Julian!’ said the brother. ‘He’s quite one
of the family!’
‘Never mind—can’t I go down into the kitchen with you?’ she
inquired. There had been bliss and misery mingled in those
tidings, and she scarcely knew for a moment which way they affected
her. What she did know was that she had run her dear fox to
earth, and a sense of satisfaction at that feat prevented her just
now from counting the cost of the performance.
‘Does Mr. Julian come to see her very often?’ said she.
‘O yes—he’s always a-coming—a regular bore to me.’
‘A regular what?’
‘Bore!—Ah, I forgot, you don’t know our town words.
However, come along.’
They passed by the doors on tiptoe, and their mother upstairs
being, according to Joey’s account, in the midst of a nap, Picotee
was unwilling to disturb her; so they went down at once to the
kitchen, when forward rushed Gwendoline the cook, flourishing her
floury hands, and Cornelia the housemaid, dancing over her brush;
and these having welcomed and made Picotee comfortable, who should
ring the area-bell, and be admitted down the steps, but Sol and
Dan. The workman-brothers, their day’s duties being over, had
called to see their relations, first, as usual, going home to their
lodgings in Marylebone and making themselves as spruce as
bridegrooms, according to the rules of their newly-acquired town
experience. For the London mechanic is only nine hours a
mechanic, though the country mechanic works, eats, drinks, and
sleeps a mechanic throughout the whole twenty-four.
‘God bless my soul—Picotee!’ said Dan, standing fixed.
‘Well—I say, this is splendid! ha-ha!’
‘Picotee—what brought you here?’ said Sol, expanding the
circumference of his face in satisfaction. ‘Well, come
along—never mind so long as you be here.’
Picotee explained circumstances as well as she could without
stating them, and, after a general conversation of a few minutes,
Sol interrupted with—‘Anybody upstairs with Mrs. Petherwin?’
‘Mr. Julian was there just now,’ said Joey; ‘but he may be
gone. Berta always lets him slip out how he can, the form of
ringing me up not being necessary with him. Wait a
minute—I’ll see.’
Joseph vanished up the stairs; and, the question whether
Christopher were gone or not being an uninteresting one to the
majority, the talking went on upon other matters. When Joey
crept down again a minute later, Picotee was sitting aloof and
silent, and he accordingly singled her out to speak to.
‘Such a lark, Picotee!’ he whispered. ‘Berta’s a-courting
of her young man. Would you like to see how they carries on a
bit?’
‘Dearly I should!’ said Picotee, the pupils of her eyes
dilating.
Joey conducted her to the top of the basement stairs, and told
her to listen. Within a few yards of them was the
morning-room door, now standing ajar; and an intermittent
flirtation in soft male and female tones could be heard going on
inside. Picotee’s lips parted at thus learning the condition
of things, and she leant against the stair-newel.
‘My? What’s the matter?’ said Joey.
‘If this is London, I don’t like it at all!’ moaned Picotee.
‘Well—I never see such a girl—fainting all over the stairs for
nothing in the world.’
‘O—it will soon be gone—it is—it is only indigestion.’
‘Indigestion? Much you simple country people can know
about that! You should see what devils of indigestions we get
in high life—eating ’normous great dinners and suppers that require
clever physicians to carry ’em off, or else they’d carry us off
with gout next day; and waking in the morning with such a splitting
headache, and dry throat, and inward cusses about human nature,
that you feel all the world like some great lord. However,
now let’s go down again.’
‘No, no, no!’ said the unhappy maiden imploringly.
‘Hark!’
They listened again. The voices of the musician and
poetess had changed: there was a decided frigidity in their
tone—then came a louder expression—then a silence.
‘You needn’t be afeard,’ said Joey. ‘They won’t fight;
bless you, they busts out quarrelling like this times and times
when they’ve been over-friendly, but it soon gets straight with ’em
again.’
There was now a quick walk across the room, and Joey and his
sister drew down their heads out of sight. Then the room door
was slammed, quick footsteps went along the hall, the front door
closed just as loudly, and Christopher’s tread passed into nothing
along the pavement.
‘That’s rather a wuss one than they mostly have; but Lord, ’tis
nothing at all.’
‘I don’t much like biding here listening!’ said Picotee.
‘O, ’tis how we do all over the West End,’ said Joey.
‘’Tis yer ignorance of town life that makes it seem a good deal to
’ee.’
‘You can’t make much boast about town life; for you haven’t left
off talking just as they do down in Wessex.’
‘Well, I own to that—what’s fair is fair, and ’tis a true
charge; but if I talk the Wessex way ’tisn’t for want of knowing
better; ’tis because my staunch nater makes me bide faithful to our
old ancient institutions. You’d soon own ’twasn’t ignorance
in me, if you knowed what large quantities of noblemen I gets mixed
up with every day. In fact ’tis thoughted here and there that
I shall do very well in the world.’
‘Well, let us go down,’ said Picotee. ‘Everything seems so
overpowering here.’
‘O, you’ll get broke in soon enough. I felt just the same
when I first entered into society.’
‘Do you think Berta will be angry with me? How does she
treat you?’
‘Well, I can’t complain. You see she’s my own flesh and
blood, and what can I say? But, in secret truth, the wages is
terrible low, and barely pays for the tobacco I consooms.’
‘O Joey, you wicked boy! If mother only knew that you
smoked!’
‘I don’t mind the wickedness so much as the smell. And
Mrs. Petherwin has got such a nose for a fellow’s clothes.
’Tis one of the greatest knots in service—the smoke question.
