At the evening meal, which was the
first time the whole four sat round the dining-room
table together, Scrap appeared.
She appeared quite punctually, and
in one of those wrappers or tea-gowns which are sometimes
described as ravishing. This one really was
ravishing. It certainly ravished Mrs. Wilkins,
who could not take her eyes off the enchanting figure
opposite. It was a shell-pink garment, and clung
to the adorable Scrap as though it, too, loved her.
“What a beautiful dress!” exclaimed Mrs.
Wilkins eagerly.
“What—this old rag?”
said Scrap, glancing down at it as if to see which
one she had got on. “I’ve had it
a hundred years.” And she concentrated
on her soup.
“You must be very cold in it,”
said Mrs. Fisher, thin-lipped; for it showed a great
deal of Scrap—the whole of her arms, for
instance, and even where it covered her up it was
so thin that you still saw her.
“Who—me?” said Scrap, looking
up a moment. “Oh, no.”
And she continued her soup.
“You mustn’t catch a chill,
you know,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot, feeling that
such loveliness must at all costs be preserved unharmed.
“There’s a great difference here when the
sun goes down.”
“I’m quite warm,” said Scrap, industriously
eating her soup.
“You look as if you had nothing
at all on underneath,” said Mrs. Fisher.
“I haven’t. At least,
hardly anything,” said Scrap, finishing her
soup.
“How every imprudent,”
said Mrs. Fisher, “and how highly improper.”
Whereupon Scrap stared at her.
Mrs. Fisher had arrived at dinner
feeling friendly towards Lady Caroline. She
at least had not intruded into her room and sat at
her table and written with her pen. She did,
Mrs. Fisher had supposed, know how to behave.
Now it appeared that she did not know, for was this
behaving, to come dressed—no, undressed—like
that to a meal? Such behaviour was not only exceedingly
improper but also most inconsiderate, for the indelicate
creature would certainly catch a chill, and then infect
the entire party. Mrs. Fisher had a great objection
to other people’s chills. They were always
the fruit of folly; and then they were handed on to
her, who had done nothing at all to deserve them.
“Bird-brained,” though
Mrs. Fisher, sternly contemplating Lady Caroline.
“Not an idea in her head except vanity.”
“But there are no men here,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, “so how can it be improper?
Have you noticed,” she inquired of Mrs. Fisher,
who endeavoured to pretend she did not hear, “How
difficult it is to be improper without men?”
Mrs. Fisher neither answered her not
looked at her; but Scrap looked at her, and did that
with her mouth which in any other mouth would have
been a fain grin. Seen from without, across the
bowl of nasturtiums, it was the most beautiful of
brief and dimpled smiles.
She had a very alive sort of face,
that one, thought Scrap, observing Mrs. Wilkins with
a dawn of interest. It was rather like a field
of corn swept by lights and shadows. Both she
and the dark one, Scrap noticed, had changed their
clothes, but only in order to put on silk jumpers.
The same amount of trouble would have been enough
to dress them properly, reflected Scrap. Naturally
they looked like nothing on earth in the jumpers.
It didn’t matter what Mrs. Fisher wore; indeed,
the only thing for her, short of plumes and ermine,
was what she did wear. But these others were
quite young still, and quite attractive. They
really definitely had faces. How different life
would be for them if they made the most of themselves
instead of the least. And yet—Scrap
was suddenly bored, and turned away her thoughts and
absently ate toast. What did it matter?
If you did make the most of yourself, you only collected
people round you who ended by wanting to grab.
“I’ve had the most wonderful
day,” began Mrs. Wilkins, her eyes shining.
Scrap lowered hers. “Oh,”
she thought, “she’s going to gush.”
“As though anybody were interested
in her day,” thought Mrs. Fisher, lowering hers
also.
In fact, whenever Mrs. Wilkins spoke
Mrs. Fisher deliberately cast down her eyes.
