Several days passed.
Was Mrs. Wilcox one of the unsatisfactory
people—there are many of them—who
dangle intimacy and then withdraw it? They evoke
our interests and affections, and keep the life of
the spirit dawdling round them. Then they withdraw.
When physical passion is involved, there is a definite
name for such behaviour—flirting—
and if carried far enough it is punishable by law.
But no law— not public opinion even—punishes
those who coquette with friendship, though the dull
ache that they inflict, the sense of misdirected effort
and exhaustion, may be as intolerable. Was she
one of these?
Margaret feared so at first, for,
with a Londoner’s impatience, she wanted everything
to be settled up immediately. She mistrusted
the periods of quiet that are essential to true growth.
Desiring to book Mrs. Wilcox as a friend, she pressed
on the ceremony, pencil, as it were, in hand, pressing
the more because the rest of the family were away,
and the opportunity seemed favourable. But the
elder woman would not be hurried. She refused
to fit in with the Wickham Place set, or to reopen
discussion of Helen and Paul, whom Margaret would have
utilised as a short-cut. She took her time, or
perhaps let time take her, and when the crisis did
come all was ready.
The crisis opened with a message:
Would Miss Schlegel come shopping? Christmas
was nearing, and Mrs. Wilcox felt behindhand with
the presents. She had taken some more days in
bed, and must make up for lost time. Margaret
accepted, and at eleven o’clock one cheerless
morning they started out in a brougham.
“First of all,” began
Margaret, “we must make a list and tick off
the people’s names. My aunt always does,
and this fog may thicken up any moment. Have
you any ideas?”
“I thought we would go to Harrods
or the Haymarket Stores,” said Mrs. Wilcox rather
hopelessly. “Everything is sure to be there.
I am not a good shopper. The din is so confusing,
and your aunt is quite right—one ought
to make a list. Take my notebook, then, and write
your own name at the top of the page.
“Oh, hooray!” said Margaret,
writing it. “How very kind of you to start
with me!” But she did not want to receive anything
expensive. Their acquaintance was singular rather
than intimate, and she divined that the Wilcox clan
would resent any expenditure on outsiders; the more
compact families do. She did not want to be thought
a second Helen, who would snatch presents since she
could not snatch young men, nor to be exposed like
a second Aunt Juley, to the insults of Charles.
A certain austerity of demeanour was best, and she
added: “I don’t really want a Yuletide
gift, though. In fact, I’d rather not.”
“Why?”
“Because I’ve odd ideas
about Christmas. Because I have all that money
can buy. I want more people, but no more things.”
“I should like to give you something
worth your acquaintance, Miss Schlegel, in memory
of your kindness to me during my lonely fortnight.
It has so happened that I have been left alone, and
you have stopped me from brooding. I am too apt
to brood.”
“If that is so,” said
Margaret, “if I have happened to be of use to
you, which I didn’t know, you cannot pay me back
with anything tangible.”
“I suppose not, but one would
like to. Perhaps I shall think of something as
we go about.”
Her name remained at the head of the
list, but nothing was written opposite it. They
drove from shop to shop. The air was white, and
when they alighted it tasted like cold pennies.
At times they passed through a clot of grey.
Mrs. Wilcox’s vitality was low that morning,
and it was Margaret who decided on a horse for this
little girl, a golliwog for that, for the rector’s
wife a copper warming-tray. “We always
give the servants money.” “Yes, do
you, yes, much easier,” replied Margaret but
felt the grotesque impact of the unseen upon the seen,
and saw issuing from a forgotten manger at Bethlehem
this torrent of coins and toys. Vulgarity reigned.
Public-houses, besides their usual exhortation against
temperance reform, invited men to “Join our
Christmas goose club”—one bottle of
gin, etc., or two, according to subscription.
A poster of a woman in tights heralded the Christmas
pantomime, and little red devils, who had come in again
that year, were prevalent upon the Christmas-cards.
Margaret was no morbid idealist. She did not
wish this spate of business and self-advertisement
checked. It was only the occasion of it that
struck her with amazement annually. How many of
these vacillating shoppers and tired shop-assistants
realised that it was a divine event that drew them
together? She realised it, though standing outside
in the matter. She was not a Christian in the
accepted sense; she did not believe that God had ever
worked among us as a young artisan. These people,
or most of them, believed it, and if pressed, would
affirm it in words. But the visible signs of their
belief were Regent Street or Drury Lane, a little mud
displaced, a little money spent, a little food cooked,
eaten, and forgotten. Inadequate. But in
public who shall express the unseen adequately?
It is private life that holds out the mirror to infinity;
personal intercourse, and that alone, that ever hints
at a personality beyond our daily vision.
“No, I do like Christmas on
the whole,” she announced. “In its
clumsy way, it does approach Peace and Goodwill.
But oh, it is clumsier every year.”
“Is it? I am only used to country Christmases.”
