The strange effect of this incident
was that when they met that evening at dinner both
Mrs. Fisher and Lady Caroline had a singular feeling
of secret understanding with Mr. Wilkins. He
could not be to them as other men. He could
not be to them as he would have been if they had met
him in his clothes. There was a sense of broken
ice; they felt at once intimate and indulgent; almost
they felt to him as nurses do—as those
feel who have assisted either patients or young children
at their baths. They were acquainted with Mr.
Wilkins’s legs.
What Mrs. Fisher said to him that
morning in her first shock will never be known, but
what Mr. Wilkins said to her in reply, when reminded
by what she was saying of his condition, was so handsome
in its apology, so proper in its confusion, that she
had ended by being quite sorry for him and completely
placated. After all, it was an accident, and
nobody could help accidents. And when she saw
him next at dinner, dressed, polished, spotless as
to linen and sleek as to hair, she felt this singular
sensation of a secret understanding with him and,
added to it, of a kind of almost personal pride in
his appearance, now that he was dressed, which presently
extended in some subtle way to an almost personal
pride in everything he said.
There was no doubt whatever in Mrs.
Fisher’s mind that a man was infinitely preferable
as a companion to a woman. Mr. Wilkins’s
presence and conversation at once raised the standard
of the dinner-table from that of a bear garden—yes,
a bear garden—to that of a civilized social
gathering. He talked as men talk, about interesting
subjects, and, though most courteous to Lady Caroline,
showed no traces of dissolving into simpers and idiocy
whenever he addressed her. He was, indeed, precisely
as courteous to Mrs. Fisher herself; and when for
the first time at that table politics were introduced,
he listened to her with the proper seriousness on her
exhibiting a desire to speak, and treated her opinions
with the attention they deserved. He appeared
to think much as she did about Lloyd George, and in
regard to literature he was equally sound. In
fact there was real conversation, and he liked nuts.
How he could have married Mrs. Wilkins was a mystery.
Lotty, for her part, looked on with
round eyes. She had expected Mellersh to take
at least two days before he got to this stage, but
the San Salvatore spell had worked instantly.
It was not only that he was pleasant at dinner, for
she had always seen him pleasant at dinners with other
people, but he had been pleasant all day privately—so
pleasant that he had complimented her on her looks
while she was brushing out her hair, and kissed her.
Kissed her! And it was neither good-morning
nor good-night.
Well, this being so, she would put
off telling him the truth about her nest-egg, and
about Rose not being his hostess after all, till next
day. Pity to spoil things. She had been
going to blurt it out as soon as he had had a rest,
but it did seem a pity to disturb such a very beautiful
frame of mind as that of Mellersh this first day.
Let him too get more firmly fixed in heaven.
Once fixed he wouldn’t mind anything.
Her face sparkled with delight at
the instantaneous effect of San Salvatore. Even
the catastrophe of the bath, of which she had been
told when she came in from the garden, had not shaken
him. Of course all that he had needed was a
holiday. What a brute she had been to him when
he wanted to take her himself to Italy. But this
arrangement, as it happened, was ever so much better,
though not through any merit of hers. She talked
and laughed gaily, not a shred of fear of him left
in her, and even when she said, struck by his spotlessness,
that he looked so clean that one could eat one’s
dinner off him, and Scrap laughed, Mellersh laughed
too. He would have minded that at home, supposing
that at home she had had the spirit to say it.
It was a successful evening.
Scrap, whenever she looked at Mr. Wilkins, saw him
in his towel, dripping water, and felt indulgent.
Mrs. Fisher was delighted with him. Rose was
a dignified hostess in Mr. Wilkins’s eyes, quiet
and dignified, and he admired the way she waived her
right to preside at the head of the table—as
a graceful compliment, of course, to Mrs. Fisher’s
age. Mrs. Arbuthnot was, opined Mr. Wilkins,
naturally retiring. She was the most retiring
of the three ladies. He had met her before dinner
alone for a moment in the drawing-room, and had expressed
in appropriate language his sense of her kindness
in wishing him to join her party, and she had been
retiring. Was she shy? Probably.
