And so the second week began, and
all was harmony. The arrival of Mr. Wilkins,
instead of, as three of the party had feared and the
fourth had only been protected from fearing by her
burning faith in the effect on him of San Salvatore,
disturbing such harmony as there was, increased it.
He fitted in. He was determined to please, and
he did please. He was most amiable to his wife—not
only in public, which she was used to, but in private,
when he certainly wouldn’t have been if he hadn’t
wanted to. He did want to. He was so much
obliged to her, so much pleased with her, for making
him acquainted with Lady Caroline, that he felt really
fond of her. Also proud; for there must be, he
reflected, a good deal more in her than he had supposed,
for Lady Caroline to have become so intimate with
her and so affectionate. And the more he treated
her as though she were really very nice, the more
Lotty expanded and became really very nice, and the
more he, affected in his turn, became really very
nice himself; so that they went round and round, not
in a vicious but in a highly virtuous circle.
Positively, for him, Mellersh petted
her. There was at no time much pet in Mellersh,
because he was by nature a cool man; yet such was
the influence on him of, as Lotty supposed, San Salvatore,
that in this second week he sometimes pinched both
her ears, one after the other, instead of only one;
and Lotty, marveling at such rapidly developing affectionateness,
wondered what he would do, should he continue at this
rate, in the third week, when her supply of ears would
have come to an end.
He was particularly nice about the
washstand, and genuinely desirous of not taking up
too much of the space in the small bedroom. Quick
to respond, Lotty was even more desirous not to be
in his way; and the room became the scene of many
an affectionate combat de générosité, each of which
left them more pleased with each other than ever.
He did not again have a bath in the bathroom, though
it was mended and ready for him, but got up and went
down every morning to the sea, and in spite of the
cool nights making the water cold early had his dip
as a man should, and came up to breakfast rubbing his
hands and feeling, as he told Mrs. Fisher, prepared
for anything.
Lotty’s belief in the irresistible
influence of the heavenly atmosphere of San Salvatore
being thus obviously justified, and Mr. Wilkins, whom
Rose knew as alarming and Scrap had pictured as icily
unkind, being so evidently a changed man, both Rose
and Scrap began to think there might after all be
something in what Lotty insisted on, and that San
Salvatore did work purgingly on the character.
They were the more inclined to think
so in that they too felt a working going on inside
themselves: they felt more cleared, both of them,
that second week—Scrap in her thoughts,
many of which were now quite nice thoughts, real amiable
ones about her parents and relations, with a glimmer
in them of recognition of the extraordinary benefits
she had received at the hands of—what?
Fate? Providence?—anyhow of something,
and of how, having received them, she had misused them
by failing to be happy; and Rose in her bosom, which
though it still yearned, yearned to some purpose,
for she was reaching the conclusion that merely inactively
to yearn was no use at all, and that she must either
by some means stop her yearning or give it at least
a chance— remote, but still a chance—of
being quieted by writing to Frederick and asking
him to come out.
If Mr. Wilkins could be changed, thought
Rose, why not Frederick? How wonderful it would
be, how too wonderful, if the place worked on him
too and were able to make them even a little understand
each other, even a little be friends. Rose,
so far had loosening and disintegration gone on in
her character, now was beginning to think her obstinate
strait-lacedness about his books and her austere absorption
in good works had been foolish and perhaps even wrong.
He was her husband, and she had frightened him away.
She had frightened love away, precious love, and
that couldn’t be good. Was not Lotty right
when she said the other day that nothing at all except
love mattered? Nothing certainly seemed much
use unless it was built up on love. But once
frightened away, could it ever come back? Yes,
it might in that beauty, it might in the atmosphere
of happiness Lotty and San Salvatore seemed between
them to spread round like some divine infection.
She had, however, to get him there
first, and he certainly couldn’t be got there
if she didn’t write and tell him where she was.
She would write. She must write;
for if she did there was at least a chance of his
coming, and if she didn’t there was manifestly
none. And then, once here in this loveliness,
with everything so soft and kind and sweet all round,
it would be easier to tell him, to try and explain,
to ask for something different, for at least an attempt
at something different in their lives in the future,
instead of the blankness of separation, the cold—oh,
the cold—of nothing at all but the great
windiness of faith, the great bleakness of works.
Why, one person in the world, one single person belonging
to one, of one’s very own, to talk to, to take
care of, to love, to be interested in, was worth more
than all the speeches on platforms and the compliments
of chairmen in the world. It was also worth
more—Rose couldn’t help it, the thought
would come—than all the prayers.
These thoughts were not head thoughts,
like Scrap’s, who was altogether free from yearnings,
but bosom thoughts. They lodged in the bosom;
it was in the bosom that Rose ached, and felt so dreadfully
lonely. And when her courage failed her, as it
did on most days, and it seemed impossible to write
to Frederick, she would look at Mr. Wilkins and revive.
