That one of the two sitting-rooms
which Mrs. Fisher had taken for her own was a room
of charm and character. She surveyed it with
satisfaction on going into it after breakfast, and
was glad it was hers. It had a tiled floor,
and walls the colour of pale honey, and inlaid furniture
the colour of amber, and mellow books, many in ivory
or lemon-coloured covers. There was a big window
overlooking the sea towards Genoa, and a glass door
through which she could proceed out on to the battlements
and walk along past the quaint and attractive watch-tower,
in itself a room with chairs and a writing table, to
where on the other side of the tower the battlements
ended in a marble seat, and one could see the western
bay and the point round which began the Gulf of Spezia.
Her south view, between these two stretches of sea,
was another hill, higher than San Salvatore, the last
of the little peninsula, with the bland turrets of
a smaller and uninhabited castle on the top, on which
the setting sun still shone when everything else was
sunk in shadow. Yes, she was very comfortably
established here; and receptacles—Mrs.
Fisher did not examine their nature closely, but they
seemed to be small stone troughs, or perhaps little
sarcophagi— ringed round the battlements
with flowers.
These battlements, she thought, considering
them, would have been a perfect place for her to pace
up and down gently in moments when she least felt
the need of her stick, or to sit in on the marble seat,
having first put a cushion on it, if there had not
unfortunately been a second glass door opening on
to them, destroying their complete privacy, spoiling
her feeling that the place was only for her.
The second door belonged to the round drawing-room,
which both she and Lady Caroline had rejected as too
dark. That room would probably be sat in by
the women from Hampstead, and she was afraid they would
not confine themselves to sitting in it, but would
come out through the glass door and invade her battlements.
This would ruin the battlements. It would ruin
them as far as she was concerned if they were to be
overrun; or even if, not actually overrun, they were
liable to be raked by the actually eyes of persons
inside the room. No one could be perfectly at
ease if they were being watched and knew it.
What she wanted, what she surely had a right to, was
privacy. She had no wish to intrude on the others;
why then should they intrude on her? And she
could always relax her privacy if, when she became
better acquainted with her companions, she should
think it worth while, but she doubted whether any
of the three would so develop at to make her think
it worth while.
Hardly anything was really worth while,
reflected Mrs. Fisher, except the past. It was
astonishing, it was simply amazing, the superiority
of the past to the present. Those friends of
hers in London, solid persons of her own age, knew
the same past that she knew, could talk about it with
her, could compare it as she did with the tinkling
present, and in remembering great men forget for a
moment the trivial and barren young people who still,
in spite of the war, seemed to litter the world in
such numbers. She had not come away from these
friends, these conversable ripe friends, in order to
spend her time in Italy chatting with three persons
of another generation and defective experience; she
had come away merely to avoid the treacheries of a
London April. It was true what she had told the
two who came to Prince of Wales Terrace, that all
she wished to do at San Salvatore was to sit by herself
in the sun and remember. They knew this, for
she had told them. It had been plainly expressed
and clearly understood. Therefore she had a
right to expect them to stay inside the round drawing-room
and not to emerge interruptingly on to her battlements.
But would they? The doubt spoilt
her morning. It was only towards lunch-time
that she saw a way to be quite safe, and ringing for
Francesca, bade her, in slow and majestic Italian,
shut the shutters of the glass door of the round drawing-room,
and then, going with her into the room, which had
become darker than ever in consequence, but also,
Mrs. Fisher observed to Francesca, who was being voluble,
would cause of this very darkness remain agreeably
cool, and after all there were the numerous slit-windows
in the walls to let in light and it was nothing to
do with her if they did not let it in, she directed
the placing of a cabinet of curios across the door
on its inside.
This would discourage egress.
Then she rang for Domenico, and caused
him to move one of the flower-filled sarcophagi across
the door on its outside.
This would discourage ingress.
“No one,” said Domenico,
hesitating, “will be able to use the door.”
“No one,” said Mrs. Fisher firmly, “will
wish to.”
She then retired to her sitting-room,
and from a chair placed where she could look straight
on to them, gazed at her battlements, secured to her
now completely, with calm pleasure.
Being here, she reflected placidly,
was much cheaper than being in an hotel and, if she
could keep off the others, immeasurably more agreeable.
She was paying for her rooms—extremely
pleasant rooms, now that she was arranged in them—£3
a week, which came to about eight shillings a day,
battlements, watch-tower and all. Where else
abroad could she live as well for so little, and have
as many baths as she like, for eight shillings a day?