She had blushed, and murmured as if in deprecation,
and then the others had come in. At dinner she
talked least. He would, of course, become better
acquainted with her during the next few days, and
it would be a pleasure, he was sure.
Meanwhile Lady Caroline was all and
more than all Mr. Wilkins had imagined, and had received
his speeches, worked in skillfully between the courses,
graciously; Mrs. Fisher was the exact old lady he had
been hoping to come across all his professional life;
and Lotty and not only immensely improved, but was
obviously au mieux—Mr. Wilkins knew what
was necessary in French—with Lady Caroline.
He had been much tormented during the day by the
thought of how he had stood conversing with Lady Caroline
forgetful of his not being dressed, and had at last
written her a note most deeply apologizing, and beseeching
her to overlook his amazing, his incomprehensible
obliviousness, to which she had replied in pencil
on the back of the envelop, “Don’t worry.”
And he had obeyed her commands, and had put it from
him. The result was he was now in great contentment.
Before going to sleep that night he pinched his wife’s
ear. She was amazed. These endearments
. . .
What is more, the morning brought
no relapse in Mr. Wilkins, and he kept up to his high
level through out the day, in spite of its being the
first day of the second week, and therefore pay day.
It being pay day precipitated Lotty’s
confession, which she had, when it came to the point,
been inclined to put off a little longer. She
was not afraid, she dared anything, but Mellersh was
in such an admirable humour—why risk clouding
it just yet? When, however, soon after breakfast
Costanza appeared with a pile of very dirty little
bits of paper covered with sums in pencil, and having
knocked at Mrs. Fisher’s door and been sent
away, and at Lady Caroline’s door and been sent
away, and at Rose’s door and had no answer because
Rose had gone out, she waylaid Lotty, who was showing
Mellersh over the house, and pointed to the bits of
paper and talked very rapidly and loud, and shrugged
her shoulders a great deal, and kept on pointing at
the bits of paper, Lotty remembered that a week had
passed without anybody paying anything to anyone,
and that the moment had come to settle up.
“Does this good lady want something?”
inquired Mr. Wilkins mellifluously.
“Money,” said Lotty.
“Money?”
“It’s the housekeeping bills.”
“Well, you have nothing to do
with those,” said Mr. Wilkins serenely.
“Oh yes, I have—”
And the confession was precipitated.
It was wonderful how Mellersh took
it. One would have imagined that his sole idea
about the nest-egg had always been that it should be
lavished on just this. He did not, as he would
have done at home, cross-examine her; he accepted
everything as it came pouring out, about her fibs
and all, and when she had finished and said, “You
have every right to be angry, I think, but I hope
you won’t be and will forgive me instead,”
he merely asked, “What can be more beneficial
than such a holiday?”
Whereupon she put her arm through
his and held it tight and said, “Oh, Mellersh,
you really are too sweet!”—her face
red with pride in him.
That he should so quickly assimilate
the atmosphere, that he should at once become nothing
but kindness, showed surely what a real affinity he
had with good and beautiful things. He belonged
quite naturally in this place of heavenly calm.
He was—extraordinary how she had misjudged
him—by nature a child of light. Fancy
not minding the dreadful fibs she had gone in for
before leaving home; fancy passing even those over
without comment. Wonderful. Yet not wonderful,
for wasn’t he in heaven? In heaven nobody
minded any of those done-with things, one didn’t
even trouble to forgive and forget, one was much too
happy. She pressed his arm tight in her gratitude
and appreciation; and though he did not withdraw his,
neither did he respond to her pressure. Mr.
Wilkins was of a cool habit, and rarely had any real
wish to press.
Meanwhile, Costanza, perceiving that
she had lost the Wilkinses’ ear had gone back
to Mrs. Fisher, who at least understood Italian, besides
being clearly in the servants’ eyes the one of
the party marked down by age and appearance to pay
the bills; and to her, while Mrs. Fisher put the final
touches to her toilette, for she was preparing, by
means of putting on a hat and veil and feather boa
and gloves, to go for her first stroll in the lower
garden—positively her first since her arrival—she
explained that unless she was given money to pay the
last week’s bills the shops of Castagneto would
refuse credit for the current week’s food.