“We are usually in London, and
play the game with vigour—carols at the
Abbey, clumsy midday meal, clumsy dinner for the maids,
followed by Christmas-tree and dancing of poor children,
with songs from Helen. The drawing-room does
very well for that. We put the tree in the powder-closet,
and draw a curtain when the candles are lighted, and
with the looking-glass behind it looks quite pretty.
I wish we might have a powder-closet in our next house.
Of course, the tree has to be very small, and the presents
don’t hang on it. No; the presents reside
in a sort of rocky landscape made of crumpled brown
paper.”
“You spoke of your ‘next
house,’ Miss Schlegel. Then are you leaving
Wickham Place?”
“Yes, in two or three years,
when the lease expires. We must.”
“Have you been there long?”
“All our lives.”
“You will be very sorry to leave it.”
“I suppose so. We scarcely
realise it yet. My father—” She
broke off, for they had reached the stationery department
of the Haymarket Stores, and Mrs. Wilcox wanted to
order some private greeting cards.
“If possible, something distinctive,”
she sighed. At the counter she found a friend,
bent on the same errand, and conversed with her insipidly,
wasting much time. “My husband and our daughter
are motoring.” “Bertha, too?
Oh, fancy, what a coincidence!”
Margaret, though not practical, could
shine in such company as this. While they talked,
she went through a volume of specimen cards, and submitted
one for Mrs. Wilcox’s inspection. Mrs.
Wilcox was delighted—so original, words
so sweet; she would order a hundred like that, and
could never be sufficiently grateful. Then, just
as the assistant was booking the order, she said:
“Do you know, I’ll wait. On second
thoughts, I’ll wait. There’s plenty
of time still, isn’t there, and I shall be able
to get Evie’s opinion.”
They returned to the carriage by devious
paths; when they were in, she said, “But couldn’t
you get it renewed?”
“I beg your pardon?” asked Margaret.
“The lease, I mean.”
“Oh, the lease! Have you
been thinking of that all the time? How very
kind of you!”
“Surely something could be done.”
“No; values have risen too enormously.
They mean to pull down Wickham Place, and build flats
like yours.”
“But how horrible!”
“Landlords are horrible.”
Then she said vehemently: “It
is monstrous, Miss Schlegel; it isn’t right.
I had no idea that this was hanging over you.
I do pity you from the bottom of my heart. To
be parted from your house, your father’s house—it
oughtn’t to be allowed. It is worse than
dying. I would rather die than— Oh,
poor girls! Can what they call civilisation be
right, if people mayn’t die in the room where
they were born? My dear, I am so sorry.”
Margaret did not know what to say.
Mrs. Wilcox had been overtired by the shopping, and
was inclined to hysteria.
“Howards End was nearly pulled
down once. It would have killed me.”
“I—Howards End must
be a very different house to ours. We are fond
of ours, but there is nothing distinctive about it.
As you saw, it is an ordinary London house. We
shall easily find another.”
“So you think.”
“Again my lack of experience,
I suppose!” said Margaret, easing away from
the subject. “I can’t say anything
when you take up that line, Mrs. Wilcox. I wish
I could see myself as you see me— foreshortened
into a backfisch. Quite the ingenue. Very
charming —wonderfully well read for my
age, but incapable—”
Mrs. Wilcox would not be deterred.
“Come down with me to Howards End now,”
she said, more vehemently than ever. “I
want you to see it. You have never seen it.
I want to hear what you say about it, for you do put
things so wonderfully.”
Margaret glanced at the pitiless air
and then at the tired face of her companion.
“Later on I should love it,” she continued,
“but it’s hardly the weather for such an
expedition, and we ought to start when we’re
fresh. Isn’t the house shut up, too?”
She received no answer. Mrs.
Wilcox appeared to be annoyed.
“Might I come some other day?”
Mrs. Wilcox bent forward and tapped
the glass. “Back to Wickham Place, please!”
was her order to the coachman. Margaret had been
snubbed.
“A thousand thanks, Miss Schlegel,
for all your help.”
“Not at all.”
“It is such a comfort to get
the presents off my mind—the Christmas-cards
especially. I do admire your choice.”
It was her turn to receive no answer.
In her turn Margaret became annoyed.
“My husband and Evie will be
back the day after to-morrow. That is why I dragged
you out shopping to-day. I stayed in town chiefly
to shop, but got through nothing, and now he writes
that they must cut their tour short, the weather is
so bad, and the police-traps have been so bad—nearly
as bad as in Surrey. Ours is such a careful chauffeur,
and my husband feels it particularly hard that they
should be treated like road-hogs.”
“Why?”
“Well, naturally he—he isn’t
a road-hog.”
“He was exceeding the speed-limit,
I conclude. He must expect to suffer with the
lower animals.”
Mrs. Wilcox was silenced. In
growing discomfort they drove homewards. The
city seemed Satanic, the narrower streets oppressing
like the galleries of a mine.
