The owner of the mediaeval castle
was an Englishman, a Mr. Briggs, who was in London
at the moment and wrote that it had beds enough for
eight people, exclusive of servants, three sitting-rooms,
battlements, dungeons, and electric light. The
rent was £60 for the month, the servants’ wages
were extra, and he wanted references—he
wanted assurances that the second half of his rent
would be paid, the first half being paid in advance,
and he wanted assurances of respectability from a
solicitor, or a doctor, or a clergyman. He was
very polite in his letter, explaining that his desire
for references was what was usual and should be regarded
as a mere formality.
Mrs. Arbuthnot and Mrs. Wilkins had
not thought of references, and they had not dreamed
a rent could be so high. In their minds had
floated sums like three guineas a week; or less, seeing
that the place was small and old.
Sixty pounds for a single month.
It staggered them.
Before Mrs. Arbuthnot’s eyes
rose up boots: endless vistas, all the stout
boots that sixty pounds would buy; and besides the
rent there would be the servants’ wages and
the food, and the railway journeys out and home.
While as for references, these did indeed seem a
stumbling-block; it did seem impossible to give any
without making their plan more public than they had
intended.
They had both—even Mrs.
Arbuthnot, lured for once away from perfect candour
by the realization of the great saving of trouble and
criticism an imperfect explanation would produce—they
had both thought it would be a good plan to give out,
each to her own circle, their circles being luckily
distinct, that each was going to stay with a friend
who had a house in Italy. It would be true as
far as it went— Mrs. Wilkins asserted that
it would be quite true, but Mrs. Arbuthnot thought
it wouldn’t be quite—and it was the
only way, Mrs. Wilkins said, to keep Mellersh even
approximately quiet. To spend any of her money
just on the mere getting to Italy would cause him indignation;
what he would say if he knew she was renting part of
a mediaeval castle on her own account Mrs. Wilkins
preferred not to think. It would take him days
to say it all; and this although it was her very own
money, and not a penny of it had ever been his.
“But I expect,” she said,
“your husband is just the same. I expect
all husbands are alike in the long run.”
Mrs. Arbuthnot said nothing, because
her reason for not wanting Frederick to know was the
exactly opposite one—Frederick would by
only to pleased for her to go, he would not mind it
in the very least; indeed, he would hail such a manifestation
of self-indulgence and worldliness with an amusement
that would hurt, and urge her to have a good time
and not to hurry home with a crushing detachment.
Far better, she thought, to be missed by Mellersh
than to be sped by Frederick. To be missed,
to be needed, from whatever motive, was, she though,
better than the complete loneliness of not being missed
or needed at all.
She therefore said nothing, and allowed
Mrs. Wilkins to leap at her conclusions unchecked.
But they did, both of them, for a whole day feel
that the only thing to be done was to renounce the
mediaeval castle; and it was in arriving at this bitter
decision that they really realized how acute had been
their longing for it.
Then Mrs. Arbuthnot, whose mind was
trained in the finding of ways out of difficulties,
found a way out of the reference difficulty; and simultaneously
Mrs. Wilkins had a vision revealing to her how to
reduce the rent.
Mrs. Arbuthnot’s plan was simple,
and completely successful. She took the whole
of the rent in person to the owner, drawing it out
of her Savings Bank—again she looked furtive
and apologetic, as if the clerk must know the money
was wanted for purposes of self-indulgence—
and, going up with the six ten pound notes in her hand-bag
to the address near the Brompton Oratory where the
owner lived, presented them to him, waiving her right
to pay only half. And when he saw her, and her
parted hair and soft dark eyes and sober apparel, and
heard her grave voice, he told her not to bother about
writing round for those references.
“It’ll be all right,”
he said, scribbling a receipt for the rent. “Do
sit down, won’t you? Nasty day, isn’t
it? You’ll find the old castle has lots
of sunshine, whatever else it hasn’t got.
Husband going?”
Mrs. Arbuthnot, unused to anything
but candour, looked troubled at this question and
began to murmur inarticulately, and the owner at once
concluded that she was a widow—a war one,
of course, for other widows were old—and
that he had been a fool not to guess it.
“Oh, I’m sorry,”
he said, turning red right up to his fair hair.
“I didn’t mean—h’m, h’m,
h’m—”
He ran his eye over the receipt he
had written. “Yes, I think that’s
all right,” he said, getting up and giving it
to her. “Now,” he added, taking
the six notes she held out and smiling, for Mrs. Arbuthnot
was agreeable to look at, “I’m richer,
and you’re happier. I’ve got money,
and you’ve got San Salvatore. I wonder
got is best.”
