“Oh, Margaret,” cried
her aunt next morning, “such a most unfortunate
thing has happened. I could not get you alone.”
The most unfortunate thing was not
very serious. One of the flats in the ornate
block opposite had been taken furnished by the Wilcox
family, “coming up, no doubt, in the hope of
getting into London society.” That Mrs.
Munt should be the first to discover the misfortune
was not remarkable, for she was so interested in the
flats, that she watched their every mutation with unwearying
care. In theory she despised them—they
took away that old-world look—they cut
off the sun—flats house a flashy type of
person. But if the truth had been known, she
found her visits to Wickham Place twice as amusing
since Wickham Mansions had arisen, and would in a
couple of days learn more about them than her nieces
in a couple of months, or her nephew in a couple of
years. She would stroll across and make friends
with the porters, and inquire what the rents were,
exclaiming for example: “What! a hundred
and twenty for a basement? You’ll never
get it!” And they would answer: “One
can but try, madam.” The passenger lifts,
the arrangement for coals (a great temptation for
a dishonest porter), were all familiar matters to
her, and perhaps a relief from the politico-economical-esthetic
atmosphere that reigned at the Schlegels.
Margaret received the information
calmly, and did not agree that it would throw a cloud
over poor Helen’s life.
“Oh, but Helen isn’t a
girl with no interests,” she explained.
“She has plenty of other things and other people
to think about. She made a false start with the
Wilcoxes, and she’ll be as willing as we are
to have nothing more to do with them.”
“For a clever girl, dear, how
very oddly you do talk. Helen’ll have
to have something more to do with them, now that they
’re all opposite. She may meet that Paul
in the street. She cannot very well not bow.”
“Of course she must bow.
But look here; let’s do the flowers. I
was going to say, the will to be interested in him
has died, and what else matters? I look on that
disastrous episode (over which you were so kind) as
the killing of a nerve in Helen. It’s dead,
and she’ll never be troubled with it again.
The only things that matter are the things that interest
one. Bowing, even calling and leaving cards,
even a dinner-party—we can do all those
things to the Wilcoxes, if they find it agreeable;
but the other thing, the one important thing—never
again. Don’t you see?”
Mrs. Munt did not see, and indeed
Margaret was making a most questionable statement—that
any emotion, any interest once vividly aroused, can
wholly die.
“I also have the honour to inform
you that the Wilcoxes are bored with us. I didn’t
tell you at the time—it might have made
you angry, and you had enough to worry you—but
I wrote a letter to Mrs. W, and apologised for the
trouble that Helen had given them. She didn’t
answer it.”
“How very rude!”
“I wonder. Or was it sensible?”
“No, Margaret, most rude.”
“In either case one can class it as reassuring.”
Mrs. Munt sighed. She was going
back to Swanage on the morrow, just as her nieces
were wanting her most. Other regrets crowded
upon her: for instance, how magnificently she
would have cut Charles if she had met him face to
face. She had already seen him, giving an order
to the porter—and very common he looked
in a tall hat. But unfortunately his back was
turned to her, and though she had cut his back, she
could not regard this as a telling snub.
“But you will be careful, won’t you?”
she exhorted.
“Oh, certainly. Fiendishly careful.”
“And Helen must be careful, too.”
“Careful over what?” cried
Helen, at that moment coming into the room with her
cousin.
“Nothing” said Margaret, seized with a
momentary awkwardness.
“Careful over what, Aunt Juley?”
Mrs. Munt assumed a cryptic air.
“It is only that a certain family, whom we know
by name but do not mention, as you said yourself last
night after the concert, have taken the flat opposite
from the Mathesons—where the plants are
in the balcony.”
Helen began some laughing reply, and
then disconcerted them all by blushing. Mrs.
Munt was so disconcerted that she exclaimed, “What,
Helen, you don’t mind them coming, do you?”
and deepened the blush to crimson.
“Of course I don’t mind,”
said Helen a little crossly. “It is that
you and Meg are both so absurdly grave about it, when
there’s nothing to be grave about at all.”
“I’m not grave,”
protested Margaret, a little cross in her turn.
“Well, you look grave; doesn’t she, Frieda?”
“I don’t feel grave, that’s
all I can say; you’re going quite on the wrong
tack.”
“No, she does not feel grave,”
echoed Mrs. Munt. “I can bear witness to
that. She disagrees—”
“Hark!” interrupted Fraulein
Mosebach. “I hear Bruno entering the hall.”