Of course she did not yet know what her food would
cost, but she would insist on carefulness over that,
though she would also insist on its being carefulness
combined with excellence. The two were perfectly
compatible if the caterer took pains. The servants’
wages, she had ascertained, were negligible, owing
to the advantageous exchange, so that there was only
the food to cause her anxiety. If she saw signs
of extravagance she would propose that they each hand
over a reasonable sum every week to Lady Caroline
which should cover the bills, any of it that was not
used to be returned, and if it were exceeded the loss
to be borne by the caterer.
Mrs. Fisher was well off and had the
desire for comforts proper to her age, but she disliked
expenses. So well off was she that, had she
so chosen, she could have lived in an opulent part
of London and driven from it and to it in a Rolls-Royce.
She had no such wish. It needed more vitality
than went with true comfort to deal with a house in
an opulent spot and a Rolls-Royce. Worries attended
such possessions, worries of every kind, crowned by
bills. In the sober gloom of Prince of Wales
Terrace she could obscurely enjoy inexpensive yet
real comfort, without being snatched at by predatory
men-servants or collectors for charities, and a taxi
stand was at the end of the road. Her annual
outlay was small. The house was inherited.
Death had furnished it for her. She trod in
the dining-room on the Turkey carpet of her fathers;
she regulated her day by the excellent black marble
clock on the mantelpiece which she remember from childhood;
her walls were entirely covered by the photographs
her illustrious deceased friends had given either
herself or her father, with their own handwriting
across the lower parts of their bodies, and the windows,
shrouded by the maroon curtains of all her life, were
decorated besides with the selfsame aquariums to which
she owed her first lessons in sealore, and in which
still swam slowly the goldfishes of her youth.
Were they the same goldfish?
She did not know. Perhaps, like carp, they
outlived everybody. Perhaps, on the other hand,
behind the deep-sea vegetation provided for them at
the bottom, they had from time to time as the years
went by withdrawn and replaced themselves. Were
they or were they not, she sometimes wondered, contemplating
them between the courses of her solitary means, the
same goldfish that had that day been there when Carlyle—how
well she remembered it—angrily strode up
to them in the middle of some argument with her father
that had grown heated, and striking the glass smartly
with his fist had put them to flight, shouting as
they fled, “Och, ye deaf devils! Och, ye
lucky deaf devils! Ye can’t hear anything
of the blasted, blethering, doddering, glaikit fool-stuff
yer maister talks, can ye?” Or words to that
effect.
Dear, great-souled Carlyle.
Such natural gushings forth; such true freshness;
such real grandeur. Rugged, if you will—yes,
undoubtedly sometimes rugged, and startling in a drawing-room,
but magnificent. Who was there now to put beside
him? Who was there to mention in the same breath?
Her father, than whom no one had had more flair,
said: “Thomas is immortal.”
And here was this generation, this generation of
puniness, raising its little voice in doubts, or, still
worse, not giving itself the trouble to raise it at
all, not—it was incredible, but it had
been thus reported to her—even reading him.
Mrs. Fisher did not read him either, but that was different.
She had read him; she had certainly read him.
Of course she had read him. There was Teufelsdröck—she
quite well remembered a tailor called Teufelsdröck.
So like Carlyle to call him that. Yes, she must
have read him, though naturally details escaped her.
The gong sounded. Lost in reminiscence
Mrs. Fisher had forgotten time, and hastened to her
bedroom to wash her hands and smoothe her hair.
She did not wish to be late and set a bad example,
and perhaps find her seat at the head of the table
taken. One could put no trust in the manners
of the younger generation; especially not in those
of that Mrs. Wilkins.
She was, however, the first to arrive
in the dining-room. Francesca in a white apron
stood ready with an enormous dish of smoking hot,
glistening macaroni, but nobody was there to eat it.
Mrs. Fisher sat down, looking stern. Lax, lax.
“Serve me,” she said to
Francesca, who showed a disposition to wait for the
others.
Francesca served her. Of the
party she liked Mrs. Fisher least, in fact she did
not like her at all. She was the only one of
the four ladies who had not yet smiled. True
she was old, true she was unbeautiful, true she therefore
had no reason to smile, but kind ladies smiled, reason
or no. They smiled, not because they were happy
but because they wished to make happy. This
one of the four ladies could not then, Francesca decided,
be kind; so she handed her the macaroni, being unable
to hide any of her feelings, morosely.