Not even credit would they give, affirmed Costanza,
who had been spending a great deal and was anxious
to pay all her relations what was owed them and also
to find out how her mistresses took it, for that day’s
meals. Soon it would be the hour of colazione,
and how could there be colazione without meat, without
fish, without eggs, without—
Mrs. Fisher took the bills out of
her hand and looked at the total; and she was so much
astonished by its size, so much horrified by the extravagance
to which it testified, that she sat down at her writing-table
to go into the thing thoroughly.
Costanza had a very bad half-hour.
She had not supposed it was in the English to be
so mercenary. And then la Vecchia, as she was
called in the kitchen, knew so much Italian, and with
a doggedness that filled Costanza with shame on her
behalf, for such conduct was the last one expected
from the noble English, she went through item after
item, requiring and persisting till she got them,
explanations.
There were no explanations, except
that Costanza had had one glorious week of doing exactly
as she chose, of splendid unbridled licence, and that
this was the result.
Costanza, having no explanations,
wept. It was miserable to think she would have
to cook from now on under watchfulness, under suspicion;
and what would her relations say when they found the
orders the received were whittled down? They
would say she had no influence; they would despise
her.
Costanza wept, but Mrs. Fisher was
unmoved. In slow and splendid Italian, with
the roll of the cantos of the Inferno, she informed
her that she would pay no bills till the following
week, and that meanwhile the food was to be precisely
as good as ever, and at a quarter the cost.
Costanza threw up her hands.
Next week, proceeded Mrs. Fisher unmoved,
if she found this had been so she would pay the whole.
Otherwise—she paused; for what she would
do otherwise she did not know herself. But she
paused and looked impenetrable, majestic and menacing,
and Costanza was cowed.
Then Mrs. Fisher, having dismissed
her with a gesture, went in search of Lady Caroline
to complain. She had been under the impression
that Lady Caroline ordered the meals and therefore
was responsible for the prices, but now it appeared
that the cook had been left to do exactly as she pleased
ever since they got there, which of course was simply
disgraceful.
Scrap was not in her bedroom, but
the room, on Mrs. Fisher’s opening the door,
for she suspected her of being in it and only pretending
not to hear the knock, was still flowerlike from her
presence.
“Scent,” sniffed Mrs.
Fisher, shutting it again; and she wished Carlyle
could have had five minutes’ straight talk with
this young woman. And yet—perhaps
even he—
She went downstairs to go into the
garden in search of her, and in the hall encountered
Mr. Wilkins. He had his hat on, and was lighting
a cigar.
Indulgent as Mrs. Fisher felt towards
Mr. Wilkins, and peculiarly and even mystically related
after the previous morning’s encounter, she
yet could not like a cigar in the house. Out
of doors she endured it, but it was not necessary,
when out of doors was such a big place, to indulge
the habit indoors. Even Mr. Fisher, who had been,
she should say, a man originally tenacious of habits,
had quite soon after marriage got out of this one.
However, Mr. Wilkins, snatching off
his hat on seeing her, instantly threw the cigar away.
He threw it into the water a great jar of arum lilies
presumably contain, and Mrs. Fisher, aware of the value
men attach to their newly-lit cigars, could not but
be impressed by this immediate and magnificent amende
honorable.
But the cigar did not reach the water.
It got caught in the lilies, and smoked on by itself
among them, a strange and depraved-looking object.
“Where are you going to, my
prett—” began Mr. Wilkins, advancing
towards Mrs. Fisher; but he broke off just in time.
Was it morning spirits impelling him
to address Mrs. Fisher in the terms of a nursery rhyme?
He wasn’t even aware that he knew the thing.
Most strange. What could have put it, at such
a moment, into his self-possessed head? He felt
great respect for Mrs. Fisher, and would not for the
world have insulted her by addressing her as a maid,
pretty or otherwise. He wished to stand well
with her. She was a woman of parts, and also,
he suspected, of property. At breakfast they
had been most pleasant together, and he had been struck
by her apparent intimacy with well-known persons.
