suggested the condition of his freedom; and as if to
  • aggravate the young lady's predicament designing fate had sent Mrs.
  • Gereth, as the parlor-maid said, "up the back road." This would give the
  • young lady more time to make up her mind that nothing should come of the
  • negotiation. There would be different ways of putting the question to
  • Mrs. Gereth, and Fleda might profitably devote the moments before her
  • return to a selection of the way that would most surely be tantamount to
  • failure. This selection indeed required no great adroitness; it was so
  • conspicuous that failure would be the reward of an effective
  • introduction of Mona. If that abhorred name should be properly invoked
  • Mrs. Gereth would resist to the death, and before envenomed resistance
  • Owen would certainly retire. His retirement would be into single life,
  • and Fleda reflected that he had now gone away conscious of having
  • practically told her so. She could only say, as she waited for the back
  • road to disgorge, that she hoped it was a consciousness he enjoyed.
  • There was something _she_ enjoyed; but that was a very different matter.
  • To know that she had become to him an object of desire gave her wings
  • that she felt herself flutter in the air: it was like the rush of a
  • flood into her own accumulations. These stored depths had been
  • fathomless and still, but now, for half an hour, in the empty house,
  • they spread till they overflowed. He seemed to have made it right for
  • her to confess to herself her secret. Strange then there should be for
  • him in return nothing that such a confession could make right! How could
  • it make right that he should give up Mona for another woman? His
  • attitude was a sorry appeal to Fleda to legitimate that. But he didn't
  • believe it himself, and he had none of the courage of his suggestion.
  • She could easily see how wrong everything must be when a man so made to
  • be manly was wanting in courage. She had upset him, as people called it,
  • and he had spoken out from the force of the jar of finding her there. He
  • had upset her too, heaven knew, but she was one of those who could pick
  • themselves up. She had the real advantage, she considered, of having
  • kept him from seeing that she had been overthrown.
  • She had moreover at present completely recovered her feet, though there
  • was in the intensity of the effort required to do so a vibration which
  • throbbed away into an immense allowance for the young man. How could she
  • after all know what, in the disturbance wrought by his mother, Mona's
  • relations with him might have become? If he had been able to keep his
  • wits, such as they were, more about him he would probably have felt--as
  • sharply as she felt on his behalf--that so long as those relations were
  • not ended he had no right to say even the little he had said. He had no
  • right to appear to wish to draw in another girl to help him to an
  • escape. If he was in a plight he must get out of the plight himself, he
  • must get out of it first, and anything he should have to say to any one
  • else must be deferred and detached. She herself, at any rate--it was her
  • own case that was in question--couldn't dream of assisting him save in
  • the sense of their common honor. She could never be the girl to be drawn
  • in, she could never lift her finger against Mona. There was something in
  • her that would make it a shame to her forever to have owed her happiness
  • to an interference. It would seem intolerably vulgar to her to have
  • "ousted" the daughter of the Brigstocks; and merely to have abstained
  • even wouldn't assure her that she had been straight. Nothing was really
  • straight but to justify her little pensioned presence by her use; and
  • now, won over as she was to heroism, she could see her use only as some
  • high and delicate deed. She couldn't do anything at all, in short,
  • unless she could do it with a kind of pride, and there would be nothing
  • to be proud of in having arranged for poor Owen to get off easily.
  • Nobody had a right to get off easily from pledges so deep, so sacred.
  • How could Fleda doubt they had been tremendous when she knew so well
  • what any pledge of her own would be? If Mona was so formed that she
  • could hold such vows light, that was Mona's peculiar business. To have
  • loved Owen apparently, and yet to have loved him only so much, only to
  • the extent of a few tables and chairs, was not a thing she could so much
  • as try to grasp. Of a different way of loving him she was herself ready
  • to give an instance, an instance of which the beauty indeed would not be
  • generally known. It would not perhaps if revealed be generally
  • understood, inasmuch as the effect of the particular pressure she
  • proposed to exercise would be, should success attend it, to keep him
  • tied to an affection that had died a sudden and violent death. Even in
  • the ardor of her meditation Fleda remained in sight of the truth that it
  • would be an odd result of her magnanimity to prevent her friend's
  • shaking off a woman he disliked. If he didn't dislike Mona, what was the
  • matter with him? And if he did, Fleda asked, what was the matter with
  • her own silly self?
  • Our young lady met this branch of the temptation it pleased her frankly
  • to recognize by declaring that to encourage any such cruelty would be
  • tortuous and base. She had nothing to do with his dislikes; she had only
  • to do with his good-nature and his good name. She had joy of him just as
  • he was, but it was of these things she had the greatest. The worst
  • aversion and the liveliest reaction moreover wouldn't alter the
  • fact--since one was facing facts--that but the other day his strong arms
  • must have clasped a remarkably handsome girl as close as she had
  • permitted. Fleda's emotion at this time was a wondrous mixture, in which
  • Mona's permissions and Mona's beauty figured powerfully as aids to
  • reflection. She herself had no beauty, and _her_ permissions were the
  • stony stares she had just practiced in the drawing-room--a consciousness
  • of a kind appreciably to add to the particular sense of triumph that
  • made her generous. I may not perhaps too much diminish the merit of that
  • generosity if I mention that it could take the flight we are considering
  • just because really, with the telescope of her long thought, Fleda saw
  • what might bring her out of the wood. Mona herself would bring her out;
  • at the least Mona possibly might. Deep down plunged the idea that even
  • should she achieve what she had promised Owen, there was still the
  • contingency of Mona's independent action. She might by that time, under
  • stress of temper or of whatever it was that was now moving her, have
  • said or done the things there is no patching up. If the rupture should
  • come from Waterbath they might all be happy yet. This was a calculation
  • that Fleda wouldn't have committed to paper, but it affected the total
  • of her sentiments. She was meanwhile so remarkably constituted that
  • while she refused to profit by Owen's mistake, even while she judged it
  • and hastened to cover it up, she could drink a sweetness from it that
  • consorted little with her wishing it mightn't have been made. There was
  • no harm done, because he had instinctively known, poor dear, with whom
  • to make it, and it was a compensation for seeing him worried that he
  • hadn't made it with some horrid mean girl who would immediately have
  • dished him by making a still bigger one. Their protected error (for she
  • indulged a fancy that it was hers too) was like some dangerous, lovely
  • living thing that she had caught and could keep--keep vivid and helpless
  • in the cage of her own passion and look at and talk to all day long. She
  • had got it well locked up there by the time that, from an upper window,
  • she saw Mrs. Gereth again in the garden. At this she went down to meet
  • her.
  • X
  • Fleda's line had been taken, her word was quite ready; on the terrace of
  • the painted pots she broke out before her interlocutress could put a
  • question. "His errand was perfectly simple: he came to demand that you
  • shall pack everything straight up again and send it back as fast as the
  • railway will carry it."
  • The back road had apparently been fatiguing to Mrs. Gereth; she rose
  • there rather white and wan with her walk. A certain sharp thinness was
  • in her ejaculation of "Oh!"--after which she glanced about her for a
  • place to sit down. The movement was a criticism of the order of events
  • that offered such a piece of news to a lady coming in tired; but Fleda
  • could see that in turning over the possibilities this particular peril
  • was the one that during the last hour her friend had turned up oftenest.
  • At the end of the short, gray day, which had been moist and mild, the
  • sun was out; the terrace looked to the south, and a bench, formed as to
  • legs and arms of iron representing knotted boughs, stood against the
  • warmest wall of the house. The mistress of Ricks sank upon it and
  • presented to her companion the handsome face she had composed to hear
  • everything. Strangely enough, it was just this fine vessel of her
  • attention that made the girl most nervous about what she must drop in.
  • "Quite a 'demand,' dear, is it?" asked Mrs. Gereth, drawing in her
  • cloak.
  • "Oh, that's what I should call it!" Fleda laughed, to her own surprise.
  • "I mean with the threat of enforcement and that sort of thing."
  • "Distinctly with the threat of enforcement--what would be called, I
  • suppose, coercion."
  • "What sort of coercion?" said Mrs. Gereth.
  • "Why, legal, don't you know?--what he calls setting the lawyers at you."
  • "Is that what he calls it?" She seemed to speak with disinterested
  • curiosity.
  • "That's what he calls it," said Fleda.
  • Mrs. Gereth considered an instant. "Oh, the lawyers!" she exclaimed
  • lightly. Seated there almost cosily in the reddening winter sunset, only
  • with her shoulders raised a little and her mantle tightened as if from a
  • slight chill, she had never yet looked to Fleda so much in possession
  • nor so far from meeting unsuspectedness halfway. "Is he going to send
  • them down here?"
  • "I dare say he thinks it may come to that."
  • "The lawyers can scarcely do the packing," Mrs. Gereth humorously
  • remarked.
  • "I suppose he means them--in the first place, at least--to try to talk
  • you over."
  • "In the first place, eh? And what does he mean in the second?"
  • Fleda hesitated; she had not foreseen that so simple an inquiry could
  • disconcert her. "I'm afraid I don't know."
  • "Didn't you ask?" Mrs. Gereth spoke as if she might have said, "What
  • then were you doing all the while?"
  • "I didn't ask very much," said her companion. "He has been gone some
  • time. The great thing seemed to be to understand clearly that he
  • wouldn't be content with anything less than what he mentioned."
  • "My just giving everything back?"
  • "Your just giving everything back."
  • "Well, darling, what did you tell him?" Mrs. Gereth blandly inquired.
  • Fleda faltered again, wincing at the term of endearment, at what the
  • words took for granted, charged with the confidence she had now
  • committed herself to betray. "I told him I would tell you!" She smiled,
  • but she felt that her smile was rather hollow and even that Mrs. Gereth
  • had begun to look at her with some fixedness.
  • "Did he seem very angry?"
  • "He seemed very sad. He takes it very hard," Fleda added.
  • "And how does _she_ take it?"
  • "Ah, that--that I felt a delicacy about asking."
  • "So you didn't ask?" The words had the note of surprise.
  • Fleda was embarrassed; she had not made up her mind definitely to lie.
  • "I didn't think you'd care." That small untruth she would risk.
  • "Well--I don't!" Mrs. Gereth declared; and Fleda felt less guilty to
  • hear her, for the statement was as inexact as her own. "Didn't you say
  • anything in return?" Mrs. Gereth presently continued.
  • "Do you mean in the way of justifying you?"
  • "I didn't mean to trouble you to do that. My justification," said Mrs.
  • Gereth, sitting there warmly and, in the lucidity of her thought, which
  • nevertheless hung back a little, dropping her eyes on the gravel--"my
  • justification was all the past. My justification was the cruelty--" But
  • at this, with a short, sharp gesture, she checked herself. "It's too
  • good of me to talk--now." She produced these sentences with a cold
  • patience, as if addressing Fleda in the girl's virtual and actual
  • character of Owen's representative. Our young lady crept to and fro
  • before the bench, combating the sense that it was occupied by a judge,
  • looking at her boot-toes, reminding herself in doing so of Mona, and
  • lightly crunching the pebbles as she walked. She moved about because she
  • was afraid, putting off from moment to moment the exercise of the
  • courage she had been sure she possessed. That courage would all come to
  • her if she could only be equally sure that what she should be called
  • upon to do for Owen would be to suffer. She had wondered, while Mrs.
  • Gereth spoke, how that lady would describe her justification. She had
  • described it as if to be irreproachably fair, give her adversary the
  • benefit of every doubt, and then dismiss the question forever. "Of
  • course," Mrs. Gereth went on, "if we didn't succeed in showing him at
  • Poynton the ground we took, it's simply that he shuts his eyes. What I
  • supposed was that you would have given him your opinion that if I was
  • the woman so signally to assert myself, I'm also the woman to rest upon
  • it imperturbably enough."
  • Fleda stopped in front of her hostess. "I gave him my opinion that
  • you're very logical, very obstinate, and very proud."
  • "Quite right, my dear: I'm a rank bigot--about that sort of thing!" and
  • Mrs. Gereth jerked her head at the contents of the house. "I've never
  • denied it. I'd kidnap--to save them, to convert them--the children of
  • heretics. When I know I'm right I go to the stake. Oh, he may burn me
  • alive!" she cried with a happy face. "Did he abuse me?" she then
  • demanded.
  • Fleda had remained there, gathering in her purpose. "How little you know
  • him!"
  • Mrs. Gereth stared, then broke into a laugh that her companion had not
  • expected. "Ah, my dear, certainly not so well as you!" The girl, at
  • this, turned away again--she felt she looked too conscious; and she was
  • aware that, during a pause, Mrs. Gereth's eyes watched her as she went.
  • She faced about afresh to meet them, but what she met was a question
  • that reinforced them. "Why had you a 'delicacy' as to speaking of Mona?"
  • She stopped again before the bench, and an inspiration came to her. "I
  • should think _you_ would know," she said with proper dignity.
  • Blankness was for a moment on Mrs. Gereth's brow; then light broke--she
  • visibly remembered the scene in the breakfast-room after Mona's night at
  • Poynton. "Because I contrasted you--told him _you_ were the one?" Her
  • eyes looked deep. "You were--you are still!"
  • Fleda gave a bold dramatic laugh. "Thank you, my love--with all the best
  • things at Ricks!"
  • Mrs. Gereth considered, trying to penetrate, as it seemed; but at last
  • she brought out roundly: "For you, you know, I'd send them back!"
  • The girl's heart gave a tremendous bound; the right way dawned upon her
  • in a flash. Obscurity indeed the next moment engulfed this course, but
  • for a few thrilled seconds she had understood. To send the things back
  • "for her" meant of course to send them back if there were even a dim
  • chance that she might become mistress of them. Fleda's palpitation was
  • not allayed as she asked herself what portent Mrs. Gereth had suddenly
  • perceived of such a chance: that perception could come only from a
  • sudden suspicion of her secret. This suspicion, in turn, was a tolerably
  • straight consequence of that implied view of the propriety of surrender
  • from which, she was well aware, she could say nothing to dissociate
  • herself. What she first felt was that if she wished to rescue the spoils
  • she wished also to rescue her secret. So she looked as innocent as she
  • could and said as quickly as possible: "For me? Why in the world for
  • me?"
  • "Because you're so awfully keen."
  • "Am I? Do I strike you so? You know I hate him," Fleda went on.
  • She had the sense for a while of Mrs. Gereth's regarding her with the
  • detachment of some stern, clever stranger. "Then what's the matter with
  • you? Why do you want me to give in?"
  • Fleda hesitated; she felt herself reddening. "I've only said your son
  • wants it. I haven't said _I_ do."
  • "Then say it and have done with it!"
  • This was more peremptory than any word her friend, though often speaking
  • in her presence with much point, had ever yet directly addressed to her.
  • It affected her like the crack of a whip, but she confined herself, with
  • an effort, to taking it as a reminder that she must keep her head. "I
  • know he has his engagement to carry out."
  • "His engagement to marry? Why, it's just that engagement we loathe!"
  • "Why should _I_ loathe it?" Fleda asked with a strained smile. Then,
  • before Mrs. Gereth could reply, she pursued: "I'm thinking of his
  • general undertaking--to give her the house as she originally saw it."
  • "To give her the house!" Mrs. Gereth brought up the words from the depth
  • of the unspeakable. The effort was like the moan of an autumn wind; it
  • was in the power of such an image to make her turn pale.
  • "I'm thinking," Fleda continued, "of the simple question of his keeping
  • faith on an important clause of his contract: it doesn't matter whether
  • it's with a stupid girl or with a monster of cleverness. I'm thinking of
  • his honor and his good name."
  • "The honor and good name of a man you hate?"
  • "Certainly," the girl resolutely answered. "I don't see why you should
  • talk as if one had a petty mind. You don't think so. It's not on that
  • assumption you've ever dealt with me. I can do your son justice, as he
  • put his case to me."
  • "Ah, then he did put his case to you!" Mrs. Gereth exclaimed, with an
  • accent of triumph. "You seemed to speak just now as if really nothing of
  • any consequence had passed between you."
  • "Something always passes when one has a little imagination," our young
  • lady declared.
  • "I take it you don't mean that Owen has any!" Mrs. Gereth cried with her
  • large laugh.
  • Fleda was silent a moment. "No, I don't mean that Owen has any," she
  • returned at last.
  • "Why is it you hate him so?" her hostess abruptly inquired.
  • "Should I love him for all he has made you suffer?"
  • Mrs. Gereth slowly rose at this and, coming across the walk, took her
  • young friend in her arms and kissed her. She then passed into one of
  • Fleda's an arm perversely and imperiously sociable. "Let us move a
  • little," she said, holding her close and giving a slight shiver. They
  • strolled along the terrace, and she brought out another question. "He
  • _was_ eloquent, then, poor dear--he poured forth the story of his
  • wrongs?"
  • Fleda smiled down at her companion, who, cloaked and perceptibly bowed,
  • leaned on her heavily and gave her an odd, unwonted sense of age and
  • cunning. She took refuge in an evasion. "He couldn't tell me anything
  • that I didn't know pretty well already."
  • "It's very true that you know everything. No, dear, you haven't a petty
  • mind; you've a lovely imagination and you're the nicest creature in the
  • world. If you were inane, like most girls--like every one, in fact--I
  • would have insulted you, I would have outraged you, and then you would
  • have fled from me in terror. No, now that I think of it," Mrs. Gereth
  • went on, "you wouldn't have fled from me; nothing, on the contrary,
  • would have made you budge. You would have cuddled into your warm corner,
  • but you would have been wounded and weeping and martyrized, and you
  • would have taken every opportunity to tell people I'm a brute--as indeed
  • I should have been!" They went to and fro, and she would not allow
  • Fleda, who laughed and protested, to attenuate with any light civility
  • this spirited picture. She praised her cleverness and her patience; then
  • she said it was getting cold and dark and they must go in to tea. She
  • delayed quitting the place, however, and reverted instead to Owen's
  • ultimatum, about which she asked another question or two; in particular
  • whether it had struck Fleda that he really believed she would comply
  • with such a summons.
  • "I think he really believes that if I try hard enough I can make you:"
  • after uttering which words our young lady stopped short and emulated the
  • embrace she had received a few moments before.
  • "And you've promised to try: I see. You didn't tell me that, either,"
  • Mrs. Gereth added as they went on. "But you're rascal enough for
  • anything!" While Fleda was occupied in thinking in what terms she could
  • explain why she had indeed been rascal enough for the reticence thus
  • denounced, her companion broke out with an inquiry somewhat irrelevant
  • and even in form somewhat profane. "Why the devil, at any rate, doesn't
  • it come off?"
  • Fleda hesitated. "You mean their marriage?"
  • "Of course I mean their marriage!" Fleda hesitated again. "I haven't the
  • least idea."
  • "You didn't ask him?"
  • "Oh, how in the world can you fancy?" She spoke in a shocked tone.
  • "Fancy your putting a question so indelicate? _I_ should have put it--I
  • mean in your place; but I'm quite coarse, thank God!" Fleda felt
  • privately that she herself was coarse, or at any rate would presently
  • have to be; and Mrs. Gereth, with a purpose that struck the girl as
  • increasing, continued: "What, then, _was_ the day to be? Wasn't it just
  • one of these?"
  • "I'm sure I don't remember."
  • It was part of the great rupture and an effect of Mrs. Gereth's
  • character that up to this moment she had been completely and haughtily
  • indifferent to that detail. Now, however, she had a visible reason for
  • being clear about it. She bethought herself and she broke out--"Isn't
  • the day past?" Then, stopping short, she added: "Upon my word, they must
  • have put it off!" As Fleda made no answer to this she sharply went on:
  • "_Have_ they put it off?"
  • "I haven't the least idea," said the girl.
  • Her hostess was looking at her hard again. "Didn't he tell you--didn't
  • he say anything about it?"
  • Fleda, meanwhile, had had time to make her reflections, which were
  • moreover the continued throb of those that had occupied the interval
  • between Owen's departure and his mother's return. If she should now
  • repeat his words, this wouldn't at all play the game of her definite
  • vow; it would only play the game of her little gagged and blinded
  • desire. She could calculate well enough the effect of telling Mrs.
  • Gereth how she had had it from Owen's troubled lips that Mona was only
  • waiting for the restitution and would do nothing without it. The thing
  • was to obtain the restitution without imparting that knowledge. The only
  • way, also, not to impart it was not to tell any truth at all about it;
  • and the only way to meet this last condition was to reply to her
  • companion, as she presently did: "He told me nothing whatever: he didn't
  • touch on the subject."
  • "Not in any way?"
  • "Not in any way."
  • Mrs. Gereth watched Fleda and considered. "You haven't any idea if they
  • are waiting for the things?"
  • "How should I have? I'm not in their counsels."
  • "I dare say they are--or that Mona is." Mrs. Gereth reflected again; she
  • had a bright idea. "If I don't give in, I'll be hanged if she'll not
  • break off."
  • "She'll never, never break off!" said Fleda.
  • "Are you sure?"
  • "I can't be sure, but it's my belief."
  • "Derived from _him_?"
  • The girl hung fire a few seconds. "Derived from him."
  • Mrs. Gereth gave her a long last look, then turned abruptly away. "It's
  • an awful bore you didn't really get it out of him! Well, come to tea,"
  • she added rather dryly, passing straight into the house.
  • XI
  • The sense of her adversary's dryness, which was ominous of something she
  • couldn't read, made Fleda, before complying, linger a little on the
  • terrace; she felt the need moreover of taking breath after such a flight
  • into the cold air of denial. When at last she rejoined Mrs. Gereth she
  • found her erect before the drawing-room fire. Their tea had been set out
  • in the same quarter, and the mistress of the house, for whom the
  • preparation of it was in general a high and undelegated function, was in
  • an attitude to which the hissing urn made no appeal. This omission, for
  • Fleda, was such a further sign of something to come that, to disguise
  • her apprehension, she immediately and without an apology took the duty
  • in hand; only, however, to be promptly reminded that she was performing
  • it confusedly and not counting the journeys of the little silver shovel
  • she emptied into the pot. "Not _five_, my dear--the usual three," said
  • her hostess, with the same dryness; watching her then in silence while
  • she clumsily corrected her mistake. The tea took some minutes to draw,
  • and Mrs. Gereth availed herself of them suddenly to exclaim: "You
  • haven't yet told me, you know, how it is you propose to 'make' me!"
  • "Give everything back?" Fleda looked into the pot again and uttered her
  • question with a briskness that she felt to be a little overdone. "Why,
  • by putting the question well before you; by being so eloquent that I
  • shall persuade you, shall act upon you; by making you sorry for having
  • gone so far," she said boldly; "by simply and earnestly asking it of
  • you, in short; and by reminding you at the same time that it's the first
  • thing I ever have so asked. Oh, you've done things for me--endless and
  • beautiful things," she exclaimed; "but you've done them all from your
  • own generous impulse. I've never so much as hinted to you to lend me a
  • postage-stamp."
  • "Give me a cup of tea," said Mrs. Gereth. A moment later, taking the
  • cup, she replied: "No, you've never asked me for a postage-stamp."
  • "That gives me a pull!" Fleda returned, smiling.
  • "Puts you in the situation of expecting that I shall do this thing just
  • simply to oblige you?"
  • The girl hesitated. "You said a while ago that for me you _would_ do
  • it."
  • "For you, but not for your eloquence. Do you understand what I mean by
  • the difference?" Mrs. Gereth asked as she stood stirring her tea.
  • Fleda, to postpone answering, looked round, while she drank it, at the
  • beautiful room. "I don't in the least like, you know, your having taken
  • so much. It was a great shock to me, on my arrival here, to find you had
  • done so."
  • "Give me some more tea," said Mrs. Gereth; and there was a moment's
  • silence as Fleda poured out another cup. "If you were shocked, my dear,
  • I'm bound to say you concealed your shock."
  • "I know I did. I was afraid to show it."
  • Mrs. Gereth drank off her second cup. "And you're not afraid now?"
  • "No, I'm not afraid now."
  • "What has made the difference?"
  • "I've pulled myself together." Fleda paused; then she added: "And I've
  • seen Mr. Owen."
  • "You've seen Mr. Owen"--Mrs. Gereth concurred. She put down her cup and
  • sank into a chair, in which she leaned back, resting her head and gazing
  • at her young friend. "Yes, I did tell you a while ago that for you I'd
  • do it. But you haven't told me yet what you'll do in return."
  • Fleda thought an instant. "Anything in the wide world you may require."
  • "Oh, 'anything' is nothing at all! That's too easily said." Mrs. Gereth,
  • reclining more completely, closed her eyes with an air of disgust, an
  • air indeed of inviting slumber.
  • Fleda looked at her quiet face, which the appearance of slumber always
  • made particularly handsome; she noted how much the ordeal of the last
  • few weeks had added to its indications of age. "Well then, try me with
  • something. What is it you demand?"
  • At this, opening her eyes, Mrs. Gereth sprang straight up. "Get him away
  • from her!"
  • Fleda marveled: her companion had in an instant become young again.
  • "Away from Mona? How in the world--?"
  • "By not looking like a fool!" cried Mrs. Gereth very sharply. She kissed
  • her, however, on the spot, to make up for this roughness, and summarily
  • took off her hat, which, on coming into the house, our young lady had
  • not removed. She applied a friendly touch to the girl's hair and gave a
  • businesslike pull to her jacket. "I say don't look like an idiot,
  • because you happen not to be one, not the least bit. _I_'m idiotic; I've
  • been so, I've just discovered, ever since our first days together. I've
  • been a precious donkey; but that's another affair."
  • Fleda, as if she humbly assented, went through no form of controverting
  • this; she simply stood passive to her companion's sudden refreshment of
  • her appearance. "How _can_ I get him away from her?" she presently
  • demanded.
  • "By letting yourself go."
  • "By letting myself go?" She spoke mechanically, still more like an
  • idiot, and felt as if her face flamed out the insincerity of her
  • question. It was vividly back again, the vision of the real way to act
  • upon Mrs. Gereth. This lady's movements were now rapid; she turned off
  • from her as quickly as she had seized her, and Fleda sat down to steady
  • herself for full responsibility.
  • Her hostess, without taking up her ejaculation, gave a violent poke at
  • the fire and then faced her again. "You've done two things, then,
  • to-day--haven't you?--that you've never done before. One has been asking
  • me the service, or favor, or concession--whatever you call it--that you
  • just mentioned; the other has been telling me--certainly too for the
  • first time--an immense little fib."
  • "An immense little fib?" Fleda felt weak; she was glad of the support of
  • her seat.
  • "An immense big one, then!" said Mrs. Gereth irritatedly. "You don't in
  • the least 'hate' Owen, my darling. You care for him very much. In fact,
  • my own, you're in love with him--there! Don't tell me any more lies!"