Thus would she mark her disapproval. Besides,
it seemed the only safe thing to do with her eyes,
for no one could tell what the uncurbed creature would
say next. That which she had just said, for
instance, about men—addressed too, to her—what
could she mean? Better not conjecture, thought
Mrs. Fisher; and her eyes, though cast down, yet saw
Lady Caroline stretch out her hand to the Chianti
flask and fill her glass again.
Again. She had done it once
already, and the fish was only just going out of the
room. Mrs. Fisher could see that the other respectable
member of the party, Mrs. Arbuthnot, was noticing it
too. Mrs. Arbuthnot was, she hoped and believed,
respectable and well-meaning. It is true she
also had invaded her sitting-room, but no doubt she
had been dragged there by the other one, and Mrs. Fisher
had little if anything against Mrs. Arbuthnot, and
observed with approval that she only drank water.
That was as it should be. So, indeed, to give
her her dues, did the freckled one; and very right
at their age. She herself drank wine, but with
what moderation: one meal, one glass. And
she was sixty-five, and might properly, and even beneficially,
have had a least two.
“That,” she said to Lady
Caroline, cutting right across what Mrs. Wilkins was
telling them about her wonderful day and indicating
the wine-glass, “is very bad for you.”
Lady Caroline, however, could not
have heard, for she continued to sip, her elbow on
the table, and listen to what Mrs. Wilkins was saying.
And what was it she was saying?
She had invited somebody to come and stay?
A man?
Mrs. Fisher could not credit her ears.
Yet it evidently was a man, for she spoke of the
person as he.
Suddenly and for the first time—but
then this was most important—Mrs. Fisher
addressed Mrs. Wilkins directly. She was sixty-five,
and cared very little what sorts of women she happened
to be with for a month, but if the women were to be
mixed with men it was a different proposition altogether.
She was not going to be made a cat’s-paw of.
She had not come out there to sanction by her presence
what used in her day to be called fast behaviour.
Nothing had been said at the interview in London
about men; if there had been she would have declined,
of course to come.
“What is his name?” asked
Mrs. Fisher, abruptly interposing.
Mrs. Wilkins turned to her with a
slight surprise. “Wilkins,” she
said.
“Wilkins?”
“Yes,”
“Your name?”
“And his.”
“A relation?”
“Not blood.”
“A connection?”
“A husband.”
Mrs. Fisher once more cast down her
eyes. She could not talk to Mrs. Wilkins.
There was something about the things she said. . .
“A husband.” Suggesting one of
many. Always that unseemly twist to everything.
Why could she not say “My husband”?
Besides, Mrs. Fisher had, she herself knew not for
what reason, taken both the Hampstead young women
for widows. War ones. There had been an
absence of mention of husbands at the interview which
would not, she considered, be natural if such persons
did after all exist. And if a husband was not
a relation, who was? “Not blood.”
What a way to talk. Why, a husband was the
first of all relations. How well she remembered
Ruskin—no, it was not Ruskin, it was the
Bible that said a man should leave his father and
mother and cleave only to his wife; showing that she
became by marriage an even more than blood relation.
And if the husband’s father and mother were
to be nothing to him compared to his wife, how much
less than nothing ought the wife’s father and
mother be to her compared to her husband. She
herself had been unable to leave her father and mother
in order to cleave to Mr. Fisher because they were
no longer, when she married, alive, but she certainly
would have left them if they had been there to leave.
Not blood, indeed. Silly talk.
The dinner was very good. Succulence
succeeded succulence. Costanza had determined
to do as she chose in the matter of cream and eggs
the first week, and see what happened at the end of
it when the bills had to be paid. Her experience
of the English was that they were quiet about bills.
They were shy of words. They believed readily.
Besides, who was the mistress here? In the absence
of a definite one, it occurred to Costanza that she
might as well be the mistress herself. So she
did as she chose about the dinner, and it was very
good.
