It had been arranged that Mrs. Arbuthnot
and Mrs. Wilkins, traveling together, should arrive
at San Salvatore on the evening of March 31st—the
owner, who told them how to get there, appreciated
their disinclination to begin their time in it on April
1st—and Lady Caroline and Mrs. Fisher,
as yet unacquainted and therefore under no obligations
to bore each other on the journey, for only towards
the end would they find out by a process of sifting
who they were, were to arrive on the mourning of April
2nd. In this way everything would be got nicely
ready for the two who seemed, in spite of the equality
of the sharing, yet to have something about them of
guests.
There were disagreeable incidents
towards the end of March, when Mrs. Wilkins, her heart
in her mouth and her face a mixture of guilt, terror
and determination, told her husband that she had been
invited to Italy, and he declined to believe it.
Of course he declined to believe it. Nobody
had ever invited his wife to Italy before. There
was no precedent. He required proofs.
The only proof was Mrs. Arbuthnot, and Mrs. Wilkins
had produced her; but after what entreaties, what
passionate persuading! Mrs. Arbuthnot had not
imagined she would have to face Mr. Wilkins and say
things to him that were short of the truth, and it
brought home to her what she had for some time suspected,
that she was slipping more and more away from God.
Indeed, the whole of March was filled
with unpleasant, anxious moments. It was an
uneasy month. Mrs. Arbuthnot’s conscience,
made super-sensitive by years of pampering, could
not reconcile what she was doing with its own high
standard of what was right. It gave her little
peace. It nudged her at her prayers. It
punctuated her entreaties for divine guidance with
disconcerting questions, such as, “Are you not
a hypocrite? Do you really mean that?
Would you not, frankly, be disappointed if that prayer
were granted?”
The prolonged wet, raw weather was
on the side too of her conscience, producing far more
sickness than usual among the poor. They had
bronchitis; they had fevers; there was no end to the
distress. And here she was going off, spending
precious money on going off, simply and solely to
be happy. One woman. One woman being happy,
and these piteous multitudes . . .
She was unable to look the vicar in
the face. He did not know, nobody knew, what
she was going to do, and from the very beginning she
was unable to look anybody in the face. She excused
herself from making speeches appealing for money.
How could she stand up and ask people for money when
she herself was spending so much on her own selfish
pleasure? Nor did it help her or quiet her that,
having actually told Frederick, in her desire to make
up for what she was squandering, that she would be
grateful if he would let her have some money, he instantly
gave her a cheque for £100. He asked no questions.
She was scarlet. He looked at her a moment and
then looked away. It was a relief to Frederick
that she should take some money. She gave it
all immediately to the organization she worked with,
and found herself more tangled in doubts than ever.
Mrs. Wilkins, on the contrary, had
no doubts. She was quite certain that it was
a most proper thing to have a holiday, and altogether
right and beautiful to spend one’s own hard-collected
savings on being happy.
“Think how much nicer we shall
be when we come back,” she said to Mrs. Arbuthnot,
encouraging that pale lady.
No, Mrs. Wilkins had no doubts, but
she had fears; and March was for her too an anxious
month, with the unconscious Mr. Wilkins coming back
daily to his dinner and eating his fish in the silence
of imagined security.
Also things happened so awkwardly.
It really is astonishing, how awkwardly they happen.
Mrs. Wilkins, who was very careful all this month
to give Mellersh only the food he liked, buying it
and hovering over its cooking with a zeal more than
common, succeeded so well the Mellersh was pleased;
definitely pleased; so much pleased that he began
to think that he might, after all, have married the
right wife instead of, as he had frequently suspected,
the wrong one. The result was that on the third
Sunday in the month—Mrs. Wilkins had made
up her trembling mind that on the fourth Sunday, there
being five in that March and it being on the fifth
of them that she and Mrs. Arbuthnot were to start,
she would tell Mellersh of her invitation—on
the third Sunday, then, after a very well-cooked lunch
in which the Yorkshire pudding had melted in his mouth
and the apricot tart had been so perfect that he ate
it all, Mellersh, smoking his cigar by the brightly
burning fire the while hail gusts banged on the window,
said “I am thinking of taking you to Italy for
Easter.” And paused for her astounded
and grateful ecstasy.
None came. The silence in the
room, except for the hail hitting the windows and
the gay roar of the fire, was complete. Mrs.
Wilkins could not speak. She was dumbfounded.
The next Sunday was the day she had meant to break
her news to him, and she had not yet even prepared
the form of words in which she would break it.
Mr. Wilkins, who had not been abroad
since before the war, and was noticing with increasing
disgust, as week followed week of wind and rain, the
peculiar persistent vileness of the weather, and slowly
conceived a desire to get away from England for Easter.
He was doing very well in his business. He
could afford a trip. Switzerland was useless
in April. There was a familiar sound about Easter
in Italy. To Italy he would go; and as it would
cause comment if he did not take his wife, take her
he must—besides, she would be useful; a
second person was always useful in a country whose
language one did not speak for holding things, for
waiting with the luggage.
