It was Lady Mallowe who perceived
the moment when he became the fashion. The Duke
of Stone called with the immense formality he had
described, and his visit was neither brief nor dull.
A little later Tembarom with his guests dined at
Stone Hover, and the dinner was further removed from
dullness than any one of numerous past dinners always
noted for being the most agreeable the neighborhood
afforded. The duke managed his guest as an impresario
might have managed his tenor, though this was done
with subtly concealed methods. He had indeed
a novelty to offer which had been discussed with much
uncertainty of point of view. He presented it
to an only languidly entertained neighborhood as
a trouvaille of his own choice. Here was drama,
here was atmosphere, here was charm verging in its
character upon the occult. You would not see
it if you were not a collector of such values.
“Nobody will be likely to see
him as he is unless he is pointed out to them,”
was what he said to his daughters. “But
being bored to death,— we are all bored,—once
adroitly assisted to suspect him of being alluring,
most of them will spring upon him and clasp him to
their wearied breasts. I haven’t the least
idea what will happen afterward. I shall in
fact await the result with interest.”
Being told Palliser’s story
of the “Ladies,” he listened, holding the
tips of his fingers together, and wearing an expression
of deep interest slightly baffled in its nature.
It was Lady Edith who related the anecdote to him.
“Now,” he said, “it
would be very curious and complicating if that were
true; but I don’t believe it is. Palliser,
of course, likes to tell a good story. I shall
be able to discover in time whether it is true or
not; but at present I don’t believe it.”
Following the dinner party at Stone
Hover came many others. All the well-known carriages
began to roll up the avenue to Temple Barholm.
The Temple Barholm carriages also began to roll down
the avenue and between the stone griffins on their
way to festive gatherings of varied order. Burrill
and the footmen ventured to reconsider their early
plans for giving warning. It wasn’t so bad
if the country was going to take him up.
“Do you see what is happening?”
Lady Mallowe said to Joan. “The man is
becoming actually popular.”
“He is popular as a turn at
a music hall is,” answered Joan. “He
will be dropped as he was taken up.”
“There’s something about
him they like, and he represents what everybody most
wants. For God’s sake! Joan, don’t
behave like a fool this time. The case is more
desperate. There is nothing else—
nothing.”
“There never was,” said
Joan, ” and I know the desperateness of the case.
How long are you going to stay here?”
“I am going to stay for some
time. They are not conventional people.
It can be managed very well. We are relatives.”
“Will you stay,” inquired
Joan in a low voice, “until they ask you to
remove yourself?”
Lady Mallowe smiled an agreeably subtle smile.
“Not quite that,” she
answered. “Miss Alicia would never have
the courage to suggest it. It takes courage
and sophistication to do that sort of thing.
Mr. Temple Barholm evidently wants us to remain.
He will be willing to make as much of the relationship
as we choose to let him.”
“Do you choose to let him make
as much of it as will establish us here for weeks—or
months?” Joan asked, her low voice shaking a
little.
“That will depend entirely upon
circumstances. It will, in fact, depend entirely
upon you,” said Lady Mallowe, her lips setting
themselves into a straight, thin line.
For an appreciable moment Joan was
silent; but after it she lost her head and whirled
about.
“I shall go away,” she cried.
“Where?” asked Lady Mallowe.
“Back to London.”
“How much money have you?”
asked her mother. She knew she had none.
She was always sufficiently shrewd to see that she
had none. If the girl had had a pound a week
of her own, her mother had always realized that she
would have been unmanageable. After the Jem Temple
Barholm affair she would have been capable of going
to live alone in slums. As it was, she knew
enough to be aware that she was too handsome to walk
out into Piccadilly without a penny in her pocket;
so it had been just possible to keep her indoors.
“How much money have you?”
she repeated quietly. This was the way in which
their unbearable scenes began—the scenes
which the servants passing the doors paused to listen
to in the hope that her ladyship would forget that
raised voices may be heard by the discreet outsider.
“How much money have you?” she said again.
Joan looked at her; this time it was
for about five seconds. She turned her back
on her and walked out of the room. Shortly afterward
Lady Mallowe saw her walking down the avenue in the
rain, which was beginning to fall.
She had left the house because she
dared not stay in it. Once out in the park,
she folded her long purple cloak about her and pulled
her soft purple felt hat down over her brows, walking
swiftly under the big trees without knowing where
she intended to go before she returned. She
liked the rain, she liked the heavy clouds; she wore
her dark purples because she felt a fantastic, secret
comfort in calling them her mourning —her
mourning which she would wear forevermore.