The four, however, were so much preoccupied
by their own conversation that they ate it without
noticing how good it was. Even Mrs. Fisher,
she who in such matters was manly, did not notice.
The entire excellent cooking was to her as though
it were not; which shows how much she must have been
stirred.
She was stirred. It was that
Mrs. Wilkins. She was enough to stir anybody.
And she was undoubtedly encouraged by Lady Caroline,
who, in her turn, was no doubt influenced by the Chianti.
Mrs. Fisher was very glad there were
no men present, for they certainly would have been
foolish about Lady Caroline. She was precisely
the sort of young woman to unbalance them; especially,
Mrs. Fisher recognized, at that moment. Perhaps
it was the Chianti momentarily intensifying her personality,
but she was undeniably most attractive; and there
were few things Mrs. Fisher disliked more than having
to look on while sensible, intelligent men, who the
moment before were talking seriously and interestingly
about real matters, became merely foolish and simpering—she
had seen them actually simpering—just because
in walked a bit of bird-brained beauty. Even
Mr. Gladstone, that great wise statesman, whose hand
had once rested for an unforgettable moment solemnly
on her head, would have, she felt, on perceiving Lady
Caroline left off talking sense and horribly embarked
on badinage.
“You see,” Mrs. Wilkins
said—a silly trick that, with which she
mostly began her sentences; Mrs. Fisher each time wished
to say, “Pardon me—I do not see,
I hear”—but why trouble?—“You
see,” said Mrs. Wilkins, leaning across towards
Lady Caroline, “we arranged, didn’t we,
in London that if any of us wanted to we could each
invite one guest. So now I’m doing it.”
“I don’t remember that,”
said Mrs. Fisher, her eyes on her plate.
“Oh yes, we did—didn’t we,
Rose?”
“Yes—I remember,”
said Lady Caroline. “Only it seemed so
incredible that one could every want to. One’s
whole idea was to get away from one’s friends.”
“And one’s husbands.”
Again that unseemly plural.
But how altogether unseemly, thought Mrs. Fisher.
Such implications. Mrs. Arbuthnot clearly thought
so too, for she had turned red.
“And family affection,”
said Lady Caroline—or was it the Chianti
speaking? Surely it was the Chianti.
“And the want of family affection,”
said Mrs. Wilkins—what a light she was
throwing on her home life and real character.
“That wouldn’t be so bad,”
said Lady Caroline. “I’d stay with
that. It would give one room.”
“Oh no, no—it’s
dreadful,” cried Mrs. Wilkins. “It’s
as if one had no clothes on.”
“But I like that,” said Lady Caroline.
“Really—” said Mrs. Fisher.
“It’s a divine feeling,
getting rid of things,” said Lady Caroline,
who was talking altogether to Mrs. Wilkins and paid
no attention to the other two.
“Oh, but in a bitter wind to
have nothing on and know there never will be anything
on and you going to get colder and colder till at last
you die of it—that’s what it was like,
living with somebody who didn’t love one.”
These confidences, thought Mrs. Fisher
. . . and no excuse whatever for Mrs. Wilkins, who
was making them entirely on plain water. Mrs.
Arbuthnot, judging from her face, quite shared Mrs.
Fisher’s disapproval; she was fidgeting.
“But didn’t he?”
asked Lady Caroline—every bit as shamelessly
unreticent as Mrs. Wilkins.
“Mellersh? He showed no signs of it.”
“Delicious,” murmured Lady Caroline.
“Really—” said Mrs. Fisher.
“I didn’t think it was
at all delicious. I was miserably. And
now, since I’ve been here, I simply stare at
myself being miserable. As miserable as that.
And about Mellersh.”
“You mean he wasn’t worth it.”
“Really—” said Mrs. Fisher.
“No, I don’t. I mean I’ve
suddenly got well.”
Lady Caroline, slowly twisting the
stem of her glass in her fingers, scrutinized the
lit-up face opposite.
“And now I’m well I find
I can’t sit here and gloat all to myself.