  • cried Mrs. Gereth with a voice and a face in the presence of which Fleda
  • recognized that there was nothing for her but to hold herself and take
  • them. When once the truth was out, it was out, and she could see more
  • and more every instant that it would be the only way. She accepted
  • therefore what had to come; she leaned back her head and closed her eyes
  • as her companion had done just before. She would have covered her face
  • with her hands but for the still greater shame. "Oh, you're a wonder, a
  • wonder," said Mrs. Gereth; "you're magnificent, and I was right, as soon
  • as I saw you, to pick you out and trust you!" Fleda closed her eyes
  • tighter at this last word, but her friend kept it up. "I never dreamed
  • of it till a while ago, when, after he had come and gone, we were face
  • to face. Then something stuck out of you; it strongly impressed me, and
  • I didn't know at first quite what to make of it. It was that you had
  • just been with him and that you were not natural. Not natural to _me_,"
  • she added with a smile. "I pricked up my ears, and all that this might
  • mean dawned upon me when you said you had asked nothing about Mona. It
  • put me on the scent, but I didn't show you, did I? I felt it was _in_
  • you, deep down, and that I must draw it out. Well, I _have_ drawn it,
  • and it's a blessing. Yesterday, when you shed tears at breakfast, I was
  • awfully puzzled. What has been the matter with you all the while? Why,
  • Fleda, it isn't a crime, don't you know that?" cried the delighted
  • woman. "When I was a girl I was always in love, and not always with such
  • nice people as Owen. I didn't behave as well as you; compared with you I
  • think I must have been horrid. But if you're proud and reserved, it's
  • your own affair; I'm proud too, though I'm not reserved--that's what
  • spoils it. I'm stupid, above all--that's what I am; so dense that I
  • really blush for it. However, no one but you could have deceived me. If
  • I trusted you, moreover, it was exactly to be cleverer than myself. You
  • must be so now more than ever!" Suddenly Fleda felt her hands grasped:
  • Mrs. Gereth had plumped down at her feet and was leaning on her knees.
  • "Save him--save him: you _can_!" she passionately pleaded. "How could
  • you _not_ like him, when he's such a dear? He _is_ a dear, darling;
  • there's no harm in my own boy! You can do what you will with him--you
  • know you can! What else does he give us all this time for? Get him away
  • from her; it's as if he besought you to, poor wretch! Don't abandon him
  • to such a fate, and I'll never abandon _you_. Think of him with that
  • creature, that future! If you'll take him I'll give up everything.
  • There, it's a solemn promise, the most sacred of my life! Get the better
  • of her, and he shall have every stick I removed. Give me your word, and
  • I'll accept it. I'll write for the packers to-night!"
  • Fleda, before this, had fallen forward on her companion's neck, and the
  • two women, clinging together, had got up while the younger wailed on the
  • other's bosom. "You smooth it down because you see more in it than there
  • can ever be; but after my hideous double game how will you be able to
  • believe in me again?"
  • "I see in it simply what _must_ be, if you've a single spark of pity.
  • Where on earth was the double game, when you've behaved like such a
  • saint? You've been beautiful, you've been exquisite, and all our trouble
  • is over."
  • Fleda, drying her eyes, shook her head ever so sadly. "No, Mrs. Gereth,
  • it isn't over. I can't do what you ask--I can't meet your condition."
  • Mrs. Gereth stared; the cloud gathered in her face again. "Why, in the
  • name of goodness, when you adore him? I know what you see in him," she
  • declared in another tone. "You're right!"
  • Fleda gave a faint, stubborn smile. "He cares for her too much."
  • "Then why doesn't he marry her? He's giving you an extraordinary
  • chance."
  • "He doesn't dream I've ever thought of him," said Fleda. "Why should he,
  • if you didn't?"
  • "It wasn't with me you were in love, my duck." Then Mrs. Gereth added:
  • "I'll go and tell him."
  • "If you do any such thing, you shall never see me again,--absolutely,
  • literally never!"
  • Mrs. Gereth looked hard at her young friend, showing she saw she must
  • believe her. "Then you're perverse, you're wicked. Will you swear he
  • doesn't know?"
  • "Of course he doesn't know!" cried Fleda indignantly.
  • Her interlocutress was silent a little. "And that he has no feeling on
  • _his_ side?"
  • "For me?" Fleda stared. "Before he has even married her?"
  • Mrs. Gereth gave a sharp laugh at this. "He ought at least to appreciate
  • your wit. Oh, my dear, you _are_ a treasure! Doesn't he appreciate
  • anything? Has he given you absolutely no symptom--not looked a look, not
  • breathed a sigh?"
  • "The case," said Fleda coldly, "is as I've had the honor to state it."
  • "Then he's as big a donkey as his mother! But you know you must account
  • for their delay," Mrs. Gereth remarked.
  • "Why must I?" Fleda asked after a moment.
  • "Because you were closeted with him here so long. You can't pretend at
  • present, you know, not to have any art."
  • The girl hesitated an instant; she was conscious that she must choose
  • between two risks. She had had a secret and the secret was gone. Owen
  • had one, which was still unbruised, and the greater risk now was that
  • his mother should lay her formidable hand upon it. All Fleda's
  • tenderness for him moved her to protect it; so she faced the smaller
  • peril. "Their delay," she brought herself to reply, "may perhaps be
  • Mona's doing. I mean because he has lost her the things."
  • Mrs. Gereth jumped at this. "So that she'll break altogether if I keep
  • them?"
  • Fleda winced. "I've told you what I believe about that. She'll make
  • scenes and conditions; she'll worry him. But she'll hold him fast;
  • she'll never give him up."
  • Mrs. Gereth turned it over. "Well, I'll keep them, to try her," she
  • finally pronounced; at which Fleda felt quite sick, as if she had given
  • everything and got nothing.
  • XII
  • "I must in common decency let him know that I've talked of the matter
  • with you," she said to her hostess that evening. "What answer do you
  • wish me to write to him?"
  • "Write to him that you must see him again," said Mrs. Gereth.
  • Fleda looked very blank. "What on earth am I to see him for?"
  • "For anything you like."
  • The girl would have been struck with the levity of this had she not
  • already, in an hour, felt the extent of the change suddenly wrought in
  • her commerce with her friend--wrought above all, to that friend's view,
  • in her relation to the great issue. The effect of what had followed
  • Owen's visit was to make that relation the very key of the crisis.
  • Pressed upon her, goodness knew, the crisis had been, but it now seemed
  • to put forth big, encircling arms--arms that squeezed till they hurt and
  • she must cry out. It was as if everything at Ricks had been poured into
  • a common receptacle, a public ferment of emotion and zeal, out of which
  • it was ladled up to be tasted and talked about; everything at least but
  • the one little treasure of knowledge that she kept back. She ought to
  • have liked this, she reflected, because it meant sympathy, meant a
  • closer union with the source of so much in her life that had been
  • beautiful and renovating; but there were fine instincts in her that
  • stood off. She had had--and it was not merely at this time--to recognize
  • that there were things for which Mrs. Gereth's _flair_ was not so happy
  • as for bargains and "marks." It wouldn't be happy now as to the best
  • action on the knowledge she had just gained; yet as from this moment
  • they were still more intimately together, so a person deeply in her debt
  • would simply have to stand and meet what was to come. There were ways in
  • which she could sharply incommode such a person, and not only with the
  • best conscience in the world, but with a sort of brutality of good
  • intentions. One of the straightest of these strokes, Fleda saw, would be
  • the dance of delight over the mystery Mrs. Gereth had laid bare--the
  • loud, lawful, tactless joy of the explorer leaping upon the strand. Like
  • any other lucky discoverer, she would take possession of the fortunate
  • island. She was nothing if not practical: almost the only thing she took
  • account of in her young friend's soft secret was the excellent use she
  • could make of it--a use so much to her taste that she refused to feel a
  • hindrance in the quality of the material. Fleda put into Mrs. Gereth's
  • answer to her question a good deal more meaning than it would have
  • occurred to her a few hours before that she was prepared to put, but she
  • had on the spot a foreboding that even so broad a hint would live to be
  • bettered.
  • "Do you suggest that I shall propose to him to come down here again?"
  • she presently inquired.
  • "Dear, no; say that you'll go up to town and meet him." It _was_
  • bettered, the broad hint; and Fleda felt this to be still more the case
  • when, returning to the subject before they went to bed, her companion
  • said: "I make him over to you wholly, you know--to do what you please
  • with. Deal with him in your own clever way--I ask no questions. All I
  • ask is that you succeed."
  • "That's charming," Fleda replied, "but it doesn't tell me a bit, you'll
  • be so good as to consider, in what terms to write to him. It's not an
  • answer from you to the message I was to give you."
  • "The answer to his message is perfectly distinct: he shall have
  • everything in the place the minute he'll say he'll marry you."
  • "You really pretend," Fleda asked, "to think me capable of transmitting
  • him that news?"
  • "What else can I really pretend when you threaten so to cast me off if I
  • speak the word myself?"
  • "Oh, if _you_ speak the word!" the girl murmured very gravely, but happy
  • at least to know that in this direction Mrs. Gereth confessed herself
  • warned and helpless. Then she added: "How can I go on living with you on
  • a footing of which I so deeply disapprove? Thinking as I do that you've
  • despoiled him far more than is just or merciful--for if I expected you
  • to take something, I didn't in the least expect you to take
  • everything--how can I stay here without a sense that I'm backing you up
  • in your cruelty and participating in your ill-gotten gains?" Fleda was
  • determined that if she had the chill of her exposed and investigated
  • state she would also have the convenience of it, and that if Mrs. Gereth
  • popped in and out of the chamber of her soul she would at least return
  • the freedom. "I shall quite hate, you know, in a day or two, every
  • object that surrounds you--become blind to all the beauty and rarity
  • that I formerly delighted in. Don't think me harsh; there's no use in my
  • not being frank now. If I leave you, everything's at an end."
  • Mrs. Gereth, however, was imperturbable: Fleda had to recognize that her
  • advantage had become too real. "It's too beautiful, the way you care for
  • him; it's music in my ears. Nothing else but such a passion could make
  • you say such things; that's the way I should have been too, my dear. Why
  • didn't you tell me sooner? I'd have gone right in for you; I never would
  • have moved a candlestick. Don't stay with me if it torments you; don't,
  • if you suffer, be where you see the old rubbish. Go up to town--go back
  • for a little to your father's. It need be only for a little; two or
  • three weeks will see us through. Your father will take you and be glad,
  • if you only will make him understand what it's a question of--of your
  • getting yourself off his hands forever. _I_'ll make him understand, you
  • know, if you feel shy. I'd take you up myself, I'd go with you, to spare
  • your being bored; we'd put up at an hotel and we might amuse ourselves a
  • bit. We haven't had much pleasure since we met, have we? But of course
  • that wouldn't suit our book. I should be a bugaboo to Owen--I should be
  • fatally in the way. Your chance is there--your chance is to be alone;
  • for God's sake, use it to the right end. If you're in want of money I've
  • a little I can give you. But I ask no questions--not a question as small
  • as your shoe!"
  • She asked no questions, but she took the most extraordinary things for
  • granted. Fleda felt this still more at the end of a couple of days. On
  • the second of these our young lady wrote to Owen; her emotion had to a
  • certain degree cleared itself--there was something she could say
  • briefly. If she had given everything to Mrs. Gereth and as yet got
  • nothing, so she had on the other hand quickly reacted--it took but a
  • night--against the discouragement of her first check. Her desire to
  • serve him was too passionate, the sense that he counted upon her too
  • sweet: these things caught her up again and gave her a new patience and
  • a new subtlety. It shouldn't really be for nothing that she had given so
  • much; deep within her burned again the resolve to get something back. So
  • what she wrote to Owen was simply that she had had a great scene with
  • his mother, but that he must be patient and give her time. It was
  • difficult, as they both had expected, but she was working her hardest
  • for him. She had made an impression--she would do everything to follow
  • it up. Meanwhile he must keep intensely quiet and take no other steps;
  • he must only trust her and pray for her and believe in her perfect
  • loyalty. She made no allusion whatever to Mona's attitude, nor to his
  • not being, as regarded that young lady, master of the situation; but she
  • said in a postscript, in reference to his mother, "Of course she wonders
  • a good deal why your marriage doesn't take place." After the letter had
  • gone she regretted having used the word "loyalty;" there were two or
  • three milder terms which she might as well have employed. The answer she
  • immediately received from Owen was a little note of which she met all
  • the deficiencies by describing it to herself as pathetically simple, but
  • which, to prove that Mrs. Gereth might ask as many questions as she
  • liked, she at once made his mother read. He had no art with his pen, he
  • had not even a good hand, and his letter, a short profession of friendly
  • confidence, consisted of but a few familiar and colorless words of
  • acknowledgment and assent. The gist of it was that he would certainly,
  • since Miss Vetch recommended it, not hurry mamma too much. He would not
  • for the present cause her to be approached by any one else, but he would
  • nevertheless continue to hope that she would see she _must_ come round.
  • "Of course, you know," he added, "she can't keep me waiting
  • indefinitely. Please give her my love and tell her that. If it can be
  • done peaceably I know you're just the one to do it."
  • Fleda had awaited his rejoinder in deep suspense; such was her
  • imagination of the possibility of his having, as she tacitly phrased it,
  • let himself go on paper that when it arrived she was at first almost
  • afraid to open it. There was indeed a distinct danger, for if he should
  • take it into his head to write her love-letters the whole chance of
  • aiding him would drop: she would have to return them, she would have to
  • decline all further communication with him: it would be quite the end of
  • the business. This imagination of Fleda's was a faculty that easily
  • embraced all the heights and depths and extremities of things; that made
  • a single mouthful, in particular, of any tragic or desperate necessity.
  • She was perhaps at first just a trifle disappointed not to find in the
  • note in question a syllable that strayed from the text; but the next
  • moment she had risen to a point of view from which it presented itself
  • as a production almost inspired in its simplicity. It was simple even
  • for Owen, and she wondered what had given him the cue to be more so than
  • usual. Then she saw how natures that are right just do the things that
  • are right. He wasn't clever--his manner of writing showed it; but the
  • cleverest man in England couldn't have had more the instinct that, under
  • the circumstances, was the supremely happy one, the instinct of giving
  • her something that would do beautifully to be shown to Mrs. Gereth. This
  • was a kind of divination, for naturally he couldn't know the line Mrs.
  • Gereth was taking. It was furthermore explained--and that was the most
  • touching part of all--by his wish that she herself should notice how
  • awfully well he was behaving. His very bareness called her attention to
  • his virtue; and these were the exact fruits of her beautiful and
  • terrible admonition. He was cleaving to Mona; he was doing his duty; he
  • was making tremendously sure he should be without reproach.
  • If Fleda handed this communication to her friend as a triumphant gage of
  • the innocence of the young man's heart, her elation lived but a moment
  • after Mrs. Gereth had pounced upon the tell-tale spot in it. "Why in the
  • world, then," that lady cried, "does he still not breathe a breath about
  • the day, the _day_, the day?" She repeated the word with a crescendo of
  • superior acuteness; she proclaimed that nothing could be more marked
  • than its absence--an absence that simply spoke volumes. What did it
  • prove in fine but that she was producing the effect she had toiled
  • for--that she had settled or was rapidly settling Mona?
  • Such a challenge Fleda was obliged in some manner to take up. "You may
  • be settling Mona," she returned with a smile, "but I can hardly regard
  • it as sufficient evidence that you're settling Mona's lover."
  • "Why not, with such a studied omission on his part to gloss over in any
  • manner the painful tension existing between them--the painful tension
  • that, under providence, I've been the means of bringing about? He gives
  • you by his silence clear notice that his marriage is practically off."
  • "He speaks to me of the only thing that concerns me. He gives me clear
  • notice that he abates not one jot of his demand."
  • "Well, then, let him take the only way to get it satisfied."
  • Fleda had no need to ask again what such a way might be, nor was her
  • support removed by the fine assurance with which Mrs. Gereth could make
  • her argument wait upon her wish. These days, which dragged their length
  • into a strange, uncomfortable fortnight, had already borne more
  • testimony to that element than all the other time the two women had
  • passed together. Our young lady had been at first far from measuring the
  • whole of a feature that Owen himself would probably have described as
  • her companion's "cheek." She lived now in a kind of bath of boldness,
  • felt as if a fierce light poured in upon her from windows opened wide;
  • and the singular part of the ordeal was that she couldn't protest
  • against it fully without incurring, even to her own mind, some reproach
  • of ingratitude, some charge of smallness. If Mrs. Gereth's apparent
  • determination to hustle her into Owen's arms was accompanied with an air
  • of holding her dignity rather cheap, this was after all only as a
  • consequence of her being held in respect to some other attributes rather
  • dear. It was a new version of the old story of being kicked upstairs.
  • The wonderful woman was the same woman who, in the summer, at Poynton,
  • had been so puzzled to conceive why a good-natured girl shouldn't have
  • contributed more to the personal rout of the Brigstocks--shouldn't have
  • been grateful even for the handsome puff of Fleda Vetch. Only her
  • passion was keener now and her scruple more absent; the fight made a
  • demand upon her, and her pugnacity had become one with her constant
  • habit of using such weapons as she could pick up. She had no imagination
  • about anybody's life save on the side she bumped against. Fleda was
  • quite aware that she would have otherwise been a rare creature; but a
  • rare creature was originally just what she had struck her as being. Mrs.
  • Gereth had really no perception of anybody's nature--had only one
  • question about persons: were they clever or stupid? To be clever meant
  • to know the marks. Fleda knew them by direct inspiration, and a warm
  • recognition of this had been her friend's tribute to her character. The
  • girl had hours, now, of sombre wishing that she might never see anything
  • good again: that kind of experience was evidently not an infallible
  • source of peace. She would be more at peace in some vulgar little place
  • that should owe its _cachet_ to Tottenham Court Road. There were nice
  • strong horrors in West Kensington; it was as if they beckoned her and
  • wooed her back to them. She had a relaxed recollection of Waterbath; and
  • of her reasons for staying on at Ricks the force was rapidly ebbing. One
  • of these was her pledge to Owen--her vow to press his mother close; the
  • other was the fact that of the two discomforts, that of being prodded by
  • Mrs. Gereth and that of appearing to run after somebody else, the former
  • remained for a while the more endurable.
  • As the days passed, however, it became plainer to Fleda that her only
  • chance of success would be in lending herself to this low appearance.
  • Then, moreover, at last, her nerves settling the question, the choice
  • was simply imposed by the violence done to her taste--to whatever was
  • left of that high principle, at least, after the free and reckless
  • meeting, for months, of great drafts and appeals. It was all very well
  • to try to evade discussion: Owen Gereth was looking to her for a
  • struggle, and it wasn't a bit of a struggle to be disgusted and dumb.
  • She was on too strange a footing--that of having presented an ultimatum
  • and having had it torn up in her face. In such a case as that the envoy
  • always departed; he never sat gaping and dawdling before the city. Mrs.
  • Gereth, every morning, looked publicly into "The Morning Post," the only
  • newspaper she received; and every morning she treated the blankness of
  • that journal as fresh evidence that everything was "off." What did the
  • Post exist for but to tell you your children were wretchedly
  • married?--so that if such a source of misery was dry, what could you do
  • but infer that for once you had miraculously escaped? She almost taunted
  • Fleda with supineness in not getting something out of somebody--in the
  • same breath indeed in which she drenched her with a kind of appreciation
  • more onerous to the girl than blame. Mrs. Gereth herself had of course
  • washed her hands of the matter; but Fleda knew people who knew Mona and
  • would be sure to be in her confidence--inconceivable people who admired
  • her and had the privilege of Waterbath. What was the use therefore of
  • being the most natural and the easiest of letter-writers, if no sort of
  • side-light--in some pretext for correspondence--was, by a brilliant
  • creature, to be got out of such barbarians? Fleda was not only a
  • brilliant creature, but she heard herself commended in these days for
  • new and strange attractions; she figured suddenly, in the queer
  • conversations of Ricks, as a distinguished, almost as a dangerous
  • beauty. That retouching of her hair and dress in which her friend had
  • impulsively indulged on a first glimpse of her secret was by implication
  • very frequently repeated. She had the sense not only of being advertised
  • and offered, but of being counseled and enlightened in ways that she
  • scarcely understood--arts obscure even to a poor girl who had had, in
  • good society and motherless poverty, to look straight at realities and
  • fill out blanks.
  • These arts, when Mrs. Gereth's spirits were high, were handled with a
  • brave and cynical humor with which Fleda's fancy could keep no step:
  • they left our young lady wondering what on earth her companion wanted
  • her to do. "I want you to cut in!"--that was Mrs. Gereth's familiar and
  • comprehensive phrase for the course she prescribed. She challenged again
  • and again Fleda's picture, as she called it (though the sketch was too
  • slight to deserve the name), of the indifference to which a prior
  • attachment had committed the proprietor of Poynton. "Do you mean to say
  • that, Mona or no Mona, he could see you that way, day after day, and not
  • have the ordinary feelings of a man?" This was the sort of interrogation
  • to which Fleda was fitfully and irrelevantly treated. She had grown
  • almost used to the refrain. "Do you mean to say that when, the other
  • day, one had quite made you over to him, the great gawk, and he was, on
  • this very spot, utterly alone with you--?" The poor girl at this point
  • never left any doubt of what she meant to say, but Mrs. Gereth could be
  • trusted to break out in another place and at another time. At last Fleda
  • wrote to her father that he must take her in for a while; and when, to
  • her companion's delight, she returned to London, that lady went with her
  • to the station and wafted her on her way. "The Morning Post" had been
  • delivered as they left the house, and Mrs. Gereth had brought it with
  • her for the traveler, who never spent a penny on a newspaper. On the
  • platform, however, when this young person was ticketed, labeled, and
  • seated, she opened it at the window of the carriage, exclaiming as
  • usual, after looking into it a moment: "Nothing--nothing--nothing: don't
  • tell _me_!" Every day that there was nothing was a nail in the coffin of
  • the marriage. An instant later the train was off, but, moving quickly
  • beside it, while Fleda leaned inscrutably forth, Mrs. Gereth grasped her
  • friend's hand and looked up with wonderful eyes. "Only let yourself go,
  • darling--only let yourself go!"
  • XIII
  • That she desired to ask no questions Mrs. Gereth conscientiously proved
  • by closing her lips tight after Fleda had gone to London. No letter from
  • Ricks arrived at West Kensington, and Fleda, with nothing to communicate
  • that could be to the taste of either party, forbore to open a
  • correspondence. If her heart had been less heavy she might have been
  • amused to perceive how much rope this reticence of Ricks seemed to
  • signify to her that she could take. She had at all events no good news
  • for her friend save in the sense that her silence was not bad news. She
  • was not yet in a position to write that she had "cut in;" but neither,
  • on the other hand, had she gathered material for announcing that Mona
  • was undisseverable from her prey. She had made no use of the pen so
  • glorified by Mrs. Gereth to wake up the echoes of Waterbath; she had
  • sedulously abstained from inquiring what in any quarter, far or near,
  • was said or suggested or supposed. She only spent a matutinal penny on
  • "The Morning Post;" she only saw, on each occasion, that that inspired
  • sheet had as little to say about the imminence as about the abandonment
  • of certain nuptials. It was at the same time obvious that Mrs. Gereth
  • triumphed on these occasions much more than she trembled, and that with
  • a few such triumphs repeated she would cease to tremble at all. What was
  • most manifest, however, was that she had had a rare preconception of the
  • circumstances that would have ministered, had Fleda been disposed, to
  • the girl's cutting in. It was brought home to Fleda that these
  • circumstances would have particularly favored intervention; she was
  • quickly forced to do them a secret justice. One of the effects of her
  • intimacy with Mrs. Gereth was that she had quite lost all sense of
  • intimacy with any one else. The lady of Ricks had made a desert around
  • her, possessing and absorbing her so utterly that other partakers had
  • fallen away. Hadn't she been admonished, months before, that people
  • considered they had lost her and were reconciled on the whole to the
  • privation? Her present position in the great unconscious town defined
  • itself as obscure: she regarded it at any rate with eyes suspicious of
  • that lesson. She neither wrote notes nor received them; she indulged in
  • no reminders nor knocked at any doors; she wandered vaguely in the
  • western wilderness or cultivated shy forms of that "household art" for
  • which she had had a respect before tasting the bitter tree of knowledge.
  • Her only plan was to be as quiet as a mouse, and when she failed in the
  • attempt to lose herself in the flat suburb she felt like a lonely fly
  • crawling over a dusty chart.
  • How had Mrs. Gereth known in advance that if she had chosen to be "vile"
  • (that was what Fleda called it) everything would happen to help
  • her?--especially the way her poor father, after breakfast, doddered off
  • to his club, showing seventy when he was really fifty-seven, and leaving
  • her richly alone for the day. He came back about midnight, looking at
  • her very hard and not risking long words--only making her feel by
  • inimitable touches that the presence of his family compelled him to
  • alter all his hours. She had in their common sitting-room the company of
  • the objects he was fond of saying that he had collected--objects, shabby
  • and battered, of a sort that appealed little to his daughter: old
  • brandy-flasks and match-boxes, old calendars and hand-books, intermixed
  • with an assortment of pen-wipers and ash-trays, a harvest he had
  • gathered in from penny bazaars. He was blandly unconscious of that side
  • of Fleda's nature which had endeared her to Mrs. Gereth, and she had
  • often heard him wish to goodness there was something striking she cared
  • for. Why didn't she try collecting something?--it didn't matter what.
  • She would find it gave an interest to life, and there was no end of
  • little curiosities one could easily pick up. He was conscious of having
  • a taste for fine things which his children had unfortunately not
  • inherited. This indicated the limits of their acquaintance with
  • him--limits which, as Fleda was now sharply aware, could only leave him
  • to wonder what the mischief she was there for. As she herself echoed
  • this question to the letter she was not in a position to clear up the
  • mystery. She couldn't have given a name to her errand in town or
  • explained it save by saying that she had had to get away from Ricks. It
  • was intensely provisional, but what was to come next? Nothing could come
  • next but a deeper anxiety. She had neither a home nor an
  • outlook--nothing in all the wide world but a feeling of suspense.