’Tis thoughted that we shall make a great stir about it in the
mansions of the nobility soon.’
‘How much more you know of life than I do—you only fourteen and
me seventeen!’
‘Yes, that’s true. You see, age is nothing—’tis
opportunity. And even I can’t boast, for many a younger man
knows more.’
‘But don’t smoke, Joey—there’s a dear!’
‘What can I do? Society hev its rules, and if a person
wishes to keep himself up, he must do as the world do. We be
all Fashion’s slave—as much a slave as the meanest in the
land!’
They got downstairs again; and when the dinner of the French
lady and gentleman had been sent up and cleared away, and also
Ethelberta’s evening tea (which she formed into a genuine meal,
making a dinner of luncheon, when nobody was there, to give less
trouble to her servant-sisters), they all sat round the fire.
Then the rustle of a dress was heard on the staircase, and
squirrel-haired Ethelberta appeared in person. It was her
custom thus to come down every spare evening, to teach Joey and her
sisters something or other—mostly French, which she spoke fluently;
but the cook and housemaid showed more ambition than intelligence
in acquiring that tongue, though Joey learnt it readily enough.
There was consternation in the camp for a moment or two, on
account of poor Picotee, Ethelberta being not without firmness in
matters of discipline. Her eye instantly lighted upon her
disobedient sister, now looking twice as disobedient as she really
was.
‘O, you are here, Picotee? I am glad to see you,’ said the
mistress of the house quietly.
This was altogether to Picotee’s surprise, for she had expected
a round rating at least, in her freshness hardly being aware that
this reserve of feeling was an acquired habit of Ethelberta’s, and
that civility stood in town for as much vexation as a tantrum
represented in Wessex.
Picotee lamely explained her outward reasons for coming, and
soon began to find that Ethelberta’s opinions on the matter would
not be known by the tones of her voice. But innocent Picotee
was as wily as a religionist in sly elusions of the letter whilst
infringing the spirit of a dictum; and by talking very softly and
earnestly about the wondrous good she could do by remaining in the
house as governess to the children, and playing the part of
lady’s-maid to her sister at show times, she so far coaxed
Ethelberta out of her intentions that she almost accepted the plan
as a good one. It was agreed that for the present, at any
rate, Picotee should remain. Then a visit was made to Mrs.
Chickerel’s room, where the remainder of the evening was passed;
and harmony reigned in the household.
19. ETHELBERTA’S DRAWING-ROOM
Picotee’s heart was fitfully glad. She was near the man
who had enlarged her capacity from girl’s to woman’s, a little note
or two of young feeling to a whole diapason; and though nearness
was perhaps not in itself a great reason for felicity when viewed
beside the complete realization of all that a woman can desire in
such circumstances, it was much in comparison with the outer
darkness of the previous time.
It became evident to all the family that some misunderstanding
had arisen between Ethelberta and Mr. Julian. What Picotee
hoped in the centre of her heart as to the issue of the affair it
would be too complex a thing to say. If Christopher became
cold towards her sister he would not come to the house; if he
continued to come it would really be as Ethelberta’s
lover—altogether, a pretty game of perpetual check for Picotee.
He did not make his appearance for several days. Picotee,
being a presentable girl, and decidedly finer-natured than her
sisters below stairs, was allowed to sit occasionally with
Ethelberta in the afternoon, when the teaching of the little ones
had been done for the day; and thus she had an opportunity of
observing Ethelberta’s emotional condition with reference to
Christopher, which Picotee did with an interest that the elder
sister was very far from suspecting.
At first Ethelberta seemed blithe enough without him. One
more day went, and he did not come, and then her manner was that of
apathy. Another day passed, and from fanciful elevations of
the eyebrow, and long breathings, it became apparent that
Ethelberta had decidedly passed the indifferent stage, and was
getting seriously out of sorts about him. Next morning she
looked all hope. He did not come that day either, and
Ethelberta began to look pale with fear.
‘Why don’t you go out?’ said Picotee timidly.
‘I can hardly tell: I have been expecting some one.’
‘When she comes I must run up to mother at once, must I not?’
said clever Picotee.
‘It is not a lady,’ said Ethelberta blandly. She came then
and stood by Picotee, and looked musingly out of the window.
‘I may as well tell you, perhaps,’ she continued. ‘It is Mr.
Julian. He is—I suppose—my lover, in plain English.’
‘Ah!’ said Picotee.
‘Whom I am not going to marry until he gets rich.’
‘Ah—how strange! If I had him—such a lover, I mean—I would
marry him if he continued poor.’
‘I don’t doubt it, Picotee; just as you come to London without
caring about consequences, or would do any other crazy thing and
not mind in the least what came of it. But somebody in the
family must take a practical view of affairs, or we should all go
to the dogs.’
Picotee recovered from the snubbing which she felt that she
deserved, and charged gallantly by saying, with delicate showings
of indifference, ‘Do you love this Mr. What’s-his-name of
yours?’
‘Mr. Julian? O, he’s a very gentlemanly man. That
is, except when he is rude, and ill-uses me, and will not come and
apologize!’
‘If I had him—a lover, I would ask him to come if I wanted him
to.’
Ethelberta did not give her mind to this remark; but, drawing a
long breath, said, with a pouting laugh, which presaged unreality,
‘The idea of his getting indifferent now! I have been
intending to keep him on until I got tired of his attentions, and
then put an end to them by marrying him; but here is he, before he
has hardly declared himself, forgetting my existence as much as if
he had vowed to love and cherish me for life. ’Tis an
unnatural inversion of the manners of society.’