No one could know so well as herself
how desperate from her own point of view the case
was. She had long known that her mother would
not hesitate for a moment before any chance of a
second marriage which would totally exclude her daughter
from her existence. Why should she, after all,
Joan thought? They had always been antagonists.
The moment of chance had been looming on the horizon
for months. Sir Moses Monaldini had hovered
about fitfully and evidently doubtfully at first,
more certainly and frequently of late, but always with
a clearly objecting eye cast askance upon herself.
With determination and desire to establish a social
certainty, astute enough not to care specially for
young beauty and exactions he did not purpose to submit
to, and keen enough to see the advantage of a handsome
woman with bitter reason to value what was offered
to her in the form of a luxurious future, Sir Moses
was moving toward action, though with proper caution.
He would have no penniless daughters hanging about
scowling and sneering. None of that for him.
And the ripest apple upon the topmost bow in the
highest wind would not drop more readily to his feet
than her mother would, Joan knew with sharp and shamed
burnings.
As the rain fell, she walked in her
purple cloak, unpaid for, and her purple hat, for
which they had been dunned with threatening insults,
and knew that she did not own and could not earn
a penny. She could not dig, and to beg she was
ashamed, and all the more horribly because she had
been a beggar of the meaner order all her life.
It made her sick to think of the perpetual visits
they had made where they were not wanted, of the
times when they had been politely bundled out of
places, of the methods which had been used to induce
shop-keepers to let them run up bills. For years
her mother and she had been walking advertisements
of smart shops because both were handsome, wore clothes
well, and carried them where they would be seen and
talked about. Now this would be all over, since
it had been Lady Mallowe who had managed all details.
Thrown upon her own resources, Joan would have none
of them, even though she must walk in rags.
Her education had prepared her for only one thing—to
marry well, if luck were on her side. It had
never been on her side. If she had never met Jem,
she would have married somebody, since that would
have been better than the inevitable last slide into
an aging life spent in cheap lodgings with her mother.
But Jem had been the beginning and the end.
She bit her lips as she walked, and
suddenly tears swept down her cheeks and dripped
on to the purple cloth folded over her breast.
“And he sits in Jem’s
place! And every day that common, foolish stare
will follow me!” she said.
He sat, it was true, in the place
Jem Temple Barholm would have occupied if he had
been a living man, and he looked at her a good deal.
Perhaps he sometimes unconsciously stared because she
made him think of many things. But if she had
been in a state of mind admitting of judicial fairness,
she would have been obliged to own that it was not
quite a foolish stare. Absorbed, abstracted, perhaps,
but it was not foolish. Sometimes, on the contrary,
it was searching and keen.
Of course he was doing his best to
please her. Of all the “Ladies,” it
seemed evident that he was most attracted by her.
He tried to talk to her despite her unending rebuffs,
he followed her about and endeavored to interest
her, he presented a hide-bound unsensitiveness when
she did her worst. Perhaps he did not even know
that she was being icily rude. He was plainly
“making up to her” after the manner of
his class. He was perhaps playing the part of
the patient adorer who melted by noble long-suffering
in novels distinguished by heroes of humble origin.
She had reached the village when the
rain changed its mind, and without warning began
to pour down as if the black cloud passing overhead
had suddenly opened. She was wondering if she
would not turn in somewhere for shelter until the
worst was over when a door opened and Tembarom ran
out with an umbrella.
“Come in to the Hibblethwaites
cottage, Lady Joan,” he said. “This
will be over directly.”
He did not affectionately hustle her
in by the arm as he would have hustled in Miss Alicia,
but he closely guarded her with the umbrella until
he guided her inside.
“Thank you,” she said.
The first object she became aware
of was a thin face with pointed chin and ferret eyes
peering at her round the end of a sofa, then a sharp
voice.
“Tak’ off her cloak an’
shake th’ rain off it in th’ wash ’us’,”
it said. “Mother an’ Aunt Susan’s
out. Let him unbutton it fer thee.”
“I can unbutton it myself, thank
you,” said Lady Joan. Tembarom took it
when she had unbuttoned it. He took it from her
shoulders before she had time to stop him. Then
he walked into the tiny “wash ’us”
and shook it thoroughly. He came back and hung
it on a chair before the fire.
Tummas was leaning back in his pillows
and gazing at her.
“I know tha name,” he
said. “He towd me,” with a jerk of
the head toward Tembarom.