  • Of course she had her duty--her duty to Owen--a definite undertaking,
  • reaffirmed, after his visit to Ricks, under her hand and seal; but there
  • was no sense of possession attached to that; there was only a horrible
  • sense of privation. She had quite moved from under Mrs. Gereth's wide
  • wing; and now that she was really among the pen-wipers and ash-trays she
  • was swept, at the thought of all the beauty she had forsworn, by short,
  • wild gusts of despair. If her friend should really keep the spoils she
  • would never return to her. If that friend should on the other hand part
  • with them, what on earth would there be to return to? The chill struck
  • deep as Fleda thought of the mistress of Ricks reduced, in vulgar
  • parlance, to what she had on her back: there was nothing to which she
  • could compare such an image but her idea of Marie Antoinette in the
  • Conciergerie, or perhaps the vision of some tropical bird, the creature
  • of hot, dense forests, dropped on a frozen moor to pick up a living. The
  • mind's eye could see Mrs. Gereth, indeed, only in her thick, colored
  • air; it took all the light of her treasures to make her concrete and
  • distinct. She loomed for a moment, in any mere house, gaunt and
  • unnatural; then she vanished as if she had suddenly sunk into a
  • quicksand. Fleda lost herself in the rich fancy of how, if _she_ were
  • mistress of Poynton, a whole province, as an abode, should be assigned
  • there to the august queen-mother. She would have returned from her
  • campaign with her baggage-train and her loot, and the palace would unbar
  • its shutters and the morning flash back from its halls. In the event of
  • a surrender the poor woman would never again be able to begin to
  • collect: she was now too old and too moneyless, and times were altered
  • and good things impossibly dear. A surrender, furthermore, to any
  • daughter-in-law save an oddity like Mona needn't at all be an abdication
  • in fact; any other fairly nice girl whom Owen should have taken it into
  • his head to marry would have been positively glad to have, for the
  • museum, a custodian who was a walking catalogue and who understood
  • beyond any one in England the hygiene and temperament of rare pieces. A
  • fairly nice girl would somehow be away a good deal and would at such
  • times count it a blessing to feel Mrs. Gereth at her post.
  • Fleda had fully recognized, the first days, that, quite apart from any
  • question of letting Owen know where she was, it would be a charity to
  • give him some sign: it would be weak, it would be ugly, to be diverted
  • from that kindness by the fact that Mrs. Gereth had attached a tinkling
  • bell to it. A frank relation with him was only superficially
  • discredited: she ought for his own sake to send him a word of cheer. So
  • she repeatedly reasoned, but she as repeatedly delayed performance: if
  • her general plan had been to be as still as a mouse, an interview like
  • the interview at Ricks would be an odd contribution to that ideal.
  • Therefore with a confused preference of practice to theory she let the
  • days go by; she felt that nothing was so imperative as the gain of
  • precious time. She shouldn't be able to stay with her father forever,
  • but she might now reap the benefit of having married her sister.
  • Maggie's union had been built up round a small spare room. Concealed in
  • this apartment she might try to paint again, and abetted by the grateful
  • Maggie--for Maggie at least was grateful--she might try to dispose of
  • her work. She had not indeed struggled with a brush since her visit to
  • Waterbath, where the sight of the family splotches had put her immensely
  • on her guard. Poynton moreover had been an impossible place for
  • producing; no active art could flourish there but a Buddhistic
  • contemplation. It had stripped its mistress clean of all feeble
  • accomplishments; her hands were imbrued neither with ink nor with
  • water-color. Close to Fleda's present abode was the little shop of a man
  • who mounted and framed pictures and desolately dealt in artists'
  • materials. She sometimes paused before it to look at a couple of shy
  • experiments for which its dull window constituted publicity, small
  • studies placed there for sale and full of warning to a young lady
  • without fortune and without talent. Some such young lady had brought
  • them forth in sorrow; some such young lady, to see if they had been
  • snapped up, had passed and repassed as helplessly as she herself was
  • doing. They never had been, they never would be, snapped up; yet they
  • were quite above the actual attainment of some other young ladies. It
  • was a matter of discipline with Fleda to take an occasional lesson from
  • them; besides which, when she now quitted the house, she had to look for
  • reasons after she was out. The only place to find them was in the
  • shop-windows. They made her feel like a servant-girl taking her
  • "afternoon," but that didn't signify: perhaps some day she would
  • resemble such a person still more closely. This continued a fortnight,
  • at the end of which the feeling was suddenly dissipated. She had stopped
  • as usual in the presence of the little pictures; then, as she turned
  • away, she had found herself face to face with Owen Gereth.
  • At the sight of him two fresh waves passed quickly across her heart, one
  • at the heels of the other. The first was an instant perception that this
  • encounter was not an accident; the second a consciousness as prompt that
  • the best place for it was the street. She knew before he told her that
  • he had been to see her, and the next thing she knew was that he had had
  • information from his mother. Her mind grasped these things while he said
  • with a smile: "I saw only your back, but I was sure. I was over the way.
  • I've been at your house."
  • "How came you to know my house?" Fleda asked.
  • "I like that!" he laughed. "How came you not to let me know that you
  • were there?"
  • Fleda, at this, thought it best also to laugh. "Since I didn't let you
  • know, why did you come?"
  • "Oh, I say!" cried Owen. "Don't add insult to injury. Why in the world
  • didn't you let me know? I came because I want awfully to see you." He
  • hesitated, then he added: "I got the tip from mother: she has written to
  • me--fancy!"
  • They still stood where they had met. Fleda's instinct was to keep him
  • there; the more so that she could already see him take for granted that
  • they would immediately proceed together to her door. He rose before her
  • with a different air: he looked less ruffled and bruised than he had
  • done at Ricks, he showed a recovered freshness. Perhaps, however, this
  • was only because she had scarcely seen him at all as yet in London form,
  • as he would have called it--"turned out" as he was turned out in town.
  • In the country, heated with the chase and splashed with the mire, he had
  • always rather reminded her of a picturesque peasant in national costume.
  • This costume, as Owen wore it, varied from day to day; it was as copious
  • as the wardrobe of an actor; but it never failed of suggestions of the
  • earth and the weather, the hedges and the ditches, the beasts and the
  • birds. There had been days when it struck her as all nature in one pair
  • of boots. It didn't make him now another person that he was delicately
  • dressed, shining and splendid--that he had a higher hat and light gloves
  • with black seams, and a spearlike umbrella; but it made him, she soon
  • decided, really handsomer, and that in turn gave him--for she never
  • could think of him, or indeed of some other things, without the aid of
  • his vocabulary--a tremendous pull. Yes, this was for the moment, as he
  • looked at her, the great fact of their situation--his pull was
  • tremendous. She tried to keep the acknowledgement of it from trembling
  • in her voice as she said to him with more surprise than she really felt:
  • "You've then reopened relations with her?"
  • "It's she who has reopened them with me. I got her letter this morning.
  • She told me you were here and that she wished me to know it. She didn't
  • say much; she just gave me your address. I wrote her back, you know,
  • 'Thanks no end. Shall go to-day.' So we _are_ in correspondence again,
  • aren't we? She means of course that you've something to tell me from
  • her, eh? But if you have, why haven't you let a fellow know?" He waited
  • for no answer to this, he had so much to say. "At your house, just now,
  • they told me how long you've been here. Haven't you known all the while
  • that I'm counting the hours? I left a word for you--that I would be back
  • at six; but I'm awfully glad to have caught you so much sooner. You
  • don't mean to say you're not going home!" he exclaimed in dismay. "The
  • young woman there told me you went out early."
  • "I've been out a very short time," said Fleda, who had hung back with
  • the general purpose of making things difficult for him. The street would
  • make them difficult; she could trust the street. She reflected in time,
  • however, that to betray to him she was afraid to admit him would give
  • him more a feeling of facility than of anything else. She moved on with
  • him after a moment, letting him direct their course to her door, which
  • was only round a corner: she considered as they went that it might not
  • prove such a stroke to have been in London so long and yet not to have
  • called him. She desired he should feel she was perfectly simple with
  • him, and there was no simplicity in that. None the less, on the steps of
  • the house, though she had a key, she rang the bell; and while they
  • waited together and she averted her face she looked straight into the
  • depths of what Mrs. Gereth had meant by giving him the "tip." This had
  • been perfidious, had been monstrous of Mrs. Gereth, and Fleda wondered
  • if her letter had contained only what Owen repeated.
  • XIV
  • When Owen and Fleda were in her father's little place and, among the
  • brandy-flasks and pen-wipers, still more disconcerted and divided, the
  • girl--to do something, though it would make him stay--had ordered tea,
  • he put the letter before her quite as if he had guessed her thought.
  • "She's still a bit nasty--fancy!" He handed her the scrap of a note
  • which he had pulled out of his pocket and from its envelope. "Fleda
  • Vetch," it ran, "is at 10 Raphael Road, West Kensington. Go to see her,
  • and try, for God's sake, to cultivate a glimmer of intelligence." When
  • in handing it back to him she took in his face she saw that its
  • heightened color was the effect of his watching her read such an
  • allusion to his want of wit. Fleda knew what it was an allusion to, and
  • his pathetic air of having received this buffet, tall and fine and kind
  • as he stood there, made her conscious of not quite concealing her
  • knowledge. For a minute she was kept silent by an angered sense of the
  • trick that had been played her. It was a trick because Fleda considered
  • there had been a covenant; and the trick consisted of Mrs. Gereth's
  • having broken the spirit of their agreement while conforming in a
  • fashion to the letter. Under the girl's menace of a complete rupture she
  • had been afraid to make of her secret the use she itched to make; but in
  • the course of these days of separation she had gathered pluck to hazard
  • an indirect betrayal. Fleda measured her hesitations and the impulse
  • which she had finally obeyed and which the continued procrastination of
  • Waterbath had encouraged, had at last made irresistible. If in her
  • high-handed manner of playing their game she had not named the thing
  • hidden, she had named the hiding-place. It was over the sense of this
  • wrong that Fleda's lips closed tight: she was afraid of aggravating her
  • case by some ejaculation that would make Owen prick up his ears. A
  • great, quick effort, however, helped her to avoid the danger; with her
  • constant idea of keeping cool and repressing a visible flutter, she
  • found herself able to choose her words. Meanwhile he had exclaimed with
  • his uncomfortable laugh: "That's a good one for me, Miss Vetch, isn't
  • it?"
  • "Of course you know by this time that your mother's very sharp," said
  • Fleda.
  • "I think I can understand well enough when I know what's to be
  • understood," the young man asserted. "But I hope you won't mind my
  • saying that you've kept me pretty well in the dark about that. I've been
  • waiting, waiting, waiting; so much has depended on your news. If you've
  • been working for me I'm afraid it has been a thankless job. Can't she
  • say what she'll do, one way or the other? I can't tell in the least
  • where I am, you know. I haven't really learnt from you, since I saw you
  • there, where _she_ is. You wrote me to be patient, and upon my soul I
  • have been. But I'm afraid you don't quite realize what I'm to be patient
  • with. At Waterbath, don't you know? I've simply to account and answer
  • for the damned things. Mona looks at me and waits, and I, hang it, I
  • look at you and do the same." Fleda had gathered fuller confidence as he
  • continued; so plain was it that she had succeeded in not dropping into
  • his mind the spark that might produce the glimmer invoked by his mother.
  • But even this fine assurance gave a start when, after an appealing
  • pause, he went on: "I hope, you know, that after all you're not keeping
  • anything back from me."
  • In the full face of what she was keeping back such a hope could only
  • make her wince; but she was prompt with her explanations in proportion
  • as she felt they failed to meet him. The smutty maid came in with
  • tea-things, and Fleda, moving several objects, eagerly accepted the
  • diversion of arranging a place for them on one of the tables. "I've been
  • trying to break your mother down because it has seemed there may be some
  • chance of it. That's why I've let you go on expecting it. She's too
  • proud to veer round all at once, but I think I speak correctly in saying
  • that I've made an impression."
  • In spite of ordering tea she had not invited him to sit down; she
  • herself made a point of standing. He hovered by the window that looked
  • into Raphael Road; she kept at the other side of the room; the stunted
  • slavey, gazing wide-eyed at the beautiful gentleman and either stupidly
  • or cunningly bringing but one thing at a time, came and went between the
  • tea-tray and the open door.
  • "You pegged at her so hard?" Owen asked.
  • "I explained to her fully your position and put before her much more
  • strongly than she liked what seemed to me her absolute duty."
  • Owen waited a little. "And having done that, you departed?"
  • Fleda felt the full need of giving a reason for her departure; but at
  • first she only said with cheerful frankness: "I departed."
  • Her companion again looked at her in silence. "I thought you had gone to
  • her for several months."
  • "Well," Fleda replied, "I couldn't stay. I didn't like it. I didn't like
  • it at all--I couldn't bear it," she went on. "In the midst of those
  • trophies of Poynton, living with them, touching them, using them, I felt
  • as if I were backing her up. As I was not a bit of an accomplice, as I
  • hate what she has done, I didn't want to be, even to the extent of the
  • mere look of it--what is it you call such people?--an accessory after
  • the fact." There was something she kept back so rigidly that the joy of
  • uttering the rest was double. She felt the sharpest need of giving him
  • all the other truth. There was a matter as to which she had deceived
  • him, and there was a matter as to which she had deceived Mrs. Gereth,
  • but her lack of pleasure in deception as such came home to her now. She
  • busied herself with the tea and, to extend the occupation, cleared the
  • table still more, spreading out the coarse cups and saucers and the
  • vulgar little plates. She was aware that she produced more confusion
  • than symmetry, but she was also aware that she was violently nervous.
  • Owen tried to help her with something: this made rather for disorder.
  • "My reason for not writing to you," she pursued, "was simply that I was
  • hoping to hear more from Ricks. I've waited from day to day for that."
  • "But you've heard nothing?"
  • "Not a word."
  • "Then what I understand," said Owen, "is that, practically, you and
  • Mummy have quarreled. And you've done it--I mean you personally--for
  • _me_."
  • "Oh no, we haven't quarreled a bit!" Then with a smile: "We've only
  • diverged."
  • "You've diverged uncommonly far!"--Owen laughed back. Fleda, with her
  • hideous crockery and her father's collections, could conceive that these
  • objects, to her visitor's perception even more strongly than to her own,
  • measured the length of the swing from Poynton and Ricks; she was aware
  • too that her high standards figured vividly enough even to Owen's
  • simplicity to make him reflect that West Kensington was a tremendous
  • fall. If she had fallen it was because she had acted for him. She was
  • all the more content he should thus see she _had_ acted, as the cost of
  • it, in his eyes, was none of her own showing. "What seems to have
  • happened," he exclaimed, "is that you've had a row with her and yet not
  • moved her!"
  • Fleda considered a moment; she was full of the impression that,
  • notwithstanding her scant help, he saw his way clearer than he had seen
  • it at Ricks. He might mean many things; and what if the many should mean
  • in their turn only one? "The difficulty is, you understand, that she
  • doesn't really see into your situation." She hesitated. "She doesn't
  • comprehend why your marriage hasn't yet taken place."
  • Owen stared. "Why, for the reason I told you: that Mona won't take
  • another step till mother has given full satisfaction. Everything must be
  • there. You see, everything _was_ there the day of that fatal visit."
  • "Yes, that's what I understood from you at Ricks," said Fleda; "but I
  • haven't repeated it to your mother." She had hated, at Ricks, to talk
  • with him about Mona, but now that scruple was swept away. If he could
  • speak of Mona's visit as fatal, she need at least not pretend not to
  • notice it. It made all the difference that she had tried to assist him
  • and had failed: to give him any faith in her service she must give him
  • all her reasons but one. She must give him, in other words, with a
  • corresponding omission, all Mrs. Gereth's. "You can easily see that, as
  • she dislikes your marriage, anything that may seem to make it less
  • certain works in her favor. Without my telling her, she has suspicions
  • and views that are simply suggested by your delay. Therefore it didn't
  • seem to me right to make them worse. By holding off long enough, she
  • thinks she may put an end to your engagement. If Mona's waiting, she
  • believes she may at last tire Mona out." That, in all conscience, Fleda
  • felt was lucid enough.
  • So the young man, following her attentively, appeared equally to feel.
  • "So far as that goes," he promptly declared, "she _has_ at last tired
  • Mona out." He uttered the words with a strange approach to hilarity.
  • Fleda's surprise at this aberration left her a moment looking at him.
  • "Do you mean your marriage is off?"
  • Owen answered with a kind of gay despair. "God knows, Miss Vetch, where
  • or when or what my marriage is! If it isn't 'off,' it certainly, at the
  • point things have reached, isn't _on_. I haven't seen Mona for ten days,
  • and for a week I haven't heard from her. She used to write me every
  • week, don't you know? She won't budge from Waterbath, and I haven't
  • budged from town." Then he suddenly broke out: "If she _does_ chuck me,
  • will mother come round?"
  • Fleda, at this, felt that her heroism had come to its real test--felt
  • that in telling him the truth she should effectively raise a hand to
  • push his impediment out of the way. Was the knowledge that such a motion
  • would probably dispose forever of Mona capable of yielding to the
  • conception of still giving her every chance she was entitled to? That
  • conception was heroic, but at the same moment it reminded Fleda of the
  • place it had held in her plan, she was also reminded of the not less
  • urgent claim of the truth. Ah, the truth--there was a limit to the
  • impunity with which one could juggle with it! Wasn't what she had most
  • to remember the fact that Owen had a right to his property and that he
  • had also her vow to stand by him in the effort to recover it? How did
  • she stand by him if she hid from him the single way to recover it of
  • which she was quite sure? For an instant that seemed to her the fullest
  • of her life she debated. "Yes," she said at last, "if your marriage is
  • really abandoned, she will give up everything she has taken."
  • "That's just what makes Mona hesitate!" Owen honestly exclaimed. "I mean
  • the idea that I shall get back the things only if she gives me up."
  • Fleda thought an instant. "You mean makes her hesitate to keep you--not
  • hesitate to renounce you?"
  • Owen looked a trifle bewildered. "She doesn't see the use of hanging on,
  • as I haven't even yet put the matter into legal hands. She's awfully
  • keen about that, and awfully disgusted that I don't. She says it's the
  • only real way, and she thinks I'm afraid to take it. She has given me
  • time and then has given me again more. She says I give Mummy too much.
  • She says I'm a muff to go pottering on. That's why she's drawing off so
  • hard, don't you see?"
  • "I don't see very clearly. Of course you must give her what you offered
  • her; of course you must keep your word. There must be no mistake about
  • _that_!" the girl declared.
  • Owen's bewilderment visibly increased. "You think, then, as she does,
  • that I _must_ send down the police?"
  • The mixture of reluctance and dependence in this made her feel how much
  • she was failing him. She had the sense of "chucking" him too. "No, no,
  • not yet!" she said, though she had really no other and no better course
  • to prescribe. "Doesn't it occur to you," she asked in a moment, "that if
  • Mona is, as you say, drawing away, she may have, in doing so, a very
  • high motive? She knows the immense value of all the objects detained by
  • your mother, and to restore the spoils of Poynton she is ready--is that
  • it!--to make a sacrifice. The sacrifice is that of an engagement she had
  • entered upon with joy."
  • Owen had been blank a moment before, but he followed this argument with
  • success--a success so immediate that it enabled him to produce with
  • decision: "Ah, she's not that sort! She wants them herself," he added;
  • "she wants to feel they're hers; she doesn't care whether I have them or
  • not! And if she can't get them she doesn't want _me_. If she can't get
  • them she doesn't want anything at all."
  • This was categoric; Fleda drank it in. "She takes such an interest in
  • them?"
  • "So it appears."
  • "So much that they're _all_, and that she can let everything else
  • absolutely depend upon them?"
  • Owen weighed her question as if he felt the responsibility of his
  • answer. But that answer came in a moment, and, as Fleda could see, out
  • of a wealth of memory. "She never wanted them particularly till they
  • seemed to be in danger. Now she has an idea about them; and when she
  • gets hold of an idea--Oh dear me!" He broke off, pausing and looking
  • away as with a sense of the futility of expression: it was the first
  • time Fleda had ever heard him explain a matter so pointedly or embark at
  • all on a generalization. It was striking, it was touching to her, as he
  • faltered, that he appeared but half capable of floating his
  • generalization to the end. The girl, however, was so far competent to
  • fill up his blank as that she had divined, on the occasion of Mona's
  • visit to Poynton, what would happen in the event of the accident at
  • which he glanced. She had there with her own eyes seen Owen's betrothed
  • get hold of an idea. "I say, you know, _do_ give me some tea!" he went
  • on irrelevantly and familiarly.
  • Her profuse preparations had all this time had no sequel, and, with a
  • laugh that she felt to be awkward, she hastily complied with his
  • request. "It's sure to be horrid," she said; "we don't have at all good
  • things." She offered him also bread and butter, of which he partook,
  • holding his cup and saucer in his other hand and moving slowly about the
  • room. She poured herself a cup, but not to take it; after which, without
  • wanting it, she began to eat a small stale biscuit. She was struck with
  • the extinction of the unwillingness she had felt at Ricks to contribute
  • to the bandying between them of poor Mona's name; and under this
  • influence she presently resumed: "Am I to understand that she engaged
  • herself to marry you without caring for you?"
  • Owen looked out into Raphael Road. "She _did_ care for me awfully. But
  • she can't stand the strain."
  • "The strain of what?"
  • "Why, of the whole wretched thing."
  • "The whole thing has indeed been wretched, and I can easily conceive its
  • effect upon her," Fleda said.
  • Her visitor turned sharp round. "You _can_?" There was a light in his
  • strong stare. "You can understand it's spoiling her temper and making
  • her come down on _me_? She behaves as if I were of no use to her at
  • all!"
  • Fleda hesitated. "She's rankling under the sense of her wrong."
  • "Well, was it _I_, pray, who perpetrated the wrong? Ain't I doing what I
  • can to get the thing arranged?"
  • The ring of his question made his anger at Mona almost resemble for a
  • minute an anger at Fleda; and this resemblance in turn caused our young
  • lady to observe how handsome he looked when he spoke, for the first time
  • in her hearing, with that degree of heat, and used, also for the first
  • time, such a term as "perpetrated." In addition, his challenge rendered
  • still more vivid to her the mere flimsiness of her own aid. "Yes, you've
  • been perfect," she said. "You've had a most difficult part. You've _had_
  • to show tact and patience, as well as firmness, with your mother, and
  • you've strikingly shown them. It's I who, quite unintentionally, have
  • deceived you. I haven't helped you at all to your remedy."
  • "Well, you wouldn't at all events have ceased to like me, would you?"
  • Owen demanded. It evidently mattered to him to know if she really
  • justified Mona. "I mean of course if you _had_ liked me--liked me as
  • _she_ liked me," he explained.
  • Fleda looked this inquiry in the face only long enough to recognize
  • that, in her embarrassment, she must take instant refuge in a superior
  • one. "I can answer that better if I know how kind to her you've been.
  • _Have_ you been kind to her?" she asked as simply as she could.
  • "Why, rather, Miss Vetch!" Owen declared. "I've done every blessed thing
  • she wished. I rushed down to Ricks, as you saw, with fire and sword, and
  • the day after that I went to see her at Waterbath." At this point he
  • checked himself, though it was just the point at which her interest
  • deepened. A different look had come into his face as he put down his
  • empty teacup. "But why should I tell you such things, for any good it
  • does me? I gather that you've no suggestion to make me now except that I
  • shall request my solicitor to act. _Shall_ I request him to act?"
  • Fleda scarcely heard his words; something new had suddenly come into her
  • mind. "When you went to Waterbath after seeing me," she asked, "did you
  • tell her all about that?"
  • Owen looked conscious. "All about it?"
  • "That you had had a long talk with me, without seeing your mother at
  • all?"
  • "Oh yes, I told her exactly, and that you had been most awfully kind,
  • and that I had placed the whole thing in your hands."
  • Fleda was silent a moment. "Perhaps that displeased her," she at last
  • suggested.
  • "It displeased her fearfully," said Owen, looking very queer.
  • "Fearfully?" broke from the girl. Somehow, at the word, she was
  • startled.
  • "She wanted to know what right you had to meddle. She said you were not
  • honest."
  • "Oh!" Fleda cried, with a long wail. Then she controlled herself. "I
  • see."
  • "She abused you, and I defended you. She denounced you--"
  • She checked him with a gesture. "Don't tell me what she did!" She had
  • colored up to her eyes, where, as with the effect of a blow in the face,
  • she quickly felt the tears gathering. It was a sudden drop in her great
  • flight, a shock to her attempt to watch over what Mona was entitled to.
  • While she had been straining her very soul in this attempt, the object
  • of her magnanimity had been pronouncing her "not honest." She took it
  • all in, however, and after an instant was able to speak with a smile.
  • She would not have been surprised to learn, indeed, that her smile was
  • strange. "You had said a while ago that your mother and I quarreled
  • about you. It's much more true that you and Mona have quarreled about
  • _me_."
  • Owen hesitated, but at last he brought it out. "What I mean to say is,
  • don't you know, that Mona, if you don't mind my saying so, has taken it
  • into her head to be jealous."
  • "I see," said Fleda. "Well, I dare say our conferences have looked very
  • odd."
  • "They've looked very beautiful, and they've been very beautiful. Oh,
  • I've told her the sort you are!" the young man pursued.
  • "That of course hasn't made her love me better."
  • "No, nor love me," said Owen. "Of course, you know, she says she loves
  • me."
  • "And do you say you love her?"
  • "I say nothing else--I say it all the while. I said it the other day a
  • dozen times." Fleda made no immediate rejoinder to this, and before she
  • could choose one he repeated his question of a moment before. "_Am_ I to
  • tell my solicitor to act?"
  • She had at that moment turned away from this solution, precisely because
  • she saw in it the great chance of her secret. If she should determine
  • him to adopt it she might put out her hand and take him. It would shut
  • in Mrs. Gereth's face the open door of surrender: she would flare up and
  • fight, flying the flag of a passionate, an heroic defense. The case
  • would obviously go against her, but the proceedings would last longer
  • than Mona's patience or Owen's propriety. With a formal rupture he would
  • be at large; and she had only to tighten her fingers round the string
  • that would raise the curtain on that scene. "You tell me you 'say' you
  • love her, but is there nothing more in it than your saying so? You
  • wouldn't say so, would you, if it's not true? What in the world has
  • become, in so short a time, of the affection that led to your
  • engagement?"
  • "The deuce knows what has become of it, Miss Vetch!" Owen cried. "It
  • seemed all to go to pot as this horrid struggle came on." He was close
  • to her now, and, with his face lighted again by the relief of it, he
  • looked all his helpless history into her eyes. "As I saw you and noticed
  • you more, as I knew you better and better, I felt less and less--I
  • couldn't help it--about anything or any one else. I wished I had known
  • you sooner--I knew I should have liked you better than any one in the
  • world. But it wasn't you who made the difference," he eagerly continued,
  • "and I was awfully determined to stick to Mona to the death. It was she
  • herself who made it, upon my soul, by the state she got into, the way
  • she sulked, the way she took things, and the way she let me have it! She
  • destroyed our prospects and our happiness, upon my honor. She made just
  • the same smash of them as if she had kicked over that tea-table. She
  • wanted to know all the while what was passing between us, between you
  • and me; and she wouldn't take my solemn assurance that nothing was
  • passing but what might have directly passed between me and old Mummy.