For Herr Liesecke was due at Wickham
Place to call for the two younger girls. He was
not entering the hall—in fact, he did not
enter it for quite five minutes. But Frieda detected
a delicate situation, and said that she and Helen
had much better wait for Bruno down below, and leave
Margaret and Mrs. Munt to finish arranging the flowers.
Helen acquiesced. But, as if to prove that the
situation was not delicate really, she stopped in the
doorway and said:
“Did you say the Mathesons’
flat, Aunt Juley? How wonderful you are!
I never knew that the name of the woman who laced too
tightly was Matheson.”
“Come, Helen,” said her cousin.
“Go, Helen,” said her
aunt; and continued to Margaret almost in the same
breath: “Helen cannot deceive me. She
does mind.”
“Oh, hush!” breathed Margaret.
“Frieda’ll hear you, and she can be so
tiresome.”
“She minds,” persisted
Mrs. Munt, moving thoughtfully about the room, and
pulling the dead chrysanthemums out of the vases.
“I knew she’d mind—and I’m
sure a girl ought to! Such an experience!
Such awful coarse-grained people! I know more
about them than you do, which you forget, and if Charles
had taken you that motor drive—well, you’d
have reached the house a perfect wreck. Oh, Margaret,
you don’t know what you are in for! They’re
all bottled up against the drawing-room window.
There’s Mrs. Wilcox—I’ve seen
her. There’s Paul. There’s Evie,
who is a minx. There’s Charles—I
saw him to start with. And who would an elderly
man with a moustache and a copper-coloured face be?”
“Mr. Wilcox, possibly.”
“I knew it. And there’s Mr. Wilcox.”
“It’s a shame to call
his face copper colour,” complained Margaret.
“He has a remarkably good complexion for a man
of his age.”
Mrs. Munt, triumphant elsewhere, could
afford to concede Mr. Wilcox his complexion.
She passed on from it to the plan of campaign that
her nieces should pursue in the future. Margaret
tried to stop her.
“Helen did not take the news
quite as I expected, but the Wilcox nerve is dead
in her really, so there’s no need for plans.”
“It’s as well to be prepared.”
“No—it’s as well not to be
prepared.”
“Why?”
“Because—”
Her thought drew being from the obscure
borderland. She could not explain in so many
words, but she felt that those who prepare for all
the emergencies of life beforehand may equip themselves
at the expense of joy. It is necessary to prepare
for an examination, or a dinner-party, or a possible
fall in the price of stock: those who attempt
human relations must adopt another method, or fail.
“Because I’d sooner risk it,” was
her lame conclusion.
“But imagine the evenings,”
exclaimed her aunt, pointing to the Mansions with
the spout of the watering can. “Turn the
electric light on here or there, and it’s almost
the same room. One evening they may forget to
draw their blinds down, and you’ll see them;
and the next, you yours, and they’ll see you.
Impossible to sit out on the balconies. Impossible
to water the plants, or even speak. Imagine going
out of the front-door, and they come out opposite
at the same moment. And yet you tell me that plans
are unnecessary, and you’d rather risk it.”
“I hope to risk things all my life.”
“Oh, Margaret, most dangerous.”
“But after all,” she continued
with a smile, “there’s never any great
risk as long as you have money.”
“Oh, shame! What a shocking speech!”
“Money pads the edges of things,”
said Miss Schlegel. “God help those who
have none.”
“But this is something quite
new!” said Mrs. Munt, who collected new ideas
as a squirrel collects nuts, and was especially attracted
by those that are portable.
“New for me; sensible people
have acknowledged it for years. You and I and
the Wilcoxes stand upon money as upon islands.
It is so firm beneath our feet that we forget its
very existence. It’s only when we see some
one near us tottering that we realise all that an
independent income means. Last night, when we
were talking up here round the fire, I began to think
that the very soul of the world is economic, and that
the lowest abyss is not the absence of love, but the
absence of coin.”
“I call that rather cynical.”
“So do I. But Helen and I, we
ought to remember, when we are tempted to criticise
others, that we are standing on these islands, and
that most of the others are down below the surface
of the sea. The poor cannot always reach those
whom they want to love, and they can hardly ever escape
from those whom they love no longer. We rich
can. Imagine the tragedy last June, if Helen
and Paul Wilcox had been poor people, and couldn’t
invoke railways and motor-cars to part them.”
“That’s more like Socialism,”
said Mrs. Munt suspiciously.
“Call it what you like.
