The sweet smells that were everywhere
in San Salvatore were alone enough to produce concord.
They came into the sitting-room from the flowers
on the battlements, and met the ones from the flowers
inside the room, and almost, thought Mrs. Wilkins,
could be seen greeting each other with a holy kiss.
Who could be angry in the middle of such gentlenesses?
Who could be acquisitive, selfish, in the old rasped
London way, in the presence of this bounteous beauty?
Yet Mrs. Fisher seemed to be all three of these things.
There was so much beauty, so much
more than enough for every one, that it did appear
to be a vain activity to try and make a corner in
it.
Yet Mrs. Fisher was trying to make
a corner in it, and had railed off a portion for her
exclusive use.
Well, she would get over that presently;
she would get over it inevitably, Mrs. Wilkins was
sure, after a day or two in the extraordinary atmosphere
of peace in that place.
Meanwhile she obviously hadn’t
even begun to get over it. She stood looking
at her and Rose with an expression that appeared to
be one of anger. Anger. Fancy. Silly
old nerve-racked London feelings, thought Mrs. Wilkins,
whose eyes saw the room full of kisses, and everybody
in it being kissed, Mrs. Fisher as copiously as she
herself and Rose.
“You don’t like us being
in here,” said Mrs. Wilkins, getting up and
at once, after her manner, fixing on the truth.
’Why?”
“I should have thought,”
said Mrs. Fisher leaning on her stick, “you
could have seen that it is my room.”
“You mean because of the photographs,”
said Mrs. Wilkins.
Mrs. Arbuthnot, who was a little red and surprised,
got up too.
“And the notepaper,” said
Mrs. Fisher. “Notepaper with my London
address on it. That pen—”
She pointed. It was still in Mrs. Wilkins’s
hand.
“Is yours. I’m very
sorry,” said Mrs. Wilkins, laying it on the
table. And she added smiling, that it had just
been writing some very amiable things.
“But why,” asked Mrs.
Arbuthnot, who found herself unable to acquiesce in
Mrs. Fisher’s arrangements without at least a
gentle struggle, “ought we not to be here?
It’s a sitting-room.”
“There is another one,”
said Mrs. Fisher. “You and your friend
cannot sit in two rooms at once, and if I have no wish
to disturb you in yours I am unable to see why you
should wish to disturb me in mine.”
“But why—” began Mrs. Arbuthnot
again.
“It’s quite natural,”
Mrs. Wilkins interrupted, for Rose was looking stubborn;
and turning to Mrs. Fisher she said that although
sharing things with friends was pleasant she could
understand that Mrs. Fisher, still steeped in the
Prince of Wales Terrace attitude to life, did not
yet want to, but that she would get rid of that after
a bit and feel quite different. “Soon
you’ll want us to share,” said Mrs. Wilkins
reassuringly. “Why, you may even get so
far as asking me to use your pen if you knew I hadn’t
got one.”
Mrs. Fisher was moved almost beyond
control by this speech. To have a ramshackle
young woman from Hampstead patting her on the back
as it were, in breezy certitude that quite soon she
would improve, stirred her more deeply than anything
had stirred her since her first discovery that Mr.
Fisher was not what he seemed. Mrs. Wilkins must
certainly be curbed. But how? There was
a curious imperviousness about her. At that
moment, for instance, she was smiling as pleasantly
and with as unclouded a face as if she were saying
nothing in the least impertinent. Would she
know she was being curbed? If she didn’t
know, if she were too tough to feel it, then what?
Nothing, except avoidance; except, precisely, one’s
own private sitting-room.
“I’m an old woman,”
said Mrs. Fisher, “and I need a room to myself.
I cannot get about, because of my stick. As
I cannot get about I have to sit. Why should
I not sit quietly and undisturbed, as I told you in
London I intended to? If people are to come in
and out all day long, chattering and leaving doors
open, you will have broken the agreement, which was
that I was to be quiet.”
“But we haven’t the least
wish—” began Mrs. Arbuthnot, who was
again cut short by Mrs. Wilkins.
“We’re only too glad,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, “for you to have this room
if it makes you happy. We didn’t know about
it, that’s all. We wouldn’t have
come in if we had—not till you invited us,
anyhow. I expect,” she finished looking
down cheerfully at Mrs. Fisher, “you soon will.”
And picking up her letter she took Mrs. Arbuthnot’s
hand and drew her towards the door.
Mrs. Arbuthnot did not want to go.
She, the mildest of women, was filled with a curious
and surely unchristian desire to stay and fight.
Not, of course, really, nor even with any definitely
aggressive words. No; she only wanted to reason
with Mrs. Fisher, and to reason patiently. But
she did feel that something ought to be said, and that
she ought not to allow herself to be rated and turned
out as if she were a schoolgirl caught in ill behaviour
by Authority.
Mrs. Wilkins, however, drew her firmly
to and through the door, and once again Rose wondered
at Lotty, at her balance, her sweet and equable temper—she
who in England had been such a thing of gusts.