  • She said a pretty girl like you was a nice old Mummy for me, and, if
  • you'll believe it, she never called you anything else but that. I'll be
  • hanged if I haven't been good, haven't I? I haven't breathed a breath of
  • any sort to you, have I? You'd have been down on me hard if I had,
  • wouldn't you? You're down on me pretty hard as it is, I think, aren't
  • you? But I don't care what you say now, or what Mona says, either, or a
  • single rap what any one says: she has given me at last, by her
  • confounded behavior, a right to speak out, to utter the way I feel about
  • it. The way I feel about it, don't you know, is that it had all better
  • come to an end. You ask me if I don't love her, and I suppose it's
  • natural enough you should. But you ask it at the very moment I'm half
  • mad to say to you that there's only one person on the whole earth I
  • _really_ love, and that that person--" Here Owen pulled up short, and
  • Fleda wondered if it was from the effect of his perceiving, through the
  • closed door, the sound of steps and voices on the landing of the stairs.
  • She had caught this sound herself with surprise and a vague uneasiness:
  • it was not an hour at which her father ever came in, and there was no
  • present reason why she should have a visitor. She had a fear, which
  • after a few seconds deepened: a visitor was at hand; the visitor would
  • be simply Mrs. Gereth. That lady wished for a near view of the
  • consequence of her note to Owen. Fleda straightened herself with the
  • instant thought that if this was what Mrs. Gereth desired Mrs. Gereth
  • should have it in a form not to be mistaken. Owen's pause was the matter
  • of a moment, but during that moment our young couple stood with their
  • eyes holding each other's eyes and their ears catching the suggestion,
  • still through the door, of a murmured conference in the hall. Fleda had
  • begun to make the movement to cut it short when Owen stopped her with a
  • grasp of her arm. "You're surely able to guess," he said, with his voice
  • dropped and her arm pressed as she had never known such a drop or such a
  • pressure--"you're surely able to guess the one person on earth I love?"
  • The handle of the door turned, and Fleda had only time to jerk at him:
  • "Your mother!"
  • The door opened, and the smutty maid, edging in, announced "Mrs.
  • Brigstock!"
  • XV
  • Mrs. Brigstock, in the doorway, stood looking from one of the occupants
  • of the room to the other; then they saw her eyes attach themselves to a
  • small object that had lain hitherto unnoticed on the carpet. This was
  • the biscuit of which, on giving Owen his tea, Fleda had taken a
  • perfunctory nibble: she had immediately laid it on the table, and that
  • subsequently, in some precipitate movement, she should have brushed it
  • off was doubtless a sign of the agitation that possessed her. For Mrs.
  • Brigstock there was apparently more in it than met the eye. Owen at any
  • rate picked it up, and Fleda felt as if he were removing the traces of
  • some scene that the newspapers would have characterized as lively. Mrs.
  • Brigstock clearly took in also the sprawling tea-things and the mark as
  • of high water in the full faces of her young friends. These elements
  • made the little place a vivid picture of intimacy. A minute was filled
  • by Fleda's relief at finding her visitor not to be Mrs. Gereth, and a
  • longer space by the ensuing sense of what was really more compromising
  • in the actual apparition. It dimly occurred to her that the lady of
  • Ricks had also written to Waterbath. Not only had Mrs. Brigstock never
  • paid her a call, but Fleda would have been unable to figure her so
  • employed. A year before the girl had spent a day under her roof, but
  • never feeling that Mrs. Brigstock regarded this as constituting a bond.
  • She had never stayed in any house but Poynton where the imagination of a
  • bond, one way or the other, prevailed. After the first astonishment she
  • dashed gayly at her guest, emphasizing her welcome and wondering how her
  • whereabouts had become known at Waterbath. Had not Mrs. Brigstock
  • quitted that residence for the very purpose of laying her hand on the
  • associate of Mrs. Gereth's misconduct? The spirit in which this hand was
  • to be laid our young lady was yet to ascertain; but she was a person who
  • could think ten thoughts at once--a circumstance which, even putting her
  • present plight at its worst, gave her a great advantage over a person
  • who required easy conditions for dealing even with one. The very
  • vibration of the air, however, told her that whatever Mrs. Brigstock's
  • spirit might originally have been, it had been sharply affected by the
  • sight of Owen. He was essentially a surprise: she had reckoned with
  • everything that concerned him but his presence. With that, in awkward
  • silence, she was reckoning now, as Fleda could see, while she effected
  • with friendly aid an embarrassed transit to the sofa. Owen would be
  • useless, would be deplorable: that aspect of the case Fleda had taken in
  • as well. Another aspect was that he would admire her, adore her, exactly
  • in proportion as she herself should rise gracefully superior. Fleda felt
  • for the first time free to let herself "go," as Mrs. Gereth had said,
  • and she was full of the sense that to "go" meant now to aim straight at
  • the effect of moving Owen to rapture at her simplicity and tact. It was
  • her impression that he had no positive dislike of Mona's mother; but she
  • couldn't entertain that notion without a glimpse of the implication that
  • he had a positive dislike of Mrs. Brigstock's daughter. Mona's mother
  • declined tea, declined a better seat, declined a cushion, declined to
  • remove her boa: Fleda guessed that she had not come on purpose to be
  • dry, but that the voice of the invaded room had itself given her the
  • hint.
  • "I just came on the mere chance," she said. "Mona found yesterday,
  • somewhere, the card of invitation to your sister's marriage that you
  • sent us, or your father sent us, some time ago. We couldn't be
  • present--it was impossible; but as it had this address on it I said to
  • myself that I might find you here."
  • "I'm very glad to be at home," Fleda responded.
  • "Yes, that doesn't happen very often, does it?" Mrs. Brigstock looked
  • round afresh at Fleda's home.
  • "Oh, I came back from Ricks last week. I shall be here now till I don't
  • know when."
  • "We thought it very likely you would have come back. We knew of course
  • of your having been at Ricks. If I didn't find you I thought I might
  • perhaps find Mr. Vetch," Mrs. Brigstock went on.
  • "I'm sorry he's out. He's always out--all day long."
  • Mrs. Brigstock's round eyes grew rounder. "All day long?"
  • "All day long," Fleda smiled.
  • "Leaving you quite to yourself?"
  • "A good deal to myself, but a little, to-day, as you see, to Mr.
  • Gereth,--" and the girl looked at Owen to draw him into their
  • sociability. For Mrs. Brigstock he had immediately sat down; but the
  • movement had not corrected the sombre stiffness taking possession of him
  • at the sight of her. Before he found a response to the appeal addressed
  • to him Fleda turned again to her other visitor. "Is there any purpose
  • for which you would like my father to call on you?"
  • Mrs. Brigstock received this question as if it were not to be
  • unguardedly answered; upon which Owen intervened with pale irrelevance:
  • "I wrote to Mona this morning of Miss Vetch's being in town; but of
  • course the letter hadn't arrived when you left home."
  • "No, it hadn't arrived. I came up for the night--I've several matters to
  • attend to." Then looking with an intention of fixedness from one of her
  • companions to the other, "I'm afraid I've interrupted your
  • conversation," Mrs. Brigstock said. She spoke without effectual point,
  • had the air of merely announcing the fact. Fleda had not yet been
  • confronted with the question of the sort of person Mrs. Brigstock was;
  • she had only been confronted with the question of the sort of person
  • Mrs. Gereth scorned her for being. She was really, somehow, no sort of
  • person at all, and it came home to Fleda that if Mrs. Gereth could see
  • her at this moment she would scorn her more than ever. She had a face of
  • which it was impossible to say anything but that it was pink, and a mind
  • that it would be possible to describe only if one had been able to mark
  • it in a similar fashion. As nature had made this organ neither green nor
  • blue nor yellow, there was nothing to know it by: it strayed and bleated
  • like an unbranded sheep. Fleda felt for it at this moment much of the
  • kindness of compassion, since Mrs. Brigstock had brought it with her to
  • do something for her that she regarded as delicate. Fleda was quite
  • prepared to help it to perform, if she should be able to gather what it
  • wanted to do. What she gathered, however, more and more, was that it
  • wanted to do something different from what it had wanted to do in
  • leaving Waterbath. There was still nothing to enlighten her more
  • specifically in the way her visitor continued: "You must be very much
  • taken up. I believe you quite espouse his dreadful quarrel."
  • Fleda vaguely demurred. "His dreadful quarrel?"
  • "About the contents of the house. Aren't you looking after them for
  • him?"
  • "She knows how awfully kind you've been to me," Owen said. He showed
  • such discomfiture that he really gave away their situation; and Fleda
  • found herself divided between the hope that he would take leave and the
  • wish that he should see the whole of what the occasion might enable her
  • to bring to pass for him.
  • She explained to Mrs. Brigstock. "Mrs. Gereth, at Ricks, the other day,
  • asked me particularly to see him for her."
  • "And did she ask you also particularly to see him here in town?" Mrs.
  • Brigstock's hideous bonnet seemed to argue for the unsophisticated
  • truth; and it was on Fleda's lips to reply that such had indeed been
  • Mrs. Gereth's request. But she checked herself, and before she could say
  • anything else Owen had addressed their companion.
  • "I made a point of letting Mona know that I should be here, don't you
  • see? That's exactly what I wrote her this morning."
  • "She would have had no doubt you would be here, if you had a chance,"
  • Mrs. Brigstock returned. "If your letter had arrived it might have
  • prepared me for finding you here at tea. In that case I certainly
  • wouldn't have come."
  • "I'm glad, then, it didn't arrive. Shouldn't you like him to go?" Fleda
  • asked.
  • Mrs. Brigstock looked at Owen and considered: nothing showed in her face
  • but that it turned a deeper pink. "I should like him to go with _me_."
  • There was no menace in her tone, but she evidently knew what she wanted.
  • As Owen made no response to this Fleda glanced at him to invite him to
  • assent; then, for fear that he wouldn't, and would thereby make his case
  • worse, she took upon herself to declare that she was sure he would be
  • very glad to meet such a wish. She had no sooner spoken than she felt
  • that the words had a bad effect of intimacy: she had answered for him as
  • if she had been his wife. Mrs. Brigstock continued to regard him as if
  • she had observed nothing, and she continued to address Fleda: "I've not
  • seen him for a long time--I've particular things to say to him."
  • "So have I things to say to you, Mrs. Brigstock!" Owen interjected. With
  • this he took up his hat as if for an immediate departure.
  • The other visitor meanwhile turned to Fleda. "What is Mrs. Gereth going
  • to do?"
  • "Is that what you came to ask me?" Fleda demanded.
  • "That and several other things."
  • "Then you had much better let Mr. Gereth go, and stay by yourself and
  • make me a pleasant visit. You can talk with him when you like, but it is
  • the first time you've been to see me."
  • This appeal had evidently a certain effect; Mrs. Brigstock visibly
  • wavered. "I can't talk with him whenever I like," she returned; "he
  • hasn't been near us since I don't know when. But there are things that
  • have brought me here."
  • "They are not things of any importance," Owen, to Fleda's surprise,
  • suddenly asserted. He had not at first taken up Mrs. Brigstock's
  • expression of a wish to carry him off: Fleda could see that the instinct
  • at the bottom of this was that of standing by her, of seeming not to
  • abandon her. But abruptly, all his soreness working within him, it had
  • struck him that he should abandon her still more if he should leave her
  • to be dealt with by her other visitor. "You must allow me to say, you
  • know, Mrs. Brigstock, that I don't think you should come down on Miss
  • Vetch about anything. It's very good of her to take the smallest
  • interest in us and our horrid little squabble. If you want to talk about
  • it, talk about it with _me_." He was flushed with the idea of protecting
  • Fleda, of exhibiting his consideration for her. "I don't like your
  • cross-questioning her, don't you see? She's as straight as a die: _I_'ll
  • tell you all about her!" he declared with an excited laugh. "Please come
  • off with me and let her alone."
  • Mrs. Brigstock, at this, became vivid at once; Fleda thought she looked
  • most peculiar. She stood straight up, with a queer distention of her
  • whole person and of everything in her face but her mouth, which she
  • gathered into a small, tight orifice. Fleda was painfully divided; her
  • joy was deep within, but it was more relevant to the situation that she
  • should not appear to associate herself with the tone of familiarity in
  • which Owen addressed a lady who had been, and was perhaps still, about
  • to become his mother-in-law. She laid on Mrs. Brigstock's arm a
  • repressive hand. Mrs. Brigstock, however, had already exclaimed on her
  • having so wonderful a defender. "He speaks, upon my word, as if I had
  • come here to be rude to you!"
  • At this, grasping her hard, Fleda laughed; then she achieved the exploit
  • of delicately kissing her. "I'm not in the least afraid to be alone with
  • you, or of your tearing me to pieces. I'll answer any question that you
  • can possibly dream of putting to me."
  • "I'm the proper person to answer Mrs. Brigstock's questions," Owen broke
  • in again, "and I'm not a bit less ready to meet them than you are." He
  • was firmer than she had ever seen him: it was as if she had not known he
  • could be so firm.
  • "But she'll only have been here a few minutes. What sort of a visit is
  • that?" Fleda cried.
  • "It has lasted long enough for my purpose. There was something I wanted
  • to know, but I think I know it now."
  • "Anything you don't know I dare say I can tell you!" Owen observed as he
  • impatiently smoothed his hat with the cuff of his coat.
  • Fleda by this time desired immensely to keep his companion, but she saw
  • she could do so only at the cost of provoking on his part a further
  • exhibition of the sheltering attitude, which he exaggerated precisely
  • because it was the first thing, since he had begun to "like" her, that
  • he had been able frankly to do for her. It was not in her interest that
  • Mrs. Brigstock should be more struck than she already was with that
  • benevolence. "There may be things you know that I don't," she presently
  • said to her, with a smile. "But I've a sort of sense that you're
  • laboring under some great mistake."
  • Mrs. Brigstock, at this, looked into her eyes more deeply and yearningly
  • than she had supposed Mrs. Brigstock could look; it was the flicker of a
  • certain willingness to give her a chance. Owen, however, quickly spoiled
  • everything. "Nothing is more probable than that Mrs. Brigstock is doing
  • what you say; but there's no one in the world to whom you owe an
  • explanation. I may owe somebody one--I dare say I do; but not you, no!"
  • "But what if there's one that it's no difficulty at all for me to give?"
  • Fleda inquired. "I'm sure that's the only one Mrs. Brigstock came to
  • ask, if she came to ask any at all."
  • Again the good lady looked hard at her young hostess. "I came, I
  • believe, Fleda, just, you know, to plead with you."
  • Fleda, with a bright face, hesitated a moment. "As if I were one of
  • those bad women in a play?"
  • The remark was disastrous. Mrs. Brigstock, on whom her brightness was
  • lost, evidently thought it singularly free. She turned away, as from a
  • presence that had really defined itself as objectionable, and Fleda had
  • a vain sense that her good humor, in which there was an idea, was taken
  • for impertinence, or at least for levity. Her allusion was improper,
  • even if she herself wasn't; Mrs. Brigstock's emotion simplified: it came
  • to the same thing. "I'm quite ready," that lady said to Owen rather
  • mildly and woundedly. "I do want to speak to you very much."
  • "I'm completely at your service." Owen held out his hand to Fleda.
  • "Good-bye, Miss Vetch. I hope to see you again to-morrow." He opened the
  • door for Mrs. Brigstock, who passed before the girl with an oblique,
  • averted salutation. Owen and Fleda, while he stood at the door, then
  • faced each other darkly and without speaking. Their eyes met once more
  • for a long moment, and she was conscious there was something in hers
  • that the darkness didn't quench, that he had never seen before and that
  • he was perhaps never to see again. He stayed long enough to take it--to
  • take it with a sombre stare that just showed the dawn of wonder; then he
  • followed Mrs. Brigstock out of the house.
  • XVI
  • He had uttered the hope that he should see her the next day, but Fleda
  • could easily reflect that he wouldn't see her if she were not there to
  • be seen. If there was a thing in the world she desired at that moment,
  • it was that the next day should have no point of resemblance with the
  • day that had just elapsed. She accordingly aspired to an absence: she
  • would go immediately down to Maggie. She ran out that evening and
  • telegraphed to her sister, and in the morning she quitted London by an
  • early train. She required for this step no reason but the sense of
  • necessity. It was a strong personal need; she wished to interpose
  • something, and there was nothing she could interpose but distance, but
  • time. If Mrs. Brigstock had to deal with Owen she would allow Mrs.
  • Brigstock the chance. To be there, to be in the midst of it, was the
  • reverse of what she craved: she had already been more in the midst of it
  • than had ever entered into her plan. At any rate she had renounced her
  • plan; she had no plan now but the plan of separation. This was to
  • abandon Owen, to give up the fine office of helping him back to his own;
  • but when she had undertaken that office she had not foreseen that Mrs.
  • Gereth would defeat it by a manoeuvre so simple. The scene at her
  • father's rooms had extinguished all offices, and the scene at her
  • father's rooms was of Mrs. Gereth's producing. Owen, at all events, must
  • now act for himself: he had obligations to meet, he had satisfactions to
  • give, and Fleda fairly ached with the wish that he might be equal to
  • them. She never knew the extent of her tenderness for him till she
  • became conscious of the present force of her desire that he should be
  • superior, be perhaps even sublime. She obscurely made out that
  • superiority, that sublimity, mightn't after all be fatal. She closed her
  • eyes and lived for a day or two in the mere beauty of confidence. It was
  • with her on the short journey; it was with her at Maggie's; it glorified
  • the mean little house in the stupid little town. Owen had grown larger
  • to her: he would do, like a man, whatever he should have to do. He
  • wouldn't be weak--not as she was: she herself was weak exceedingly.
  • Arranging her few possessions in Maggie's fewer receptacles, she caught
  • a glimpse of the bright side of the fact that her old things were not
  • such a problem as Mrs. Gereth's. Picking her way with Maggie through the
  • local puddles, diving with her into smelly cottages and supporting her,
  • at smellier shops, in firmness over the weight of joints and the taste
  • of cheese, it was still her own secret that was universally inter-woven
  • In the puddles, the cottages, the shops she was comfortably alone with
  • it; that comfort prevailed even while, at the evening meal, her
  • brother-in-law invited her attention to a diagram, drawn with a fork on
  • too soiled a tablecloth, of the scandalous drains of the Convalescent
  • Home. To be alone with it she had come away from Ricks; and now she knew
  • that to be alone with it she had come away from London. This advantage
  • was of course menaced, but not immediately destroyed, by the arrival, on
  • the second day, of the note she had been sure she should receive from
  • Owen. He had gone to West Kensington and found her flown, but he had got
  • her address from the little maid and then hurried to a club and written
  • to her. "Why have you left me just when I want you most?" he demanded.
  • The next words, it was true, were more reassuring on the question of his
  • steadiness. "I don't know what your reason may be," they went on, "nor
  • why you've not left a line for me; but I don't think you can feel that I
  • did anything yesterday that it wasn't right for me to do. As regards
  • Mrs. Brigstock, certainly, I just felt what was right and I did it. She
  • had no business whatever to attack you that way, and I should have been
  • ashamed if I had left her there to worry you. I won't have you worried
  • by any one; no one shall be disagreeable to you but me. I didn't mean to
  • be so yesterday, and I don't to-day; but I'm perfectly free now to want
  • you, and I want you much more than you've allowed me to explain. You'll
  • see if I'm not all right, if you'll let me come to you. Don't be
  • afraid--I'll not hurt you nor trouble you. I give you my honor I'll not
  • hurt any one. Only I _must_ see you, on what I had to say to Mrs. B. She
  • was nastier than I thought she could be, but I'm behaving like an angel.
  • I assure you I'm all right--that's exactly what I want you to see. You
  • owe me something, you know, for what you said you would do and haven't
  • done; what your departure without a word gives me to understand--doesn't
  • it?--that you definitely can't do. Don't simply forsake me. See me, if
  • you only see me once. I shan't wait for any leave--I shall come down
  • to-morrow. I've been looking into trains and find there's something that
  • will bring me down just after lunch and something very good for getting
  • me back. I won't stop long. For God's sake, be there."
  • This communication arrived in the morning, but Fleda would still have
  • had time to wire a protest. She debated on that alternative; then she
  • read the note over and found in one phrase an exact statement of her
  • duty. Owen's simplicity had expressed it, and her subtlety had nothing
  • to answer. She owed him something for her obvious failure, and what she
  • owed him was to receive him. If indeed she had known he would make this
  • attempt she might have been held to have gained nothing by her flight.
  • Well, she had gained what she had gained--she had gained the interval.
  • She had no compunction for the greater trouble she should give the young
  • man; it was now doubtless right that he should have as much trouble as
  • possible. Maggie, who thought she was in her confidence, but was
  • immensely not, had reproached her for having left Mrs. Gereth, and
  • Maggie was just in this proportion gratified to hear of the visitor with
  • whom, early in the afternoon, she would have to ask to be left alone.
  • Maggie liked to see far, and now she could sit upstairs and rake the
  • whole future. She had known that, as she familiarly said, there was
  • something the matter with Fleda, and the value of that knowledge was
  • augmented by the fact that there was apparently also something the
  • matter with Mr. Gereth.
  • Fleda, downstairs, learned soon enough what this was. It was simply
  • that, as he announced the moment he stood before her, he was now all
  • right. When she asked him what he meant by that state he replied that he
  • meant he could practically regard himself henceforth as a free man: he
  • had had at West Kensington, as soon as they got into the street, such a
  • horrid scene with Mrs. Brigstock.
  • "I knew what she wanted to say to me: that's why I was determined to get
  • her off. I knew I shouldn't like it, but I was perfectly prepared," said
  • Owen. "She brought it out as soon as we got round the corner; she asked
  • me point-blank if I was in love with you."
  • "And what did you say to that?"
  • "That it was none of her business."
  • "Ah," said Fleda, "I'm not so sure!"
  • "Well, _I_ am, and I'm the person most concerned. Of course I didn't use
  • just those words: I was perfectly civil, quite as civil as she. But I
  • told her I didn't consider she had a right to put me any such question.
  • I said I wasn't sure that even Mona had, with the extraordinary line,
  • you know, that Mona has taken. At any rate the whole thing, the way _I_
  • put it, was between Mona and me; and between Mona and me, if she didn't
  • mind, it would just have to remain."
  • Fleda was silent a little. "All that didn't answer her question."
  • "Then you think I ought to have told her?"
  • Again our young lady reflected. "I think I'm rather glad you didn't."
  • "I knew what I was about," said Owen. "It didn't strike me that she had
  • the least right to come down on us that way and ask for explanations."
  • Fleda looked very grave, weighing the whole matter. "I dare say that
  • when she started, when she arrived, she didn't mean to 'come down.'"
  • "What then did she mean to do?"
  • "What she said to me just before she went: she meant to plead with me."
  • "Oh, I heard her!" said Owen. "But plead with you for what?"
  • "For you, of course--to entreat me to give you up. She thinks me awfully
  • designing--that I've taken some sort of possession of you."
  • Owen stared. "You haven't lifted a finger! It's I who have taken
  • possession."
  • "Very true, you've done it all yourself." Fleda spoke gravely and
  • gently, without a breath of coquetry. "But those are shades between
  • which she's probably not obliged to distinguish. It's enough for her
  • that we're singularly intimate."
  • "I am, but you're not!" Owen exclaimed.
  • Fleda gave a dim smile. "You make me at least feel that I'm learning to
  • know you very well when I hear you say such a thing as that. Mrs.
  • Brigstock came to get round me, to supplicate me," she went on; "but to
  • find you there, looking so much at home, paying me a friendly call and
  • shoving the tea-things about--that was too much for her patience. She
  • doesn't know, you see, that I'm after all a decent girl. She simply made
  • up her mind on the spot that I'm a very bad case."
  • "I couldn't stand the way she treated you, and that was what I had to
  • say to her," Owen returned.
  • "She's simple and slow, but she's not a fool: I think she treated me, on
  • the whole, very well." Fleda remembered how Mrs. Gereth had treated Mona
  • when the Brigstocks came down to Poynton.
  • Owen evidently thought her painfully perverse. "It was you who carried
  • it off; you behaved like a brick. And so did I, I consider. If you only
  • knew the difficulty I had! I told her you were the noblest and
  • straightest of women."
  • "That can hardly have removed her impression that there are things I put
  • you up to."
  • "It didn't," Owen replied with candor. "She said our relation, yours and
  • mine, isn't innocent."
  • "What did she mean by that?"
  • "As you may suppose, I particularly inquired. Do you know what she had
  • the cheek to tell me?" Owen asked. "She didn't better it much: she said
  • she meant that it's excessively unnatural."
  • Fleda considered afresh. "Well, it is!" she brought out at last.
  • "Then, upon my honor, it's only you who make it so!" Her perversity was
  • distinctly too much for him. "I mean you make it so by the way you keep
  • me off."
  • "Have I kept you off to-day?" Fleda sadly shook her head, raising her
  • arms a little and dropping them.
  • Her gesture of resignation gave him a pretext for catching at her hand,
  • but before he could take it she had put it behind her. They had been
  • seated together on Maggie's single sofa, and her movement brought her to
  • her feet, while Owen, looking at her reproachfully, leaned back in
  • discouragement. "What good does it do me to be here when I find you only
  • a stone?"
  • She met his eyes with all the tenderness she had not yet uttered, and
  • she had not known till this moment how great was the accumulation.
  • "Perhaps, after all," she risked, "there may be even in a stone still
  • some little help for you."
  • Owen sat there a minute staring at her. "Ah, you're beautiful, more
  • beautiful than any one," he broke out, "but I'll be hanged if I can ever
  • understand you! On Tuesday, at your father's, you were beautiful--as
  • beautiful, just before I left, as you are at this instant. But the next
  • day, when I went back, I found it had apparently meant nothing; and now,
  • again, that you let me come here and you shine at me like an angel, it
  • doesn't bring you an inch nearer to saying what I want you to say." He
  • remained a moment longer in the same position; then he jerked himself
  • up. "What I want you to say is that you like me--what I want you to say
  • is that you pity me." He sprang up and came to her. "What I want you to
  • say is that you'll _save_ me!"
  • Fleda hesitated. "Why do you need saving, when you announced to me just
  • now that you're a free man?"
  • He too hesitated, but he was not checked. "It's just for the reason that
  • I'm free. Don't you know what I mean, Miss Vetch? I want you to marry
  • me."