“I think you know,” said
Mrs. Arbuthnot with her sweet smile.
He laughed and opened the door for
her. It was a pity the interview was over.
He would have liked to ask her to lunch with him.
She made him think of his mother, of his nurse, of
all things kind and comforting, besides having the
attraction of not being his mother or his nurse.
“I hope you’ll like the
old place,” he said, holding her hand a minute
at the door. The very feel of her hand, even
through its glove, was reassuring; it was the sort
of hand, he thought, that children would like to hold
in the dark. “In April, you know, it’s
simply a mass of flowers. And then there’s
the sea. You must wear white. You’ll
fit in very well. There are several portraits
of you there.”
“Portraits?”
“Madonnas, you know. There’s
one on the stairs really exactly like you.”
Mrs. Arbuthnot smiled and said good-bye
and thanked him. Without the least trouble and
at once she had got him placed in his proper category:
he was an artist and of an effervescent temperament.
She shook hands and left, and he wished
she hadn’t. After she was gone he supposed
that he ought to have asked for those references,
if only because she would think him so unbusiness-like
not to, but he could as soon have insisted on references
from a saint in a nimbus as from that grave, sweet
lady.
Rose Arbuthnot.
Her letter, making the appointment, lay on the table.
Pretty name.
That difficulty, then, was overcome.
But there still remained the other one, the really
annihilating effect of the expense on the nest-eggs,
and especially on Mrs. Wilkins’s, which was in
size, compared with Mrs. Arbuthnot’s, as the
egg of the plover to that of the duck; and this in
its turn was overcome by the vision vouchsafed to
Mrs. Wilkins, revealing to her the steps to be taken
for its overcoming. Having got San Salvatore—the
beautiful, the religious name, fascinated them—they
in their turn would advertise in the Agony Column
of The Times, and would inquire after two more ladies,
of similar desires to their own, to join them and
share the expenses.
At once the strain of the next-eggs
would be reduced from half to a quarter. Mrs.
Wilkins was prepared to fling her entire egg into the
adventure, but she realized that if it were to cost
even sixpence over her ninety pounds her position
would be terrible. Imagine going to Mellersh
and saying, “I owe.” It would be
awful enough if some day circumstances forced her
to say, “I have no nest-egg,” but at least
she would be supported in such a case by the knowledge
that the egg had been her own. She therefore,
though prepared to fling her last penny into the adventure,
was not prepared to fling into it a single farthing
that was not demonstrably her own; and she felt that
if her share of the rent was reduced to fifteen pounds
only, she would have a safe margin for the other expenses.
Also they might economise very much on food—gather
olives off their own trees and eat them, for instance,
and perhaps catch fish.
Of course, as they pointed out to
each other, they could reduce the rent to an almost
negligible sum by increasing the number of sharers;
they could have six more ladies instead of two if they
wanted to, seeing that there were eight beds.
But supposing the eight beds were distributed in
couples in four rooms, it would not be altogether
what they wanted, to find themselves shut up at night
with a stranger. Besides they thought that perhaps
having so many would not be quite so peaceful.
After all, they were going to San Salvatore for peace
and rest and joy, and six more ladies, especially
if they got into one’s bedroom, might a little
interfere with that.
However, there seemed to be only two
ladies in England at that moment who had any wish
to join them, for they had only two answers to their
advertisement.
“Well, we only want two,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, quickly recovering, for she had
imagined a great rush.
“I think a choice would have
been a good thing,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“You mean because then we needn’t
have had Lady Caroline Dester.”
“I didn’t say that,” gently protested
Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“We needn’t have her,”
said Mrs. Wilkins. “Just one more person
would help us a great deal with the rent. We’re
not obliged to have two.”
“But why should we not have
her? She seems really quite what we want.”
“Yes—she does from
her letter,” said Mrs. Wilkins doubtfully.
She felt she would be terribly shy
of Lady Caroline. Incredible as it may seem,
seeing how they get into everything, Mrs. Wilkins had
never come across any members of the aristocracy.
They interviewed Lady Caroline, and
they interviewed the other applicant, a Mrs. Fisher.
Lady Caroline came to the club in
Shaftesbury Avenue, and appeared to be wholly taken
up by one great longing, a longing to get away from
everybody she had ever known. When she saw the
club, and Mrs. Arbuthnot, and Mrs. Wilkins, she was
sure that here was exactly what she wanted.