From the moment they got into Italy it was Lotty who
seemed the elder. She certainly was very happy;
blissful, in fact. Did happiness so completely
protect one? Did it make one so untouchable,
so wise? Rose was happy herself, but not anything
like so happy. Evidently not, for not only did
she want to fight Mrs. Fisher but she wanted something
else, something more than this lovely place, something
to complete it; she wanted Frederick. For the
first time in her life she was surrounded by perfect
beauty, and her one thought was to show it to him,
to share it with him. She wanted Frederick.
She yearned for Frederick. Ah, if only, only
Frederick . . .
“Poor old thing,” said
Mrs. Wilkins, shutting the door gently on Mrs. Fisher
and her triumph. “Fancy on a day like this.”
“She’s a very rude old thing,” said
Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“She’ll get over that.
I’m sorry we chose just her room to go and
sit in.”
“It’s much the nicest,”
said Mrs. Arbuthnot. “And it isn’t
hers.”
“Oh but there are lots of other
places, and she’s such a poor old thing.
Let her have the room. Whatever does it matter?”
And Mrs. Wilkins said she was going
down to the village to find out where the post-office
was and post her letter to Mellersh, and would Rose
go too.
“I’ve been thinking about
Mellersh,” said Mrs. Wilkins as they walked,
one behind the other, down the narrow zigzag path up
which they had climbed in the rain the night before.
She went first. Mrs. Arbuthnot,
quite naturally now, followed. In England it
had been the other way about—Lotty, timid,
hesitating, except when she burst out so awkwardly,
getting behind the calm and reasonable Rose whenever
she could.
“I’ve been thinking about
Mellersh,” repeated Mrs. Wilkins over her shoulder,
as Rose seemed not to have heard.
“Have you?” said Rose,
a faint distaste in her voice, for her experiences
with Mellersh had not been of a kind to make her enjoy
remembering him. She had deceived Mellersh; therefore
she didn’t like him. She was unconscious
that this was the reason of her dislike, and thought
it was that there didn’t seem to be much, if
any, of the grace of god about him. And yet
how wrong to feel that, she rebuked herself, and how
presumptuous. No doubt Lotty’s husband
was far, far nearer to God than she herself was ever
likely to be. Still, she didn’t like him.
“I’ve been a mean dog,” said Mrs.
Wilkins.
“A what?” asked Mrs. Arbuthnot, incredulous
of her hearing.
“All this coming away and leaving
him in that dreary place while I rollick in heaven.
He had planned to take me to Italy for Easter himself.
Did I tell you?”
“No,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot;
and indeed she had discouraged talk about husbands.
Whenever Lotty had begun to blurt out things she had
swiftly changed the conversation. One husband
led to another, in conversation as well as in life,
she felt, and she could not, she would not, talk of
Frederick. Beyond the bare fact that he was there,
he had not been mentioned. Mellersh had had
to be mentioned, because of his obstructiveness, but
she had carefully kept him from overflowing outside
the limits of necessity.
“Well, he did,” said Mrs.
Wilkins. “He had never done such a thing
in his life before, and I was horrified. Fancy—just
as I had planned to come to it myself.”
She paused on the path and looked up at Rose.
“Yes,” said Rose, trying
to think of something else to talk about.
“Now you see why I say I’ve
been a mean dog. He had planned a holiday in
Italy with me, and I had planned a holiday in Italy
leaving him at home. I think,” she went
on, her eyes fixed on Rose’s face, “Mellersh
has every reason to be both angry and hurt.”
Mrs. Arbuthnot was astonished.
The extraordinary quickness with which, hour by hour,
under her very eyes, Lotty became more selfless, disconcerted
her. She was turning into something surprisingly
like a saint. Here she was now being affectionate
about Mellersh—Mellersh, who only that
morning, while they hung their feet into the sea, had
seemed a mere iridescence, Lotty had told her, a thing
of gauze. That was only that morning; and by
the time they had had lunch Lotty had developed so
far as to have got him solid enough again to write
to, and to write to at length. And now, a few
minutes later, she was announcing that he had every
reason to be angry with her and hurt, and that she
herself had been—the language was unusual,
but it did express real penitence—a mean
dog.
Rose stared at her astonished.
If she went on like this, soon a nimbus might be
expected round her head, was there already, if one
didn’t know it was the sun through the tree-trunks
catching her sandy hair.
A great desire to love and be friends,
to love everybody, to be friends with everybody, seemed
to be invading Lotty—a desire for sheer
goodness. Rose’s own experience was that
goodness, the state of being good, was only reached
with difficulty and pain. It took a long time
to get to it; in fact one never did get to it, or,
if for a flashing instant one did, it was only for
a flashing instant. Desperate perseverance was
needed to struggle along its path, and all the way
was dotted with doubts. Lotty simply flew along.
She had certainly, thought Rose, not got rid of her
impetuousness. It had merely taken another direction.
She was now impetuously becoming a saint. Could
one really attain goodness so violently? Wouldn’t
there be an equally violent reaction?
“I shouldn’t,” said
Rose with caution, looking down into Lotty’s
bright eyes—the path was steep, so that
Lotty was well below her—“I shouldn’t
be sure of that too quickly.”