  • Fleda, at this, put out her hand in charity; she held his own, which
  • quickly grasped it a moment, and if he had described her as shining at
  • him it may be assumed that she shone all the more in her deep, still
  • smile. "Let me hear a little more about your freedom first," she said.
  • "I gather that Mrs. Brigstock was not wholly satisfied with the way you
  • disposed of her question."
  • "I dare say she wasn't. But the less she's satisfied the more I'm free."
  • "What bearing have _her_ feelings, pray?" Fleda asked.
  • "Why, Mona's much worse than her mother. She wants much more to give me
  • up."
  • "Then why doesn't she do it?"
  • "She will, as soon as her mother gets home and tells her."
  • "Tells her what?" Fleda inquired.
  • "Why, that I'm in love with _you_!"
  • Fleda debated. "Are you so very sure she will?"
  • "Certainly I'm sure, with all the evidence I already have. That will
  • finish her!" Owen declared.
  • This made his companion thoughtful again. "Can you take such pleasure in
  • her being 'finished'--a poor girl you've once loved?"
  • Owen waited long enough to take in the question; then with a serenity
  • startling even to her knowledge of his nature, "I don't think I can have
  • _really_ loved her, you know," he replied.
  • Fleda broke into a laugh which gave him a surprise as visible as the
  • emotion it testified to. "Then how am I to know that you 'really'
  • love--anybody else?"
  • "Oh, I'll show you that!" said Owen.
  • "I must take it on trust," the girl pursued. "And what if Mona doesn't
  • give you up?" she added.
  • Owen was baffled but a few seconds; he had thought of everything. "Why,
  • that's just where you come in."
  • "To save you? I see. You mean I must get rid of her for you." His
  • blankness showed for a little that he felt the chill of her cold logic;
  • but as she waited for his rejoinder she knew to which of them it cost
  • most. He gasped a minute, and that gave her time to say: "You see, Mr.
  • Owen, how impossible it is to talk of such things yet!"
  • Like lightning he had grasped her arm. "You mean you _will_ talk of
  • them?" Then as he began to take the flood of assent from her eyes: "You
  • _will_ listen to me? Oh, you dear, you dear--when, when?"
  • "Ah, when it isn't mere misery!" The words had broken from her in a
  • sudden loud cry, and what next happened was that the very sound of her
  • pain upset her. She heard her own true note; she turned short away from
  • him; in a moment she had burst into sobs; in another his arms were round
  • her; the next she had let herself go so far that even Mrs. Gereth might
  • have seen it. He clasped her, and she gave herself--she poured out her
  • tears on his breast; something prisoned and pent throbbed and gushed;
  • something deep and sweet surged up--something that came from far within
  • and far off, that had begun with the sight of him in his indifference
  • and had never had rest since then. The surrender was short, but the
  • relief was long: she felt his lips upon her face and his arms tighten
  • with his full divination. What she did, what she _had_ done, she
  • scarcely knew: she only was aware, as she broke from him again, of what
  • had taken place in his own quick breast. What had taken place was that,
  • with the click of a spring, he saw. He had cleared the high wall at a
  • bound; they were together without a veil. She had not a shred of a
  • secret left; it was as if a whirlwind had come and gone, laying low the
  • great false front that she had built up stone by stone. The strangest
  • thing of all was the momentary sense of desolation.
  • "Ah, all the while you _cared_?" Owen read the truth with a wonder so
  • great that it was visibly almost a sadness, a terror caused by his
  • sudden perception of where the impossibility was not. That made it all
  • perhaps elsewhere.
  • "I cared, I cared, I cared!" Fleda moaned it as defiantly as if she were
  • confessing a misdeed. "How couldn't I care? But you mustn't, you must
  • never, never ask! It isn't for us to talk about!" she insisted. "Don't
  • speak of it, don't speak!"
  • It was easy indeed not to speak when the difficulty was to find words.
  • He clasped his hands before her as he might have clasped them at an
  • altar; his pressed palms shook together while he held his breath and
  • while she stilled herself in the effort to come round again to the real
  • and the right. He helped this effort, soothing her into a seat with a
  • touch as light as if she had really been something sacred. She sank into
  • a chair and he dropped before her on his knees; she fell back with
  • closed eyes and he buried his face in her lap. There was no way to thank
  • her but this act of prostration, which lasted, in silence, till she laid
  • consenting hands on him, touched his head and stroked it, held it in her
  • tenderness till he acknowledged his long density. He made the avowal
  • seem only his--made her, when she rose again, raise him at last, softly,
  • as if from the abasement of shame. If in each other's eyes now, however,
  • they saw the truth, this truth, to Fleda, looked harder even than
  • before--all the harder that when, at the very moment she recognized it,
  • he murmured to her ecstatically, in fresh possession of her hands, which
  • he drew up to his breast, holding them tight there with both his own:
  • "I'm saved, I'm saved,--I _am_! I'm ready for anything. I have your
  • word. Come!" he cried, as if from the sight of a response slower than he
  • needed, and in the tone he so often had of a great boy at a great game.
  • She had once more disengaged herself, with the private vow that he
  • shouldn't yet touch her again. It was all too horribly soon--her sense
  • of this was rapidly surging back. "We mustn't talk, we mustn't talk; we
  • must _wait_!" she intensely insisted. "I don't know what you mean by
  • your freedom; I don't see it, I don't feel it. Where is it yet, where,
  • your freedom? If it's real there's plenty of time, and if it isn't
  • there's more than enough. I hate myself," she protested, "for having
  • anything to say about her: it's like waiting for dead men's shoes! What
  • business is it of mine what she does? She has her own trouble and her
  • own plan. It's too hideous to watch her and count on her!"
  • Owen's face, at this, showed a reviving dread, the fear of some darksome
  • process of her mind. "If you speak for yourself I can understand, but
  • why is it hideous for _me_?"
  • "Oh, I mean for myself!" Fleda said impatiently.
  • "_I_ watch her, _I_ count on her: how can I do anything else? If I count
  • on her to let me definitely know how we stand, I do nothing in life but
  • what she herself has led straight up to. I never thought of asking you
  • to 'get rid of her' for me, and I never would have spoken to you if I
  • hadn't held that I _am_ rid of her, that she has backed out of the whole
  • thing. Didn't she do so from the moment she began to put it off? I had
  • already applied for the license; the very invitations were half
  • addressed. Who but she, all of a sudden, demanded an unnatural wait? It
  • was none of _my_ doing; I had never dreamed of anything but coming up to
  • the scratch." Owen grew more and more lucid, and more confident of the
  • effect of his lucidity. "She called it 'taking a stand,' to see what
  • mother would do. I told her mother would do what I would make her do;
  • and to that she replied that she would like to see me make her first. I
  • said I would arrange that everything should be all right, and she said
  • she really preferred to arrange it herself. It was a flat refusal to
  • trust me in the smallest degree. Why then had she pretended so
  • tremendously to care for me? And of course, at present," said Owen, "she
  • trusts me, if possible, still less."
  • Fleda paid this statement the homage of a minute's muteness. "As to
  • that, naturally, she has reason."
  • "Why on earth has she reason?" Then, as his companion, moving away,
  • simply threw up her hands, "I never looked at you--not to call
  • looking--till she had regularly driven me to it," he went on. "I know
  • what I'm about. I do assure you I'm all right!"
  • "You're not all right--you're all wrong!" Fleda cried in despair. "You
  • mustn't stay here, you mustn't!" she repeated with clear decision. "You
  • make me say dreadful things, and I feel as if I made _you_ say them."
  • But before he could reply she took it up in another tone. "Why in the
  • world, if everything had changed, didn't you break off?"
  • "I?--" The inquiry seemed to have moved him to stupefaction. "Can you
  • ask me that question when I only wanted to please you? Didn't you seem
  • to show me, in your wonderful way, that that was exactly how? I didn't
  • break off just on purpose to leave it to _her_. I didn't break off so
  • that there shouldn't be a thing to be said against me."
  • The instant after her challenge Fleda had faced him again in
  • self-reproof. "There _isn't_ a thing to be said against you, and I don't
  • know what nonsense you make me talk! You _have_ pleased me, and you've
  • been right and good, and it's the only comfort, and you must go.
  • Everything must come from Mona, and if it doesn't come we've said
  • entirely too much. You must leave me alone--forever."
  • "Forever?" Owen gasped.
  • "I mean unless everything is different."
  • "Everything _is_ different--when I _know_!"
  • Fleda winced at what he knew; she made a wild gesture which seemed to
  • whirl it out of the room. The mere allusion was like another embrace.
  • "You know nothing--and you must go and wait! You mustn't break down at
  • this point."
  • He looked about him and took up his hat: it was as if, in spite of
  • frustration, he had got the essence of what he wanted and could afford
  • to agree with her to the extent of keeping up the forms. He covered her
  • with his fine, simple smile, but made no other approach. "Oh, I'm so
  • awfully happy!" he exclaimed.
  • She hesitated: she would only be impeccable even though she should have
  • to be sententious. "You'll be happy if you're perfect!" she risked.
  • He laughed out at this, and she wondered if, with a new-born acuteness,
  • he saw the absurdity of her speech, and that no one was happy just
  • because no one could be what she so lightly prescribed. "I don't pretend
  • to be perfect, but I shall find a letter to-night!"
  • "So much the better, if it's the kind of one you desire." That was the
  • most she could say, and having made it sound as dry as possible she
  • lapsed into a silence so pointed as to deprive him of all pretext for
  • not leaving her. Still, nevertheless, he stood there, playing with his
  • hat and filling the long pause with a strained and anxious smile. He
  • wished to obey her thoroughly, to appear not to presume on any advantage
  • he had won from her; but there was clearly something he longed for
  • beside. While he showed this by hanging on she thought of two other
  • things. One of these was that his countenance, after all, failed to bear
  • out his description of his bliss. As for the other, it had no sooner
  • come into her head than she found it seated, in spite of her resolution,
  • on her lips. It took the form of an inconsequent question. "When did you
  • say Mrs. Brigstock was to have gone back?"
  • Owen stared. "To Waterbath? She was to have spent the night in town,
  • don't you know? But when she left me, after our talk, I said to myself
  • that she would take an evening train. I know I made her want to get
  • home."
  • "Where did you separate?" Fleda asked.
  • "At the West Kensington station--she was going to Victoria. I had walked
  • with her there, and our talk was all on the way."
  • Fleda pondered a moment. "If she did go back that night you would have
  • heard from Waterbath by this time."
  • "I don't know," said Owen. "I thought I might hear this morning."
  • "She can't have gone back," Fleda declared. "Mona would have written on
  • the spot."
  • "Oh yes, she _will_ have written bang off!" Owen cheerfully conceded.
  • Fleda thought again. "Then, even in the event of her mother's not having
  • got home till the morning, you would have had your letter at the latest
  • to-day. You see she has had plenty of time."
  • Owen hesitated; then, "Oh, she's all right!" he laughed. "I go by Mrs.
  • Brigstock's certain effect on her--the effect of the temper the old lady
  • showed when we parted. Do you know what she asked me?" he sociably
  • continued. "She asked me in a kind of nasty manner if I supposed you
  • 'really' cared anything about me. Of course I told her I supposed you
  • didn't--not a solitary rap. How could I suppose you _do_, with your
  • extraordinary ways? It doesn't matter; I could see she thought I lied."
  • "You should have told her, you know, that I had seen you in town only
  • that one time," Fleda observed.
  • "By Jove, I did--for _you_! It was only for you."
  • Something in this touched the girl so that for a moment she could not
  • trust herself to speak. "You're an honest man," she said at last. She
  • had gone to the door and opened it. "Good-bye."
  • Even yet, however, he hung back; and she remembered how, at the end of
  • his hour at Ricks, she had been put to it to get him out of the house.
  • He had in general a sort of cheerful slowness which helped him at such
  • times, though she could now see his strong fist crumple his big, stiff
  • gloves as if they had been paper. "But even if there's no letter--" he
  • began. He began, but there he left it.
  • "You mean, even if she doesn't let you off? Ah, you ask me too much!"
  • Fleda spoke from the tiny hall, where she had taken refuge between the
  • old barometer and the old mackintosh. "There are things too utterly for
  • yourselves alone. How can I tell? What do I know? Good-bye, good-bye! If
  • she doesn't let you off, it will be because she _is_ attached to you."
  • "She's not, she's not: there's nothing in it! Doesn't a fellow
  • know?--except with _you_!" Owen ruefully added. With this he came out of
  • the room, lowering his voice to secret supplication, pleading with her
  • really to meet him on the ground of the negation of Mona. It was this
  • betrayal of his need of support and sanction that made her
  • retreat--harden herself in the effort to save what might remain of all
  • she had given, given probably for nothing. The very vision of him as he
  • thus morally clung to her was the vision of a weakness somewhere in the
  • core of his bloom, a blessed manly weakness of which, if she had only
  • the valid right, it would be all a sweetness to take care. She faintly
  • sickened, however, with the sense that there was as yet no valid right
  • poor Owen could give. "You can take it from my honor, you know," he
  • whispered, "that she loathes me."
  • Fleda had stood clutching the knob of Maggie's little painted
  • stair-rail; she took, on the stairs, a step backward. "Why then doesn't
  • she prove it in the only clear way?"
  • "She _has_ proved it. Will you believe it if you see the letter?"
  • "I don't want to see any letter," said Fleda. "You'll miss your train."
  • Facing him, waving him away, she had taken another upward step; but he
  • sprang to the side of the stairs and brought his hand, above the
  • banister, down hard on her wrist. "Do you mean to tell me that I must
  • marry a woman I hate?"
  • From her step she looked down into his raised face. "Ah, you see it's
  • not true that you're free!" She seemed almost to exult. "It's not
  • true--it's not true!"
  • He only, at this, like a buffeting swimmer, gave a shake of his head and
  • repeated his question. "Do you mean to tell me I must marry such a
  • woman?"
  • Fleda hesitated; he held her fast. "No. Anything is better than that."
  • "Then, in God's name, what must I do?"
  • "You must settle that with her. You mustn't break faith. Anything is
  • better than that. You must at any rate be utterly sure. She _must_ love
  • you--how can she help it? _I_ wouldn't give you up!" said Fleda. She
  • spoke in broken bits, panting out her words. "The great thing is to keep
  • faith. Where _is_ a man if he doesn't? If he doesn't he may be so cruel.
  • So cruel, so cruel, so cruel!" Fleda repeated. "I couldn't have a hand
  • in _that_, you know: that's my position--that's mine. You offered her
  • marriage: it's a tremendous thing for her." Then looking at him another
  • moment, "_I_ wouldn't give you up!" she said again. He still had hold of
  • her arm; she took in his blank alarm. With a quick dip of her face she
  • reached his hand with her lips, pressing them to the back of it with a
  • force that doubled the force of her words. "Never, never, never!" she
  • cried; and before he could succeed in seizing her she had turned and,
  • scrambling up the stairs, got away from him even faster than she had got
  • away from him at Ricks.
  • XVII
  • Ten days after his visit she received a communication from Mrs.
  • Gereth--a telegram of eight words, exclusive of signature and date.
  • "Come up immediately and stay with me here"--it was characteristically
  • sharp, as Maggie said; but, as Maggie added, it was also
  • characteristically kind. "Here" was an hotel in London, and Maggie had
  • embraced a condition of life which already began to produce in her some
  • yearning for hotels in London. She would have responded in an instant,
  • and she was surprised that her sister seemed to hesitate. Fleda's
  • hesitation, which lasted but an hour, was expressed in that young lady's
  • own mind by the reflection that in obeying her friend's summons she
  • shouldn't know what she should be "in for." Her friend's summons,
  • however, was but another name for her friend's appeal; and Mrs. Gereth's
  • bounty had laid her under obligations more sensible than any reluctance.
  • In the event--that is at the end of her hour--she testified to her
  • gratitude by taking the train and to her mistrust by leaving her
  • luggage. She went as if she had gone up for the day. In the train,
  • however, she had another thoughtful hour, during which it was her
  • mistrust that mainly deepened. She felt as if for ten days she had sat
  • in darkness, looking to the east for a dawn that had not yet glimmered.
  • Her mind had lately been less occupied with Mrs. Gereth; it had been so
  • exceptionally occupied with Mona. If the sequel was to justify Owen's
  • prevision of Mrs. Brigstock's action upon her daughter, this action was
  • at the end of a week as much a mystery as ever. The stillness, all
  • round, had been exactly what Fleda desired, but it gave her for the time
  • a deep sense of failure, the sense of a sudden drop from a height at
  • which she had all things beneath her. She had nothing beneath her now;
  • she herself was at the bottom of the heap. No sign had reached her from
  • Owen--poor Owen, who had clearly no news to give about his precious
  • letter from Waterbath. If Mrs. Brigstock had hurried back to obtain that
  • this letter should be written, Mrs. Brigstock might then have spared
  • herself so great an inconvenience. Owen had been silent for the best of
  • all reasons--the reason that he had had nothing in life to say. If the
  • letter had not been written he would simply have had to introduce some
  • large qualification into his account of his freedom. He had left his
  • young friend under her refusal to listen to him until he should be able,
  • on the contrary, to extend that picture; and his present submission was
  • all in keeping with the rigid honesty that his young friend had
  • prescribed.
  • It was this that formed the element through which Mona loomed large;
  • Fleda had enough imagination, a fine enough feeling for life, to be
  • impressed with such an image of successful immobility. The massive
  • maiden at Waterbath _was_ successful from the moment she could entertain
  • her resentments as if they had been poor relations who needn't put her
  • to expense. She was a magnificent dead weight; there was something
  • positive and portentous in her quietude. "What game are they all
  • playing?" poor Fleda could only ask; for she had an intimate conviction
  • that Owen was now under the roof of his betrothed. That was stupefying
  • if he really hated Mona; and if he didn't really hate her what had
  • brought him to Raphael Road and to Maggie's? Fleda had no real light,
  • but she felt that to account for the absence of any result of their last
  • meeting would take a supposition of the full sacrifice to charity that
  • she had held up before him. If he had gone to Waterbath it had been
  • simply because he had to go. She had as good as told him that he would
  • have to go; that this was an inevitable incident of his keeping perfect
  • faith--faith so literal that the smallest subterfuge would always be a
  • reproach to him. When she tried to remember that it was for herself he
  • was taking his risk, she felt how weak a way that was of expressing
  • Mona's supremacy. There would be no need of keeping him up if there were
  • nothing to keep him up to. Her eyes grew wan as she discerned in the
  • impenetrable air that Mona's thick outline never wavered an inch. She
  • wondered fitfully what Mrs. Gereth had by this time made of it, and
  • reflected with a strange elation that the sand on which the mistress of
  • Ricks had built a momentary triumph was quaking beneath the surface. As
  • The Morning Post still held its peace, she would be, of course, more
  • confident; but the hour was at hand at which Owen would have absolutely
  • to do either one thing or the other. To keep perfect faith was to inform
  • against his mother, and to hear the police at her door would be Mrs.
  • Gereth's awakening. How much she was beguiled Fleda could see from her
  • having been for a whole month quite as deep and dark as Mona. She had
  • let her young friend alone because of the certitude, cultivated at
  • Ricks, that Owen had done the opposite. He had done the opposite indeed,
  • but much good had that brought forth! To have sent for her now, Fleda
  • felt, was from this point of view wholly natural: she had sent for her
  • to show at last how much she had scored. If, however, Owen was really at
  • Waterbath the refutation of that boast was easy.
  • Fleda found Mrs. Gereth in modest apartments and with an air of fatigue
  • in her distinguished face--a sign, as she privately remarked, of the
  • strain of that effort to be discreet of which she herself had been
  • having the benefit. It was a constant feature of their relation that
  • this lady could make Fleda blench a little, and that the effect
  • proceeded from the intense pressure of her confidence. If the confidence
  • had been heavy even when the girl, in the early flush of devotion, had
  • been able to feel herself most responsive, it drew her heart into her
  • mouth now that she had reserves and conditions, now that she couldn't
  • simplify with the same bold hand as her protectress. In the very
  • brightening of the tired look, and at the moment of their embrace, Fleda
  • felt on her shoulders the return of the load, so that her spirit frankly
  • quailed as she asked herself what she had brought up from her trusted
  • seclusion to support it. Mrs. Gereth's free manner always made a joke of
  • weakness, and there was in such a welcome a richness, a kind of familiar
  • nobleness, that suggested shame to a harried conscience. Something had
  • happened, she could see, and she could also see, in the bravery that
  • seemed to announce it had changed everything, a formidable assumption
  • that what had happened was what a healthy young woman must like. The
  • absence of luggage had made this young woman feel meagre even before her
  • companion, taking in the bareness at a second glance, exclaimed upon it
  • and roundly rebuked her. Of course she had expected her to stay.
  • Fleda thought best to show bravery too, and to show it from the first.
  • "What you expected, dear Mrs. Gereth, is exactly what I came up to
  • ascertain. It struck me as right to do that first. I mean to ascertain,
  • without making preparations."
  • "Then you'll be so good as to make them on the spot!" Mrs. Gereth was
  • most emphatic. "You're going abroad with me."
  • Fleda wondered, but she also smiled. "To-night--to-morrow?"
  • "In as few days as possible. That's all that's left for me now." Fleda's
  • heart, at this, gave a bound; she wondered to what particular difference
  • in Mrs. Gereth's situation as last known to her it was an allusion.
  • "I've made my plan," her friend continued: "I go for at least a year. We
  • shall go straight to Florence; we can manage there. I of course don't
  • look to you, however," she added, "to stay with me all that time. That
  • will require to be settled. Owen will have to join us as soon as
  • possible; he may not be quite ready to get off with us. But I'm
  • convinced it's quite the right thing to go. It will make a good change;
  • it will put in a decent interval."
  • Fleda listened; she was deeply mystified. "How kind you are to me!" she
  • presently said. The picture suggested so many questions that she
  • scarcely knew which to ask first. She took one at a venture. "You really
  • have it from Mr. Gereth that he'll give us his company?"
  • If Mr. Gereth's mother smiled in response to this, Fleda knew that her
  • smile was a tacit criticism of such a form of reference to her son.
  • Fleda habitually spoke of him as Mr. Owen, and it was a part of her
  • present vigilance to appear to have relinquished that right. Mrs.
  • Gereth's manner confirmed a certain impression of her pretending to more
  • than she felt; her very first words had conveyed it, and it reminded
  • Fleda of the conscious courage with which, weeks before, the lady had
  • met her visitor's first startled stare at the clustered spoils of
  • Poynton. It was her practice to take immensely for granted whatever she
  • wished. "Oh, if you'll answer for him, it will do quite as well!" she
  • said. Then she put her hands on the girl's shoulders and held them at
  • arm's length, as if to shake them a little, while in the depths of her
  • shining eyes Fleda discovered something obscure and unquiet. "You bad,
  • false thing, why didn't you tell me?" Her tone softened her harshness,
  • and her visitor had never had such a sense of her indulgence. Mrs.
  • Gereth could show patience; it was a part of the general bribe, but it
  • was also like the handing in of a heavy bill before which Fleda could
  • only fumble in a penniless pocket. "You must perfectly have known at
  • Ricks, and yet you practically denied it. That's why I call you bad and
  • false!" It was apparently also why she again almost roughly kissed her.
  • "I think that before I answer you I had better know what you're talking
  • about," Fleda said.
  • Mrs. Gereth looked at her with a slight increase of hardness. "You've
  • done everything you need for modesty, my dear! If he's sick with love of
  • you, you haven't had to wait for me to inform you."
  • Fleda hesitated. "Has he informed _you_, dear Mrs. Gereth?"
  • Dear Mrs. Gereth smiled sweetly. "How could he, when our situation is
  • such that he communicates with me only through you, and that you are so
  • tortuous you conceal everything?"
  • "Didn't he answer the note in which you let him know that I was in
  • town?" Fleda asked.
  • "He answered it sufficiently by rushing off on the spot to see you."
  • Mrs. Gereth met that allusion with a prompt firmness that made almost
  • insolently light of any ground of complaint, and Fleda's own sense of
  • responsibility was now so vivid that all resentments turned
  • comparatively pale. She had no heart to produce a grievance; she could
  • only, left as she was with the little mystery on her hands, produce,
  • after a moment, a question. "How then do you come to know that your son
  • has ever thought--"
  • "That he would give his ears to get you?" Mrs. Gereth broke in. "I had a
  • visit from Mrs. Brigstock."
  • Fleda opened her eyes. "She went down to Ricks?"
  • "The day after she had found Owen at your feet. She knows everything."
  • Fleda shook her head sadly; she was more startled than she cared to
  • show. This odd journey of Mrs. Brigstock's, which, with a simplicity
  • equal for once to Owen's, she had not divined, now struck her as having
  • produced the hush of the last ten days. "There are things she doesn't
  • know!" she presently exclaimed.
  • "She knows he would do anything to marry you."
  • "He hasn't told her so," Fleda said.
  • "No, but he has told you. That's better still!" laughed Mrs. Gereth. "My
  • dear child," she went on with an air that affected the girl as a sort of
  • blind profanity, "don't try to make yourself out better than you are.
  • _I_ know what you are. I haven't lived with you so much for nothing.
  • You're not quite a saint in heaven yet. Lord, what a creature you'd have
  • thought me in my good time! But you do like it, fortunately, you idiot.
  • You're pale with your passion, you sweet thing. That's exactly what I
  • wanted to see. I can't for the life of me think where the shame comes
  • in." Then with a finer significance, a look that seemed to Fleda
  • strange, she added: "It's all right."
  • "I've seen him but twice," said Fleda.
  • "But twice?" Mrs. Gereth still smiled.
  • "On the occasion, at papa's, that Mrs. Brigstock told you of, and one
  • day, since then, down at Maggie's."
  • "Well, those things are between yourselves, and you seem to me both poor
  • creatures at best." Mrs. Gereth spoke with a rich humor which tipped
  • with light for an instant a real conviction. "I don't know what you've
  • got in your veins: you absurdly exaggerated the difficulties. But enough
  • is as good as a feast, and when once I get you abroad together--!" She
  • checked herself as if from excess of meaning; what might happen when she
  • should get them abroad together was to be gathered only from the way she
  • slowly rubbed her hands.
  • The gesture, however, made the promise so definite that for a moment her
  • companion was almost beguiled. But there was nothing to account, as yet,
  • for the wealth of Mrs. Gereth's certitude: the visit of the lady of
  • Waterbath appeared but half to explain it. "Is it permitted to be
  • surprised," Fleda deferentially asked, "at Mrs. Brigstock's thinking it
  • would help her to see you?"
  • "It's never permitted to be surprised at the aberrations of born fools,"
  • said Mrs. Gereth. "If a cow should try to calculate, that's the kind of
  • happy thought she'd have. Mrs. Brigstock came down to plead with me."