‘When did you first get to care for him, dear Berta?’
‘O—when I had seen him once or twice.’
‘Goodness—how quick you were!’
‘Yes—if I am in the mind for loving I am not to be hindered by
shortness of acquaintanceship.’
‘Nor I neither!’ sighed Picotee.
‘Nor any other woman. We don’t need to know a man well in
order to love him. That’s only necessary when we want to
leave off.’
‘O Berta—you don’t believe that!’
‘If a woman did not invariably form an opinion of her choice
before she has half seen him, and love him before she has half
formed an opinion, there would be no tears and pining in the whole
feminine world, and poets would starve for want of a topic. I
don’t believe it, do you say? Ah, well, we shall see.’
Picotee did not know what to say to this; and Ethelberta left
the room to see about her duties as public story-teller, in which
capacity she had undertaken to appear again this very evening.
20. THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF THE HALL—THE ROAD HOME
London was illuminated by the broad full moon. The
pavements looked white as if mantled with snow; ordinary houses
were sublimated to the rank of public buildings, public buildings
to palaces, and the faces of women walking the streets to those of
calendared saints and guardian-angels, by the pure bleaching light
from the sky.
In the quiet little street where opened the private door of the
Hall chosen by Ethelberta for her story-telling, a brougham was
waiting. The time was about eleven o’clock; and presently a
lady came out from the building, the moonbeams forthwith flooding
her face, which they showed to be that of the Story-teller
herself. She hastened across to the carriage, when a second
thought arrested her motion: telling the man-servant and a woman
inside the brougham to wait for her, she wrapped up her features
and glided round to the front of the house, where she paused to
observe the carriages and cabs driving up to receive the
fashionable crowd stepping down from the doors. Standing here
in the throng which her own talent and ingenuity had drawn
together, she appeared to enjoy herself by listening for a minute
or two to the names of several persons of more or less distinction
as they were called out, and then regarded attentively the faces of
others of lesser degree: to scrutinize the latter was, as the event
proved, the real object of the journey from round the corner.
When nearly every one had left the doors, she turned back
disappointed. Ethelberta had been fancying that her alienated
lover Christopher was in the back rows to-night, but, as far as
could now be observed, the hopeful supposition was a false one.
When she got round to the back again, a man came forward.
It was Ladywell, whom she had spoken to already that evening.
‘Allow me to bring you your note-book, Mrs. Petherwin: I think you
had forgotten it,’ he said. ‘I assure you that nobody has
handled it but myself.’
Ethelberta thanked him, and took the book. ‘I use it to
look into between the parts, in case my memory should fail me,’ she
explained. ‘I remember that I did lay it down, now you remind
me.’
Ladywell had apparently more to say, and moved by her side
towards the carriage; but she declined the arm he offered, and said
not another word till he went on, haltingly:
‘Your triumph to-night was very great, and it was as much a
triumph to me as to you; I cannot express my feeling—I cannot say
half that I would. If I might only—’
‘Thank you much,’ said Ethelberta, with dignity. ‘Thank
you for bringing my book, but I must go home now. I know that
you will see that it is not necessary for us to be talking
here.’
‘Yes—you are quite right,’ said the repressed young painter,
struck by her seriousness. ‘Blame me; I ought to have known
better. But perhaps a man—well, I will say it—a lover without
indiscretion is no lover at all. Circumspection and devotion
are a contradiction in terms. I saw that, and hoped that I
might speak without real harm.’
‘You calculated how to be uncalculating, and are natural by
art!’ she said, with the slightest accent of sarcasm. ‘But
pray do not attend me further—it is not at all necessary or
desirable. My maid is in the carriage.’ She bowed,
turned, and entered the vehicle, seating herself beside
Picotee.
‘It was harsh!’ said Ladywell to himself, as he looked after the
retreating carriage. ‘I was a fool; but it was harsh.
Yet what man on earth likes a woman to show too great a readiness
at first? She is right: she would be nothing without
repulse!’ And he moved away in an opposite direction.
‘What man was that?’ said Picotee, as they drove along.
‘O—a mere Mr. Ladywell: a painter of good family, to whom I have
been sitting for what he calls an Idealization. He is a
dreadful simpleton.’
‘Why did you choose him?’
‘I did not: he chose me. But his silliness of behaviour is
a hopeful sign for the picture. I have seldom known a man
cunning with his brush who was not simple with his tongue; or,
indeed, any skill in particular that was not allied to general
stupidity.’
‘Your own skill is not like that, is it, Berta?’
‘In men—in men. I don’t mean in women. How childish
you are!’
The slight depression at finding that Christopher was not
present, which had followed Ethelberta’s public triumph that
evening, was covered over, if not removed, by Ladywell’s
declaration, and she reached home serene in spirit. That she
had not the slightest notion of accepting the impulsive painter
made little difference; a lover’s arguments being apt to affect a
lady’s mood as much by measure as by weight. A useless
declaration like a rare china teacup with a hole in it, has its
ornamental value in enlarging a collection.
No sooner had they entered the house than Mr. Julian’s card was
discovered; and Joey informed them that he had come particularly to
speak with Ethelberta, quite forgetting that it was her evening for
tale-telling.
This was real delight, for between her excitements Ethelberta
had been seriously sick-hearted at the horrible possibility of his
never calling again. But alas! for Christopher. There
being nothing like a dead silence for getting one’s off-hand
sweetheart into a corner, there is nothing like prematurely ending
it for getting into that corner one’s self.