She would be in Italy—a place she adored;
she would not be in hotels—places she loathed;
she would not be staying with friends—persons
she disliked; and she would be in the company of strangers
who would never mention a single person she knew, for
the simple reason that they had not, could not have,
and would not come across them. She asked a
few questions about the fourth woman, and was satisfied
with the answers. Mrs. Fisher, of Prince of Wales
Terrace. A widow. She too would be unacquainted
with any of her friends. Lady Caroline did not
even know where Prince of Wales Terrace was.
“It’s in London,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Is it?” said Lady Caroline.
It all seemed most restful.
Mrs. Fisher was unable to come to
the club because, she explained by letter, she could
not walk without a stick; therefore Mrs. Arbuthnot
and Mrs. Wilkins went to her.
“But if she can’t come
to the club how can she go to Italy?” wondered
Mrs. Wilkins, aloud.
“We shall hear that from her
own lips,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
From Mrs. Fisher’s lips they
merely heard, in reply to delicate questioning, that
sitting in trains was not walking about; and they
knew that already. Except for the stick, however,
she appeared to be a most desirable fourth—quiet,
educated, elderly. She was much older than they
or Lady Caroline—Lady Caroline had informed
them she was twenty-eight—but not so old
as to have ceased to be active-minded. She was
very respectable indeed, and still wore a complete
suit of black though her husband had died, she told
them, eleven years before. Her house was full
of signed photographs of illustrious Victorian dead,
all of whom she said she had known when she was little.
Her father had been an eminent critic, and in his
house she had seen practically everybody who was anybody
in letters and art. Carlyle had scowled at her;
Matthew Arnold had held her on his knee; Tennyson had
sonorously rallied her on the length of her pig-tail.
She animatedly showed them the photographs, hung
everywhere on her walls, pointing out the signatures
with her stick, and she neither gave any information
about her own husband nor asked for any about the
husbands of her visitors; which was the greatest comfort.
Indeed, she seemed to think that they also were widows,
for on inquiring who the fourth lady was to be, and
being told it was a Lady Caroline Dester, she said,
“Is she a widow too?” And on their explaining
that she was not, because she had not yet been married,
observed with abstracted amiability, “All in
good time.”
But Mrs. Fisher’s very abstractedness—and
she seemed to be absorbed chiefly in the interesting
people she used to know and in their memorial photographs,
and quite a good part of the interview was taken up
by reminiscent anecdote of Carlyle, Meredith, Matthew
Arnold, Tennyson, and a host of others—her
very abstractedness was a recommendation. She
only asked, she said, to be allowed to sit quiet in
the sun and remember. That was all Mrs. Arbuthnot
and Mrs. Wilkins asked of their sharers. It
was their idea of a perfect sharer that she should
sit quiet in the sun and remember, rousing herself
on Saturday evenings sufficiently to pay her share.
Mrs. Fisher was very fond, too, she said, of flowers,
and once when she was spending a week-end with her
father at Box Hill—
“Who lived at Box Hill?”
interrupted Mrs. Wilkins, who hung on Mrs. Fisher’s
reminiscences, intensely excited by meeting somebody
who had actually been familiar with all the really
and truly and undoubtedly great—actually
seen them, heard them talking, touched them.
Mrs. Fisher looked at her over the
top of her glasses in some surprise. Mrs. Wilkins,
in her eagerness to tear the heart out quickly of
Mrs. Fisher’s reminiscences, afraid that at any
moment Mrs. Arbuthnot would take her away and she
wouldn’t have heard half, had already interrupted
several times with questions which appeared ignorant
to Mrs. Fisher.
“Meredith of course,”
said Mrs. Fisher rather shortly. “I remember
a particular week-end”—she continued.
“My father often took me, but I always remember
this week-end particularly—”
“Did you know Keats?” eagerly interrupted
Mrs. Wilkins.
Mrs. Fisher, after a pause, said with
sub-acid reserve that she had been unacquainted with
both Keats and Shakespeare.
“Oh of course—how
ridiculous of me!” cried Mrs. Wilkins, flushing
scarlet. “It’s because”—she
floundered—“it’s because the
immortals somehow still seem alive, don’t they—as
if they were here, going to walk into the room in
another minute—and one forgets they are
dead. In fact one knows perfectly well that they’re
not dead—not nearly so dead as you and
I even now,” she assured Mrs. Fisher, who observed
her over the top of her glasses.
“I thought I saw Keats the other
day,” Mrs. Wilkins incoherently proceeded, driven
on by Mrs. Fisher’s look over the top of her
glasses. “In Hampstead—crossing
the road in front of that house—you know—the
house where he lived—”
Mrs. Arbuthnot said they must be going.