  • Fleda mused a moment. "That's what she came to do with _me_," she then
  • honestly returned. "But what did she expect to get of you, with your
  • opposition so marked from the first?"
  • "She didn't know I want _you_, my dear. It's a wonder, with all my
  • violence--the gross publicity I've given my desires. But she's as stupid
  • as an owl--she doesn't feel your charm."
  • Fleda felt herself flush slightly, but she tried to smile. "Did you tell
  • her all about it? Did you make her understand you want me?"
  • "For what do you take me? I wasn't such a donkey."
  • "So as not to aggravate Mona?" Fleda suggested.
  • "So as not to aggravate Mona, naturally. We've had a narrow course to
  • steer, but thank God we're at last in the open!"
  • "What do you call the open, Mrs. Gereth?" Fleda demanded. Then as the
  • other faltered: "Do you know where Mr. Owen is to-day?"
  • Mrs. Gereth stared. "Do you mean he's at Waterbath? Well, that's your
  • own affair. I can bear it if _you_ can."
  • "Wherever he is, I can bear it," Fleda said. "But I haven't the least
  • idea where he is."
  • "Then you ought to be ashamed of yourself!" Mrs. Gereth broke out with a
  • change of note that showed how deep a passion underlay everything she
  • had said. The poor woman, catching her companion's hand, however, the
  • next moment, as if to retract something of this harshness, spoke more
  • patiently. "Don't you understand, Fleda, how immensely, how devotedly,
  • I've trusted you?" Her tone was indeed a supplication.
  • Fleda was infinitely shaken; she was silent a little. "Yes, I
  • understand. Did she go to you to complain of me?"
  • "She came to see what she could do. She had been tremendously upset, the
  • day before, by what had taken place at your father's, and she had posted
  • down to Ricks on the inspiration of the moment. She hadn't meant it on
  • leaving home; it was the sight of you closeted there with Owen that had
  • suddenly determined her. The whole story, she said, was written in your
  • two faces: she spoke as if she had never seen such an exhibition. Owen
  • was on the brink, but there might still be time to save him, and it was
  • with this idea she had bearded me in my den. 'What won't a mother do,
  • you know?'--that was one of the things she said. What wouldn't a mother
  • do indeed? I thought I had sufficiently shown her what! She tried to
  • break me down by an appeal to my good nature, as she called it, and from
  • the moment she opened on _you_, from the moment she denounced Owen's
  • falsity, I was as good-natured as she could wish. I understood that it
  • was a plea for mere mercy, that you and he between you were killing her
  • child. Of course I was delighted that Mona should be killed, but I was
  • studiously kind to Mrs. Brigstock. At the same time I was honest, I
  • didn't pretend to anything I couldn't feel. I asked her why the marriage
  • hadn't taken place months ago, when Owen was perfectly ready; and I
  • showed her how completely that fatuous mistake on Mona's part cleared
  • his responsibility. It was she who had killed _him_--it was she who had
  • destroyed his affection, his illusions. Did she want him now when he was
  • estranged, when he was disgusted, when he had a sore grievance? She
  • reminded me that Mona had a sore grievance too, but she admitted that
  • she hadn't come to me to speak of that. What she had come to me for was
  • not to get the old things back, but simply to get Owen. What she wanted
  • was that I would, in simple pity, see fair play. Owen had been awfully
  • bedeviled--she didn't call it that, she called it 'misled'--but it was
  • simply you who had bedeviled him. He would be all right still if I would
  • see that you were out of the way. She asked me point-blank if it was
  • possible I could want him to marry you."
  • Fleda had listened in unbearable pain and growing terror, as if her
  • interlocutress, stone by stone, were piling some fatal mass upon her
  • breast. She had the sense of being buried alive, smothered in the mere
  • expansion of another will; and now there was but one gap left to the
  • air. A single word, she felt, might close it, and with the question that
  • came to her lips as Mrs. Gereth paused she seemed to herself to ask, in
  • cold dread, for her doom. "What did you say to that?" she inquired.
  • "I was embarrassed, for I saw my danger--the danger of her going home
  • and saying to Mona that I was backing you up. It had been a bliss to
  • learn that Owen had really turned to you, but my joy didn't put me off
  • my guard. I reflected intensely for a few seconds; then I saw my issue."
  • "Your issue?" Fleda murmured.
  • "I remembered how you had tied my hands about saying a word to Owen."
  • Fleda wondered. "And did you remember the little letter that, with your
  • hands tied, you still succeeded in writing to him?"
  • "Perfectly; my little letter was a model of reticence. What I remembered
  • was all that in those few words I forbade myself to say. I had been an
  • angel of delicacy--I had effaced myself like a saint. It was not for me
  • to have done all that and then figure to such a woman as having done the
  • opposite. Besides, it was none of her business."
  • "Is that what you said to her?" Fleda asked.
  • "I said to her that her question revealed a total misconception of the
  • nature of my present relations with my son. I said to her that I had no
  • relations with him at all, and that nothing had passed between us for
  • months. I said to her that my hands were spotlessly clean of any attempt
  • to make him make up to you. I said to her that I had taken from Poynton
  • what I had a right to take, but had done nothing else in the world. I
  • was determined that if I had bit my tongue off to oblige you I would at
  • least have the righteousness that my sacrifice gave me."
  • "And was Mrs. Brigstock satisfied with your answer?"
  • "She was visibly relieved."
  • "It was fortunate for you," said Fleda, "that she's apparently not aware
  • of the manner in which, almost under her nose, you advertised me to him
  • at Poynton."
  • Mrs. Gereth appeared to recall that scene; she smiled with a serenity
  • remarkably effective as showing how cheerfully used she had grown to
  • invidious allusions to it. "How should she be aware of it?"
  • "She would if Owen had described your outbreak to Mona."
  • "Yes, but he didn't describe it. All his instinct was to conceal it from
  • Mona. He wasn't conscious, but he was already in love with you!" Mrs.
  • Gereth declared.
  • Fleda shook her head wearily. "No--I was only in love with him!"
  • Here was a faint illumination with which Mrs. Gereth instantly mingled
  • her fire. "You dear old wretch!" she exclaimed; and she again, with
  • ferocity, embraced her young friend.
  • Fleda submitted like a sick animal: she would submit to everything now.
  • "Then what further passed?"
  • "Only that she left me thinking she had got something."
  • "And what had she got?"
  • "Nothing but her luncheon. But _I_ got everything!"
  • "Everything?" Fleda quavered.
  • Mrs. Gereth, struck apparently by something in her tone, looked at her
  • from a tremendous height. "Don't fail me now!"
  • It sounded so like a menace that, with a full divination at last, the
  • poor girl fell weakly into a chair. "What on earth have you done?"
  • Mrs. Gereth stood there in all the glory of a great stroke. "I've
  • settled you." She filled the room, to Fleda's scared vision, with the
  • glare of her magnificence. "I've sent everything back."
  • "Everything?" Fleda gasped.
  • "To the smallest snuff-box. The last load went yesterday. The same
  • people did it. Poor little Ricks is empty." Then as if, for a crowning
  • splendor, to check all deprecation, "They're yours, you goose!" Mrs.
  • Gereth concluded, holding up her handsome head and rubbing her white
  • hands. Fleda saw that there were tears in her deep eyes.
  • XVIII
  • She was slow to take in the announcement, but when she had done so she
  • felt it to be more than her cup of bitterness would hold. Her bitterness
  • was her anxiety, the taste of which suddenly sickened her. What had she
  • become, on the spot, but a traitress to her friend? The treachery
  • increased with the view of the friend's motive, a motive magnificent as
  • a tribute to her value. Mrs. Gereth had wished to make sure of her and
  • had reasoned that there would be no such way as by a large appeal to her
  • honor. If it be true, as men have declared, that the sense of honor is
  • weak in women, some of the bearings of this stroke might have thrown a
  • light on the question. What was now, at all events, put before Fleda was
  • that she had been made sure of, for the greatness of the surrender
  • imposed an obligation as great. There was an expression she had heard
  • used by young men with whom she danced: the only word to fit Mrs.
  • Gereth's intention was that Mrs. Gereth had designed to "fetch" her. It
  • was a calculated, it was a crushing bribe; it looked her in the eyes and
  • said simply: "That's what I do for you!" What Fleda was to do in return
  • required no pointing out. The sense, at present, of how little she had
  • done made her almost cry aloud with pain; but her first endeavor, in the
  • face of the fact, was to keep such a cry from reaching her companion.
  • How little she had done Mrs. Gereth didn't yet know, and possibly there
  • would be still some way of turning round before the discovery. On her
  • own side too Fleda had almost made one: she had known she was wanted,
  • but she had not after all conceived how magnificently much. She had been
  • treated by her friend's act as a conscious prize, but what made her a
  • conscious prize was only the power the act itself imputed to her. As
  • high, bold diplomacy it dazzled and carried her off her feet. She
  • admired the noble risk of it, a risk Mrs. Gereth had faced for the
  • utterly poor creature that the girl now felt herself. The change it
  • instantly wrought in her was, moreover, extraordinary: it transformed at
  • a touch her emotion on the subject of concessions. A few weeks earlier
  • she had jumped at the duty of pleading for them, practically quarreling
  • with the lady of Ricks for her refusal to restore what she had taken.
  • She had been sore with the wrong to Owen, she had bled with the wounds
  • of Poynton; now however, as she heard of the replenishment of the void
  • that had so haunted her, she came as near sounding an alarm as if from
  • the deck of a ship she had seen a person she loved jump into the sea.
  • Mrs. Gereth had become in a flash the victim; poor little Ricks had been
  • laid bare in a night. If Fleda's feeling about the old things had taken
  • precipitate form the form would have been a frantic command. It was
  • indeed for mere want of breath that she didn't shout: "Oh, stop
  • them--it's no use; bring them back--it's too late!" And what most kept
  • her breathless was her companion's very grandeur. Fleda distinguished as
  • never before the purity of such a passion; it made Mrs. Gereth august
  • and almost sublime. It was absolutely unselfish--she cared nothing for
  • mere possession. She thought solely and incorruptibly of what was best
  • for the things; she had surrendered them to the presumptive care of the
  • one person of her acquaintance who felt about them as she felt herself,
  • and whose long lease of the future would be the nearest approach that
  • could be compassed to committing them to a museum. Now it was indeed
  • that Fleda knew what rested on her; now it was also that she measured as
  • if for the first time Mrs. Gereth's view of the natural influence of a
  • fine acquisition. She had adopted the idea of blowing away the last
  • doubt of what her young friend would gain, of making good still more
  • than she was obliged to make it the promise of weeks before. It was one
  • thing for the girl to have heard that in a certain event restitution
  • would be made; it was another for her to see the condition, with a noble
  • trust, treated in advance as performed, and to be able to feel that she
  • should have only to open a door to find every old piece in every old
  • corner. To have played such a card was therefore, practically, for Mrs.
  • Gereth, to have won the game. Fleda had certainly to recognize that, so
  • far as the theory of the matter went, the game had been won. Oh, she had
  • been made sure of!
  • She couldn't, however, succeed for so very many minutes in deferring her
  • exposure. "Why didn't you wait, dearest? Ah, why didn't you wait?"--if
  • that inconsequent appeal kept rising to her lips to be cut short before
  • it was spoken, this was only because at first the humility of gratitude
  • helped her to gain time, enabled her to present herself very honestly as
  • too overcome to be clear. She kissed her companion's hands, she did
  • homage at her feet, she murmured soft snatches of praise, and yet in the
  • midst of it all was conscious that what she really showed most was the
  • wan despair at her heart. She saw Mrs. Gereth's glimpse of this despair
  • suddenly widen, heard the quick chill of her voice pierce through the
  • false courage of endearments. "Do you mean to tell me at such an hour as
  • this that you've really lost him?"
  • The tone of the question made the idea a possibility for which Fleda had
  • nothing from this moment but terror. "I don't know, Mrs. Gereth; how can
  • I say?" she asked. "I've not seen him for so long; as I told you just
  • now, I don't even know where he is. That's by no fault of his," she
  • hurried on: "he would have been with me every day if I had consented.
  • But I made him understand, the last time, that I'll receive him again
  • only when he's able to show me that his release has been complete and
  • definite. Oh, he can't yet, don't you see, and that's why he hasn't been
  • back. It's far better than his coming only that we should both be
  • miserable. When he does come he'll be in a better position. He'll be
  • tremendously moved by the splendid thing you've done. I know you wish me
  • to feel that you've done it as much for me as for Owen, but your having
  • done it for me is just what will delight him most! When he hears of it,"
  • said Fleda, in desperate optimism, "when he hears of it--" There indeed,
  • regretting her advance, she quite broke down. She was wholly powerless
  • to say what Owen would do when he heard of it. "I don't know what he
  • won't make of you and how he won't hug you!" she had to content herself
  • with lamely declaring. She had drawn Mrs. Gereth to a sofa with a vague
  • instinct of pacifying her and still, after all, gaining time; but it was
  • a position in which her great duped benefactress, portentously patient
  • again during this demonstration, looked far from inviting a "hug." Fleda
  • found herself tricking out the situation with artificial flowers, trying
  • to talk even herself into the fancy that Owen, whose name she now made
  • simple and sweet, might come in upon them at any moment. She felt an
  • immense need to be understood and justified; she averted her face in
  • dread from all that she might have to be forgiven. She pressed on her
  • companion's arm as if to keep her quiet till she should really know, and
  • then, after a minute, she poured out the clear essence of what in
  • happier days had been her "secret." "You mustn't think I don't adore him
  • when I've told him so to his face. I love him so that I'd die for him--I
  • love him so that it's horrible. Don't look at me therefore as if I had
  • not been kind, as if I had not been as tender as if he were dying and my
  • tenderness were what would save him. Look at me as if you believe me, as
  • if you feel what I've been through. Darling Mrs. Gereth, I could kiss
  • the ground he walks on. I haven't a rag of pride; I used to have, but
  • it's gone. I used to have a secret, but every one knows it now, and any
  • one who looks at me can say, I think, what's the matter with me. It's
  • not so very fine, my secret, and the less one really says about it the
  • better; but I want you to have it from me because I was stiff before. I
  • want you to see for yourself that I've been brought as low as a girl can
  • very well be. It serves me right," Fleda laughed, "if I was ever proud
  • and horrid to you! I don't know what you wanted me, in those days at
  • Ricks, to do, but I don't think you can have wanted much more than what
  • I've done. The other day at Maggie's I did things that made me,
  • afterwards, think of you! I don't know what girls may do; but if he
  • doesn't know that there isn't an inch of me that isn't his--!" Fleda
  • sighed as if she couldn't express it; she piled it up, as she would have
  • said; holding Mrs. Gereth with dilated eyes, she seemed to sound her for
  • the effect of these words. "It's idiotic," she wearily smiled; "it's so
  • strange that I'm almost angry for it, and the strangest part of all is
  • that it isn't even happiness. It's anguish--it was from the first; from
  • the first there was a bitterness and a kind of dread. But I owe you
  • every word of the truth. You don't do him justice, either: he's a dear,
  • I assure you he's a dear. I'd trust him to the last breath; I don't
  • think you really know him. He's ever so much cleverer than he makes a
  • show of; he's remarkable in his own shy way. You told me at Ricks that
  • you wanted me to let myself go, and I've 'gone' quite far enough to
  • discover as much as that, as well as all sorts of other delightful
  • things about him. You'll tell me I make myself out worse than I am,"
  • said the girl, feeling more and more in her companion's attitude a
  • quality that treated her speech as a desperate rigmarole and even
  • perhaps as a piece of cold immodesty. She wanted to make herself out
  • "bad"--it was a part of her justification; but it suddenly occurred to
  • her that such a picture of her extravagance imputed a want of gallantry
  • to the young man. "I don't care for anything you think," she declared,
  • "because Owen, don't you know, sees me as I am. He's so kind that it
  • makes up for everything!"
  • This attempt at gayety was futile; the silence with which, for a minute,
  • her adversary greeted her troubled plea brought home to her afresh that
  • she was on the bare defensive. "Is it a part of his kindness never to
  • come near you?" Mrs. Gereth inquired at last. "Is it a part of his
  • kindness to leave you without an inkling of where he is?" She rose again
  • from where Fleda had kept her down; she seemed to tower there in the
  • majesty of her gathered wrong. "Is it a part of his kindness that, after
  • I've toiled as I've done for six days, and with my own weak hands, which
  • I haven't spared, to denude myself, in your interest, to that point that
  • I've nothing left, as I may say, but what I have on my back--is it a
  • part of his kindness that you're not even able to produce him for me?"
  • There was a high contempt in this which was for Owen quite as much, and
  • in the light of which Fleda felt that her effort at plausibility had
  • been mere groveling. She rose from the sofa with an humiliated sense of
  • rising from ineffectual knees. That discomfort, however, lived but an
  • instant: it was swept away in a rush of loyalty to the absent. She
  • herself could bear his mother's scorn; but to avert it from his sweet
  • innocence she broke out with a quickness that was like the raising of an
  • arm. "Don't blame him--don't blame him: he'd do anything on earth for
  • me! It was I," said Fleda, eagerly, "who sent him back to her; I made
  • him go; I pushed him out of the house; I declined to have anything to
  • say to him except on another footing."
  • Mrs. Gereth stared as at some gross material ravage. "Another footing?
  • What other footing?"
  • "The one I've already made so clear to you: my having it in black and
  • white, as you may say, from her that she freely gives him up."
  • "Then you think he lies when he tells you that he has recovered his
  • liberty?"
  • Fleda hesitated a moment; after which she exclaimed with a certain hard
  • pride: "He's enough in love with me for anything!"
  • "For anything, apparently, except to act like a man and impose his
  • reason and his will on your incredible folly. For anything except to put
  • an end, as any man worthy of the name would have put it, to your
  • systematic, to your idiotic perversity. What are you, after all, my
  • dear, I should like to know, that a gentleman who offers you what Owen
  • offers should have to meet such wonderful exactions, to take such
  • extraordinary precautions about your sweet little scruples?" Her
  • resentment rose to a strange insolence which Fleda took full in the face
  • and which, for the moment at least, had the horrible force to present to
  • her vengefully a showy side of the truth. It gave her a blinding glimpse
  • of lost alternatives. "I don't know what to think of him," Mrs. Gereth
  • went on; "I don't know what to call him: I'm so ashamed of him that I
  • can scarcely speak of him even to _you_. But indeed I'm so ashamed of
  • you both together that I scarcely know in common decency where to look."
  • She paused to give Fleda the full benefit of this remarkable statement;
  • then she exclaimed: "Any one but a jackass would have tucked you under
  • his arm and marched you off to the Registrar!"
  • Fleda wondered; with her free imagination she could wonder even while
  • her cheek stung from a slap. "To the Registrar?"
  • "That would have been the sane, sound, immediate course to adopt. With a
  • grain of gumption you'd both instantly have felt it. _I_ should have
  • found a way to take you, you know, if I'd been what Owen's supposed to
  • be. _I_ should have got the business over first; the rest could come
  • when you liked! Good God, girl, your place was to stand before me as a
  • woman honestly married. One doesn't know what one has hold of in
  • touching you, and you must excuse my saying that you're literally
  • unpleasant to me to meet as you are. Then at least we could have talked,
  • and Owen, if he had the ghost of a sense of humor, could have snapped
  • his fingers at your refinements."
  • This stirring speech affected our young lady as if it had been the shake
  • of a tambourine borne towards her from a gypsy dance: her head seemed to
  • go round and she felt a sudden passion in her feet. The emotion,
  • however, was but meagrely expressed in the flatness with which she heard
  • herself presently say: "I'll go to the Registrar now."
  • "Now?" Magnificent was the sound Mrs. Gereth threw into this
  • monosyllable. "And pray who's to take you?" Fleda gave a colorless
  • smile, and her companion continued: "Do you literally mean that you
  • can't put your hand upon him?" Fleda's wan grimace appeared to irritate
  • her; she made a short, imperious gesture. "Find him for me, you
  • fool--_find_ him for me!"
  • "What do you want of him," Fleda sadly asked, "feeling as you do to both
  • of us?"
  • "Never mind how I feel, and never mind what I say when I'm furious!"
  • Mrs. Gereth still more incisively added. "Of course I cling to you, you
  • wretches, or I shouldn't suffer as I do. What I want of him is to see
  • that he takes you; what I want of him is to go with you myself to the
  • place." She looked round the room as if, in feverish haste, for a mantle
  • to catch up; she bustled to the window as if to spy out a cab: she would
  • allow half an hour for the job. Already in her bonnet, she had snatched
  • from the sofa a garment for the street: she jerked it on as she came
  • back. "Find him, find him," she repeated; "come straight out with me, to
  • try, at least, to get at him!"
  • "How can I get at him? He'll come when he's ready," Fleda replied.
  • Mrs. Gereth turned on her sharply. "Ready for what? Ready to see me
  • ruined without a reason or a reward?"
  • Fleda was silent; the worst of it all was that there was something
  • unspoken between them. Neither of them dared to utter it, but the
  • influence of it was in the girl's tone when she returned at last, with
  • great gentleness: "Don't be harsh to me--I'm very unhappy." The words
  • produced a visible impression on Mrs. Gereth, who held her face averted
  • and sent off through the window a gaze that kept pace with the long
  • caravan of her treasures. Fleda knew she was watching it wind up the
  • avenue of Poynton--Fleda participated indeed fully in the vision; so
  • that after a little the most consoling thing seemed to her to add: "I
  • don't see why in the world you take so for granted that he's, as you
  • say, 'lost.'"
  • Mrs. Gereth continued to stare out of the window, and her stillness
  • denoted some success in controlling herself. "If he's not lost, why are
  • you unhappy?"
  • "I'm unhappy because I torment you, and you don't understand me."
  • "No, Fleda, I don't understand you," said Mrs. Gereth, finally facing
  • her again. "I don't understand you at all, and it's as if you and Owen
  • were of quite another race and another flesh. You make me feel very
  • old-fashioned and simple and bad. But you must take me as I am, since
  • you take so much else _with_ me!" She spoke now with the drop of her
  • resentment, with a dry and weary calm. "It would have been better for me
  • if I had never known you," she pursued, "and certainly better if I
  • hadn't taken such an extraordinary fancy to you. But that too was
  • inevitable: everything, I suppose, is inevitable. It was all my own
  • doing--you didn't run after me: I pounced on you and caught you up.
  • You're a stiff little beggar, in spite of your pretty manners: yes,
  • you're hideously misleading. I hope you feel how handsome it is of me to
  • recognize the independence of your character. It was your clever
  • sympathy that did it--your extraordinary feeling for those accursed
  • vanities. You were sharper about them than any one I had ever known, and
  • that was a thing I simply couldn't resist. Well," the poor lady
  • concluded after a pause, "you see where it has landed us!"
  • "If you'll go for him yourself, I'll wait here," said Fleda.
  • Mrs. Gereth, holding her mantle together, appeared for a while to
  • consider.
  • "To his club, do you mean?"
  • "Isn't it there, when he's in town, that he has a room? He has at
  • present no other London address," Fleda said: "it's there one writes to
  • him."
  • "How do _I_ know, with my wretched relations with him?" Mrs. Gereth
  • asked.
  • "Mine have not been quite so bad as that," Fleda desperately smiled.
  • Then she added: "His silence, _her_ silence, our hearing nothing at
  • all--what are these but the very things on which, at Poynton and at
  • Ricks, you rested your assurance that everything is at an end between
  • them?"
  • Mrs. Gereth looked dark and void. "Yes, but I hadn't heard from you then
  • that you could invent nothing better than, as you call it, to send him
  • back to her."
  • "Ah, but, on the other hand, you've learned from them what you didn't
  • know--you've learned by Mrs. Brigstock's visit that he cares for me."
  • Fleda found herself in the position of availing herself of optimistic
  • arguments that she formerly had repudiated; her refutation of her
  • companion had completely changed its ground.
  • She was in a fever of ingenuity and painfully conscious, on behalf of
  • her success, that her fever was visible. She could herself see the
  • reflection of it glitter in Mrs. Gereth's sombre eyes.
  • "You plunge me in stupefaction," that lady answered, "and at the same
  • time you terrify me. Your account of Owen is inconceivable, and yet I
  • don't know what to hold on by. He cares for you, it does appear, and yet
  • in the same breath you inform me that nothing is more possible than that
  • he's spending these days at Waterbath. Excuse me if I'm so dull as not
  • to see my way in such darkness. If he's at Waterbath he doesn't care for
  • you. If he cares for you he's not at Waterbath."
  • "Then where is he?" poor Fleda helplessly wailed. She caught herself up,
  • however; she did her best to be brave and clear. Before Mrs. Gereth
  • could reply, with due obviousness, that this was a question for her not
  • to ask, but to answer, she found an air of assurance to say: "You
  • simplify far too much. You always did and you always will. The tangle of
  • life is much more intricate than you've ever, I think, felt it to be.
  • You slash into it," cried Fleda finely, "with a great pair of shears,
  • you nip at it as if you were one of the Fates! If Owen's at Waterbath
  • he's there to wind everything up."
  • Mrs. Gereth shook her head with slow austerity. "You don't believe a
  • word you're saying. I've frightened you, as you've frightened me: you're
  • whistling in the dark to keep up our courage. I do simplify, doubtless,
  • if to simplify is to fail to comprehend the insanity of a passion that
  • bewilders a young blockhead with bugaboo barriers, with hideous and
  • monstrous sacrifices. I can only repeat that you're beyond me. Your
  • perversity's a thing to howl over. However," the poor woman continued
  • with a break in her voice, a long hesitation and then the dry triumph of
  • her will, "I'll never mention it to you again! Owen I can just make out;
  • for Owen _is_ a blockhead. Owen's a blockhead," she repeated with a
  • quiet, tragic finality, looking straight into Fleda's eyes. "I don't
  • know why you dress up so the fact that he's disgustingly weak."
  • Fleda hesitated; at last, before her companion's, she lowered her look.
  • "Because I love him. It's because he's weak that he needs me," she
  • added.
  • "That was why his father, whom he exactly resembles, needed _me_. And I
  • didn't fail his father," said Mrs. Gereth. She gave Fleda a moment to
  • appreciate the remark; after which she pursued: "Mona Brigstock isn't
  • weak; she's stronger than you!"
  • "I never thought she was weak," Fleda answered. She looked vaguely round
  • the room with a new purpose: she had lost sight of her umbrella.
  • "I did tell you to let yourself go, but it's clear enough that you
  • really haven't," Mrs. Gereth declared. "If Mona has got him--"
  • Fleda had accomplished her search; her interlocutress paused. "If Mona
  • has got him?" the girl inquired, tightening the umbrella.
  • "Well," said Mrs. Gereth profoundly, "it will be clear enough that Mona
  • _has_."