There he was, a changed man.
There he was, going into that small, uncomfortable
room every night, that room whose proximities had
been Lotty’s only misgiving, and coming out of
it in the morning, and Lotty coming out of it too,
both of them as unclouded and as nice to each other
as when they went in. And hadn’t he, so
critical at home, Lotty had told her, of the least
thing going wrong, emerged from the bath catastrophe
as untouched in spirit as Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego
were untouched in body when they emerged from the fire?
Miracles were happening in this place. If they
could happen to Mr. Wilkins, why not to Frederick?
She got up quickly. Yes, she
would write. She would go and write to him at
once.
But suppose—
She paused. Suppose he didn’t
answer. Suppose he didn’t even answer.
And she sat down again to think a little longer.
In these hesitations did Rose spend most of the second
week.
Then there was Mrs. Fisher.
Her restlessness increased that second week.
It increased to such an extent that she might just
as well not have had her private sitting-room at all,
for she could no longer sit. Not for ten minutes
together could Mrs. Fisher sit. And added to
the restlessness, as the days of the second week proceeded
on their way, she had a curious sensation, which worried
her, of rising sap. She knew the feeling, because
she had sometimes had it in childhood in specially
swift springs, when the lilacs and the syringes seemed
to rush out into blossom in a single night, but it
was strange to have it again after over fifty years.
She would have liked to remark on the sensation to
some one, but she was ashamed. It was such an
absurd sensation at her age. Yet oftener and
oftener, and every day more and more, did Mrs. Fisher
have a ridiculous feeling as if she were presently
going to burgeon.
Sternly she tried to frown the unseemly
sensation down. Burgeon, indeed. She had
heard of dried staffs, pieces of mere dead wood, suddenly
putting forth fresh leaves, but only in legend.
She was not in legend. She knew perfectly what
was due to herself. Dignity demanded that she
should have nothing to do with fresh leaves at her
age; and yet there it was—the feeling that
presently, that at any moment now, she might crop
out all green.
Mrs. Fisher was upset. There
were many things she disliked more than anything else,
and one was when the elderly imagined they felt young
and behaved accordingly. Of course they only
imagined it, they were only deceiving themselves;
but how deplorable were the results. She herself
had grown old as people should grow old—steadily
and firmly. No interruptions, no belated after—glows
and spasmodic returns. If, after all these years,
she were now going to be deluded into some sort of
unsuitable breaking-out, how humiliating.
Indeed she was thankful, that second
week, that Kate Lumley was not there. It would
be most unpleasant, should anything different occur
in her behaviour, to have Kate looking on. Kate
had known her all her life. She felt she could
let herself go—here Mrs. Fisher frowned
at the book she was vainly trying to concentrate on,
for where did that expression come from?—much
less painfully before strangers than before an old
friend. Old friends, reflected Mrs. Fisher,
who hoped she was reading, compare one constantly
with what one used to be. They are always doing
it if one develops. They are surprised at development.
They hark back; they expect motionlessness after,
say, fifty, to the end of one’s days.
That, thought Mrs. Fisher, her eyes
going steadily line by line down the page and not
a word of it getting through into her consciousness,
if foolish of friends. It is condemning one to
a premature death. One should continue (of course
with dignity) to develop, however old one may be.
She had nothing against developing, against further
ripeness, because as long as one was alive one was
not dead—obviously, decided Mrs. Fisher,
and development, change, ripening, were life.
What she would dislike would be unripening, going
back to something green. She would dislike it
intensely; and this is what she felt she was on the
brink of doing.
Naturally it made her very uneasy,
and only in constant movement could she find distraction.
Increasingly restless and no longer able to confine
herself to her battlements, she wandered more and more
frequently, and also aimlessly, in and out of the top
garden, to the growing surprise of Scrap, especially
when she found that all Mrs. Fisher did was to stare
for a few minutes at the view, pick a few dead leaves
off the rose-bushes, and go away again.
In Mr. Wilkins’s conversation
she found temporary relief, but though he joined her
whenever he could he was not always there, for he
spread his attentions judiciously among the three ladies,
and when he was somewhere else she had to face and
manage her thoughts as best she could by herself.
Perhaps it was the excess of light and colour at San
Salvatore which made every other place seem dark and
black; and Prince of Wales Terrace did seem a very
dark black spot to have to go back to —a
dark, narrow street, and her house dark and narrow
as the street, with nothing really living or young
in it. The goldfish could hardly be called living,
or at most not more than half living, and were certainly
not young, and except for them there were only the
maids, and they were dusty old things.
Dusty old things. Mrs. Fisher
paused in her thoughts, arrested by the strange expression.
