Their eyes followed her admiringly.
They had no idea they had been snubbed. It
was a disappointment, of course, to find she had forestalled
them and that they were not to have the happiness of
preparing for her, of watching her face when she arrived
and first saw everything, but there was till Mrs.
Fisher. They would concentrate on Mrs. Fisher,
and would watch her face instead; only, like everybody
else, they would have preferred to watch Lady Caroline’s.
Perhaps, then, as Lady Caroline had
talked of breakfast, they had better begin by going
and having it, for there was too much to be done that
day to spend any more time gazing at the scenery—servants
to be interviewed, the house to be gone through and
examined, and finally Mrs. Fisher’s room to
be got ready and adorned.
They waved their hands gaily at Lady
Caroline, who seemed absorbed in what she saw and
took no notice, and turning away found the maidservant
of the night before had come up silently behind them
in cloth slippers with string soles.
She was Francesca, the elderly parlour-maid,
who had been with the owner, he had said, for years,
and whose presence made inventories unnecessary; and
after wishing them good-morning and hoping they had
slept well, she told them breakfast was ready in the
dining-room on the floor below, and if they would
follow her she would lead.
They did not understand a single word
of the very many in which Francesca succeeded in clothing
this simple information, but they followed her, for
it at least was clear that they were to follow, and
going down the stairs, and along the broad hall like
the one above except for glass doors at the end instead
of a window opening into the garden, they were shown
into the dining-room; where, sitting at the head of
the table having her breakfast, was Mrs. Fisher.
This time they exclaimed. Even
Mrs. Arbuthnot exclaimed, though her exclamation was
only “Oh.”
Mrs. Wilkins exclaimed at greater
length. “Why, but it’s like having
the bread taken out of one’s mouth!” exclaimed
Mrs. Wilkins.
“How do you do,” said
Mrs. Fisher. “I can’t get up because
of my stick.” And she stretched out her
hand across the table.
They advanced and shook it.
“We had no idea you were here,” said Mrs.
Arbuthnot.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Fisher,
resuming her breakfast. “Yes. I am
here.” And with composure she removed the
top of her egg.
“It’s a great disappointment,”
said Mrs. Wilkins. “We had meant to give
you such a welcome.”
This was the one, Mrs. Fisher remembered,
briefly glancing at her, who when she came to Prince
of Wales Terrace said she had seen Keats. She
must be careful with this one—curb her from
the beginning.
She therefore ignored Mrs. Wilkins
and said gravely, with a downward face of impenetrable
calm bent on her egg, “Yes. I arrived
yesterday with Lady Caroline.”
“It’s really dreadful,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, exactly as if she had not been
ignored. “There’s nobody left to
get anything ready for now. I fee thwarted.
I feel as if the bread had been taken out of my mouth
just when I was going to be happy swallowing it.”
“Where will you sit?”
asked Mrs. Fisher of Mrs. Arbuthnot—markedly
of Mrs. Arbuthnot; the comparison with the bread seemed
to her most unpleasant.
“Oh, thank you—”
said Mrs. Arbuthnot, sitting down rather suddenly
next to her.
There were only two places she could
sit down in, the places laid on either side of Mrs.
Fisher. She therefore sat down in one, and Mrs.
Wilkins sat down opposite her in the other.
Mrs. Fisher was at the head of the
table. Round her was grouped the coffee and
the tea. Of course they were all sharing San
Salvatore equally, but it was she herself and Lotty,
Mrs. Arbuthnot mildly reflected, who had found it,
who had had the work of getting it, who had chosen
to admit Mrs. Fisher into it. Without them, she
could not help thinking, Mrs. Fisher would not have
been there. Morally Mrs. Fisher was a guest.
There was no hostess in this party, but supposing
there had been a hostess it would not have been Mrs.
Fisher, nor Lady Caroline, it would have been either
herself or Lotty. Mrs. Arbuthnot could not help
feeling this as she sat down, and Mrs. Fisher, the
hand which Ruskin had wrung suspended over the pots
before her, inquired, “Tea or coffee?”
She could not help feeling it even more definitely
when Mrs. Fisher touched a small gong on the table
beside her as though she had been used to that gong
and that table ever since she was little, and, on
Francesca’s appearing, bade her in the language
of Dante bring more milk. There was a curious
air about Mrs. Fisher, thought Mrs. Arbuthnot, of
being in possession; and if she herself had not been
so happy she would have perhaps minded.
Mrs. Wilkins noticed it too, but it
only made her discursive brain think of cuckoos.
