And then when she spoke . . . what
chance was there for poor Briggs? He was undone.
All Scrap said was, “How do you do,” on
Mr. Wilkins presenting him, but it was enough; it
undid Briggs.
From a cheerful, chatty, happy young
man, overflowing with life and friendliness, he became
silent, solemn, and with little beads on his temples.
Also he became clumsy, dropping the teaspoon as he
handed her her cup, mismanaging the macaroons, so
that one rolled on the ground. His eyes could
not keep off the enchanting face for a moment; and
when Mr. Wilkins, elucidating him, for he failed to
elucidate himself, informed Lady Caroline that in
Mr. Briggs she beheld the owner of San Salvatore,
who was on his way to Rome, but had got out at Mezzago,
etc. etc., and that the other three ladies
had invited him to spend the night in what was to
all intents and purposes his own house rather than
an hotel, and Mr. Briggs was only waiting for the seal
of her approval to this invitation, she being the
fourth hostess—when Mr. Wilkins, balancing
his sentences and being admirably clear and enjoying
the sound of his own cultured voice, explained the
position in this manner to Lady Caroline, Briggs sat
and said never a word.
A deep melancholy invaded Scrap.
The symptoms of the incipient grabber were all there
and only too familiar, and she knew that if Briggs
stayed her rest-cure might be regarded as over.
Then Kate Lumley occurred to her.
She caught at Kate as at a straw.
“It would have been delightful,”
she said, faintly smiling at Briggs—she
could not in decency not smile, at least a little,
but even a little betrayed the dimple, and Briggs’s
eyes became more fixed than ever—“I’m
only wondering if there is room.”
“Yes, there is,” said
Lotty. “There’s Kate Lumley’s
room.”
“I thought,” said Scrap
to Mrs. Fisher, and it seemed to Briggs that he had
never heard music till now, “your friend was
expected immediately.”
“Oh, no,” said Mrs. Fisher—with
an odd placidness, Scrap thought.
“Miss Lumley,” said Mr.
Wilkins, “—or should I,” he
inquired of Mrs. Fisher, “say Mrs.?”
“Nobody has ever married Kate,”
said Mrs. Fisher complacently.
“Quite so. Miss Lumley
does not arrive to-day in any case, Lady Caroline,
and Mr. Briggs has—unfortunately, if I may
say so—to continue his journey to-morrow,
so that his staying would in no way interfere with
Miss Lumley’s possible movements.”
“Then of course I join in the
invitation,” said Scrap, with what was to Briggs
the most divine cordiality.
He stammered something, flushing scarlet,
and Scrap thought, “Oh,” and turned her
head away; but that merely made Briggs acquainted
with her profile, and if there existed anything more
lovely than Scrap’s full face it was her profile.
Well, it was only for this one afternoon
and evening. He would leave, no doubt, the first
thing in the morning. It took hours to get to
Rome. Awful if he hung on till the night train.
She had a feeling that the principal express to Rome
passed through at night. Why hadn’t that
woman Kate Lumley arrived yet? She had forgotten
all about her, but now she remembered she was to have
been invited a fortnight ago. What had become
of her? This man, once let in, would come and
see her in London, would haunt the places she was
likely to go to. He had the makings, her experienced
eye could see, of a passionately persistent grabber.
“If,” thought Mr. Wilkins,
observing Briggs’s face and sudden silence,
“any understanding existed between this young
fellow and Mrs. Arbuthnot, there is now going to be
trouble. Trouble of a different nature from
the kind I feared, in which Arbuthnot would have played
a leading part, in fact the part of petitioner, but
trouble that may need help and advice none the less
for its not being publicly scandalous. Briggs,
impelled by his passions and her beauty, will aspire
to the daughter of the Droitwiches. She, naturally
and properly, will repel him. Mrs. Arbuthnot,
left in the cold, will be upset and show it.
Arbuthnot, on his arrival will find his wife in enigmatic
tears. Inquiring into their cause, he will be
met with an icy reserve. More trouble may then
be expected, and in me they will seek and find their
adviser. When Lotty said Mrs. Arbuthnot wanted
her husband, she was wrong. What Mrs. Arbuthnot
wants is Briggs, and it looks uncommonly as if she
were not going to get him. Well, I’m their
man.”
“Where are your things, Mr.
Briggs?” asked Mrs. Fisher, her voice round
with motherliness. “Oughtn’t they
to be fetched?” For the sun was nearly in the
sea now, and the sweet-smelling April dampness that
followed immediately on its disappearance was beginning
to steal into the garden.
Briggs started. “My things?”
he repeated. “Oh yes—I must
fetch them. They’re in Mezzago. I’ll
send Domenico. My fly is waiting in the village.
He can go back in it. I’ll go and tell
him.”
He got up. To whom was he talking?