“Did he?” replied Lady Joan without interest.
A flaringly illustrated New York paper
was spread out upon his sofa. He pushed it aside
and pulled the shabby atlas toward him. It fell
open at a map of North America as if through long
habit.
“Sit thee down,” he ordered.
Tembarom had stood watching them both.
“I guess you’d better not do that,”
he suggested to Tummas.
“Why not? ” said the boy, sharply.
“She’s th’ wench he was goin’
to marry. It’s th’ same as if he’d
married her. If she wur his widder, she’d
want to talk about him. Widders allus wants to
talk. Why shouldn’t she? Women’s
women. He’d ha’ wanted to talk about
her.”
“Who is `he’?” asked Joan with stiff
lips.
“The Temple Barholm as’ ’d be here
if he was na.”
Joan turned to Tembarom.
“Do you come here to talk to this boy about
him?” she said. “How dare you!”
Tummas’s eyes snapped; his voice snapped also.
“He knew next to nowt about
him till I towd him,” he said. “Then
he came to ax me things an’ foind out more.
He knows as much as I do now. Us sits here an’
talks him over.”
Lady Joan still addressed Tembarom.
“What interest can you have
in the man who ought to be in your place?”
she asked. “What possible interest?”
“Well,” he answered awkwardly,
“because he ought to be, I suppose. Ain’t
that reason enough?”
He had never had to deal with women
who hated him and who were angry and he did not know
exactly what to say. He had known very few women,
and he had always been good- natured with them and
won their liking in some measure. Also, there
was in his attitude toward this particular woman
a baffled feeling that he could not make her understand
him. She would always think of him as an enemy
and believe he meant things he did not mean.
If he had been born and educated in her world, he could
have used her own language; but he could use only
his own, and there were so many things he must not
say for a time at least.
“Do you not realize,”
she said, “that you are presuming upon your
position—that you and this boy are taking
liberties?”
Tummas broke in wholly without compunction.
“I’ve taken liberties
aw my loife,” he stated, “an’ I’m
goin’ to tak’ ‘em till I dee.
They’re th’ on’y things I can tak’,
lyin’ here crippled, an’ I’m goin’
to tak’ ’em.”
“Stop that, Tummas! ” said Tembarom
with friendly authority. “She doesn’t
catch on, and you don’t catch on, either.
You’re both of you ’way off. Stop
it!”
“I thought happen she could
tell me things I didn’t know,” protested
Tummas, throwing himself back on his pillows.
“If she conna, she conna, an’ if she
wunnot, she wunnot. Get out wi’ thee!”
he said to Joan. “I dunnot want thee about
th’ place.”
“Say,” said Tembarom, “shut up!”
“I am going,” said Lady Joan and turned
to open the door.
The rain was descending in torrents,
but she passed swiftly out into its deluge walking
as rapidly as she could. She thought she cared
nothing about the rain, but it dashed in her face
and eyes, taking her breath away, and she had need
of breath when her heart was beating with such fierceness.
“If she wur his widder,” the boy had said.
Even chance could not let her alone
at one of her worst moments. She walked faster
and faster because she was afraid Tembarom would follow
her, and in a few minutes she heard him splashing
behind her, and then he was at her side, holding
the umbrella over her head.
“You’re a good walker,”
he said, “but I’m a sprinter. I trained
running after street cars and catching the ‘L’
in New York.”
She had so restrained her miserable
hysteric impulse to break down and utterly humiliate
herself under the unexpected blow of the episode in
the cottage that she had had no breath to spare when
she left the room, and her hurried effort to escape
had left her so much less that she did not speak.
“I’ll tell you something,”
he went on. “He’s a little freak,
but you can’t blame him much. Don’t
be mad at him. He’s never moved from that
corner since he was born, I guess, and he’s
got nothing to do or to think of but just hearing
what’s happening outside. He’s sort
of crazy curious, and when he gets hold of a thing
that suits him he just holds on to it till the last
bell rings.”
She said nothing whatever, and he
paused a moment because he wanted to think over the
best way to say the next thing.
“Mr. James Temple Barholm “—he
ventured it with more delicacy of desire not to seem
to “take liberties” than she would have
credited him with—“saw his mother
sitting with him in her arms at the cottage door
a week or so after he was born. He stopped at
the gate and talked to her about him, and he left
him a sovereign. He’s got it now. It
seems a fortune to him. He’s made a sort
of idol of him. That’s why he talks like
he does. I wouldn’t let it make me mad if
I were you.”