  • "Has let herself go?"
  • "Has let herself go." Mrs. Gereth spoke as if she saw it in every
  • detail.
  • Fleda felt the tone and finished her preparation; then she went and
  • opened the door. "We'll look for him together," she said to her friend,
  • who stood a moment taking in her face. "They may know something about
  • him at the Colonel's."
  • "We'll go there." Mrs. Gereth had picked up her gloves and her purse.
  • "But the first thing," she went on, "will be to wire to Poynton."
  • "Why not to Waterbath at once?" Fleda asked.
  • Her companion hesitated. "In _your_ name?"
  • "In my name. I noticed a place at the corner."
  • While Fleda held the door open Mrs. Gereth drew on her gloves. "Forgive
  • me," she presently said. "Kiss me," she added.
  • Fleda, on the threshold, kissed her; then they went out.
  • XIX
  • In the place at the corner, on the chance of its saving time, Fleda
  • wrote her telegram--wrote it in silence under Mrs. Gereth's eye and then
  • in silence handed it to her. "I send this to Waterbath, on the
  • possibility of your being there, to ask you to come to me." Mrs. Gereth
  • held it a moment, read it more than once; then keeping it, and with her
  • eyes on her companion, seemed to consider. There was the dawn of a
  • kindness in her look; Fleda perceived in it, as if as the reward of
  • complete submission, a slight relaxation of her rigor.
  • "Wouldn't it perhaps after all be better," she asked, "before doing
  • this, to see if we can make his whereabouts certain?"
  • "Why so? It will be always so much done," said Fleda. "Though I'm poor,"
  • she added with a smile, "I don't mind the shilling."
  • "The shilling's _my_ shilling," said Mrs. Gereth.
  • Fleda stayed her hand. "No, no--I'm superstitious."
  • "Superstitious?"
  • "To succeed, it must be all me!"
  • "Well, if that will make it succeed!" Mrs. Gereth took back her
  • shilling, but she still kept the telegram. "As he's most probably not
  • there--"
  • "If he shouldn't be there," Fleda interrupted, "there will be no harm
  • done."
  • "If he 'shouldn't be' there!" Mrs. Gereth ejaculated. "Heaven help us,
  • how you assume it!"
  • "I'm only prepared for the worst. The Brigstocks will simply send any
  • telegram on."
  • "Where will they send it?"
  • "Presumably to Poynton."
  • "They'll read it first," said Mrs. Gereth.
  • "Read it?"
  • "Yes, Mona will. She'll open it under the pretext of having it repeated;
  • and then she'll probably do nothing. She'll keep it as a proof of your
  • immodesty."
  • "What of that?" asked Fleda.
  • "You don't mind her seeing it?"
  • Rather musingly and absently Fleda shook her head. "I don't mind
  • anything."
  • "Well, then, that's all right," said Mrs. Gereth as if she had only
  • wanted to feel that she had been irreproachably considerate. After this
  • she was gentler still, but she had another point to clear up. "Why have
  • you given, for a reply, your sister's address?"
  • "Because if he _does_ come to me he must come to me there. If that
  • telegram goes," said Fleda, "I return to Maggie's to-night."
  • Mrs. Gereth seemed to wonder at this. "You won't receive him here with
  • me?"
  • "No, I won't receive him here with you. Only where I received him
  • last--only there again." She showed her companion that as to that she
  • was firm.
  • But Mrs. Gereth had obviously now had some practice in following queer
  • movements prompted by queer feelings. She resigned herself, though she
  • fingered the paper a moment longer. She appeared to hesitate; then she
  • brought out: "You couldn't then, if I release you, make your message a
  • little stronger?"
  • Fleda gave her a faint smile. "He'll come if he can."
  • Mrs. Gereth met fully what this conveyed; with decision she pushed in
  • the telegram. But she laid her hand quickly upon another form and with
  • still greater decision wrote another message. "From _me_, this," she
  • said to Fleda when she had finished: "to catch him possibly at Poynton.
  • Will you read it?"
  • Fleda turned away. "Thank you."
  • "It's stronger than yours."
  • "I don't care," said Fleda, moving to the door. Mrs. Gereth, having paid
  • for the second missive, rejoined her, and they drove together to Owen's
  • club, where the elder lady alone got out. Fleda, from the hansom,
  • watched through the glass doors her brief conversation with the
  • hall-porter and then met in silence her return with the news that he had
  • not seen Owen for a fortnight and was keeping his letters till called
  • for. These had been the last orders; there were a dozen letters lying
  • there. He had no more information to give, but they would see what they
  • could find at Colonel Gereth's. To any connection with this inquiry,
  • however, Fleda now roused herself to object, and her friend had indeed
  • to recognize that on second thoughts it couldn't be quite to the taste
  • of either of them to advertise in the remoter reaches of the family that
  • they had forfeited the confidence of the master of Poynton. The letters
  • lying at the club proved effectively that he was not in London, and this
  • was the question that immediately concerned them. Nothing could concern
  • them further till the answers to their telegrams should have had time to
  • arrive. Mrs. Gereth had got back into the cab, and, still at the door of
  • the club, they sat staring at their need of patience. Fleda's eyes
  • rested, in the great hard street, on passing figures that struck her as
  • puppets pulled by strings. After a little the driver challenged them
  • through the hole in the top. "Anywhere in particular, ladies?"
  • Fleda decided. "Drive to Euston, please."
  • "You won't wait for what we may hear?" Mrs. Gereth asked.
  • "Whatever we hear, I must go." As the cab went on she added: "But I
  • needn't drag _you_ to the station."
  • Mrs. Gereth was silent a moment; then "Nonsense!" she sharply replied.
  • In spite of this sharpness they were now almost equally and almost
  • tremulously mild; though their mildness took mainly the form of an
  • inevitable sense of nothing left to say. It was the unsaid that occupied
  • them--the thing that for more than an hour they had been going round and
  • round without naming it. Much too early for Fleda's train, they
  • encountered at the station a long half-hour to wait. Fleda made no
  • further allusion to Mrs. Gereth's leaving her; their dumbness, with the
  • elapsing minutes, grew to be in itself a reconstituted bond. They slowly
  • paced the great gray platform, and presently Mrs. Gereth took the girl's
  • arm and leaned on it with a hard demand for support. It seemed to Fleda
  • not difficult for each to know of what the other was thinking--to know
  • indeed that they had in common two alternating visions, one of which, at
  • moments, brought them as by a common impulse to a pause. This was the
  • one that was fixed; the other filled at times the whole space and then
  • was shouldered away. Owen and Mona glared together out of the gloom and
  • disappeared, but the replenishment of Poynton made a shining, steady
  • light. The old splendor was there again, the old things were in their
  • places. Our friends looked at them with an equal yearning; face to face,
  • on the platform, they counted them in each other's eyes. Fleda had come
  • back to them by a road as strange as the road they themselves had
  • followed. The wonder of their great journeys, the prodigy of this second
  • one, was the question that made her occasionally stop. Several times she
  • uttered it, asked how this and that difficulty had been met. Mrs. Gereth
  • replied with pale lucidity--was naturally the person most familiar with
  • the truth that what she undertook was always somehow achieved. To do it
  • was to do it--she had more than one kind of magnificence. She confessed
  • there, audaciously enough, to a sort of arrogance of energy, and Fleda,
  • going on again, her inquiry more than answered and her arm rendering
  • service, flushed, in her diminished identity, with the sense that such a
  • woman was great.
  • "You do mean literally everything, to the last little miniature on the
  • last little screen?"
  • "I mean literally everything. Go over them with the catalogue!"
  • Fleda went over them while they walked again; she had no need of the
  • catalogue. At last she spoke once more: "Even the Maltese cross?"
  • "Even the Maltese cross. Why not that as well as everything
  • else?--especially as I remembered how you like it."
  • Finally, after an interval, the girl exclaimed: "But the mere fatigue of
  • it, the exhaustion of such a feat! I drag you to and fro here while you
  • must be ready to drop."
  • "I'm very, very tired." Mrs. Gereth's slow head-shake was tragic. "I
  • couldn't do it again."
  • "I doubt if they'd bear it again!"
  • "That's another matter: they'd bear it if I could. There won't have
  • been, this time either, a shake or a scratch. But I'm too tired--I very
  • nearly don't care."
  • "You must sit down, then, till I go," said Fleda. "We must find a
  • bench."
  • "No. I'm tired of _them_: I'm not tired of you. This is the way for you
  • to feel most how much I rest on you." Fleda had a compunction, wondering
  • as they continued to stroll whether it was right after all to leave her.
  • She believed, however, that if the flame might for the moment burn low,
  • it was far from dying out; an impression presently confirmed by the way
  • Mrs. Gereth went on: "But one's fatigue is nothing. The idea under which
  • one worked kept one up. For you I _could_--I can still. Nothing will
  • have mattered if _she's_ not there."
  • There was a question that this imposed, but Fleda at first found no
  • voice to utter it: it was the thing that, between them, since her
  • arrival, had been so consciously and vividly unsaid. Finally she was
  • able to breathe: "And if she _is_ there--if she's there already?"
  • Mrs. Gereth's rejoinder too hung back; then when it came--from sad eyes
  • as well as from lips barely moved--it was unexpectedly merciful. "It
  • will be very hard." That was all, now; and it was poignantly simple. The
  • train Fleda was to take had drawn up; the girl kissed her as if in
  • farewell. Mrs. Gereth submitted, then after a little brought out: "If we
  • _have_ lost--"
  • "If we have lost?" Fleda repeated as she paused again.
  • "You'll all the same come abroad with me?"
  • "It will seem very strange to me if you want me. But whatever you ask,
  • whatever you need, that I will always do."
  • "I shall need your company," said Mrs. Gereth. Fleda wondered an instant
  • if this were not practically a demand for penal submission--for a
  • surrender that, in its complete humility, would be a long expiation. But
  • there was none of the latent chill of the vindictive in the way Mrs.
  • Gereth pursued: "We can always, as time goes on, talk of them together."
  • "Of the old things?" Fleda had selected a third-class compartment: she
  • stood a moment looking into it and at a fat woman with a basket who had
  • already taken possession. "Always?" she said, turning again to her
  • companion. "Never!" she exclaimed. She got into the carriage, and two
  • men with bags and boxes immediately followed, blocking up door and
  • window so long that when she was able to look out again Mrs. Gereth had
  • gone.
  • XX
  • There came to her at her sister's no telegram in answer to her own: the
  • rest of that day and the whole of the next elapsed without a word either
  • from Owen or from his mother. She was free, however, to her infinite
  • relief, from any direct dealing with suspense, and conscious, to her
  • surprise, of nothing that could show her, or could show Maggie and her
  • brother-in-law, that she was excited. Her excitement was composed of
  • pulses as swift and fine as the revolutions of a spinning top: she
  • supposed she was going round, but she went round so fast that she
  • couldn't even feel herself move. Her emotion occupied some quarter of
  • her soul that had closed its doors for the day and shut out even her own
  • sense of it; she might perhaps have heard something if she had pressed
  • her ear to a partition. Instead of that she sat with her patience in a
  • cold, still chamber from which she could look out in quite another
  • direction. This was to have achieved an equilibrium to which she
  • couldn't have given a name: indifference, resignation, despair were the
  • terms of a forgotten tongue. The time even seemed not long, for the
  • stages of the journey were the items of Mrs. Gereth's surrender. The
  • detail of that performance, which filled the scene, was what Fleda had
  • now before her eyes. The part of her loss that she could think of was
  • the reconstituted splendor of Poynton. It was the beauty she was most
  • touched by that, in tons, she had lost--the beauty that, charged upon
  • big wagons, had safely crept back to its home. But the loss was a gain
  • to memory and love; it was to her too, at last, that, in condonation of
  • her treachery, the old things had crept back. She greeted them with open
  • arms; she thought of them hour after hour; they made a company with
  • which solitude was warm and a picture that, at this crisis, overlaid
  • poor Maggie's scant mahogany. It was really her obliterated passion that
  • had revived, and with it an immense assent to Mrs. Gereth's early
  • judgment of her. She too, she felt, was of the religion, and like any
  • other of the passionately pious she could worship now even in the
  • desert. Yes, it was all for her; far round as she had gone she had been
  • strong enough: her love had gathered in the spoils. She wanted indeed no
  • catalogue to count them over; the array of them, miles away, was
  • complete; each piece, in its turn, was perfect to her; she could have
  • drawn up a catalogue from memory. Thus again she lived with them, and
  • she thought of them without a question of any personal right. That they
  • might have been, that they might still be hers, that they were perhaps
  • already another's, were ideas that had too little to say to her. They
  • were nobody's at all--too proud, unlike base animals and humans, to be
  • reducible to anything so narrow. It was Poynton that was theirs; they
  • had simply recovered their own. The joy of that for them was the source
  • of the strange peace in which the girl found herself floating.
  • It was broken on the third day by a telegram from Mrs. Gereth. "Shall be
  • with you at 11.30--don't meet me at station." Fleda turned this over,
  • but was sufficiently expert not to disobey the injunction. She had only
  • an hour to take in its meaning, but that hour was longer than all the
  • previous time. If Maggie had studied her convenience the day Owen came,
  • Maggie was also at the present juncture a miracle of refinement.
  • Increasingly and resentfully mystified, in spite of all reassurance, by
  • the impression that Fleda suffered more than she gained from the
  • grandeur of the Gereths, she had it at heart to exemplify the perhaps
  • truer distinction of nature that characterized the house of Vetch. She
  • was not, like poor Fleda, at every one's beck, and the visitor was to
  • see no more of her than what the arrangement of luncheon might
  • tantalizingly show. Maggie described herself to her sister as intending
  • for a just provocation even the understanding she had had with her
  • husband that he also should remain invisible. Fleda accordingly awaited
  • alone the subject of so many manoeuvres--a period that was slightly
  • prolonged even after the drawing-room door, at 11.30, was thrown open.
  • Mrs. Gereth stood there with a face that spoke plain, but no sound fell
  • from her till the withdrawal of the maid, whose attention had
  • immediately attached itself to the rearrangement of a window-blind and
  • who seemed, while she bustled at it, to contribute to the pregnant
  • silence; before the duration of which, however, she retreated with a
  • sudden stare.
  • "He has done it," said Mrs. Gereth, turning her eyes avoidingly but not
  • unperceivingly about her and in spite of herself dropping an opinion
  • upon the few objects in the room. Fleda, on her side, in her silence,
  • observed how characteristically she looked at Maggie's possessions
  • before looking at Maggie's sister. The girl understood and at first had
  • nothing to say; she was still dumb while Mrs. Gereth selected, with
  • hesitation, a seat less distasteful than the one that happened to be
  • nearest. On the sofa near the window the poor woman finally showed what
  • the two past days had done for the age of her face. Her eyes at last met
  • Fleda's. "It's the end."
  • "They're married?"
  • "They're married."
  • Fleda came to the sofa in obedience to the impulse to sit down by her;
  • then paused before her while Mrs. Gereth turned up a dead gray mask. A
  • tired old woman sat there with empty hands in her lap. "I've heard
  • nothing," said Fleda. "No answer came."
  • "That's the only answer. It's the answer to everything." So Fleda saw;
  • for a minute she looked over her companion's head and far away. "He
  • wasn't at Waterbath; Mrs. Brigstock must have read your telegram and
  • kept it. But mine, the one to Poynton, brought something. 'We are
  • here--what do you want?'" Mrs. Gereth stopped as if with a failure of
  • voice; on which Fleda sank upon the sofa and made a movement to take her
  • hand. It met no response; there could be no attenuation. Fleda waited;
  • they sat facing each other like strangers. "I wanted to go down," Mrs.
  • Gereth presently continued. "Well, I went."
  • All the girl's effort tended for the time to a single aim--that of
  • taking the thing with outward detachment, speaking of it as having
  • happened to Owen and to his mother and not in any degree to herself.
  • Something at least of this was in the encouraging way she said:
  • "Yesterday morning?"
  • "Yesterday morning. I saw him."
  • Fleda hesitated. "Did you see _her_?"
  • "Thank God, no!"
  • Fleda laid on her arm a hand of vague comfort, of which Mrs. Gereth took
  • no notice. "You've been capable, just to tell me, of this wretched
  • journey, of this consideration that I don't deserve?"
  • "We're together, we're together," said Mrs. Gereth. She looked helpless
  • as she sat there, her eyes, unseeingly enough, on a tall Dutch clock,
  • old but rather poor, that Maggie had had as a wedding-gift and that eked
  • out the bareness of the room.
  • To Fleda, in the face of the event, it appeared that this was exactly
  • what they were not: the last inch of common ground, the ground of their
  • past intercourse, had fallen from under them. Yet what was still there
  • was the grand style of her companion's treatment of her. Mrs. Gereth
  • couldn't stand upon small questions, couldn't, in conduct, make small
  • differences. "You're magnificent!" her young friend exclaimed. "There's
  • a rare greatness in your generosity."
  • "We're together, we're together," Mrs. Gereth lifelessly repeated.
  • "That's all we _are_ now; it's all we have." The words brought to Fleda
  • a sudden vision of the empty little house at Ricks; such a vision might
  • also have been what her companion found in the face of the stopped Dutch
  • clock. Yet with this it was clear that she would now show no bitterness:
  • she had done with that, had given the last drop to those horrible hours
  • in London. No passion even was left to her, and her forbearance only
  • added to the force with which she represented the final vanity of
  • everything.
  • Fleda was so far from a wish to triumph that she was absolutely ashamed
  • of having anything to say for herself; but there was one thing, all the
  • same, that not to say was impossible. "That he has done it, that he
  • couldn't _not_ do it, shows how right I was." It settled forever her
  • attitude, and she spoke as if for her own mind; then after a little she
  • added very gently, for Mrs. Gereth's: "That's to say, it shows that he
  • was bound to her by an obligation that, however much he may have wanted
  • to, he couldn't in any sort of honor break."
  • Blanched and bleak, Mrs. Gereth looked at her. "What sort of an
  • obligation do you call that? No such obligation exists for an hour
  • between any man and any woman who have hatred on one side. He had ended
  • by hating her, and now he hates her more than ever."
  • "Did he tell you so?" Fleda asked.
  • "No. He told me nothing but the great gawk of a fact. I saw him but for
  • three minutes." She was silent again, and Fleda, as before some lurid
  • image of this interview, sat without speaking. "Do you wish to appear as
  • if you don't care?" Mrs. Gereth presently demanded.
  • "I'm trying not to think of myself."
  • "Then if you're thinking of Owen, how can you _bear_ to think?"
  • Sadly and submissively Fleda shook her head; the slow tears had come
  • into her eyes. "I can't. I don't understand--I don't understand!" she
  • broke out.
  • "_I_ do, then." Mrs. Gereth looked hard at the floor. "There was no
  • obligation at the time you saw him last--when you sent him, hating her
  • as he did, back to her."
  • "If he went," Fleda asked, "doesn't that exactly prove that he
  • recognized one?"
  • "He recognized rot! You know what _I_ think of him." Fleda knew; she had
  • no wish to challenge a fresh statement. Mrs. Gereth made one--it was her
  • sole, faint flicker of passion--to the extent of declaring that he was
  • too abjectly weak to deserve the name of a man. For all Fleda cared!--it
  • was his weakness she loved in him. "He took strange ways of pleasing
  • you!" her friend went on. "There was no obligation till suddenly, the
  • other day, the situation changed."
  • Fleda wondered. "The other day?"
  • "It came to Mona's knowledge--I can't tell you how, but it came--that
  • the things I was sending back had begun to arrive at Poynton. I had sent
  • them for you, but it was _her_ I touched." Mrs. Gereth paused; Fleda was
  • too absorbed in her explanation to do anything but take blankly the
  • full, cold breath of this. "They were there, and that determined her."
  • "Determined her to what?"
  • "To act, to take means."
  • "To take means?" Fleda repeated.
  • "I can't tell you what they were, but they were powerful. She knew how,"
  • said Mrs. Gereth.
  • Fleda received with the same stoicism the quiet immensity of this
  • allusion to the person who had not known how. But it made her think a
  • little, and the thought found utterance, with unconscious irony, in the
  • simple interrogation: "Mona?"
  • "Why not? She's a brute."
  • "But if he knew that so well, what chance was there in it for her?"
  • "How can I tell you? How can I talk of such horrors? I can only give
  • you, of the situation, what I see. He knew it, yes. But as she couldn't
  • make him forget it, she tried to make him like it. She tried and she
  • succeeded: that's what she did. She's after all so much less of a fool
  • than he. And what _else_ had he originally liked?" Mrs. Gereth shrugged
  • her shoulders. "She did what you wouldn't!" Fleda's face had grown dark
  • with her wonder, but her friend's empty hands offered no balm to the
  • pain in it. "It was that if it was anything. Nothing else meets the
  • misery of it. Then there was quick work. Before he could turn round he
  • was married."
  • Fleda, as if she had been holding her breath, gave the sigh of a
  • listening child. "At that place you spoke of in town?"
  • "At the Registrar's, like a pair of low atheists."
  • The girl hesitated. "What do people say of that? I mean the 'world.'"
  • "Nothing, because nobody knows. They're to be married on the 17th, at
  • Waterbath church. If anything else comes out, everybody is a little
  • prepared. It will pass for some stroke of diplomacy, some move in the
  • game, some outwitting of _me_. It's known there has been a row with me."
  • Fleda was mystified. "People surely knew at Poynton," she objected, "if,
  • as you say, she's there."
  • "She was there, day before yesterday, only for a few hours. She met him
  • in London and went down to see the things."
  • Fleda remembered that she had seen them only once. "Did _you_ see them?"
  • she then ventured to ask.
  • "Everything."
  • "Are they right?"
  • "Quite right. There's nothing like them," said Mrs. Gereth. At this her
  • companion took up one of her hands again and kissed it as she had done
  • in London. "Mona went back that night; she was not there yesterday. Owen
  • stayed on," she added.
  • Fleda stared. "Then she's not to live there?"
  • "Rather! But not till after the public marriage." Mrs. Gereth seemed to
  • muse; then she brought out: "She'll live there alone."
  • "Alone?"
  • "She'll have it to herself."
  • "He won't live with her?"
  • "Never! But she's none the less his wife, and you're not," said Mrs.
  • Gereth, getting up. "Our only chance is the chance she may die."
  • Fleda appeared to consider: she appreciated her visitor's magnanimous
  • use of the plural. "Mona won't die," she replied.
  • "Well, _I_ shall, thank God! Till then"--and with this, for the first
  • time, Mrs. Gereth put out her hand--"don't desert me."
  • Fleda took her hand, and her clasp of it was a reiteration of a promise
  • already given. She said nothing, but her silence was an acceptance as
  • responsible as the vow of a nun. The next moment something occurred to
  • her. "I mustn't put myself in your son's way."
  • Mrs. Gereth gave a dry, flat laugh. "You're prodigious! But how shall
  • you possibly be more out of it? Owen and I--" She didn't finish her
  • sentence.
  • "That's your great feeling about _him_," Fleda said; "but how, after
  • what has happened, can it be his about you?"
  • Mrs. Gereth hesitated. "How do you know what has happened? You don't
  • know what I said to him."
  • "Yesterday?"
  • "Yesterday."
  • They looked at each other with a long, deep gaze. Then, as Mrs. Gereth
  • seemed again about to speak, the girl, closing her eyes, made a gesture
  • of strong prohibition. "Don't tell me!"
  • "Merciful powers, how you worship him!" Mrs. Gereth wonderingly moaned.
  • It was, for Fleda, the shake that made the cup overflow. She had a
  • pause, that of the child who takes time to know that he responds to an
  • accident with pain; then, dropping again on the sofa, she broke into
  • tears. They were beyond control, they came in long sobs, which for a
  • moment Mrs. Gereth, almost with an air of indifference, stood hearing
  • and watching. At last Mrs. Gereth too sank down again. Mrs. Gereth
  • soundlessly, wearily wept.
  • XXI
  • "It looks just like Waterbath; but, after all, we bore _that_ together:"
  • these words formed part of a letter in which, before the 17th, Mrs.
  • Gereth, writing from disfigured Ricks, named to Fleda the day on which
  • she would be expected to arrive there on a second visit. "I sha'n't, for
  • a long time to come," the missive continued, "be able to receive any one
  • who may _like_ it, who would try to smooth it down, and me with it; but
  • there are always things you and I can comfortably hate together, for
  • you're the only person who comfortably understands. You don't understand
  • quite everything, but of all my acquaintance you're far away the least
  • stupid. For action you're no good at all; but action is over, for me,
  • forever, and you will have the great merit of knowing, when I'm brutally
  • silent, what I shall be thinking about. Without setting myself up for
  • your equal, I dare say I shall also know what are your own thoughts.
  • Moreover, with nothing else but my four walls, you'll at any rate be a
  • bit of furniture. For that, you know, a little, I've always taken
  • you--quite one of my best finds. So come, if possible, on the 15th."
  • The position of a bit of furniture was one that Fleda could
  • conscientiously accept, and she by no means insisted on so high a place
  • in the list. This communication made her easier, if only by its
  • acknowledgment that her friend had some thing left: it still implied
  • recognition of the principle of property. Something to hate, and to hate
  • "comfortably," was at least not the utter destitution to which, after
  • their last interview, she had helplessly seemed to see Mrs. Gereth go
  • forth. She remembered indeed that, in the state in which they first saw
  • it, she herself had "liked" the blessed refuge of Ricks; and she now
  • wondered if the tact for which she was commended had then operated to
  • make her keep her kindness out of sight. She was at present ashamed of
  • such obliquity, and made up her mind that if this happy impression,
  • quenched in the spoils of Poynton, should revive on the spot, she would
  • utter it to her companion without reserve. Yes, she was capable of as
  • much "action" as that: all the more that the spirit of her hostess
  • seemed, for the time at least, wholly to have failed. Mrs. Gereth's
  • three minutes with Owen had been a blow to all talk of travel, and after
  • her woeful hour at Maggie's she had, like some great moaning, wounded
  • bird, made her way, with wings of anguish, back to the nest she knew she
  • should find empty. Fleda, on that dire day, could neither keep her nor
  • give her up; she had pressingly offered to return with her, but Mrs.
  • Gereth, in spite of the theory that their common grief was a bond, had
  • even declined all escort to the station, conscious apparently of
  • something abject in her collapse and almost fiercely eager, as with a
  • personal shame, to be unwatched. All she had said to Fleda was that she
  • would go back to Ricks that night, and the girl had lived for days after
  • with a dreadful image of her position and her misery there. She had had
  • a vision of her now lying prone on some unmade bed, now pacing a bare
  • floor like a lioness deprived of her cubs. There had been moments when
  • her mind's ear was strained to listen for some sound of grief wild
  • enough to be wafted from afar. But the first sound, at the end of a
  • week, had been a note announcing, without reflections, that the plan of
  • going abroad had been abandoned. "It has come to me indirectly, but with
  • much appearance of truth, that _they_ are going--for an indefinite time.