I call it going through life with one’s hand
spread open on the table. I’m tired of these
rich people who pretend to be poor, and think it shows
a nice mind to ignore the piles of money that keep
their feet above the waves. I stand each year
upon six hundred pounds, and Helen upon the same, and
Tibby will stand upon eight, and as fast as our pounds
crumble away into the sea they are renewed—from
the sea, yes, from the sea. And all our thoughts
are the thoughts of six-hundred-pounders, and all
our speeches; and because we don’t want to steal
umbrellas ourselves, we forget that below the sea people
do want to steal them and do steal them sometimes,
and that what’s a joke up here is down there
reality.”
“There they go—there
goes Fraulein Mosebach. Really, for a German
she does dress charmingly. Oh!—”
“What is it?”
“Helen was looking up at the Wilcoxes’
flat.”
“Why shouldn’t she?”
“I beg your pardon, I interrupted
you. What was it you were saying about reality?”
“I had worked round to myself,
as usual,” answered Margaret in tones that were
suddenly preoccupied.
“Do tell me this, at all events.
Are you for the rich or for the poor?”
“Too difficult. Ask me
another. Am I for poverty or for riches?
For riches. Hurrah for riches!”
“For riches!” echoed Mrs.
Munt, having, as it were, at last secured her nut.
“Yes. For riches. Money for ever!”
“So am I, and so, I am afraid,
are most of my acquaintances at Swanage, but I am
surprised that you agree with us.”
“Thank you so much, Aunt Juley.
While I have talked theories, you have done the flowers.”
“Not at all, dear. I wish
you would let me help you in more important things.”
“Well, would you be very kind?
Would you come round with me to the registry office?
There’s a housemaid who won’t say yes but
doesn’t say no.”
On their way thither they too looked
up at the Wilcoxes’ flat. Evie was in the
balcony, “staring most rudely,” according
to Mrs. Munt. Oh yes, it was a nuisance, there
was no doubt of it. Helen was proof against a
passing encounter, but—Margaret began to
lose confidence. Might it reawake the dying nerve
if the family were living close against her eyes?
And Frieda Mosebach was stopping with them for another
fortnight, and Frieda was sharp, abominably sharp,
and quite capable of remarking, “You love one
of the young gentlemen opposite, yes?” The remark
would be untrue, but of the kind which, if stated
often enough, may become true; just as the remark,
“England and Germany are bound to fight,”
renders war a little more likely each time that it
is made, and is therefore made the more readily by
the gutter press of either nation. Have the private
emotions also their gutter press? Margaret thought
so, and feared that good Aunt Juley and Frieda were
typical specimens of it. They might, by continual
chatter, lead Helen into a repetition of the desires
of June. Into a repetition—they could
not do more; they could not lead her into lasting
love. They were—she saw it clearly—Journalism;
her father, with all his defects and wrong-headedness,
had been Literature, and had he lived, he would have
persuaded his daughter rightly.
The registry office was holding its
morning reception. A string of carriages filled
the street. Miss Schlegel waited her turn, and
finally had to be content with an insidious “temporary,”
being rejected by genuine housemaids on the ground
of her numerous stairs. Her failure depressed
her, and though she forgot the failure, the depression
remained. On her way home she again glanced up
at the Wilcoxes’ flat, and took the rather matronly
step of speaking about the matter to Helen.
“Helen, you must tell me whether
this thing worries you.”
“If what?” said Helen,
who was washing her hands for lunch.
“The Ws’ coming.”
“No, of course not.”
“Really?”
“Really.” Then she
admitted that she was a little worried on Mrs. Wilcox’s
account; she implied that Mrs. Wilcox might reach
backward into deep feelings, and be pained by things
that never touched the other members of that clan.
“I shan’t mind if Paul points at our house
and says, ’There lives the girl who tried to
catch me.’ But she might.”
“If even that worries you, we
could arrange something. There’s no reason
we should be near people who displease us or whom we
displease, thanks to our money. We might even
go away for a little.”
“Well, I am going away.
Frieda’s just asked me to Stettin, and I shan’t
be back till after the New Year. Will that do?
Or must I fly the country altogether? Really,
Meg, what has come over you to make such a fuss?”
“Oh, I’m getting an old
maid, I suppose. I thought I minded nothing,
but really I—I should be bored if you fell
in love with the same man twice and”—she
cleared her throat—“you did go red,
you know, when Aunt Juley attacked you this morning.
I shouldn’t have referred to it otherwise.”
But Helen’s laugh rang true,
as she raised a soapy hand to heaven and swore that
never, nowhere and nohow, would she again fall in
love with any of the Wilcox family, down to its remotest
collaterals.