He did not know that she could not
have answered him if she would, that she felt that
if he did not stop she might fling herself down upon
the wet heather and wail aloud.
“You don’t like me,”
he began after they had walked a few steps farther.
“You don’t like me.”
This was actually better. It
choked back the sobs rising in her throat. The
stupid shock of it, his tasteless foolishness, helped
her by its very folly to a sort of defense against
the disastrous wave of emotion she might not have
been able to control. She gathered herself together.
“It must be an unusual experience,” she
answered.
“Well, it is—sort
of,” he said, but in a manner curiously free
from fatuous swagger. “I’ve had
luck that way. I guess it’s been because
I’d got to make friends so as I could
earn a living. It seems sort of queer to know
that some one’s got a grouch against me that—that
I can’t get away with.”
She looked up the avenue to see how
much farther they must walk together, since she was
not “a sprinter” and could not get away
from him. She thought she caught a glimpse through
the trees of a dog-cart driven by a groom, and hoped
she had not mistaken and that it was driving in their
direction.
“It must, indeed,” she
said, “though I am not sure I quite understand
what a grouch is.”
“When you’ve got a grouch
against a fellow,” he explained impersonally,
“you want to get at him. You want to make
him feel like a mutt; and a mutt’s the worst
kind of a fool. You’ve got one against
me.”
She looked before her between narrowed
lids and faintly smiled—the most disagreeable
smile she was capable of. And yet for some too
extraordinary reason he went on. But she had
seen men go on before this when all the odds were
against them. Sometimes their madness took them
this way.
“I knew there was a lot against
me when I came here,” he persisted. “I
should have been a fool if I hadn’t. I
knew when you came that I was up against a pretty
hard proposition; but I thought perhaps if I got
busy and showed you—you’ve got
to show a person—”
“Showed me what?” she asked contemptuously.
“Showed you—well—me,”
he tried to explain.
“You!”
“And that I wanted to be friends,” he
added candidly.
Was the man mad? Did he realize
nothing? Was he too thick of skin even to see?
“Friends! You and I?”
The words ought to have scorched him, pachyderm though
he was.
“I thought you’d give me a chance—a
sort of chance—”
She stopped short on the avenue.
“You did?”
She had not been mistaken. The
dog-cart had rounded the far-off curve and was coming
toward them. And the man went on talking.
“You’ve felt every minute
that I was in a place that didn’t belong to
me. You know that if the man that it did belong
to was here, you’d be here with him. You
felt as if I’d robbed him of it—and
I’d robbed you. It was your home—yours.
You hated me too much to think of anything else.
Suppose— suppose there was a way I could
give it back to you—make it your home
again.”
His voice dropped and was rather unsteady.
The fool, the gross, brutal, vulgar, hopeless fool!
He thought this was the way to approach her, to lead
her to listen to his proposal of marriage! Not
for a second did she guess that they were talking
at cross purposes. She did not know that as
he kept himself steady under her contemptuousness he
was thinking that Ann would have to own that he had
been up against it hard and plenty while the thing
was going on.
“I’m always up against
it when I’m talking to you,” he said.
“You get me rattled. There’s things
I want to talk about and ask you. Suppose you
give me a chance, and let us start out by being sort
of friends.”
“I am staying in your house,”
she answered in a deadly voice, “and I cannot
go away because my mother will not let me. You
can force yourself upon me, if you choose, because
I cannot help it; but understand once for all that
I will not give you your ridiculous chance.
And I will not utter one word to you when I can avoid
it.”
He was silent for a moment and seemed
to be thinking rather deeply. She realized now
that he saw the nearing dog-cart.
“You won’t. Then
it’s up to me,” he said. Then with
a change of tone, he added, “I’ll stop
the cart and tell the man to drive you to the house.
I’m not going to force myself on you, as you
call it. It’d be no use. Perhaps
it’ll come all right in the end.”
He made a sign to the groom, who hastened
his horse’s pace and drew up when he reached
them.
“Take this lady back to the house,” he
said.
The groom, who was a new arrival,
began to prepare to get down and give up his place.
“You needn’t do that,” said Tembarom.
“Won’t you get up and take the reins,
sir?” the man asked uncertainly.
“No. I can’t drive. You’ll
have to do it. I’ll walk.”
And to the groom’s amazement,
they left him standing under the trees looking after
them.
“It’s up to me,” he was saying.
“The whole durned thing’s up to me.”