Where had it come from? How was it possible
for it to come at all? It might have been one
of Mrs. Wilkins’s, in its levity, its almost
slang. Perhaps it was one of hers, and she had
heard her say it and unconsciously caught it from
her.
If so, this was both serious and disgusting.
That the foolish creature should penetrate into Mrs.
Fisher’s very mind and establish her personality
there, the personality which was still, in spite of
the harmony apparently existing between her and her
intelligent husband, so alien to Mrs. Fisher’s
own, so far removed from what she understood and liked,
and infect her with her undesirable phrases, was most
disturbing. Never in her life before had such
a sentence come into Mrs. Fisher’s head.
Never in her life before had she though of her maids,
or of anybody else, as dusty old things. Her
maids were not dusty old things; they were most respectable,
neat women, who were allowed the use of the bathroom
every Saturday night. Elderly, certainly, but
then so was she, so was her house, so was her furniture,
so were her goldfish. They were all elderly,
as they should be, together. But there was a
great difference between being elderly and being a
dusty old thing.
How true it was what Ruskin said,
that evil communications corrupt good manners.
But did Ruskin say it? On second thoughts she
was not sure, but it was just the sort of thing he
would have said if he had said it, and in any case
it was true. Merely hearing Mrs. Wilkins’s
evil communications at meals—she did not
listen, she avoided listening, yet it was evident
she had hear—those communications which,
in that they so often were at once vulgar, indelicate
and profane, and always, she was sorry to say, laughed
at by Lady Caroline, must be classed as evil, was
spoiling her own mental manners. Soon she might
not only think but say. How terrible that would
be. If that were the form her breaking-out was
going to take, the form of unseemly speech, Mrs. Fisher
was afraid she would hardly with any degree of composure
be able to bear it.
At this stage Mrs. Fisher wished more
than ever that she were able to talk over her strange
feelings with some one who would understand.
There was, however, no one who would understand except
Mrs. Wilkins herself. She would. She would
know at once, Mrs. Fisher was sure, what she felt
like. But this was impossible. It would
be as abject as begging the very microbe that was
infecting one for protection against its disease.
She continued, accordingly, to bear
her sensations in silence, and was driven by them
into that frequent aimless appearing in the top garden
which presently roused even Scrap’s attention.
Scrap had noticed it, and vaguely
wondered at it, for some time before Mr. Wilkins inquired
of her one morning as he arranged her cushions for
her—he had established the daily assisting
of Lady Caroline into her chair as his special privilege—whether
there was anything the matter with Mrs. Fisher.
At that moment Mrs. Fisher was standing
by the eastern parapet, shading her eyes and carefully
scrutinizing the distant white houses of Mezzago.
They could see her through the branches of the daphnes.
“I don’t know,” said Scrap.
“She is a lady, I take it,”
said Mr. Wilkins, “who would be unlikely to
have anything on her mind?”
“I should imagine so,” said Scrap, smiling.
“If she has, and her restlessness
appears to suggest it, I should be more than glad
to assist her with advice.”
“I am sure you would be most kind.”
“Of course she has her own legal
adviser, but he is not on the spot. I am.
And a lawyer on the spot,” said Mr. Wilkins,
who endeavoured to make her conversation when he talked
to Lady Caroline light, aware that one must be light
with young ladies, “is worth two in—we
won’t be ordinary and complete the proverb, but
say London.”
“You should ask her.”
“Ask her if she needs assistance?
Would you advise it? Would it not be a little—a
little delicate to touch on such a question, the question
whether or no a lady has something on her mind?”
“Perhaps she will tell you if
you go and talk to her. I think it must be lonely
to be Mrs. Fisher.”
“You are all thoughtfulness
and consideration,” declared Mr. Wilkins, wishing,
for the first time in his life, that he were a foreigner
so that he might respectfully kiss her hand on withdrawing
to go obediently and relieve Mrs. Fisher’s loneliness.
It was wonderful what a variety of
exits from her corner Scrap contrived for Mr. Wilkins.
Each morning she found a different one, which sent
him off pleased after he had arranged her cushions
for her. She allowed him to arrange the cushions
because she instantly had discovered, the very first
five minutes of the very first evening, that her fears
lest he should cling to her and stare in dreadful admiration
were baseless. Mr. Wilkins did not admire like
that. It was not only, she instinctively felt,
not in him, but if it had been he would not have dared
to in her case. He was all respectfulness.
She could direct his movements in regard to herself
with the raising of an eyelash. His one concern
was to obey. She had been prepared to like him
if he would only be so obliging as not to admire her,
and she did like him. She did not forget his
moving defencelessness the first morning in his towel,
and he amused her, and he was kind to Lotty.