To Mrs. Fisher, ostensibly, yet his eyes were fixed
on Scrap, who said nothing and looked at no one.
Then, recollecting himself, he stammered,
“I’m awfully sorry—I keep on
forgetting—I’ll go down and fetch
them myself.”
“We can easily send Domenico,”
said Rose; and at her gentle voice he turned his head.
Why, there was his friend, the sweet-named
lady—but how had she not in this short
interval changed! Was it the failing light making
her so colourless, so vague-featured, so dim, so much
like a ghost? A nice good ghost, of course,
and still with a pretty name, but only a ghost.
He turned from her to Scrap again,
and forgot Rose Arbuthnot’s existence.
How was it possible for him to bother about anybody
or anything else in this first moment of being face
to face with his dream come true?
Briggs had not supposed or hoped that
any one as beautiful as his dream of beauty existed.
He had never till now met even an approximation.
Pretty women, charming women by the score he had met
and properly appreciated, but never the real, the godlike
thing itself. He used to think “If ever
I saw a perfectly beautiful woman I should die”;
and though, having now met what to his ideas was a
perfectly beautiful woman, he did not die, he became
very nearly as incapable of managing his own affairs
as if he had.
The others were obliged to arrange
everything for him. By questions they extracted
from him that his luggage was in the station cloakroom
at Mezzago, and they sent for Domenico, and, urged
and prompted by everybody except Scrap, who sat in
silence and looked at no one, Briggs was induced to
give him the necessary instructions for going back
in the fly and bringing out his things.
It was a sad sight to see the collapse
of Briggs. Everybody noticed it, even Rose.
“Upon my word,” thought
Mrs. Fisher, “the way one pretty face can turn
a delightful man into an idiot is past all patience.”
And feeling the air getting chilly,
and the sight of the enthralled Briggs painful, she
went in to order his room to be got ready, regretting
now that she had pressed the poor boy to stay.
She had forgotten Lady Caroline’s kill-joy
face for the moment, and the more completely owing
to the absence of any ill effects produced by it on
Mr. Wilkins. Poor boy. Such a charming
boy too, left to himself. It was true she could
not accuse Lady Caroline of not leaving him to himself,
for she was taking no notice of him at all, but that
did not help. Exactly like foolish moths did
men, in other respects intelligent, flutter round
the impassive lighted candle of a pretty face.
She had seen them doing it. She had looked on
only too often. Almost she laid a mother hand
on Briggs’s fair head as she passed him.
Poor boy.
Then Scrap, having finished her cigarette,
got up and went indoors too. She saw no reason
why she should sit there in order to gratify Mr. Briggs’s
desire to stare. She would have liked to stay
out longer, to go to her corner behind the daphne
bushes and look at the sunset sky and watch the lights
coming out one by one in the village below and smell
the sweet moistness of the evening, but if she did
Mr. Briggs would certainly follow her.
The old familiar tyranny had begun
again. Her holiday of peace and liberation was
interrupted—perhaps over, for who knew if
he would go away, after all, to-morrow? He might
leave the house, driven out of it by Kate Lumley,
but that was nothing to prevent his taking rooms in
the village and coming up every day. This tyranny
of one person over another! And she was so miserably
constructed that she wouldn’t even be able to
frown him down without being misunderstood.
Scrap, who loved this time of the
evening in her corner, felt indignant with Mr. Briggs
who was doing her out of it, and she turned her back
on the garden and him and went towards the house without
a look or a word. But Briggs, when he realized
her intention, leapt to his fee, snatched chairs which
were not in her way out of it, kicked a footstool
which was not in her path on one side, hurried to the
door, which stood wide open, in order to hold it open,
and followed her through it, walking by her side along
the hall.
What was to be done with Mr. Briggs?
Well, it was his hall; she couldn’t prevent
his walking along it.
“I hope,” he said, not
able while walking to take his eyes off her, so that
he knocked against several things he would otherwise
have avoided—the corner of a bookcase,
an ancient carved cupboard, the table with the flowers
on it, shaking the water over—“that
you are quite comfortable here? If you’re
not I’ll—I’ll flay them alive.”
His voice vibrated. What was
to be done with Mr. Briggs? She could of course
stay in her room the whole time, say she was ill, not
appear at dinner; but again, the tyranny of this .
. .
“I’m very comfortable indeed,” said
Scrap.
“If I had dreamed you were coming—”
he began.
“It’s a wonderful old
place,” said Scrap, doing her utmost to sound
detached and forbidding, but with little hope of success.
The kitchen was on this floor, and
passing its door, which was open a crack, they were
observed by the servants, whose thoughts, communicated
to each other by looks, may be roughly reproduced by
such rude symbols as Aha and Oho—symbols
which represented and included their appreciation
of the inevitable, their foreknowledge of the inevitable,
and their complete understanding and approval.
“Are you going upstairs?”
asked Briggs, as she paused at the foot of them.