She would no doubt immediately have begun to talk
of cuckoos, incoherently, unrestrainably and deplorably,
if she had been in the condition of nerves and shyness
she was in last time she saw Mrs. Fisher. But
happiness had done away with shyness—she
was very serene; she could control her conversation;
she did not have, horrified, to listen to herself
saying things she had no idea of saying when she began;
she was quite at her ease, and completely natural.
The disappointment of not going to be able to prepare
a welcome for Mrs. Fisher had evaporated at once,
for it was impossible to go on being disappointed
in heaven. Nor did she mind her behaving as hostess.
What did it matter? You did not mind things in
heaven. She and Mrs. Arbuthnot, therefore, sat
down more willingly than they otherwise would have
done, one on either side of Mrs. Fisher, and the sun,
pouring through the two windows facing east across
the bay, flooded the room, and there was an open door
leading into the garden, and the garden was full of
many lovely things, especially freesias.
The delicate and delicious fragrance
of the freesias came in through the door and floated
round Mrs. Wilkins’s enraptured nostrils.
Freesias in London were quite beyond her. Occasionally
she went into a shop and asked what they cost, so
as just to have an excuse for lifting up a bunch and
smelling them, well knowing that it was something awful
like a shilling for about three flowers. Here
they were everywhere— bursting out of every
corner and carpeting the rose beds. Imagine it—
having freesias to pick in armsful if you wanted to,
and with glorious sunshine flooding the room, and
in your summer frock, and its being only the first
of April!
“I suppose you realize, don’t
you, that we’ve got to heaven?” she said,
beaming at Mrs. Fisher with all the familiarity of
a fellow-angel.
“They are considerably younger
than I had supposed,” thought Mrs. Fisher, “and
not nearly so plain.” And she mused a moment,
while she took no notice of Mrs. Wilkins’s exuberance,
on their instant and agitated refusal that day at
Prince of Wales Terrace to have anything to do with
the giving or the taking of references.
Nothing could affect her, of course;
nothing that anybody did. She was far too solidly
seated in respectability. At her back stood
massively in a tremendous row those three great names
she had offered, and they were not the only ones she
could turn to for support and countenance. Even
if these young women—she had no grounds
for believing the one out in the garden to be really
Lady Caroline Dester, she had merely been told she
was—even if these young women should all
turn out to be what Browning used to call—how
well she remembered his amusing and delightful way
of putting thing—Fly-by-Nights, what could
it possibly, or in any way matter to her? Let
them fly by night if they wished. One was not
sixty-five for nothing. In any case there would
only be four weeks of it, at the end of which she would
see no more of them. And in the meanwhile there
were plenty of places where she could sit quietly
away from them and remember. Also there was her
own sitting-room, a charming room, all honey-coloured
furniture and pictures, with windows to the sea towards
Genoa, and a door opening on to the battlements.
The house possessed two sitting-rooms, and she explained
to that pretty creature Lady Caroline—certainly
a pretty creature, whatever else she was; Tennyson
would have enjoyed taking her for blows on the downs—who
had seemed inclined to appropriate the honey-colored
one, that she needed some little refuge entirely to
herself because of her stick.
“Nobody wants to see an old
woman hobbling about everywhere,” she had said.
“I shall be quite content to spend much of my
time by myself in here or sitting out on these convenient
battlements.”
And she had a very nice bedroom, too;
it looked two ways, across the bay in the morning
sun—she liked the morning sun—and
onto the garden. There were only two of these
bedrooms with cross-views in the house, she and Lady
Caroline had discovered, and they were by far the
airiest. They each had two beds in them, and
she and Lady Caroline had had the extra beds taken
out at once and put into two of the other rooms.
In this way there was much more space and comfort.
Lady Caroline, indeed, had turned hers into a bed-sitting-room,
with the sofa out of the bigger drawing-room and the
writing-table and the most comfortable chair, but
she herself had not had to do that because she had
her own sitting-room, equipped with what was necessary.
Lady Caroline had thought at first of taking the
bigger sitting-room entirely for her own, because
the dining-room on the floor below could quite well
be used between meals to sit in by the two other, and
was a very pleasant room with nice chairs, but she
had not liked the bigger sitting-room’s shape—it
was a round room in the tower, with deep slit windows
pierced through the massive walls, and a domed and
ribbed ceiling arranged to look like an open umbrella,
and it seemed a little dark. Undoubtedly Lady
Caroline had cast covetous glances at the honey-coloured
room, and if she Mrs. Fisher, had been less firm would
have installed herself in it. Which would have
been absurd.
“I hope,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot,
smilingly making an attempt to convey to Mrs. Fisher
that though she, Mrs. Fisher, might not be exactly
a guest she certainly was not in the very least a hostess,
“your room is comfortable.”
“Quite,” said Mrs. Fisher.