“But I am sure of it, and I’ve written
and told him so.”
Rose stared. “Why, but only this morning—”
she began.
“It’s all in this,”
interrupted Lotty, tapping the envelope and looking
pleased.
“What—everything?”
“You mean about the advertisement
and my savings being spent? Oh no—not
yet. But I’ll tell him all that when he
comes.”
“When he comes?” repeated Rose.
“I’ve invited him to come and stay with
us.”
Rose could only go on staring.
“It’s the least I could
do. Besides—look at this.”
Lotty waived her hand. “Disgusting not
to share it. I was a mean dog to go off and
leave him, but no dog I’ve every heard of was
ever as mean as I’d be if I didn’t try
and persuade Mellersh to come out and enjoy this too.
It’s barest decency that he should have some
of the fun out of my nest-egg. After all, he
has housed me and fed me for years. One shouldn’t
be churlish.”
“But—do you think he’ll come?
“Oh, I hope so,” said
Lotty with the utmost earnestness; and added, “Poor
lamb.”
At that Rose felt she would like to
sit down. Mellersh a poor lamb? That same
Mellersh who a few hours before was mere shimmer?
There was a seat at the bend of the path, and Rose
went to it and sat down. She wished to get her
breath, gain time. If she had time she might
perhaps be able to catch up the leaping Lotty, and
perhaps be able to stop her before she committed herself
to what she probably presently would be sorry for.
Mellersh at San Salvatore? Mellersh, from whom
Lotty had taken such pains so recently to escape?
“I see him here,” said
Lotty, as if in answer to her thoughts.
Rose looked at her with real concern:
for every time Lotty said in that convinced voice,
“I see,” what she saw came true.
Then it was to be supposed that Mr. Wilkins too would
presently come true.
“I wish,” said Rose anxiously, “I
understood you.”
“Don’t try,” said Lotty, smiling.
“But I must, because I love you.”
“Dear Rose,” said Lotty, swiftly bending
down and kissing her.
“You’re so quick,”
said Rose. “I can’t follow your developments.
I can’t keep touch. It was what happened
with Freder—”
She broke off and looked frightened.
“The whole idea of our coming
here,” she went on again, as Lotty didn’t
seem to have noticed, “was to get away, wasn’t
it? Well, we’ve got away. And now,
after only a single day of it, you want to write to
the very people—”
She stopped.
“The very people we were getting
away from,” finished Lotty. “It’s
quite true. It seems idiotically illogical.
But I’m so happy, I’m so well, I feel
so fearfully wholesome. This place—why,
it makes me feel flooded with love.”
And she stared down at Rose in a kind of radiant surprise.
Rose was silent a moment. Then
she said, “And do you think it will have the
same effect on Mr. Wilkins?”
Lotty laughed. “I don’t
know,” she said. “But even if it
doesn’t, there’s enough love about to flood
fifty Mr. Wilkinses, as you call him. The great
thing is to have lots of love about. I don’t
see,” she went on, “at least I don’t
see here, though I did at home, that it matters who
loves as long as somebody does. I was a stingy
beast at home, and used to measure and count.
I had a queer obsession about justice. As though
justice mattered. As though justice can really
be distinguished from vengeance. It’s only
love that’s any good. At home I wouldn’t
love Mellersh unless he loved me back, exactly as
much, absolute fairness. Did you ever.
And as he didn’t, neither did I, and the aridity
of that house! The aridity . . .”
Rose said nothing. She was bewildered
by Lotty. One odd effect of San Salvatore on
her rapidly developing friend was her sudden free
use of robust words. She had not used them in
Hampstead. Beast and dog were more robust than
Hampstead cared about. In words, too, Lotty
had come unchained.
But how she wished, oh how Rose wished,
that she too could write to her husband and say “Come.”
The Wilkins ménage, however pompous Mellersh might
be, and he had seemed to Rose pompous, was on a healthier,
more natural footing than hers. Lotty could write
to Mellersh and would get an answer. She couldn’t
write to Frederick, for only too well did she know
he wouldn’t answer. At least, he might
answer—a hurried scribble, showing how much
bored he was at doing it, with perfunctory thanks
for her letter. But that would be worse than
no answer at all; for his handwriting, her name on
an envelope addressed by him, stabbed her heart.
Too acutely did it bring back the letters of their
beginnings together, the letters from him so desolate
with separation, so aching with love and longing.
To see apparently one of these very same letters
arrive, and open it to find:
Dear Rose—Thanks for letter.
Glad you’re having a good time. Don’t
hurry back. Say if you want any money. Everything
going splendidly here—
Yours, Frederick.
—no, it couldn’t be borne.
“I don’t think I’ll
come down to the village with you to-day,” she
said, looking up at Lotty with eyes suddenly gone dim.
“I think I want to think.”
“All right,” said Lotty,
at once starting off briskly down the path.
“But don’t think too long,” she called
back over her shoulder. “Write and invite
him at once.”
“Invite whom?” asked Rose, startled.
“Your husband.”