I can’t be happy, shutting him out. I
must share. I understand exactly what the Blessed
Damozel felt like.
“What was the Blessed Damozel?” asked
Scrap.
“Really—” said
Mrs. Fisher; and with such emphasis this time that
Lady Caroline turned to her.
“Ought I to know?” she
asked. “I don’t know any natural
history. It sounds like a bird.”
“It is a poem,” said Mrs.
Fisher with extraordinary frost.
“Oh,” said Scrap.
“I’ll lend it to you,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, over whose face laughter rippled.
“No,” said Scrap.
“And its author,” said
Mrs. Fisher icily, “though not perhaps quite
what one would have wished him to be, was frequently
at my father’s table.”
“What a bore for you,”
said Scrap. “That’s what mother’s
always doing—inviting authors. I
hate authors. I wouldn’t mind them so much
if they didn’t write books. Go on about
Mellersh,” she said, turning to Mrs. Wilkins.
“Really—” said Mrs. Fisher.
“All those empty beds,” said Mrs. Wilkins.
“What empty beds?” asked Scrap.
“The ones in this house.
Why, of course they each ought to have somebody happy
inside them. Eight beds, and only four people.
It’s dreadful, dreadful to be so greedy and
keep everything just for oneself. I want Rose
to ask her husband out too. You and Mrs. Fisher
haven’t got husbands, but why not give some friend
a glorious time?”
Rose bit her lip. She turned
red, she turned pale. If only Lotty would keep
quiet, she thought. It was all very well to have
suddenly become a saint and want to love everybody,
but need she be so tactless? Rose felt that
all her poor sore places were being danced on.
If only Lotty would keep quiet . . .
And Mrs. Fisher, with even greater
frostiness than that with which she had received Lady
Caroline’s ignorance of the Blessed Damozel,
said, “There is only one unoccupied bedroom in
this house.”
“Only one?” echoed Mrs.
Wilkins, astonished. “Then who are in
all the others?”
“We are,” said Mrs. Fisher.
“But we’re not in all
the bedrooms. There must be at least six.
That leaves two over, and the owner told us there were
eight beds— didn’t he Rose?”
“There are six bedrooms,”
said Mrs. Fisher; for both she and Lady Caroline had
thoroughly searched the house on arriving, in order
to see which part of it they would be most comfortable
in, and they both knew that there were six bedrooms,
two of which were very small, and in one of these
small ones Francesca slept in the company of a chair
and a chest of drawers, and the other, similarly furnished,
was empty.
Mrs. Wilkins and Mrs. Arbuthnot had
hardly looked at the house, having spent most of their
time out-of-doors gaping at the scenery, and had,
in the agitated inattentiveness of their minds when
first they began negotiating for San Salvatore, got
into their heads that the eight beds of which the
owner spoke were the same as eight bedrooms; which
they were not. There were indeed eight beds,
but four of them were in Mrs. Wilkins’s and
Mrs. Arbuthnot’s rooms.
“There are six bedrooms,”
repeated Mrs. Fisher. “We have four, Francesca
has the fifth, and the sixth is empty.”
“So that,” said Scrap,
“However kind we feel we would be if we could,
we can’t. Isn’t it fortunate?”
“But then there’s only
room for one?” said Mrs. Wilkins, looking round
at the three faces.
“Yes—and you’ve got him,”
said Scrap.
Mrs. Wilkins was taken aback.
This question of the beds was unexpected. In
inviting Mellersh she had intended to put him in one
of the four spare-rooms that she imagined were there.