Victorians, of course; but it was restful to talk
about them after the strain of his brother-in-law’s
Georgian parties on Hampstead Heath. He and she
were getting on famously, he felt. She already
showed all the symptoms of presently wishing to become
a client. Not for the world would he offend her.
He turned a little cold at the narrowness of his escape.
She had not, however, noticed.
“You are going out,” he
said very politely, all readiness should she confirm
his assumption to accompany her.
“I want to find Lady Caroline,”
said Mrs. Fisher, going towards the glass door leading
into the top garden.
“An agreeable quest,”
remarked Mr. Wilkins, “May I assist in the search?
Allow me—” he added, opening the
door for her.
“She usually sits over in that
corner behind the bushes,” said Mrs. Fisher.
“And I don’t know about it being an agreeable
quest. She has been letting the bills run up
in the most terrible fashion, and needs a good scolding.”
“Lady Carline?” said Mr.
Wilkins, unable to follow such an attitude.
“What has Lady Caroline, if I may inquire, to
do with the bills here?”
“The housekeeping was left to
her, and as we all share alike it ought to have been
a matter of honour with her—”
“But—Lady Caroline
housekeeping for the party here? A party which
includes my wife? My dear lady, you render me
speechless. Do you not know she is the daughter
of the Droitwiches?”
“Oh, is that who she is,”
said Mrs. Fisher, scrunching heavily over the pebbles
towards the hidden corner. “Well, that
accounts for it. The muddle that man Droitwich
made in his department in the war was a national scandal.
It amounted to misappropriation of the public funds.”
“But it is impossible, I assure
you, to expect the daughter of the Droitwiches—”
began Mr. Wilkins earnestly.
“The Droitwiches,” interrupted
Mrs. Fisher, “are neither here nor there.
Duties undertaken should be performed. I don’t
intend my money to be squandered for the sake of any
Droitwiches.”
A headstrong old lady. Perhaps
not so easy to deal with as he had hoped. But
how wealthy. Only the consciousness of great
wealth would make her snap her fingers in this manner
at the Droitwiches. Lotty, on being questioned,
had been vague about her circumstances, and had described
her house as a mausoleum with gold-fish swimming about
in it; but now he was sure she was more than very
well off. Still, he wished he had not joined
her at this moment, for he had no sort of desire to
be present at such a spectacle as the scolding of Lady
Caroline Dester.
Again, however, he was reckoning without
Scrap. Whatever she felt when she looked up
and beheld Mr. Wilkins discovering her corner on the
very first morning, nothing but angelicness appeared
on her face. She took her feet off the parapet
on Mrs. Fisher’s sitting down on it, and listening
gravely to her opening remarks as to her not having
any money to fling about in reckless and uncontrolled
household expenditure, interrupted her flow by pulling
one of the cushions from behind her head and offering
it to her.
“Sit on this,” said Scrap,
holding it out. “You’ll be more
comfortable.”
Mr. Wilkins leapt to relieve her of it.
“Oh, thanks,” said Mrs. Fisher, interrupted.
It was difficult to get into the swing
again. Mr. Wilkins inserted the cushion solicitously
between the slightly raised Mrs. Fisher and the stone
of the parapet, and again she had to say “Thanks.”
It was interrupted. Besides, Lady Caroline said
nothing in her defence; she only looked at her, and
listened with the face of an attentive angel.
It seemed to Mr. Wilkins that it must
be difficult to scold a Dester who looked like that
and so exquisitely said nothing. Mrs. Fisher,
he was glad to see, gradually found it difficult herself,
for her severity slackened, and she ended by saying
lamely, “You ought to have told me you were
not doing it.”
“I didn’t know you thought I was,”
said the lovely voice.
“I would now like to know,”
said Mrs. Fisher, “what you propose to do for
the rest of the time here.”
“Nothing,” said Scrap, smiling.
