My father's father
came over from Scotland with two sixpences in his pocket … " and
Mrs. Manford would glance with pardonable pride at the glorious
Gainsborough over the dining–room mantelpiece (which she sometimes
almost mistook for an ancestral portrait), and at her healthy
handsome family sitting about the dinner–table laden with Georgian
silver and orchids from her own hot–houses.
From the threshold, Nona called back to Miss Bruss: "Please tell
mother I shall probably be lunching with Jim and Lita—" but Miss
Bruss was passionately saying to an unseen interlocutor: "Oh, but
Mr. Rigley, but you MUST make Mr. Manford understand that Mrs.
Manford counts on him for dinner this evening… The dinner–
dance for the Marchesa, you know…"
The marriage of her half–brother had been Nona Manford's first real
sorrow. Not that she had disapproved of his choice: how could any
one take that funny irresponsible little Lita Cliffe seriously
enough to disapprove of her? The sisters–in–law were soon the best
of friends; if Nona had a fault to find with Lita, it was that she
didn't worship the incomparable Jim as blindly as his sister did.
But then Lita was made to be worshipped, not to worship; that was
manifest in the calm gaze of her long narrow nut–coloured eyes, in
the hieratic fixity of her lovely smile, in the very shape of her
hands, so slim yet dimpled, hands which had never grown up, and
which drooped from her wrists as if listlessly waiting to be
kissed, or lay like rare shells or upcurved magnolia–petals on the
cushions luxuriously piled about her indolent body.
The Jim Wyants had been married for nearly two years now; the baby
was six months old; the pair were beginning to be regarded as one
of the "old couples" of their set, one of the settled landmarks in
the matrimonial quicksands of New York. Nona's love for her
brother was too disinterested for her not to rejoice in this: above
all things she wanted her old Jim to be happy, and happy she was
sure he was—or had been until lately. The mere getting away from
Mrs. Manford's iron rule had been a greater relief than he himself
perhaps guessed. And then he was still the foremost of Lita's
worshippers; still enchanted by the childish whims, the
unpunctuality, the irresponsibility, which made life with her such
a thrillingly unsettled business after the clock–work routine of
his mother's perfect establishment.
All this Nona rejoiced in; but she ached at times with the
loneliness of the perfect establishment, now that Jim, its one
disturbing element, had left. Jim guessed her loneliness, she was
sure: it was he who encouraged the growing intimacy between his
wife and his half–sister, and tried to make the latter feel that
his house was another home to her.
Lita had always been amiably disposed toward Nona. The two, though
so fundamentally different, were nearly of an age, and united by
the prevailing passion for every form of sport. Lita, in spite of
her soft curled–up attitudes, was not only a tireless dancer but a
brilliant if uncertain tennis–player, and an adventurous rider to
hounds. Between her hours of lolling, and smoking amber–scented
cigarettes, every moment of her life was crammed with dancing,
riding or games. During the two or three months before the baby's
birth, when Lita had been reduced to partial inactivity, Nona had
rather feared that her perpetual craving for new "thrills" might
lead to some insidious form of time–killing—some of the drinking
or drugging that went on among the young women of their set; but
Lita had sunk into a state of smiling animal patience, as if the
mysterious work going on in her tender young body had a sacred
significance for her, and it was enough to lie still and let it
happen. All she asked was that nothing should "hurt" her: she had
the blind dread of physical pain common also to most of the young
women of her set. But all that was so easily managed nowadays:
Mrs. Manford (who took charge of the business, Lita being an
orphan) of course knew the most perfect "Twilight Sleep"
establishment in the country, installed Lita in its most luxurious
suite, and filled her rooms with spring flowers, hot–house fruits,
new novels and all the latest picture–papers—and Lita drifted into
motherhood as lightly and unperceivingly as if the wax doll which
suddenly appeared in the cradle at her bedside had been brought
there in one of the big bunches of hot–house roses that she found
every morning on her pillow.
"Of course there ought to be no Pain … nothing but Beauty…
It ought to be one of the loveliest, most poetic things in the
world to have a baby," Mrs. Manford declared, in that bright
efficient voice which made loveliness and poetry sound like the
attributes of an advanced industrialism, and babies something to be
turned out in series like Fords. And Jim's joy in his son had been
unbounded; and Lita really hadn't minded in the least.
II
The Marchesa was something which happened at irregular but
inevitable moments in Mrs. Manford's life.
Most people would have regarded the Marchesa as a disturbance; some
as a distinct inconvenience; the pessimistic as a misfortune. It
was a matter of conscious pride to Mrs. Manford that, while
recognizing these elements in the case, she had always contrived to
make out of it something not only showy but even enviable.
For, after all, if your husband (even an ex–husband) has a first
cousin called Amalasuntha degli Duchi di Lucera, who has married
the Marchese Venturino di San Fedele, of one of the great
Neapolitan families, it seems stupid and wasteful not to make some
use of such a conjunction of names and situations, and to remember
only (as the Wyants did) that when Amalasuntha came to New York it
was always to get money, or to get her dreadful son out of a new
scrape, or to consult the family lawyers as to some new way of
guarding the remains of her fortune against Venturino's systematic
depredations.
Mrs. Manford knew in advance the hopelessness of these quests—all
of them, that is, except that which consisted in borrowing money
from herself. She always lent Amalasuntha two or three thousand
dollars (and put it down to the profit–and–loss column of her
carefully–kept private accounts); she even gave the Marchesa her
own last year's clothes, cleverly retouched; and in return she
expected Amalasuntha to shed on the Manford entertainments that
exotic lustre which the near relative of a Duke who is also a
grandee of Spain and a great dignitary of the Papal Court trails
with her through the dustiest by–ways, even if her mother has been
a mere Mary Wyant of Albany.
Mrs. Manford had been successful. The Marchesa, without taking
thought, fell naturally into the part assigned to her. In her
stormy and uncertain life, New York, where her rich relations
lived, and from which she always came back with a few thousand
dollars, and clothes that could be made to last a year, and good
advice about putting the screws on Venturino, was like a foretaste
of heaven. "Live there? Carina, NO! It is too—too uneventful.
As heaven must be. But everybody is celestially kind … and
Venturino has learnt that there are certain things my American
relations will not tolerate…" Such was Amalasuntha's version
of her visits to New York, when she recounted them in the drawing–
rooms of Rome, Naples or St. Moritz; whereas in New York, quite
carelessly and unthinkingly—for no one was simpler at heart than
Amalasuntha—she pronounced names, and raised suggestions, which
cast a romantic glow of unreality over a world bounded by Wall
Street on the south and Long Island in most other directions; and
in this glow Pauline Manford was always eager to sun her other
guests.
"My husband's cousin" (become, since the divorce from Wyant "my
son's cousin") was still, after twenty–seven years, a useful social
card.
1 comment