When there were plenty of rooms and enough servants
there was no reason why they should, as they did in
their small, two-servanted house at home, share the
same one. Love, even universal love, the kind
of love with which she felt herself flooded, should
not be tried. Much patience and self-effacement
were needed for successful married sleep. Placidity;
a steady faith; these too were needed. She was
sure she would be much fonder of Mellersh, and he
not mind her nearly so much, if they were not shut
up together at night, if in the morning they could
meet with the cheery affection of friends between
whom lies no shadow of differences about the window
or the washing arrangements, or of absurd little choked-down
resentments at something that had seemed to one of
them unfair. Her happiness, she felt, and her
ability to be friends with everybody, was the result
of her sudden new freedom and its peace. Would
there be that sense of freedom, that peace, after
a night shut up with Mellersh? Would she be
able in the morning to be full towards him, as she
was at that moment full, of nothing at all but loving-kindness?
After all, she hadn’t been very long in heaven.
Suppose she hadn’t been in it long enough for
her to have become fixed in blandness? And only
that morning what an extraordinary joy it had been
to find herself alone when she woke, and able to pull
the bed-clothes any way she liked!
Francesca had to nudge her.
She was so much absorbed that she did not notice the
pudding.
“If,” thought Mrs. Wilkins,
distractedly helping herself, “I share my room
with Mellersh I risk losing all I now feel about him.
If on the other hand I put him in the one spare-room,
I prevent Mrs. Fisher and Lady Caroline from giving
somebody a treat. True they don’t seem
to want to at present, but at any moment in this place
one or the other of them may be seized with a desire
to make somebody happy, and then they wouldn’t
be able to because of Mellersh.”
“What a problem,” she said aloud, her
eyebrows puckered.
“What is?” asked Scrap.
“Where to put Mellersh.”
Scrap stared. “Why, isn’t one room
enough for him?” she asked?
“Oh yes, quite. But then
there won’t be any room left at all—
any room for somebody you may want to invite.”
“I shan’t want to,” said Scrap.
“Or you,” said Mrs. Wilkins
to Mrs. Fisher. “Rose, of course, doesn’t
count. I’m sure she would like sharing
her room with her husband. It’s written
all over her.”
“Really—” said Mrs. Fisher.
“Really what?” asked Mrs.
Wilkins, turning hopefully to her, for she thought
the word this time was the preliminary to a helpful
suggestion.
It was not. It stood by itself. It was,
as before, mere frost.
Challenged, however, Mrs. Fisher did
fasten it on to a sentence. “Really am
I to understand,” she asked, “that you
propose to reserve the one spare-room for the exclusive
use of your own family?”
“He isn’t my own family,”
said Mrs. Wilkins. “He’s my husband.
You see—”
“I see nothing,” Mrs.
Fisher could not this time refrain from interrupting—for
what an intolerable trick. “At the most
I hear, and that reluctantly.”
But Mrs. Wilkins, as impervious to
rebuke as Mrs. Fisher had feared, immediately repeated
the tiresome formula and launched out into a long
and excessively indelicate speech about the best place
for the person she called Mellersh to sleep in.
Mellersh—Mrs. Fisher, remembering
the Thomases and Johns and Alfreds and Roberts of
her day, plain names that yet had all become glorious,
thought it sheer affection to be christened Mellersh—was,
it seemed, Mrs. Wilkins’s husband, and therefore
his place was clearly indicated. Why this talk?
She herself, as if foreseeing his arrival, had had
a second bed put in Mrs. Wilkins’s room.
There were certain things in life which were never
talked about but only done. Most things connected
with husbands were not talked about; and to have a
whole dinner-table taken up with a discussion as to
where one of them should sleep was an affront to the
decencies. How and where husbands slept should
be known only to their wives. Sometimes it was
not known to them, and then the marriage had less
happy moments; but these moments were not talked about
either; the decencies continued to be preserved.
At least, it was so in her day. To have to hear
whether Mr. Wilkins should or should not sleep with
Mrs. Wilkins, and the reasons why he should and the
reasons why he shouldn’t, was both uninteresting
and indelicate.
She might have succeeded in imposing
propriety and changing the conversation if it had
not been for Lady Caroline. Lady Caroline encouraged
Mrs. Wilkins, and threw herself into the discussion
with every bit as much unreserved as Mrs. Wilkins
herself. No doubt she was impelled on this occasion
by Chianti, but whatever the reason there it was.