“Will you have some more coffee?”
“No, thank you. Will you?”
“No, thank you. There
were two beds in my bedroom, filling it up unnecessarily,
and I had one taken out. It has made it much
more convenient.”
“Oh that’s why I’ve
got two beds in my room!” exclaimed Mrs. Wilkins,
illuminated; the second bed in her little cell had
seemed an unnatural and inappropriate object from
the moment she saw it.
“I gave no directions,”
said Mrs. Fisher, addressing Mrs. Arbuthnot, “I
merely asked Francesca to remove it.”
“I have two in my room as well,” said
Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Your second one must be Lady
Caroline’s. She had hers removed too,”
said Mrs. Fisher. “It seems foolish to
have more beds in a room than there are occupiers.”
“But we haven’t got husbands
here either,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “and
I don’t see any use in extra beds in one’s
room if one hasn’t got husbands to put in them.
Can’t we have them taken away too?”
“Beds,” said Mrs. Fisher
coldly, “cannot be removed from one room after
another. They must remain somewhere.”
Mrs. Wilkins’s remarks seemed
to Mrs. Fisher persistently unfortunate. Each
time she opened her mouth she said something best
left unsaid. Loose talk about husbands had never
in Mrs. Fisher’s circle been encouraged.
In the ’eighties, when she chiefly flourished,
husbands were taken seriously, as the only real obstacles
to sin. Beds too, if they had to be mentioned,
were approached with caution; and a decent reserve
prevented them and husbands ever being spoken of in
the same breath.
She turned more markedly than ever
to Mrs. Arbuthnot. “Do let me give you
a little more coffee,” she said.
“No, thank you. But won’t you have
some more?”
“No indeed. I never have
more than two cups at breakfast. Would you like
an orange?”
“No thank you. Would you?”
“No, I don’t eat fruit
at breakfast. It is an American fashion which
I am too old now to adopt. Have you had all you
want?”
“Quite. Have you?”
Mrs. Fisher paused before replying
was this a habit, this trick of answering a simple
question with the same question? If so it must
be curbed, for no one could live for four weeks in
any real comfort with somebody who had a habit.
She glanced at Mrs. Arbuthnot, and
her parted hair and gentle brow reassured her.
No; it was accident, not habit, that had produced
those echoes. She could as soon imagine a dove
having tiresome habits as Mrs. Arbuthnot. Considering
her, she thought what a splendid wife she would have
been for poor Carlyle. So much better than that
horrid clever Jane. She would have soothed him.
“Then shall we go?” she suggested.
“Let me help you up,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot,
all consideration.
“Oh, thank you—I
can manage perfectly. It’s only sometimes
that my stick prevents me—”
Mrs. Fisher got up quite easily; Mrs.
Arbuthnot had hovered over her for nothing.
“I’m going to have one
of these gorgeous oranges,” said Mrs. Wilkins,
staying where she was and reaching across to a black
bowl piled with them. “Rose, how can you
resist them. Look—have this one.
Do have this beauty—” And she held
out a big one.
“No, I’m going to see
to my duties,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot, moving towards
the door. “You’ll forgive me for
leaving you, won’t you,” she added politely
to Mrs. Fisher.
Mrs. Fisher moved towards the door
too; quite easily; almost quickly; her stick did not
hinder her at all. She had no intention of being
left with Mrs. Wilkins.
“What time would you like to
have lunch?” Mrs. Arbuthnot asked her, trying
to keep her head as at least a non-guest, if not precisely
a hostess, above water.
“Lunch,” said Mrs. Fisher, “is at
half-past twelve.”
“You shall have it at half-past
twelve then,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot. “I’ll
tell the cook. It will be a great struggle,”
she continued, smiling, “but I’ve brought
a little dictionary—”
“The cook,” said Mrs. Fisher, “knows.”
“Oh?” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Lady Caroline has already told her,”
said Mrs. Fisher.
“Oh?” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Yes. Lady Caroline speaks the kind of
Italian cooks understand.
I am prevented going into the kitchen because of my
stick. And even if
I were able to go, I fear I shouldn’t be understood.”
“But—” began Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“But it’s too wonderful,”
Mrs. Wilkins finished for her from the table, delighted
with these unexpected simplifications in her and Rose’s
lives. “Why, we’ve got positively
nothing to do here, either of us, except just be happy.
You wouldn’t believe,” she said, turning
her head and speaking straight to Mrs. Fisher, portions
of orange in either hand, “how terribly good
Rose and I have been for years without stopping, and
how much now we need a perfect rest.”
And Mrs. Fisher, going without answering
her out the room, said to herself, “She must,
she shall be curbed.”