“Nothing? Do you mean to say—”
“If I may be allowed, ladies,”
interposed Mr. Wilkins in his suavest professional
manner, “to make a suggestion”—they
both looked at him, and remembering him as they first
saw him felt indulgent— “I would
advise you not to spoil a delightful holiday with worries
over housekeeping.”
“Exactly,” said Mrs. Fisher. “It
is what I intend to avoid.”
“Most sensible,” said
Mr. Wilkins. “Why not, then,” he
continued, “allow the cook—an excellent
cook, by the way—so much a head per diem”—Mr.
Wilkins knew what was necessary in Latin—“and
tell her that for this sum she must cater for you,
and not only cater but cater as well as ever?
One could easily reckon it out. The charges
of a moderate hotel, for instance, would do as a basis,
halved, or perhaps even quartered.”
“And this week that has just
passed?” asked Mrs. Fisher. “The
terrible bills of this first week? What about
them?”
“They shall be my present to
San Salvatore,” said Scrap, who didn’t
like the idea of Lotty’s nest-egg being reduced
so much beyond what she was prepared for.
There was a silence. The ground
was cut from under Mrs. Fisher’s feet.
“Of course if you choose to
throw your money about—” she said
at last, disapproving but immensely relieved, while
Mr. Wilkins was rapt in the contemplation of the precious
qualities of blue blood. This readiness, for
instance, not to trouble about money, this free-handedness—it
was not only what one admired in others, admired in
others perhaps more than anything else, but it was
extraordinarily useful to the professional classes.
When met with it should be encouraged by warmth of
reception. Mrs. Fisher was not warm. She
accepted—from which he deduced that with
her wealth went closeness—but she accepted
grudgingly. Presents were presents, and one did
not look them in this manner in the mouth, he felt;
and if Lady Caroline found her pleasure in presenting
his wife and Mrs. Fisher with their entire food for
a week, it was their part to accept gracefully.
One should not discourage gifts.
On behalf of his wife, then, Mr. Wilkins
expressed what she would wish to express, and remarking
to Lady Caroline—with a touch of lightness,
for so should gifts be accepted in order to avoid
embarrassing the donor—that she had in that
case been his wife’s hostess since her arrival,
he turned almost gaily to Mrs. Fisher and pointed
out that she and his wife must now jointly write Lady
Caroline the customary latter of thanks for hospitality.
“A Collins,” said Mr. Wilkins, who knew
what was necessary in literature. “I prefer
the name Collins for such a letter to either that
of Board and Lodging or Bread and Butter. Let
us call it a Collins.”
Scrap smiled, and held out her cigarette
case. Mrs. Fisher could not help being mollified.
A way out of waste was going to be found, thanks
to Mr. Wilkins, and she hated waste quite as much as
having to pay for it; also a way was found out of
housekeeping. For a moment she had thought that
if everybody tried to force her into housekeeping on
her brief holiday by their own indifference (Lady Caroline),
or inability to speak Italian (the other two), she
would have to send for Kate Lumley after all.
Kate could do it. Kate and she had learnt Italian
together. Kate would only be allowed to come
on condition that she did do it.
But this was much better, this way
of Mr. Wilkins’s. Really a most superior
man. There was nothing like an intelligent, not
too young man for profitable and pleasurable companionship.
And when she got up, the business for which she had
come being settled, and said she now intended to take
a little stroll before lunch, Mr. Wilkins did not
stay with Lady Caroline, as most of the men she had
known would, she was afraid, have wanted to—he
asked to be permitted to go and stroll with her; so
that he evidently definitely preferred conversation
to faces. A sensible, companionable man.
A clever, well-read man. A man of the world.
A man. She was very glad indeed she had not
written to Kate the other day. What did she
want with Kate? She had found a better companion.
But Mr. Wilkins did not go with Mrs.
Fisher because of her conversation, but because, when
she got up and he got up because she got up, intending
merely to bow her out of the recess, Lady Caroline
had put her feet up on the parapet again, and arranging
her head sideways in the cushions had shut her eyes.
The daughter of the Droitwiches desired to go to sleep.
It was not for him, by remaining, to prevent her.