  • That quite settles it; I shall stay where I am, and as soon as I've
  • turned round again I shall look for you." The second letter had come a
  • week later, and on the 15th Fleda was on her way to Ricks.
  • Her arrival took the form of a surprise very nearly as violent as that
  • of the other time. The elements were different, but the effect, like the
  • other, arrested her on the threshold: she stood there stupefied and
  • delighted at the magic of a passion of which such a picture represented
  • the low-water mark. Wound up but sincere, and passing quickly from room
  • to room, Fleda broke out before she even sat down. "If you turn me out
  • of the house for it, my dear, there isn't a woman in England for whom it
  • wouldn't be a privilege to live here." Mrs. Gereth was as honestly
  • bewildered as she had of old been falsely calm. She looked about at the
  • few sticks that, as she afterwards phrased it, she had gathered in, and
  • then hard at her guest, as if to protect herself against a joke
  • sufficiently cruel. The girl's heart gave a leap, for this stare was the
  • sign of an opportunity. Mrs. Gereth was all unwitting; she didn't in the
  • least know what she had done, and as Fleda could tell her Fleda suddenly
  • became the one who knew most. That counted for the moment as a
  • magnificent position; it almost made all the difference. Yet what
  • contradicted it was the vivid presence of the artist's idea. "Where on
  • earth did you put your hand on such beautiful things?"
  • "Beautiful things?" Mrs. Gereth turned again to the little worn,
  • bleached stuffs and the sweet spindle-legs. "They're the wretched things
  • that were here--that stupid, starved old woman's."
  • "The maiden aunt's, the nicest, the dearest old woman that ever lived? I
  • thought you had got rid of the maiden aunt."
  • "She was stored in an empty barn--stuck away for a sale; a matter that,
  • fortunately, I've had neither time nor freedom of mind to arrange. I've
  • simply, in my extremity, fished her out again."
  • "You've simply, in your extremity, made a delight of her." Fleda took
  • the highest line and the upper hand, and as Mrs. Gereth, challenging her
  • cheerfulness, turned again a lustreless eye over the contents of the
  • place, she broke into a rapture that was unforced, but that she was
  • conscious of an advantage in being able to feel. She moved, as she had
  • done on the previous occasion, from one piece to another, with looks of
  • recognition and hands that lightly lingered, but she was as feverishly
  • jubilant now as she had formerly been anxious and mute. "Ah, the little
  • melancholy, tender, tell-tale things: how can they _not_ speak to you
  • and find a way to your heart? It's not the great chorus of Poynton; but
  • you're not, I'm sure, either so proud or so broken as to be reached by
  • nothing but that. This is a voice so gentle, so human, so feminine--a
  • faint, far-away voice with the little quaver of a heart-break. You've
  • listened to it unawares; for the arrangement and effect of
  • everything--when I compare them with what we found the first day we came
  • down--shows, even if mechanically and disdainfully exercised, your
  • admirable, infallible hand. It's your extraordinary genius; you make
  • things 'compose' in spite of yourself. You've only to be a day or two in
  • a place with four sticks for something to come of it!"
  • "Then if anything has come of it here, it has come precisely of just
  • four. That's literally, by the inventory, all there are!" said Mrs.
  • Gereth.
  • "If there were more there would be too many to convey the impression in
  • which half the beauty resides--the impression, somehow, of something
  • dreamed and missed, something reduced, relinquished, resigned: the
  • poetry, as it were, of something sensibly _gone_." Fleda ingeniously and
  • triumphantly worked it out. "Ah, there's something here that will never
  • be in the inventory!"
  • "Does it happen to be in your power to give it a name?" Mrs. Gereth's
  • face showed the dim dawn of an amusement at finding herself seated at
  • the feet of her pupil.
  • "I can give it a dozen. It's a kind of fourth dimension. It's a
  • presence, a perfume, a touch. It's a soul, a story, a life. There's ever
  • so much more here than you and I. We're in fact just three!"
  • "Oh, if you count the ghosts!"
  • "Of course I count the ghosts. It seems to me ghosts count double--for
  • what they were and for what they are. Somehow there were no ghosts at
  • Poynton," Fleda went on. "That was the only fault."
  • Mrs. Gereth, considering, appeared to fall in with the girl's fine
  • humor. "Poynton was too splendidly happy."
  • "Poynton was too splendidly happy," Fleda promptly echoed.
  • "But it's cured of that now," her companion added.
  • "Yes, henceforth there'll be a ghost or two."
  • Mrs. Gereth thought again: she found her young friend suggestive. "Only
  • _she_ won't see them."
  • "No, 'she' won't see them." Then Fleda said, "What I mean is, for this
  • dear one of ours, that if she had (as I _know_ she did; it's in the very
  • taste of the air!) a great accepted pain--"
  • She had paused an instant, and Mrs. Gereth took her up. "Well, if she
  • had?"
  • Fleda still hesitated. "Why, it was worse than yours."
  • Mrs. Gereth reflected. "Very likely." Then she too hesitated. "The
  • question is if it was worse than yours."
  • "Mine?" Fleda looked vague.
  • "Precisely. Yours."
  • At this our young lady smiled. "Yes, because it was a disappointment.
  • She had been so sure."
  • "I see. And you were never sure."
  • "Never. Besides, I'm happy," said Fleda.
  • Mrs. Gereth met her eyes awhile. "Goose!" she quietly remarked as she
  • turned away. There was a curtness in it; nevertheless it represented a
  • considerable part of the basis of their new life.
  • On the 18th The Morning Post had at last its clear message, a brief
  • account of the marriage, from the residence of the bride's mother, of
  • Mr. Owen Gereth of Poynton Park to Miss Mona Brigstock of Waterbath.
  • There were two ecclesiastics and six bridesmaids and, as Mrs. Gereth
  • subsequently said, a hundred frumps, as well as a special train from
  • town: the scale of the affair sufficiently showed that the preparations
  • had been complete for weeks. The happy pair were described as having
  • taken their departure for Mr. Gereth's own seat, famous for its unique
  • collection of artistic curiosities. The newspapers and letters, the
  • fruits of the first London post, had been brought to the mistress of
  • Ricks in the garden; and she lingered there alone a long time after
  • receiving them. Fleda kept at a distance; she knew what must have
  • happened, for from one of the windows she saw her rigid in a chair, her
  • eyes strange and fixed, the newspaper open on the ground and the letters
  • untouched in her lap. Before the morning's end she had disappeared, and
  • the rest of that day she remained in her room: it recalled to Fleda, who
  • had picked up the newspaper, the day, months before, on which Owen had
  • come down to Poynton to make his engagement known. The hush of the house
  • was at least the same, and the girl's own waiting, her soft wandering,
  • through the hours: there was a difference indeed sufficiently great, of
  • which her companion's absence might in some degree have represented a
  • considerate recognition. That was at any rate the meaning Fleda,
  • devoutly glad to be alone, attached to her opportunity. Mrs. Gereth's
  • sole allusion, the next day, to the subject of their thoughts, has
  • already been mentioned: it was a dazzled glance at the fact that Mona's
  • quiet pace had really never slackened.
  • Fleda fully assented. "I said of our disembodied friend here that she
  • had suffered in proportion as she had been sure. But that's not always a
  • source of suffering. It's Mona who must have been sure!"
  • "She was sure of _you_!" Mrs. Gereth returned. But this didn't diminish
  • the satisfaction taken by Fleda in showing how serenely and lucidly she
  • could talk.
  • XXII
  • Her relation with her wonderful friend had, however, in becoming a new
  • one, begun to shape itself almost wholly on breaches and omissions.
  • Something had dropped out altogether, and the question between them,
  • which time would answer, was whether the change had made them strangers
  • or yokefellows. It was as if at last, for better or worse, they were, in
  • a clearer, cruder air, really to know each other. Fleda wondered how
  • Mrs. Gereth had escaped hating her: there were hours when it seemed that
  • such a feat might leave after all a scant margin for future accidents.
  • The thing indeed that now came out in its simplicity was that even in
  • her shrunken state the lady of Ricks was larger than her wrongs. As for
  • the girl herself, she had made up her mind that her feelings had no
  • connection with the case. It was her pretension that they had never yet
  • emerged from the seclusion into which, after her friend's visit to her
  • at her sister's, we saw them precipitately retire: if she should
  • suddenly meet them in straggling procession on the road it would be time
  • enough to deal with them. They were all bundled there together, likes
  • with dislikes and memories with fears; and she had for not thinking of
  • them the excellent reason that she was too occupied with the actual. The
  • actual was not that Owen Gereth had seen his necessity where she had
  • pointed it out; it was that his mother's bare spaces demanded all the
  • tapestry that the recipient of her bounty could furnish. There were
  • moments during the month that followed when Mrs. Gereth struck her as
  • still older and feebler, and as likely to become quite easily amused.
  • At the end of it, one day, the London paper had another piece of news:
  • "Mr. and Mrs. Owen Gereth, who arrived in town last week, proceed this
  • morning to Paris." They exchanged no word about it till the evening, and
  • none indeed would then have been uttered had not Mrs. Gereth
  • irrelevantly broken out: "I dare say you wonder why I declared the other
  • day with such assurance that he wouldn't live with her. He apparently
  • _is_ living with her."
  • "Surely it's the only proper thing for him to do."
  • "They're beyond me--I give it up," said Mrs. Gereth.
  • "I don't give it up--I never did," Fleda returned.
  • "Then what do you make of his aversion to her?"
  • "Oh, she has dispelled it."
  • Mrs. Gereth said nothing for a minute. "You're prodigious in your choice
  • of terms!" she then simply ejaculated.
  • But Fleda went luminously on; she once more enjoyed her great command of
  • her subject: "I think that when you came to see me at Maggie's you saw
  • too many things, you had too many ideas."
  • "You had none," said Mrs. Gereth: "you were completely bewildered."
  • "Yes, I didn't quite understand--but I think I understand now. The case
  • is simple and logical enough. She's a person who's upset by failure and
  • who blooms and expands with success. There was something she had set her
  • heart upon, set her teeth about--the house exactly as she had seen it."
  • "She never saw it at all, she never looked at it!" cried Mrs. Gereth.
  • "She doesn't look with her eyes; she looks with her ears. In her own way
  • she had taken it in; she knew, she felt when it had been touched. That
  • probably made her take an attitude that was extremely disagreeable. But
  • the attitude lasted only while the reason for it lasted."
  • "Go on--I can bear it now," said Mrs. Gereth. Her companion had just
  • perceptibly paused.
  • "I know you can, or I shouldn't dream of speaking. When the pressure was
  • removed she came up again. From the moment the house was once more what
  • it had to be, her natural charm reasserted itself."
  • "Her natural charm!" Mrs. Gereth could barely articulate.
  • "It's very great; everybody thinks so; there must be something in it. It
  • operated as it had operated before. There's no need of imagining
  • anything very monstrous. Her restored good humor, her splendid beauty,
  • and Mr. Owen's impressibility and generosity sufficiently cover the
  • ground. His great bright sun came out!"
  • "And his great bright passion for another person went in. Your
  • explanation would doubtless be perfection if he didn't love you."
  • Fleda was silent a little. "What do you know about his 'loving' me?"
  • "I know what Mrs. Brigstock herself told me."
  • "You never in your life took her word for any other matter."
  • "Then won't yours do?" Mrs. Gereth demanded. "Haven't I had it from your
  • own mouth that he cares for you?"
  • Fleda turned pale, but she faced her companion and smiled. "You
  • confound, Mrs. Gereth, you mix things up. You've only had it from my own
  • mouth that I care for _him_!"
  • It was doubtless in contradictious allusion to this (which at the time
  • had made her simply drop her head as in a strange, vain reverie) that
  • Mrs. Gereth, a day or two later, said to Fleda: "Don't think I shall be
  • a bit affected if I'm here to see it when he comes again to make up to
  • you."
  • "He won't do that," the girl replied. Then she added, smiling: "But if
  • he should be guilty of such bad taste, it wouldn't be nice of you not to
  • be disgusted."
  • "I'm not talking of disgust; I'm talking of its opposite," said Mrs.
  • Gereth.
  • "Of its opposite?"
  • "Why, of any reviving pleasure that one might feel in such an
  • exhibition. I shall feel none at all. You may personally take it as you
  • like; but what conceivable good will it do?"
  • Fleda wondered. "To me, do you mean?"
  • "Deuce take you, no! To what we don't, you know, by your wish, ever talk
  • about."
  • "The old things?" Fleda considered again. "It will do no good of any
  • sort to anything or any one. That's another question I would rather we
  • shouldn't discuss, please," she gently added.
  • Mrs. Gereth shrugged her shoulders.
  • "It certainly isn't worth it!"
  • Something in her manner prompted her companion, with a certain
  • inconsequence, to speak again. "That was partly why I came back to you,
  • you know--that there should be the less possibility of anything
  • painful."
  • "Painful?" Mrs. Gereth stared. "What pain can I ever feel again?"
  • "I meant painful to myself," Fleda, with a slight impatience, explained.
  • "Oh, I see." Her friend was silent a minute. "You use sometimes such odd
  • expressions. Well, I shall last a little, but I sha'n't last forever."
  • "You'll last quite as long--" Here Fleda suddenly hesitated.
  • Mrs. Gereth took her up with a cold smile that seemed the warning of
  • experience against hyperbole. "As long as what, please?"
  • The girl thought an instant; then met the difficulty by adopting, as an
  • amendment, the same tone. "As any danger of the ridiculous."
  • That did for the time, and she had moreover, as the months went on, the
  • protection of suspended allusions. This protection was marked when, in
  • the following November, she received a letter directed in a hand at
  • which a quick glance sufficed to make her hesitate to open it. She said
  • nothing, then or afterwards; but she opened it, for reasons that had
  • come to her, on the morrow. It consisted of a page and a half from Owen
  • Gereth, dated from Florence, but with no other preliminary. She knew
  • that during the summer he had returned to England with his wife, and
  • that after a couple of months they had again gone abroad. She also knew,
  • without communication, that Mrs. Gereth, round whom Ricks had grown
  • submissively and indescribably sweet, had her own interpretation of her
  • daughter-in-law's share in this second migration. It was a piece of
  • calculated insolence--a stroke odiously directed at showing whom it
  • might concern that now she had Poynton fast she was perfectly
  • indifferent to living there. The Morning Post, at Ricks, had again been
  • a resource: it was stated in that journal that Mr. and Mrs. Owen Gereth
  • proposed to spend the winter in India. There was a person to whom it was
  • clear that she led her wretched husband by the nose. Such was the light
  • in which contemporary history was offered to Fleda until, in her own
  • room, late at night, she broke the seal of her letter.
  • "I want you, inexpressibly, to have, as a remembrance, something of
  • mine--something of real value. Something from Poynton is what I mean and
  • what I should prefer. You know everything there, and far better than I
  • what's best and what isn't. There are a lot of differences, but aren't
  • some of the smaller things the most remarkable? I mean for judges, and
  • for what they'd bring. What I want you to take from me, and to choose
  • for yourself, is the thing in the whole house that's most beautiful and
  • precious. I mean the 'gem of the collection,' don't you know? If it
  • happens to be of such a sort that you can take immediate possession of
  • it--carry it right away with you--so much the better. You're to have it
  • on the spot, whatever it is. I humbly beg of you to go down there and
  • see. The people have complete instructions: they'll act for you in every
  • possible way and put the whole place at your service. There's a thing
  • mamma used to call the Maltese cross and that I think I've heard her say
  • is very wonderful. Is _that_ the gem of the collection? Perhaps you
  • would take it, or anything equally convenient. Only I do want you
  • awfully to let it be the very pick of the place. Let me feel that I can
  • trust you for this. You won't refuse if you will think a little what it
  • must be that makes me ask."
  • Fleda read that last sentence over more times even than the rest; she
  • was baffled--she couldn't think at all of what it might be. This was
  • indeed because it might be one of so many things. She made for the
  • present no answer; she merely, little by little, fashioned for herself
  • the form that her answer should eventually wear. There was only one form
  • that was possible--the form of doing, at her time, what he wished. She
  • would go down to Poynton as a pilgrim might go to a shrine, and as to
  • this she must look out for her chance. She lived with her letter, before
  • any chance came, a month, and even after a month it had mysteries for
  • her that she couldn't meet. What did it mean, what did it represent, to
  • what did it correspond in his imagination or his soul? What was behind
  • it, what was beyond it, what was, in the deepest depth, within it? She
  • said to herself that with these questions she was under no obligation to
  • deal. There was an explanation of them that, for practical purposes,
  • would do as well as another: he had found in his marriage a happiness so
  • much greater than, in the distress of his dilemma, he had been able to
  • take heart to believe, that he now felt he owed her a token of gratitude
  • for having kept him in the straight path. That explanation, I say, she
  • could throw off; but no explanation in the least mattered: what
  • determined her was the simple strength of her impulse to respond. The
  • passion for which what had happened had made no difference, the passion
  • that had taken this into account before as well as after, found here an
  • issue that there was nothing whatever to choke. It found even a relief
  • to which her imagination immensely contributed. Would she act upon his
  • offer? She would act with secret rapture. To have as her own something
  • splendid that he had given her, of which the gift had been his signed
  • desire, would be a greater joy than the greatest she had supposed to be
  • left to her, and she felt that till the sense of this came home she had
  • even herself not known what burned in her successful stillness. It was
  • an hour to dream of and watch for; to be patient was to draw out the
  • sweetness. She was capable of feeling it as an hour of triumph, the
  • triumph of everything in her recent life that had not held up its head.
  • She moved there in thought--in the great rooms she knew; she should be
  • able to say to herself that, for once at least, her possession was as
  • complete as that of either of the others whom it had filled only with
  • bitterness. And a thousand times yes--her choice should know no scruple:
  • the thing she should go down to take would be up to the height of her
  • privilege. The whole place was in her eyes, and she spent for weeks her
  • private hours in a luxury of comparison and debate. It should be one of
  • the smallest things because it should be one she could have close to
  • her; and it should be one of the finest because it was in the finest he
  • saw his symbol. She said to herself that of what it would symbolize she
  • was content to know nothing more than just what her having it would tell
  • her. At bottom she inclined to the Maltese cross--with the added reason
  • that he had named it. But she would look again and judge afresh; she
  • would on the spot so handle and ponder that there shouldn't be the shade
  • of a mistake.
  • Before Christmas she had a natural opportunity to go to London; there
  • was her periodical call upon her father to pay as well as a promise to
  • Maggie to redeem. She spent her first night in West Kensington, with the
  • idea of carrying out on the morrow the purpose that had most of a
  • motive. Her father's affection was not inquisitive, but when she
  • mentioned to him that she had business in the country that would oblige
  • her to catch an early train, he deprecated her excursion in view of the
  • menace of the weather. It was spoiling for a storm; all the signs of a
  • winter gale were in the air. She replied that she would see what the
  • morning might bring; and it brought, in fact, what seemed in London an
  • amendment. She was to go to Maggie the next day, and now that she had
  • started her eagerness had become suddenly a pain. She pictured her
  • return that evening with her trophy under her cloak; so that after
  • looking, from the doorstep, up and down the dark street, she decided,
  • with a new nervousness, and sallied forth to the nearest place of access
  • to the "Underground." The December dawn was dolorous, but there was
  • neither rain nor snow; it was not even cold, and the atmosphere of West
  • Kensington, purified by the wind, was like a dirty old coat that had
  • been bettered by a dirty brush. At the end of almost an hour, in the
  • larger station, she had taken her place in a third-class compartment;
  • the prospect before her was the run of eighty minutes to Poynton. The
  • train was a fast one, and she was familiar with the moderate measure of
  • the walk to the park from the spot at which it would drop her.
  • Once in the country, indeed, she saw that her father was right: the
  • breath of December was abroad with a force from which the London
  • labyrinth had protected her. The green fields were black, the sky was
  • all alive with the wind; she had, in her anxious sense of the elements,
  • her wonder at what might happen, a reminder of the surmises, in the old
  • days of going to the Continent, that used to worry her on the way, at
  • night, to the horrid cheap crossings by long sea. Something, in a dire
  • degree, at this last hour, had begun to press on her heart: it was the
  • sudden imagination of a disaster, or at least of a check, before her
  • errand was achieved. When she said to herself that something might
  • happen she wanted to go faster than the train. But nothing could happen
  • save a dismayed discovery that, by some altogether unlikely chance, the
  • master and mistress of the house had already come back. In that case she
  • must have had a warning, and the fear was but the excess of her hope. It
  • was every one's being exactly where every one was that lent the quality
  • to her visit. Beyond lands and seas and alienated forever, they in their
  • different ways gave her the impression to take as she had never taken
  • it. At last it was already there, though the darkness of the day had
  • deepened; they had whizzed past Chater--Chater, which was the station
  • before the right one. Off in that quarter was an air of wild rain, but
  • there shimmered straight across it a brightness that was the color of
  • the great interior she had been haunting. That vision settled before
  • her--in the house the house was all; and as the train drew up she rose,
  • in her mean compartment, quite proudly erect with the thought that all
  • for Fleda Vetch then the house was standing there.
  • But with the opening of the door she encountered a shock, though for an
  • instant she couldn't have named it; the next moment she saw it was given
  • her by the face of the man advancing to let her out, an old lame porter
  • of the station, who had been there in Mrs. Gereth's time and who now
  • recognized her. He looked up at her so hard that she took an alarm and
  • before alighting broke out to him: "They've come back?" She had a
  • confused, absurd sense that even he would know that in this case she
  • mustn't be there. He hesitated, and in the few seconds her alarm had
  • completely changed its ground: it seemed to leap, with her quick jump
  • from the carriage, to the ground that was that of his stare at her.
  • "Smoke?" She was on the platform with her frightened sniff: it had taken
  • her a minute to become aware of an extraordinary smell. The air was full
  • of it, and there were already heads at the window of the train, looking
  • out at something she couldn't see. Some one, the only other passenger,
  • had got out of another carriage, and the old porter hobbled off to close
  • his door. The smoke was in her eyes, but she saw the station-master,
  • from the end of the platform, recognize her too and come straight to
  • her. He brought her a finer shade of surprise than the porter, and while
  • he was coming she heard a voice at a window of the train say that
  • something was "a good bit off--a mile from the town." That was just what
  • Poynton was. Then her heart stood still at the white wonder in the
  • station-master's face.
  • "You've come down to it, miss, already?"
  • At this she knew. "Poynton's on fire?"
  • "Gone, miss--with this awful gale. You weren't wired? Look out!" he
  • cried in the next breath, seizing her; the train was going on, and she
  • had given a lurch that almost made it catch her as it passed. When it
  • had drawn away she became more conscious of the pervading smoke, which
  • the wind seemed to hurl in her face.
  • "_Gone?_" She was in the man's hands; she clung to him.
  • "Burning still, miss. Ain't it quite too dreadful? Took early this
  • morning--the whole place is up there."
  • In her bewildered horror she tried to think. "Have they come back?"
  • "Back? They'll be there all day!"
  • "Not Mr. Gereth, I mean--nor his wife?"
  • "Nor his mother, miss--not a soul of _them_ back. A pack o' servants in
  • charge--not the old lady's lot, eh? A nice job for care-takers! Some
  • rotten chimley or one of them portable lamps set down in the wrong
  • place. What has done it is this cruel, cruel night." Then as a great
  • wave of smoke half choked them, he drew her with force to the little
  • waiting room. "Awkward for you, miss--I see!"
  • She felt sick; she sank upon a seat, staring up at him. "Do you mean
  • that great house is _lost_?"
  • "It was near it, I was told, an hour ago--the fury of the flames had got
  • such a start. I was there myself at six, the very first I heard of it.
  • They were fighting it then, but you couldn't quite say they had got it
  • down."
  • Fleda jerked herself up. "Were they saving the things?"
  • "That's just where it was, miss--to get _at_ the blessed things. And the
  • want of right help--it maddened me to stand and see 'em muff it. This
  • ain't a place, like, for anything organized. They don't come up to a
  • _reel_ emergency."
  • She passed out of the door that opened toward the village and met a
  • great acrid gust. She heard a far-off windy roar which, in her dismay,
  • she took for that of flames a mile away, and which, the first instant,
  • acted upon her as a wild solicitation. "I must go there." She had
  • scarcely spoken before the same omen had changed into an appalling
  • check.
  • Her vivid friend, moreover, had got before her; he clearly suffered from
  • the nature of the control he had to exercise. "Don't do that, miss--you
  • won't care for it at all." Then as she waveringly stood her ground,
  • "It's not a place for a young lady, nor, if you'll believe me, a sight
  • for them as are in any way affected."
  • Fleda by this time knew in what way she was affected: she became limp
  • and weak again; she felt herself give everything up. Mixed with the
  • horror, with the kindness of the station-master, with the smell of
  • cinders and the riot of sound, was the raw bitterness of a hope that she
  • might never again in life have to give up so much at such short notice.
  • She heard herself repeat mechanically, yet as if asking it for the first
  • time: "Poynton's _gone_?"
  • The man hesitated. "What can you call it, miss, if it ain't really
  • saved?"
  • A minute later she had returned with him to the waiting-room, where, in
  • the thick swim of things, she saw something like the disk of a clock.
  • "Is there an up-train?" she asked.
  • "In seven minutes."
  • She came out on the platform: everywhere she met the smoke. She covered
  • her face with her hands. "I'll go back."
  • Henry James's Books.
  • A PASSIONATE PILGRIM, AND OTHER TALES.
  • TRANSATLANTIC SKETCHES.
  • RODERICK HUDSON. A Novel.
  • THE AMERICAN. A Novel.
  • THE EUROPEANS. A Novel.
  • CONFIDENCE. A Novel.
  • THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY.
  • THE AUTHOR OF BELTRAFFIO. Including also Pandora; Georgina's Reasons;
  • The Path of Duty; Four Meetings.
  • THE SIEGE OF LONDON. Including also The Pension Beaurepas; The Point of
  • View.
  • TALES OF THREE CITIES. Including The Impressions of a Cousin; Lady
  • Barberina; A New England Winter.
  • A LITTLE TOUR IN FRANCE.
  • PORTRAITS OF PLACES.
  • DAISY MILLER. A Comedy.
  • THE TRAGIC MUSE. 2 vols.
  • WATCH AND WARD. A Novel.
  • THE SPOILS OF POYNTON. A Novel.
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Spoils of Poynton, by Henry James
  • *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SPOILS OF POYNTON ***
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