‘Now won’t I punish him for daring to stay away so long!’ she
exclaimed as soon as she got upstairs. ‘It is as bad to show
constancy in your manners as fickleness in your heart at such a
time as this.’
‘But I thought honesty was the best policy?’ said Picotee.
‘So it is, for the man’s purpose. But don’t you go
believing in sayings, Picotee: they are all made by men, for their
own advantages. Women who use public proverbs as a guide
through events are those who have not ingenuity enough to make
private ones as each event occurs.’
She sat down, and rapidly wrote a line to Mr. Julian:—
‘EXONBURY CRESCENT.
‘I return from Mayfair Hall to find you have called. You
will, I know, be good enough to forgive my saying what seems an
unfriendly thing, when I assure you that the circumstances of my
peculiar situation make it desirable, if not necessary. It is
that I beg you not to give me the pleasure of a visit from you for
some little time, for unhappily the frequency of your kind calls
has been noticed; and I am now in fear that we may be talked
about—invidiously—to the injury of us both. The town, or a
section of it, has turned its bull’s-eye upon me with a brightness
which I did not in the least anticipate; and you will, I am sure,
perceive how indispensable it is that I should be
circumspect.—Yours sincerely,
E. PETHERWIN.’
21. A STREET—NEIGH’S ROOMS—CHRISTOPHER’S ROOMS
As soon as Ethelberta had driven off from the Hall, Ladywell
turned back again; and, passing the front entrance, overtook his
acquaintance Mr. Neigh, who had been one of the last to
emerge. The two were going in the same direction, and they
walked a short distance together.
‘Has anything serious happened?’ said Neigh, noticing an
abstraction in his companion. ‘You don’t seem in your usual
mood to-night.’
‘O, it is only that affair between us,’ said Ladywell.
‘Affair? Between you and whom?’
‘Her and myself, of course. It will be in every fellow’s
mouth now, I suppose!’
‘But—not anything between yourself and Mrs. Petherwin?’
‘A mere nothing. But surely you started, Neigh, when you
suspected it just this moment?’
‘No—you merely fancied that.’
‘Did she not speak well to-night! You were in the room, I
believe?’
‘Yes, I just turned in for half-an-hour: it seems that everybody
does, so I thought I must. But I had no idea that you were
feeble that way.’
‘It is very kind of you, Neigh—upon my word it is—very kind; and
of course I appreciate the delicacy which—which—’
‘What’s kind?’
‘I mean your well-intentioned plan for making me believe that
nothing is known of this. But stories will of course get
wind; and if our attachment has made more noise in the world than I
intended it should, and causes any public interest, why—ha-ha!—it
must. There is some little romance in it perhaps, and people
will talk of matters of that sort between individuals of any
repute—little as that is with one of the pair.’
‘Of course they will—of course. You are a rising man,
remember, whom some day the world will delight to honour.’
‘Thank you for that, Neigh. Thank you sincerely.’
‘Not at all. It is merely justice to say it, and one must
he generous to deserve thanks.’
‘Ha-ha!—that’s very nicely put, and undeserved I am sure.
And yet I need a word of that sort sometimes!’
‘Genius is proverbially modest.’
‘Pray don’t, Neigh—I don’t deserve it, indeed. Of course
it is well meant in you to recognize any slight powers, but I don’t
deserve it. Certainly, my self-assurance was never too
great. ’Tis the misfortune of all children of art that they
should be so dependent upon any scraps of praise they can pick up
to help them along.’
‘And when that child gets so deep in love that you can only see
the whites of his eyes—’
‘Ah—now, Neigh—don’t, I say!’
‘But why did—’
‘Why did I love her?’
‘Yes, why did you love her?’
‘Ah, if I could only turn self-vivisector, and watch the
operation of my heart, I should know!’
‘My dear fellow, you must be very bad indeed to talk like
that. A poet himself couldn’t be cleaner gone.’
‘Now, don’t chaff, Neigh; do anything, but don’t chaff.
You know that I am the easiest man in the world for taking it at
most times. But I can’t stand it now; I don’t feel up to
it. A glimpse of paradise, and then perdition. What
would you do, Neigh?’
‘She has refused you, then?’
‘Well—not positively refused me; but it is so near it that a
dull man couldn’t tell the difference. I hardly can
myself.’
‘How do you really stand with her?’ said Neigh, with an anxiety
ill-concealed.
‘Off and on—neither one thing nor the other. I was
determined to make an effort the last time she sat to me, and so I
met her quite coolly, and spoke only of technicalities with a
forced smile—you know that way of mine for drawing people out, eh,
Neigh?’
‘Quite, quite.’
‘A forced smile, as much as to say, “I am obliged to entertain
you, but as a mere model for art purposes.” But the deuce a
bit did she care. And then I frequently looked to see what
time it was, as the end of the sitting drew near—rather a rude
thing to do, as a rule.’
‘Of course. But that was your finesse.
Ha-ha!—capital! Yet why not struggle against such
slavery? It is regularly pulling you down. What’s a
woman’s beauty, after all?’
‘Well you may say so! A thing easier to feel than define,’
murmured Ladywell. ‘But it’s no use, Neigh—I can’t help it as
long as she repulses me so exquisitely! If she would only
care for me a little, I might get to trouble less about her.’
‘And love her no more than one ordinarily does a girl by the
time one gets irrevocably engaged to her. But I suppose she
keeps you back so thoroughly that you carry on the old adoration
with as much vigour as if it were a new fancy every time?’
‘Partly yes, and partly no! It’s very true, and it’s not
true!’