It was very well cooked, but Mrs.
Fisher had never cared for maccaroni, especially not
this long, worm-shaped variety. She found it
difficult to eat—slippery, wriggling off
her fork, making her look, she felt, undignified when,
having got it as she supposed into her mouth, ends
of it yet hung out. Always, too, when she ate
it she was reminded of Mr. Fisher. He had during
their married life behaved very much like maccaroni.
He had slipped, he had wriggled, he had made her
feel undignified, and when at last she had got him
safe, as she thought, there had invariably been little
bits of him that still, as it were, hung out.
Francesca from the sideboard watched
Mrs. Fisher’s way with macaroni gloomily, and
her gloom deepened when she saw her at last take her
knife to it and chop it small.
Mrs. Fisher really did not know how
else to get hold of the stuff. She was aware
that knives in this connection were improper, but
one did finally lose patience. Maccaroni was
never allowed to appear on her table in London.
Apart from its tiresomeness she did not even like
it, and she would tell Lady Caroline not to order it
again. Years of practice, reflected Mrs. Fisher,
chopping it up, years of actual living in Italy, would
be necessary to learn the exact trick. Browning
managed maccaroni wonderfully. She remembered
watching him one day when he came to lunch with her
father, and a dish of it had been ordered as a compliment
to his connection with Italy. Fascinating, the
way it went in. No chasing round the plate, no
slidings off the fork, no subsequent protrusions of
loose ends—just one dig, one whisk, one
thrust, one gulp, and lo, yet another poet had been
nourished.
“Shall I go and seek the young
lady?” asked Francesca, unable any longer to
look on a good maccaroni being cut with a knife.
Mrs. Fisher came out of her reminiscent
reflections with difficulty. “She knows
lunch is at half-past twelve,” she said.
“They all know.”
“She may be asleep,” said
Francesca. “The other ladies are further
away, but this one is not far away.”
“Beat the gong again the,” said Mrs. Fisher.
What manners, she though; what, what
manners. It was not an hotel, and considerations
were due. She must say she was surprised at
Mrs. Arbuthnot, who had not looked like somebody unpunctual.
Lady Caroline, too—she had seemed amiable
and courteous, whatever else she might be. From
the other one, of course, she expected nothing.
Francesca fetched the gong, and took
it out into the garden and advanced, beating it as
she advanced, close up to Lady Caroline, who, still
stretched in her low chair, waited till she had done,
and then turned her head and in the sweetest tones
poured forth what appeared to be music but was really
invective.
Francesca did not recognize the liquid
flow as invective; how was she to, when it came out
sounding like that? And with her face all smiles,
for she could not but smile when she looked at this
young lady, she told her the maccaroni was getting
cold.
“When I do not come to meals
it is because I do not wish to come to meals,”
said the irritated Scrap, “and you will not in
future disturb me.”
“Is She ill?” asked Francesca,
sympathetic but unable to stop smiling. Never,
never had she seen hair so beautiful. Like pure
flax; like the hair of northern babes. On such
a little head only blessing could rest, on such a
little head the nimbus of the holiest saints could
fitly be placed.
Scrap shut her eyes and refused to
answer. In this she was injudicious, for its
effect was to convince Francesca, who hurried away
full of concern to tell Mrs. Fisher, that she was indisposed.
And Mrs. Fisher, being prevented, she explained,
from going out to Lady Caroline herself because of
her stick, sent the two others instead, who had come
in at that moment heated and breathless and full of
excuses, while she herself proceeded to the next course,
which was a very well-made omelette, bursting most
agreeably at both its ends with young green peas.
“Serve me,” she directed
Francesca, who again showed a disposition to wait
for the others.
“Oh, why won’t they leave
me alone?” Scrap asked herself when she heard
more scrunchings on the little pebbles which took the
place of grass, and therefore knew some one else was
approaching.
She kept her eyes tight shut this
time. Why should she go in to lunch if she didn’t
want to? This wasn’t a private house; she
was in no way tangled up in duties towards a tiresome
hostess. For all practical purposes San Salvatore
was an hotel, and she ought to be let alone to eat
or not to eat exactly as if she really had been in
an hotel.
But the unfortunate Scrap could not
just sit still and close her eyes without rousing
that desire to stroke and pet in her beholders with
which she was only too familiar. Even the cook
had patted her. And now a gentle hand—how
well she knew and how much she dreaded gentle hands—was
placed on her forehead.