Mrs. Fisher did nothing to prevent them.
“I really thought I saw him,”
protested Mrs. Wilkins, appealing for belief first
to one and then to the other while waves of colour
passed over her face, and totally unable to stop because
of Mrs. Fisher’s glasses and the steady eyes
looking at her over their tops. “I believe
I did see him—he was dressed in a—”
Even Mrs. Arbuthnot looked at her
now, and in her gentlest voice said they would be
late for lunch.
It was at this point that Mrs. Fisher
asked for references. She had no wish to find
herself shut up for four weeks with somebody who saw
things. It is true that there were three sitting-rooms,
besides the garden and the battlements at San Salvatore,
so that there would be opportunities of withdrawal
from Mrs. Wilkins; but it would be disagreeable to
Mrs. Fisher, for instance, if Mrs. Wilkins were suddenly
to assert that she saw Mr. Fisher. Mr. Fisher
was dead; let him remain so. She had no wish
to be told he was walking about the garden.
The only reference she really wanted, for she was much
too old and firmly seated in her place in the world
for questionable associates to matter to her, was
one with regard to Mrs. Wilkins’s health.
Was her health quite normal? Was she an ordinary,
everyday, sensible woman? Mrs. Fisher felt that
if she were given even one address she would be able
to find out what she needed. So she asked for
references, and her visitors appeared to be so much
taken aback—Mrs. Wilkins, indeed, was instantly
sobered—that she added, “It is usual.”
Mrs. Wilkins found her speech first.
“But,” she said “aren’t we
the ones who ought to ask for some from you?”
And this seemed to Mrs. Arbuthnot
too the right attitude. Surely it was they who
were taking Mrs. Fisher into their party, and not Mrs.
Fisher who was taking them into it?
For answer Mrs. Fisher, leaning on
her stick, went to the writing-table and in a firm
hand wrote down three names and offered them to Mrs.
Wilkins, and the names were so respectable, more, they
were so momentous, they were so nearly august, that
just to read them was enough. The President
of the Royal Academy, the Archbishop of Canterbury,
and the Governor of the Bank of England—who
would dare disturb such personages in their meditations
with inquires as to whether a female friend of theirs
was all she should be?
“They have know me since I was
little,” said Mrs. Fisher— everybody
seemed to have known Mrs. Fisher since or when she
was little.
“I don’t think references
are nice things at all between—between
ordinary decent women,” burst out Mrs. Wilkins,
made courageous by being, as she felt, at bay; for
she very well knew that the only reference she could
give without getting into trouble was Shoolbred, and
she had little confidence in that, as it would be entirely
based on Mellersh’s fish. “We’re
not business people. We needn’t distrust
each other—”
And Mrs. Arbuthnot said, with a dignity
that yet was sweet, “I’m afraid references
do bring an atmosphere into our holiday plan that
isn’t quite what we want, and I don’t think
we’ll take yours up or give you any ourselves.
So that I suppose you won’t wish to join us.”
And she held out her hand in good-bye.
Then Mrs. Fisher, her gaze diverted
to Mrs. Arbuthnot, who inspired trust and liking even
in Tube officials, felt that she would be idiotic
to lose the opportunity of being in Italy in the particular
conditions offered, and that she and this calm-browed
woman between them would certainly be able to curb
the other one when she had her attacks. So she
said, taking Mrs. Arbuthnot’s offered hand, “Very
well. I waive references.”
She waived references.
The two as they walked to the station
in Kensington High Street could not help thinking
that this way of putting it was lofty. Even
Mrs. Arbuthnot, spendthrift of excuses for lapses,
thought Mrs. Fisher might have used other words; and
Mrs. Wilkins, by the time she got to the station,
and the walk and the struggle on the crowded pavement
with other people’s umbrellas had warmed her
blood, actually suggested waiving Mrs. Fisher.
“If there is any waiving to
be done, do let us be the ones who waive,” she
said eagerly.
But Mrs. Arbuthnot, as usual, held
on to Mrs. Wilkins; and presently, having cooled down
in the train, Mrs. Wilkins announced that at San Salvatore
Mrs. Fisher would find her level. “I see
her finding her level there,” she said, her
eyes very bright.
Whereupon Mrs. Arbuthnot, sitting
with her quiet hands folded, turned over in her mind
how best she could help Mrs. Wilkins not to see quite
so much; or at least, if she must see, to see in silence.