It is true she liked him most when he wasn’t
there, but then she usually liked everybody most when
they weren’t there. Certainly he did seem
to be one of those men, rare in her experience, who
never looked at a woman from the predatory angle.
The comfort of this, the simplification it brought
into the relations of the party, was immense.
From this point of view Mr. Wilkins was simply ideal;
he was unique and precious. Whenever she thought
of him, and was perhaps inclined to dwell on the aspects
of him that were a little boring, she remembered this
and murmured, “But what a treasure.”
Indeed it was Mr. Wilkins’s
one aim during his stay at San Salvatore to be a treasure.
At all costs the three ladies who were not his wife
must like him and trust him. Then presently when
trouble arose in their lives—and in what
lives did not trouble sooner or later arise?—they
would recollect how reliable he was and how sympathetic,
and turn to him for advice. Ladies with something
on their minds were exactly what he wanted.
Lady Caroline, he judged, had nothing on hers at the
moment, but so much beauty—for he could
not but see what was evident—must have
had its difficulties in the past and would have more
of them before it had done. In the past he had
not been at hand; in the future he hoped to be.
And meanwhile the behaviour of Mrs. Fisher, the next
in importance of the ladies from the professional appoint
of view, showed definite promise. It was almost
certain that Mrs. Fisher had something on her mind.
He had been observing her attentively, and it was
almost certain.
With the third, with Mrs. Arbuthnot,
he had up to this made least headway, for she was
so very retiring and quiet. But might not this
very retiringness, this tendency to avoid the others
and spend her time alone, indicate that she too was
troubled? If so, he was her man. He would
cultivate her. He would follow her and sit with
her, and encourage her to tell him about herself.
Arbuthnot, he understood from Lotty, was a British
Museum official—nothing specially important
at present, but Mr. Wilkins regarded it as his business
to know all sorts and kinds. Besides, there
was promotion. Arbuthnot, promoted, might become
very much worth while.
As for Lotty, she was charming.
She really had all the qualities he had credited
her with during his courtship, and they had been, it
appeared, merely in abeyance since. His early
impressions of her were now being endorsed by the
affection and even admiration Lady Caroline showed
for her. Lady Caroline Dester was the last person,
he was sure, to be mistaken on such a subject.
Her knowledge of the world, her constant association
with only the best, must make her quite unerring.
Lotty was evidently, then, that which before marriage
he had believed her to be—she was valuable.
She certainly had been most valuable in introducing
him to Lady Caroline and Mrs. Fisher. A man in
his profession could be immensely helped by a clever
and attractive wife. Why had she not been attractive
sooner? Why this sudden flowering?
Mr. Wilkins began too to believe there
was something peculiar, as Lotty had almost at once
informed him, in the atmosphere of San Salvatore.
It promoted expansion. It brought out dormant
qualities. And feeling more and more pleased,
and even charmed, by his wife, and very content with
the progress he was making with the two others, and
hopeful of progress to be made with the retiring third,
Mr. Wilkins could not remember ever having had such
an agreeable holiday. The only thing that might
perhaps be bettered was the way they would call him
Mr. Wilkins. Nobody said Mr. Mellersh-Wilkins.
Yet he had introduced himself to Lady Caroline—he
flinched a little on remembering the circumstances—as
Mellersh-Wilkins.
Still, this was a small matter, not
enough to worry about. He would be foolish if
in such a place and such society he worried about
anything. He was not even worrying about what
the holiday was costing, and had made up his mind
to pay not only his own expenses but his wife’s
as well, and surprise her at the end by presenting
her with her nest-egg as intact as when she started;
and just the knowledge that he was preparing a happy
surprise for her made him feel warmer than ever towards
her.
In fact Mr. Wilkins, who had begun
by being consciously and according to plan on his
best behaviour, remained on it unconsciously, and
with no effort at all.
And meanwhile the beautiful golden
days were dropping gently from the second week one
by one, equal in beauty with those of the first, and
the scent of beanfields in flower on the hillside behind
the village came across to San Salvatore whenever
the air moved. In the garden that second week
the poet’s eyed narcissus disappeared out the
long grass at the edge of the zigzag path, and wild
gladiolus, slender and rose-coloured, came in their
stead, white pinks bloomed in the borders, filing
the whole place with their smoky-sweet smell, and a
bush nobody had noticed burst into glory and fragrance,
and it was a purple lilac bush. Such a jumble
of spring and summer was not to be believed in, except
by those who dwelt in those gardens. Everything
seemed to be out together—all the things
crowded into one month which in England are spread
penuriously over six. Even primroses were found
one day by Mrs. Wilkins in a cold corner up in the
hills; and when she brought them down to the geraniums
and heliotrope of San Salvatore they looked quite
shy.