‘’Tis to be hoped she won’t hate you outright, for then you
would absolutely die of idolizing her.’
‘Don’t, Neigh!—Still there’s some truth in it—such is the
perversity of our hearts. Fancy marrying such a woman!’
‘We should feel as eternally united to her after years and years
of marriage as to a dear new angel met at last night’s dance.’
‘Exactly—just what I should have said. But did I hear you
say “We,” Neigh? You didn’t say “WE should feel?”’
‘Say “we”?—yes—of course—putting myself in your place just in
the way of speaking, you know.’
‘Of course, of course; but one is such a fool at these times
that one seems to detect rivalry in every trumpery sound!
Were you never a little touched?’
‘Not I. My heart is in the happy position of a country
which has no history or debt.’
‘I suppose I should rejoice to hear it,’ said Ladywell.
‘But the consciousness of a fellow-sufferer being in just such
another hole is such a relief always, and softens the sense of
one’s folly so very much.’
‘There’s less Christianity in that sentiment than in your
confessing to it, old fellow. I know the truth of it
nevertheless, and that’s why married men advise others to
marry. Were all the world tied up, the pleasantly tied ones
would be equivalent to those at present free. But what if
your fellow-sufferer is not only in another such a hole, but in the
same one?’
‘No, Neigh—never! Don’t trifle with a friend who—’
‘That is, refused like yourself, as well as in love.’
‘Ah, thanks, thanks! It suddenly occurred to me that we
might be dead against one another as rivals, and a friendship of
many long—days be snapped like a—like a reed.’
‘No—no—only a jest,’ said Neigh, with a strangely accelerated
speech. ‘Love-making is an ornamental pursuit that
matter-of-fact fellows like me are quite unfit for. A man
must have courted at least half-a-dozen women before he’s a match
for one; and since triumph lies so far ahead, I shall keep out of
the contest altogether.’
‘Your life would be pleasanter if you were engaged. It is
a nice thing, after all.’
‘It is. The worst of it would be that, when the time came
for breaking it off, a fellow might get into an action for
breach—women are so fond of that sort of thing now; and I hate
love-affairs that don’t end peaceably!’
‘But end it by peaceably marrying, my dear fellow!’
‘It would seem so singular. Besides, I have a horror of
antiquity: and you see, as long as a man keeps single, he belongs
in a measure to the rising generation, however old he may be; but
as soon as he marries and has children, he belongs to the last
generation, however young he may be. Old Jones’s son is a
deal younger than young Brown’s father, though they are both the
same age.’
‘At any rate, honest courtship cures a man of many evils he had
no power to stem before.’
‘By substituting an incurable matrimony!’
‘Ah—two persons must have a mind for that before it can happen!’
said Ladywell, sorrowfully shaking his head.
‘I think you’ll find that if one has a mind for it, it will be
quite sufficient. But here we are at my rooms. Come in
for half-an-hour?’
‘Not to-night, thanks!’
They parted, and Neigh went in. When he got upstairs he
murmured in his deepest chest note, ‘O, lords, that I should come
to this! But I shall never be such a fool as to marry
her! What a flat that poor young devil was not to discover
that we were tarred with the same brush. O, the deuce, the
deuce!’ he continued, walking about the room as if passionately
stamping, but not quite doing it because another man had rooms
below.
Neigh drew from his pocket-book an envelope embossed with the
name of a fashionable photographer, and out of this pulled a
portrait of the lady who had, in fact, enslaved his secret self
equally with his frank young friend the painter. After
contemplating it awhile with a face of cynical adoration, he
murmured, shaking his head, ‘Ah, my lady; if you only knew this, I
should be snapped up like a snail! Not a minute’s peace for
me till I had married you. I wonder if I shall!—I
wonder.’
Neigh was a man of five-and-thirty—Ladywell’s senior by ten
years; and, being of a phlegmatic temperament, he had glided thus
far through the period of eligibility with impunity. He knew
as well as any man how far he could go with a woman and yet keep
clear of having to meet her in church without her bonnet; but it is
doubtful if his mind that night were less disturbed with the
question how to guide himself out of the natural course which his
passion for Ethelberta might tempt him into, than was Ladywell’s by
his ardent wish to secure her.
* * * * *
About the time at which Neigh and Ladywell parted company,
Christopher Julian was entering his little place in
Bloomsbury. The quaint figure of Faith, in her bonnet and
cloak, was kneeling on the hearth-rug endeavouring to stir a dull
fire into a bright one.
‘What—Faith! you have never been out alone?’ he said.
Faith’s soft, quick-shutting eyes looked unutterable things, and
she replied, ‘I have been to hear Mrs. Petherwin’s story-telling
again.’
‘And walked all the way home through the streets at this time of
night, I suppose!’
‘Well, nobody molested me, either going or coming back.’
‘Faith, I gave you strict orders not to go into the streets
after two o’clock in the day, and now here you are taking no notice
of what I say at all!’
‘The truth is, Kit, I wanted to see with my spectacles what this
woman was really like, and I went without them last time. I
slipped in behind, and nobody saw me.’
‘I don’t think much of her after what I have seen tonight,’ said
Christopher, moodily recurring to a previous thought.
‘Why? What is the matter?’