“Yes.”
“Which room do you sit in?
The drawing-room, or the small yellow room?”
“In my own room.”
So then he couldn’t go up with
her; so then all he could do was to wait till she
came out again.
He longed to ask her which was her
own room—it thrilled him to hear her call
any room in his house her own room—that
he might picture her in it. He longed to know
if by any happy chance it was his room, for ever after
to be filled with her wonder; but he didn’t dare.
He would find that out later from some one else—Francesca,
anybody.
“Then I shan’t see you again till dinner?”
“Dinner is at eight,”
was Scrap’s evasive answer as she went upstairs.
He watched her go.
She passed the Madonna, the portrait
of Rose Arbuthnot, and the dark-eyed figure he had
thought so sweet seemed to turn pale, to shrivel into
insignificance as she passed.
She turned the bend of the stairs,
and the setting sun, shining through the west window
a moment on her face, turned her to glory.
She disappeared, and the sun went
out too, and the stairs were dark and empty.
He listened till her footsteps were
silent, trying to tell from the sound of the shutting
door which room she had gone into, then wandered aimlessly
away through the hall again, and found himself back
in the top garden.
Scrap from her window saw him there.
She saw Lotty and Rose sitting on the end parapet,
where she would have liked to have been, and she saw
Mr. Wilkins buttonholing Briggs and evidently telling
him to story of the oleander tree in the middle of
the garden.
Briggs was listening with a patience
she thought rather nice, seeing that it was his oleander
and his own father’s story. She knew Mr.
Wilkins was telling him the story by his gestures.
Domenico had told it her soon after her arrival,
and he had also told Mrs. Fisher, who had told Mr.
Wilkins. Mrs. Fisher thought highly of this story,
and often spoke of it. It was about a cherrywood
walking-stick. Briggs’s father had thrust
this stick into the ground at that spot, and said
to Domenico’s father, who was then the gardener,
“Here we will have an oleander.”
And Briggs’s father left the stick in the ground
as a reminder to Domenico’s father, and presently—how
long afterwards nobody remembered—the stick
began to sprout, and it was an oleander.
There stood poor Mr. Briggs being
told all about it, and listening to the story he must
have known from infancy with patience.
Probably he was thinking of something
else. She was afraid he was. How unfortunate,
how extremely unfortunate, the determination that
seized people to get hold of and engulf other people.
If only they could be induced to stand more on their
own feet. Why couldn’t Mr. Briggs be more
like Lotty, who never wanted anything of anybody,
but was complete in herself and respected other people’s
completeness? One loved being with Lotty.
With her one was free, and yet befriended. Mr.
Briggs looked so really nice, too. She thought
she might like him if only he wouldn’t so excessively
like her.
Scrap felt melancholy. Here
she was shut up in her bedroom, which was stuffy from
the afternoon sun that had been pouring into it, instead
of out in the cool garden, and all because of Mr. Briggs.
Intolerably tyranny, she thought,
flaring up. She wouldn’t endure it; she
would go out all the same; she would run downstairs
while Mr. Wilkins—really that man was a
treasure—held Mr. Briggs down telling him
about the oleander, and get out of the house by the
front door, and take cover in the shadows of the zigzag
path. Nobody could see her there; nobody would
think of looking for her there.
She snatched up a wrap, for she did
not mean to come back for a long while, perhaps not
even to dinner—it would be all Mr. Briggs’s
fault if she went dinnerless and hungry—and
with another glance out of the window to see if she
were still safe, she stole out and got away to the
sheltering trees of the zigzag path, and there sat
down on one of the seats placed at each bend to assist
the upward journey of those who were breathless.
Ah, this was lovely, thought Scrap
with a sigh of relief. How cool. How good
it smelt. She could see the quiet water of the
little harbour through the pine trunks, and the lights
coming out in the houses on the other side, and all
round her the green dusk was splashed by the rose-pink
of the gladioluses in the grass and the white of the
crowding daisies.
Ah, this was lovely. So still.
Nothing moving—not a leaf, not a stalk.
The only sound was a dog barking, far away somewhere
up on the hills, or when the door of the little restaurant
in the piazza below was opened and there was a burst
of voices, silenced again immediately by the swinging
to of the door.
She drew in a deep breath of pleasure. Ah, this
was—
Her deep breath was arrested in the middle.
What was that?
She leaned forward listening, her body tense.
Footsteps. On the zigzag path. Briggs.
Finding her out.
Should she run?
No—the footsteps were coming
up, not down. Some one from the village.
Perhaps Angelo, with provisions.
She relaxed again. But the steps
were not the steps of Angelo, that swift and springy
youth; they were slow and considered, and they kept
on pausing.
“Some one who isn’t used to hills,”
thought Scrap.