“I’m afraid you’re
not well,” said a voice that was not Mrs. Fisher’s,
and therefore must belong to one of the originals.
“I have a headache,” murmured
Scrap. Perhaps it was best to say that; perhaps
it was the shortest cut to peace.
“I’m so sorry,”
said Mrs. Arbuthnot softly, for it was her hand being
gentle.
“And I,” said Scrap to
herself, “who thought if I came here I would
escape mothers.”
“Don’t you think some
tea would do you good?” asked Mrs. Arbuthnot
tenderly.
“Tea? The idea was abhorrent
to Scrap. In this heat to be drinking tea in
the middle of the day. . .
“No,” she murmured.
“I expect what would really
be best for her,” said another voice, “is
to be left quiet.”
How sensible, thought Scrap; and raised
the eye-lashes of one eye just enough to peep through
and see who was speaking.
It was the freckled original.
The dark one, then, was the one with the hand.
The freckled one rose in her esteem.
“But I can’t bear to think
of you with a headache and nothing being done for
it,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot. “Would
a cup of strong black coffee—?”
Scrap said no more. She waited,
motionless and dumb, till Mrs. Arbuthnot should remove
her hand. After all, she couldn’t stand
there all day, and when she went away she would have
to take her hand with her.
“I do think,” said the
freckled one, “that she wants nothing except
quiet.”
And perhaps the freckled one pulled
the one with the hand by the sleeve, for the hold
on Scrap’s forehead relaxed, and after a minute’s
silence, during which no doubt she was being contemplated—she
was always being contemplated—the footsteps
began to scrunch the pebbles again, and grew fainter,
and were gone.
“Lady Caroline has a headache,”
said Mrs. Arbuthnot, re-entering the dining-room and
sitting down in her place next to Mrs. Fisher.
“I can’t persuade her to have even a
little tea, or some black coffee. Do you know
what aspirin is in Italian?”
“The proper remedy for headaches,”
said Mrs. Fisher firmly, “is castor oil.”
“But she hasn’t got a headache,”
said Mrs. Wilkins.
“Carlyle,” said Mrs. Fisher,
who had finished her omelette and had leisure, while
she waited for the next course, to talk, “suffered
at one period terribly from headaches, and he constantly
took castor oil as a remedy. He took it, I should
say, almost to excess, and called it, I remember,
in his interesting way the oil of sorrow. My
father said it coloured for a time his whole attitude
to life, his whole philosophy. But that was
because he took too much. What Lady Caroline
wants is one dose, and one only. It is a mistake
to keep on taking castor oil.”
“Do you know the Italian for it?” asked
Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Ah, that I’m afraid I
don’t. However, she would know. You
can ask her.”
“But she hasn’t got a
headache,” repeated Mrs. Wilkins, who was struggling
with the maccaroni. “She only wants to
be let alone.”
They both looked at her. The
word shovel crossed Mrs. Fisher’s mind in connection
with Mrs. Wilkins’s actions at that moment.
“Then why should she say she has?” asked
Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Because she is still trying
to be polite. Soon she won’t try, when
the place has got more into her—she’ll
really be it. Without trying. Naturally.”
“Lotty, you see,” explained
Mrs. Arbuthnot, smiling to Mrs. Fisher, who sat waiting
with a stony patience for her next course, delayed
because Mrs. Wilkins would go on trying to eat the
maccaroni, which must be less worth eating than ever
now that it was cold; “Lotty, you see, has a
theory about this place—”
But Mrs. Fisher had no wish to hear
any theory of Mrs. Wilkins’s.
“I am sure I don’t know,”
she interrupted, looking severely at Mrs. Wilkins,
“why you should assume Lady Caroline is not telling
the truth.”
“I don’t assume—I know.”
said Mrs. Wilkins.
“And pray how do you know?”
asked Mrs. Fisher icily, for Mrs. Wilkins was actually
helping herself to more maccaroni, offered her officiously
and unnecessarily a second time by Francesca.
“When I was out there just now I saw inside
her.”
Well, Mrs. Fisher wasn’t going
to say anything to that; she wasn’t going to
trouble to reply to downright idiocy. Instead
she sharply rapped the little table-gong by her side,
though there was Francesca standing at the sideboard,
and said, for she would wait no longer for her next
course, “Serve me.”
And Francesca—it must have
been wilful—offered her the maccaroni again.