‘I thought I would call on her this afternoon, but when I got
there I found she had left early for the performance. So in
the evening, when I thought it would be all over, I went to the
private door of the Hall to speak to her as she came out, and ask
her flatly a question or two which I was fool enough to think I
must ask her before I went to bed. Just as I was drawing near
she came out, and, instead of getting into the brougham that was
waiting for her, she went round the corner. When she came
back a man met her and gave her something, and they stayed talking
together two or three minutes. The meeting may certainly not
have been intentional on her part; but she has no business to be
going on so coolly when—when—in fact, I have come to the conclusion
that a woman’s affection is not worth having. The only
feeling which has any dignity or permanence or worth is family
affection between close blood-relations.’
‘And yet you snub me sometimes, Mr. Kit.’
‘And, for the matter of that, you snub me. Still, you know
what I mean—there’s none of that off-and-on humbug between
us. If we grumble with one another we are united just the
same: if we don’t write when we are parted, we are just the same
when we meet—there has been some rational reason for silence; but
as for lovers and sweethearts, there is nothing worth a rush in
what they feel!’
Faith said nothing in reply to this. The opinions she had
formed upon the wisdom of her brother’s pursuit of Ethelberta would
have come just then with an ill grace. It must, however, have
been evident to Christopher, had he not been too preoccupied for
observation, that Faith’s impressions of Ethelberta were not quite
favourable as regarded her womanhood, notwithstanding that she
greatly admired her talents.
22. ETHELBERTA’S HOUSE
Ethelberta came indoors one day from the University boat-race,
and sat down, without speaking, beside Picotee, as if lost in
thought.
‘Did you enjoy the sight?’ said Picotee.
‘I scarcely know. We couldn’t see at all from Mrs.
Belmaine’s carriage, so two of us—very rashly—agreed to get out and
be rowed across to the other side where the people were quite
few. But when the boatman had us in the middle of the river
he declared he couldn’t land us on the other side because of the
barges, so there we were in a dreadful state—tossed up and down
like corks upon great waves made by steamers till I made up my mind
for a drowning. Well, at last we got back again, but couldn’t
reach the carriage for the crowd; and I don’t know what we should
have done if a gentleman hadn’t come—sent by Mrs. Belmaine, who was
in a great fright about us; then he was introduced to me, and—I
wonder how it will end!’
‘Was there anything so wonderful in the beginning, then?’
‘Yes. One of the coolest and most practised men in London
was ill-mannered towards me from sheer absence of mind—and could
there be higher flattery? When a man of that sort does not
give you the politeness you deserve, it means that in his heart he
is rebelling against another feeling which his pride suggests that
you do not deserve. O, I forgot to say that he is a Mr.
Neigh, a nephew of Mr. Doncastle’s, who lives at ease about
Piccadilly and Pall Mall, and has a few acres somewhere—but I don’t
know much of him. The worst of my position now is that I
excite this superficial interest in many people and a deep
friendship in nobody. If what all my supporters feel could be
collected into the hearts of two or three they would love me better
than they love themselves; but now it pervades all and operates in
none.’
‘But it must operate in this gentleman?’
‘Well, yes—just for the present. But men in town have so
many contrivances for getting out of love that you can’t calculate
upon keeping them in for two days together. However, it is
all the same to me. There’s only—but let that be.’
‘What is there only?’ said Picotee coaxingly.
‘Only one man,’ murmured Ethelberta, in much lower tones.
‘I mean, whose wife I should care to be; and the very qualities I
like in him will, I fear, prevent his ever being in a position to
ask me.’
‘Is he the man you punished the week before last by forbidding
him to come?’
‘Perhaps he is: but he does not want civility from me.
Where there’s much feeling there’s little ceremony.’
‘It certainly seems that he does not want civility from you to
make him attentive to you,’ said Picotee, stifling a sigh; ‘for
here is a letter in his handwriting, I believe.’
‘You might have given it to me at once,’ said Ethelberta,
opening the envelope hastily. It contained very few
sentences: they were to the effect that Christopher had received
her letter forbidding him to call; that he had therefore at first
resolved not to call or even see her more, since he had become such
a shadow in her path. Still, as it was always best to do
nothing hastily, he had on second thoughts decided to ask her to
grant him a last special favour, and see him again just once, for a
few minutes only that afternoon, in which he might at least say
Farewell. To avoid all possibility of compromising her in
anybody’s eyes, he would call at half-past six, when other callers
were likely to be gone, knowing that from the peculiar constitution
of the household the hour would not interfere with her
arrangements. There being no time for an answer, he would
assume that she would see him, and keep the engagement; the request
being one which could not rationally be objected to.
‘There—read it!’ said Ethelberta, with glad displeasure.
‘Did you ever hear such audacity? Fixing a time so soon that
I cannot reply, and thus making capital out of a pretended
necessity, when it is really an arbitrary arrangement of his
own. That’s real rebellion—forcing himself into my house when
I said strictly he was not to come; and then, that it cannot
rationally be objected to—I don’t like his “rationally.”’
‘Where there’s much love there’s little ceremony, didn’t you say
just now?’ observed innocent Picotee.
‘And where there’s little love, no ceremony at all. These
manners of his are dreadful, and I believe he will never
improve.’
‘It makes you care not a bit about him, does it not, Berta?’
said Picotee hopefully.
‘I don’t answer for that,’ said Ethelberta. ‘I feel, as
many others do, that a want of ceremony which is produced by
abstraction of mind is no defect in a poet or musician, fatal as it
may be to an ordinary man.’
‘Mighty me! You soon forgive him.’
‘Picotee, don’t you be so quick to speak. Before I have
finished, how do you know what I am going to say? I’ll never
tell you anything again, if you take me up so. Of course I am
going to punish him at once, and make him remember that I am a
lady, even if I do like him a little.’