He had expected an explosion of gratitude
and excitement. The absence of it was incredible.
She could not, he concluded, have heard. Probably
she was absorbed in some foolish day-dream. It
was regrettable how childish she remained.
He turned his head—their
chairs were in front of the fire—and looked
at her. She was staring straight into the fire,
and it was no doubt the fire that made her face so
red.
“I am thinking,” he repeated,
raising his clear, cultivated voice and speaking with
acerbity, for inattention at such a moment was deplorable,
“of taking you to Italy for Easter. Did
you not hear me?”
Yes, she had heard him, and she had
been wondering at the extraordinary coincidence—really
most extraordinary—she was just going to
tell him how—how she had been invited—a
friend had invited her—Easter, too—Easter
was in April, wasn’t it?—–her
friend had a— had a house there.
In fact Mrs. Wilkins, driven by terror,
guilt and surprise, had been more incoherent if possible
than usual.
It was a dreadful afternoon.
Mellersh, profoundly indignant, besides having his
intended treat coming back on him like a blessing to
roost, cross-examined her with the utmost severity.
He demanded that she refuse the invitation.
He demanded that, since she had so outrageously accepted
it without consulting him, she should write and cancel
her acceptance. Finding himself up against an
unsuspected, shocking rock of obstinacy in her, he
then declined to believe she had been invited to Italy
at all. He declined to believe in this Mrs.
Arbuthnot, of whom till that moment he had never heard;
and it was only when the gentle creature was brought
round—with such difficulty, with such a
desire on her part to throw the whole thing up rather
than tell Mr. Wilkins less than the truth—and
herself endorsed his wife’s statements that
he was able to give them credence. He could not
but believe Mrs. Arbuthnot. She produced the
precise effect on him that she did on Tube officials.
She hardly needed to say anything. But that
made no difference to her conscience, which knew and
would not let her forget that she had given him an
incomplete impression. “Do you,”
asked her conscience, “see any real difference
between an incomplete impression and a completely
stated lie? God sees none.”
The remainder of March was a confused
bad dream. Both Mrs. Arbuthnot and Mrs. Wilkins
were shattered; try as they would not to, both felt
extraordinarily guilty; and when on the morning of
the 30th they did finally get off there was no exhilaration
about the departure, no holiday feeling at all.
“We’ve been too good—much
too good,” Mrs. Wilkins kept on murmuring as
they walked up and down the platform at Victoria, having
arrived there an hour before they need have, “and
that’s why we feel as though we’re doing
wrong. We’re brow-beaten—we’re
not any longer real human beings. Real human
beings aren’t ever as good as we’ve been.
Oh”—she clenched her thin hands—“to
think that we ought to be so happy now, here on the
very station, actually starting, and we’re not,
and it’s being spoilt for us just simply because
we’ve spoilt them! What have we done—what
have we done, I should like to know,” she inquired
of Mrs. Arbuthnot, patiently pacing, did not ask who
she meant by them, because she knew. Mrs. Wilkins
meant their husbands, persisting in her assumption
that Frederick was as indignant as Mellersh over the
departure of his wife, whereas Frederick did not even
know his wife had gone.
Mrs. Arbuthnot, always silent about
him, had said nothing of this to Mrs. Wilkins.
Frederick went too deep into her heart for her to
talk about him. He was having an extra bout of
work finishing another of those dreadful books, and
had been away practically continually the last few
weeks, and was away when she left. Why should
she tell him beforehand? Sure as she so miserably
was that he would have no objection to anything she
did, she merely wrote him a note and put it on the
hall-table ready for him if and when he should come
home. She said she was going for a month’s
holiday as she needed a rest and she had not had one
for so long, and that Gladys, the efficient parlourmaid,
had orders to see to his comforts. She did not
say where she was going; there was no reason why she
should; he would not be interested, he would not care.
The day was wretched, blustering and
wet; the crossing was atrocious, and they were very
sick. But after having been very sick, just
to arrive at Calais and not be sick was happiness,
and it was there that the real splendour of what they
were doing first began to warm their benumbed spirits.
It got hold of Mrs. Wilkins first, and spread from
her like a rose-coloured flame over her pale companion.
Mellersh at Calais, where they restored themselves
with soles because of Mrs. Wilkins’s desire
to eat a sole Mellersh wasn’t having—Mellersh
at Calais had already begun to dwindle and seem less
important. None of the French porters knew him;
not a single official at Calais cared a fig for Mellersh.
In Paris there was no time to think of him because
their train was late and they only just caught the
Turin train at the Gare de Lyons; and by the afternoon
of the next day when they got into Italy, England,
Frederick, Mellersh, the vicar, the poor, Hampstead,
the club, Shoolbred, everybody and everything, the
whole inflamed sore dreariness, had faded to the dimness
of a dream.