No harm was done by the fog to trade,
for it lay high, and the lighted windows of the shops
were thronged with customers. It was rather a
darkening of the spirit which fell back upon itself,
to find a more grievous darkness within. Margaret
nearly spoke a dozen times, but something throttled
her. She felt petty and awkward, and her meditations
on Christmas grew more cynical. Peace? It
may bring other gifts, but is there a single Londoner
to whom Christmas is peaceful? The craving for
excitement and for elaboration has ruined that blessing.
Goodwill? Had she seen any example of it in the
hordes of purchasers? Or in herself? She
had failed to respond to this invitation merely because
it was a little queer and imaginative—she,
whose birthright it was to nourish imagination!
Better to have accepted, to have tired themselves
a little by the journey, than coldly to reply, “Might
I come some other day?” Her cynicism left her.
There would be no other day. This shadowy woman
would never ask her again.
They parted at the Mansions.
Mrs. Wilcox went in after due civilities, and Margaret
watched the tall, lonely figure sweep up the hall
to the lift. As the glass doors closed on it she
had the sense of an imprisonment The beautiful head
disappeared first, still buried in the muff; the long
trailing skirt followed. A woman of undefinable
rarity was going up heavenward, like a specimen in
a bottle. And into what a heaven—a
vault as of hell, sooty black, from which soot descended!
At lunch her brother, seeing her inclined
for silence insisted on talking. Tibby was not
ill-natured, but from babyhood something drove him
to do the unwelcome and the unexpected. Now he
gave her a long account of the day-school that he
sometimes patronised. The account was interesting,
and she had often pressed him for it before, but she
could not attend now, for her mind was focussed on
the invisible. She discerned that Mrs. Wilcox,
though a loving wife and mother, had only one passion
in life—her house—and that the
moment was solemn when she invited a friend to share
this passion with her. To answer “another
day” was to answer as a fool. “Another
day” will do for brick and mortar, but not for
the Holy of Holies into which Howards End had been
transfigured. Her own curiosity was slight.
She had heard more than enough about it in the summer.
The nine windows, the vine, and the wych-elm had no
pleasant connections for her, and she would have preferred
to spend the afternoon at a concert. But imagination
triumphed. While her brother held forth she determined
to go, at whatever cost, and to compel Mrs. Wilcox
to go, too. When lunch was over she stepped over
to the flats.
Mrs. Wilcox had just gone away for the night.
Margaret said that it was of no consequence,
hurried downstairs, and took a hansom to King’s
Cross. She was convinced that the escapade was
important, though it would have puzzled her to say
why. There was question of imprisonment and escape,
and though she did not know the time of the train,
she strained her eyes for St. Pancras’s clock.
Then the clock of King’s Cross
swung into sight, a second moon in that infernal sky,
and her cab drew up at the station. There was
a train for Hilton in five minutes. She took a
ticket, asking in her agitation for a single.
As she did so, a grave and happy voice saluted her
and thanked her.
“I will come if I still may,”
said Margaret, laughing nervously.
“You are coming to sleep, dear,
too. It is in the morning that my house is most
beautiful. You are coming to stop. I cannot
show you my meadow properly except at sunrise.
These fogs”—she pointed at the station
roof—“never spread far. I dare
say they are sitting in the sun in Hertfordshire,
and you will never repent joining them.”
“I shall never repent joining you.”
“It is the same.”
They began the walk up the long platform.
Far at its end stood the train, breasting the darkness
without. They never reached it. Before imagination
could triumph, there were cries of “Mother!
mother!” and a heavy-browed girl darted out of
the cloak-room and seized Mrs. Wilcox by the arm.
“Evie!” she gasped—“Evie,
my pet—”
The girl called, “Father! I say! look who’s
here.”
“Evie, dearest girl, why aren’t you in
Yorkshire?”
“No—motor smash—changed
plans—father’s coming.”
“Why, Ruth!” cried Mr.
Wilcox, joining them. “that in the name of all
that’s wonderful are you doing here, Ruth?”
Mrs. Wilcox had recovered herself.
“Oh, Henry dear!—here’s
a lovely surprise—but let me introduce
—but I think you know Miss Schlegel.”
“Oh yes,” he replied,
not greatly interested. “But how’s
yourself, Ruth?”
“Fit as a fiddle,” she answered gaily.
“So are we, and so was our car,
which ran A1 as far as Ripon, but there a wretched
horse and cart which a fool of a driver—”
“Miss Schlegel, our little outing
must be for another day.”
“I was saying that this fool
of a driver, as the policeman himself admits.”
“Another day, Mrs. Wilcox. Of course.”
“—But as we’ve
insured against third party risks, it won’t so
much matter—”
“—Cart and car being
practically at right angles—”
The voices of the happy family rose
high. Margaret was left alone. No one wanted
her. Mrs. Wilcox walked out of King’s Cross
between her husband and her daughter, listening to
both of them.