And, characteristically, Lady Caroline was all for
Mr. Wilkins being given the solitary spare-room.
She took that for granted. Any other arrangement
would be impossible, she said; her expression was,
Barbarous. Had she never read her Bible, Mrs.
Fisher was tempted to inquire—And they
two shall be one flesh? Clearly also, then, one
room. But Mrs. Fisher did not inquire.
She did not care even to allude to such texts to some
one unmarried.
However, there was one way she could
force Mr. Wilkins into his proper place and save the
situation: she could say she herself intended
to invite a friend. It was her right. They
had all said so. Apart from propriety, it was
monstrous that Mrs. Wilkins should want to monopolise
the one spare-room, when in her own room was everything
necessary for her husband. Perhaps she really
would invite somebody— not invite, but
suggest coming. There was Kate Lumley, for instance.
Kate could perfectly afford to come and pay her share;
and she was of her own period and knew, and had known,
most of the people she herself knew and had known.
Kate, of course, had only been on the fringe; she
used to be asked only to the big parties, not to the
small ones, and she still was only on the fringe.
There were some people who never got off the fringe,
and Kate was one. Often, however, such people
were more permanently agreeable to be with than the
others, in that they remained grateful.
Yes; she might really consider Kate.
The poor soul had never married, but then everybody
could not expect to marry, and she was quite comfortably
off—not too comfortably, but just comfortably
enough to pay her own expenses if she came and yet
be grateful. Yes; Kate was the solution.
If she came, at one stroke, Mrs. Fisher saw, would
the Wilkinses be regularized and Mrs. Wilkins be prevented
from having more than her share of the rooms.
Also, Mrs. Fisher would save herself from isolation;
spiritual isolation. She desired physical isolation
between meals, but she disliked that isolation which
is of the spirit. Such isolation would, she
feared, certainly be hers with these three alien-minded
young women. Even Mrs. Arbuthnot was, owing to
her friendship with Mrs. Wilkins, necessarily alien-minded.
In Kate she would have a support. Kate, without
intruding on her sitting-room, for Kate was tractable,
would be there at meals to support her.
Mrs. Fisher said nothing at the moment;
but presently in the drawing-room, when they were
gathered round the wood fire—she had discovered
there was no fireplace in her own sitting-room, and
therefore she would after all be forced, so long as
the evenings remained cool, to spend them in the other
room—presently, while Francesca was handing
coffee round and Lady Caroline was poisoning the air
with smoke, Mrs. Wilkins, looking relieved and pleased,
said: “Well, if nobody really wants that
room, and wouldn’t use it anyhow, I shall be
very glad if Mellersh may have it.”
“Of course he must have it,” said Lady
Caroline.
Then Mrs. Fisher spoke.
“I have a friend,” she
said in her deep voice; and sudden silence fell upon
the others.
“Kate Lumley,” said Mrs. Fisher.
Nobody spoke.
“Perhaps,” continued Mrs.
Fisher, addressing Lady Caroline, “you know
her?”
No, Lady Caroline did not know Kate
Lumley; and Mrs. Fisher, without asking the others
if they did, for she was sure they knew no one, proceeded.
“I wish to invite her to join me,” said
Mrs. Fisher.
Complete silence.
Then Scrap said, turning to Mrs. Wilkins,
“That settles Mellersh, then.”
“It settles the question of
Mr. Wilkins,” said Mrs. Fisher, “although
I am unable to understand that there should ever have
been a question, in the only way that is right.”
“I’m afraid you’re
in for it, then,” said Lady Caroline, again to
Mrs. Wilkins. “Unless,” she added,
“he can’t come.”
But Mrs. Wilkins, her brow perturbed—for
suppose after all she were not yet quite stable in
heaven?—could only say, a little uneasily,
“I see him here.”