‘How do you mean to punish him?’ said Picotee, with
interest.
‘By writing and telling him that on no account is he to
come.’
‘But there is not time for a letter—’
‘That doesn’t matter. It will show him that I did not
mean him to come.’
At hearing the very merciful nature of the punishment, Picotee
sighed without replying; and Ethelberta despatched her note.
The hour of appointment drew near, and Ethelberta showed symptoms
of unrest. Six o’clock struck and passed. She walked
here and there for nothing, and it was plain that a dread was
filling her: her letter might accidentally have had, in addition to
the moral effect which she had intended, the practical effect which
she did not intend, by arriving before, instead of after, his
purposed visit to her, thereby stopping him in spite of all her
care.
‘How long are letters going to Bloomsbury?’ she said
suddenly.
‘Two hours, Joey tells me,’ replied Picotee, who had already
inquired on her own private account.
‘There!’ exclaimed Ethelberta petulantly. ‘How I dislike a
man to misrepresent things! He said there was not time for a
reply!’
‘Perhaps he didn’t know,’ said Picotee, in angel tones; ‘and so
it happens all right, and he has got it, and he will not come after
all.’
They waited and waited, but Christopher did not appear that
night; the true case being that his declaration about insufficient
time for a reply was merely an ingenious suggestion to her not to
be so cruel as to forbid him. He was far from suspecting when
the letter of denial did reach him—about an hour before the time of
appointment—that it was sent by a refinement of art, of which the
real intention was futility, and that but for his own misstatement
it would have been carefully delayed.
The next day another letter came from the musician, decidedly
short and to the point. The irate lover stated that he would
not be made a fool of any longer: under any circumstances he meant
to come that self-same afternoon, and should decidedly expect her
to see him.
‘I will not see him!’ said Ethelberta. ‘Why did he not
call last night?’
‘Because you told him not to,’ said Picotee.
‘Good gracious, as if a woman’s words are to be translated as
literally as Homer! Surely he is aware that more often than
not “No” is said to a man’s importunities because it is
traditionally the correct modest reply, and for nothing else in the
world. If all men took words as superficially as he does, we
should die of decorum in shoals.’
‘Ah, Berta! how could you write a letter that you did not mean
should be obeyed?’
‘I did in a measure mean it, although I could have shown
Christian forgiveness if it had not been. Never mind; I will
not see him. I’ll plague my heart for the credit of my
sex.’
To ensure the fulfilment of this resolve, Ethelberta determined
to give way to a headache that she was beginning to be aware of, go
to her room, disorganize her dress, and ruin her hair by lying
down; so putting it out of her power to descend and meet
Christopher on any momentary impulse.
Picotee sat in the room with her, reading, or pretending to
read, and Ethelberta pretended to sleep. Christopher’s knock
came up the stairs, and with it the end of the farce.
‘I’ll tell you what,’ said Ethelberta in the prompt and
broadly-awake tone of one who had been concentrated on the
expectation of that sound for a length of time, ‘it was a mistake
in me to do this! Joey will be sure to make a muddle of
it.’
Joey was heard coming up the stairs. Picotee opened the
door, and said, with an anxiety transcending Ethelberta’s,
‘Well?’
‘O, will you tell Mrs. Petherwin that Mr. Julian says he’ll
wait.’
‘You were not to ask him to wait,’ said Ethelberta, within.
‘I know that,’ said Joey, ‘and I didn’t. He’s doing that
out of his own head.’
‘Then let Mr. Julian wait, by all means,’ said Ethelberta.
‘Allow him to wait if he likes, but tell him it is uncertain if I
shall be able to come down.’
Joey then retired, and the two sisters remained in silence.
‘I wonder if he’s gone,’ Ethelberta said, at the end of a long
time.
‘I thought you were asleep,’ said Picotee. ‘Shall we ask
Joey? I have not heard the door close.’
Joey was summoned, and after a leisurely ascent, interspersed by
various gymnastic performances over the handrail here and there,
appeared again.
‘He’s there jest the same: he don’t seem to be in no hurry at
all,’ said Joey.
‘What is he doing?’ inquired Picotee solicitously.
‘O, only looking at his watch sometimes, and humming tunes, and
playing rat-a-tat-tat upon the table. He says he don’t mind
waiting a bit.’
‘You must have made a mistake in the message,’ said Ethelberta,
within.
‘Well, no. I am correct as a jineral thing. I jest
said perhaps you would be engaged all the evening, and perhaps you
wouldn’t.’
When Joey had again retired, and they had waited another ten
minutes, Ethelberta said, ‘Picotee, do you go down and speak a few
words to him. I am determined he shall not see me. You
know him a little; you remember when he came to the Lodge?’
‘What must I say to him?’
Ethelberta paused before replying. ‘Try to find out if—if
he is much grieved at not seeing me, and say—give him to understand
that I will forgive him, Picotee.’
‘Very well.’
‘And Picotee—’
‘Yes.’
‘If he says he must see me—I think I will get up.
But only if he says must: you remember that.’
Picotee departed on her errand. She paused on the
staircase trembling, and thinking between the thrills how very far
would have been the conduct of her poor slighted self from proud
recalcitration had Mr. Julian’s gentle request been addressed to
her instead of to Ethelberta; and she went some way in the painful
discovery of how much more tantalizing it was to watch an envied
situation that was held by another than to be out of sight of it
altogether. Here was Christopher waiting to bestow love, and
Ethelberta not going down to receive it: a commodity unequalled in
value by any other in the whole wide world was being wantonly
wasted within that very house. If she could only have stood
to-night as the beloved Ethelberta, and not as the despised
Picotee, how different would be this going down! Thus she
went along, red and pale moving in her cheeks as in the Northern
Lights at their strongest time.
Meanwhile Christopher had sat waiting minute by minute till the
evening shades grew browner, and the fire sank low. Joey,
finding himself not particularly wanted upon the premises after the
second inquiry, had slipped out to witness a nigger performance
round the corner, and Julian began to think himself forgotten by
all the household. The perception gradually cooled his
emotions and enabled him to hold his hat quite steadily.
When Picotee gently thrust open the door she was surprised to
find the room in darkness, the fire gone completely out, and the
form of Christopher only visible by a faint patch of light, which,
coming from a lamp on the opposite side of the way and falling upon
the mirror, was thrown as a pale nebulosity upon his
shoulder. Picotee was too flurried at sight of the familiar
outline to know what to do, and, instead of going or calling for a
light, she mechanically advanced into the room. Christopher
did not turn or move in any way, and then she perceived that he had
begun to doze in his chair.
Instantly, with the precipitancy of the timorous, she said, ‘Mr.
Julian!’ and touched him on the shoulder—murmuring then, ‘O, I beg
pardon, I—I will get a light.’
Christopher’s consciousness returned, and his first act, before
rising, was to exclaim, in a confused manner, ‘Ah—you have
come—thank you, Berta!’ then impulsively to seize her hand, as it
hung beside his head, and kiss it passionately. He stood up,
still holding her fingers.
Picotee gasped out something, but was completely deprived of
articulate utterance, and in another moment being unable to control
herself at this sort of first meeting with the man she had gone
through fire and water to be near, and more particularly by the
overpowering kiss upon her hand, burst into hysterical
sobbing. Julian, in his inability to imagine so much
emotion—or at least the exhibition of it—in Ethelberta, gently drew
Picotee further forward by the hand he held, and utilized the
solitary spot of light from the mirror by making it fall upon her
face. Recognizing the childish features, he at once, with an
exclamation, dropped her hand and started back. Being in
point of fact a complete bundle of nerves and nothing else, his
thin figure shook like a harp-string in painful excitement at a
contretemps which would scarcely have quickened the pulse of an
ordinary man.
Poor Picotee, feeling herself in the wind of a civil d---,
started back also, sobbing more than ever. It was a little
too much that the first result of his discovery of the mistake
should be absolute repulse. She leant against the
mantelpiece, when Julian, much bewildered at her superfluity of
emotion, assisted her to a seat in sheer humanity. But
Christopher was by no means pleased when he again thought round the
circle of circumstances.
‘How could you allow such an absurd thing to happen?’ he said,
in a stern, though trembling voice. ‘You knew I might
mistake. I had no idea you were in the house: I thought you
were miles away, at Sandbourne or somewhere! But I see: it is
just done for a joke, ha-ha!’
This made Picotee rather worse still. ‘O-O-O-O!’ she
replied, in the tone of pouring from a bottle. ‘What shall I
do-o-o-o! It is—not done for a—joke at all-l-l-l!’
‘Not done for a joke? Then never mind—don’t cry,
Picotee. What was it done for, I wonder?’
Picotee, mistaking the purport of his inquiry, imagined him to
refer to her arrival in the house, quite forgetting, in her guilty
sense of having come on his account, that he would have no right or
thought of asking questions about a natural visit to a sister, and
she said: ‘When you—went away from—Sandbourne, I—I—I didn’t know
what to do, and then I ran away, and came here, and then
Ethelberta—was angry with me; but she says I may stay; but she
doesn’t know that I know you, and how we used to meet along the
road every morning—and I am afraid to tell her—O, what shall I
do!’
‘Never mind it,’ said Christopher, a sense of the true state of
her case dawning upon him with unpleasant distinctness, and
bringing some irritation at his awkward position; though it was
impossible to be long angry with a girl who had not reasoning
foresight enough to perceive that doubtful pleasure and certain
pain must be the result of any meeting whilst hearts were at cross
purposes in this way.
‘Where is your sister?’ he asked.
‘She wouldn’t come down, unless she MUST,’ said Picotee.
‘You have vexed her, and she has a headache besides that, and I
came instead.’
‘So that I mightn’t be wasted altogether. Well, it’s a
strange business between the three of us. I have heard of
one-sided love, and reciprocal love, and all sorts, but this is my
first experience of a concatenated affection. You follow me,
I follow Ethelberta, and she follows—Heaven knows who!’
‘Mr. Ladywell!’ said the mortified Picotee.
‘Good God, if I didn’t think so!’ said Christopher, feeling to
the soles of his feet like a man in a legitimate drama.
‘No, no, no!’ said the frightened girl hastily. ‘I am not
sure it is Mr. Ladywell. That’s altogether a mistake of
mine!’
‘Ah, yes, you want to screen her,’ said Christopher, with a
withering smile at the spot of light. ‘Very sisterly,
doubtless; but none of that will do for me. I am too old a
bird by far—by very far! Now are you sure she does not love
Ladywell?’
‘Yes!’
‘Well, perhaps I blame her wrongly. She may have some
little good faith—a woman has, here and there. How do you
know she does not love Ladywell?’
‘Because she would prefer Mr. Neigh to him, any day.’
‘Ha!’
‘No, no—you mistake, sir—she doesn’t love either at
all—Ethelberta doesn’t. I meant that she cannot love Mr.
Ladywell because he stands lower in her opinion than Mr.
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