The idea of going back to the house
did not occur to her. She was afraid of nothing
in life except love. Brigands or murderers as
such held no terrors for the daughter of the Droitwiches;
she only would have been afraid of them if they left
off being brigands and murderers and began instead
to try and make love.
The next moment the footsteps turned
the corner of her bit of path, and stood still.
“Getting his wind,” thought Scrap, not
looking round.
Then as he—from the sounds
of the steps she took them to belong to a man—did
not move, she turned her head, and beheld with astonishment
a person she had seen a good deal of lately in London,
the well-known writer of amusing memoirs, Mr. Ferdinand
Arundel.
She stared. Nothing in the way
of being followed surprised her any more, but that
he should have discovered where she was surprised
her. Her mother had promised faithfully to tell
no one.
“You?” she said, feeling betrayed.
“Here?”
He came up to her and took off his
hat. His forehead beneath the hat was wet with
the beads of unaccustomed climbing. He looked
ashamed and entreating, like a guilty but devoted
dog.
“You must forgive me,”
he said. “Lady Droitwich told me where
you were, and as I happened to be passing through on
my way to Rome I thought I would get out at Mezzago
and just look in and see how you were.”
“But—didn’t my mother tell
you I was doing a rest-cure?”
Yes. She did. And that’s
why I haven’t intruded on you earlier in the
day. I thought you would probably sleep all day,
and wake up about now so as to be fed.”
“But—”
“I know. I’ve got
nothing to say in excuse. I couldn’t help
myself.”
“This,” thought Scrap,
“comes of mother insisting on having authors
to lunch, and me being so much more amiable in appearance
than I really am.”
She had been amiable to Ferdinand
Arundel; she liked him—or rather she did
not dislike him. He seemed a jovial, simple man,
and had the eyes of a nice dog. Also, though
it was evident that he admired her, he had not in
London grabbed. There he had merely been a good-natured,
harmless person of entertaining conversation, who helped
to make luncheons agreeable. Now it appeared
that he too was a grabber. Fancy following her
out there—daring to. Nobody else had.
Perhaps her mother had given him the address because
she considered him so absolutely harmless, and thought
he might be useful and see her home.
Well, whatever he was he couldn’t
possibly give her the trouble an active young man
like Mr. Briggs might give her. Mr. Briggs,
infatuated, would be reckless, she felt, would stick
at nothing, would lose his head publicly. She
could imagine Mr. Briggs doing things with rope-ladders,
and singing all night under her window—being
really difficult and uncomfortable. Mr. Arundel
hadn’t the figure for any kind of recklessness.
He had lived too long and too well. She was
sure he couldn’t sing, and wouldn’t want
to. He must be at least forty. How many
good dinners could not a man have eaten by the time
he was forty? And if during that time instead
of taking exercise he had sat writing books, he would
quite naturally acquire the figure Mr. Arundel had
in fact acquired—the figure rather for conversation
than adventure.
Scrap, who had become melancholy at
the sight of Briggs, became philosophical at the sight
of Arundel. Here he was. She couldn’t
send him away till after dinner. He must be
nourished.
This being so, she had better make
the best of it, and do that with a good grace which
anyhow wasn’t to be avoided. Besides, he
would be a temporary shelter from Mr. Briggs.
She was at least acquainted with Ferdinand Arundel,
and could hear news from him of her mother and her
friends, and such talk would put up a defensive barrier
at dinner between herself and the approaches of the
other one. And it was only for one dinner, and
he couldn’t eat her.
She therefore prepared herself for
friendliness. “I’m to be fed,”
she said, ignoring his last remark, “at eight,
and you must come up and be fed too. Sit down
and get cool and tell me how everybody is.”
“May I really dine with you?
In these travelling things?” he said, wiping
his forehead before sitting down beside her.
She was too lovely to be true, he
thought. Just to look at her for an hour, just
to hear her voice, was enough reward for his journey
and his fears.
“Of course. I suppose
you’ve left your fly in the village, and will
be going on from Mezzago by the night train.”
“Or stay in Mezzago in an hotel
and go on to-morrow. But tell me,” he
said, gazing at the adorable profile, “about
yourself. London has been extraordinarily dull
and empty. Lady Droitwich said you were with
people here she didn’t know. I hope they’ve
been kind to you? You look—well, as
if your cure had done everything a cure should.”
“They’ve been very kind,”
said Scrap. “I got them out of an advertisement.”
“An advertisement?”
“It’s a good way, I find,
to get friends. I’m fonder of one of these
than I’ve been of anybody in years.”
“Really? Who is it?”
“You shall guess which of them
it is when you see them. Tell me about mother.
When did you see her last? We arranged not to
write to each other unless there was something special.
I wanted to have a month that was perfectly blank.”
“And now I’ve come and
interrupted. I can’t tell you how ashamed
I am—both of having done it and of not having
been able to help it.”
“Oh, but,” said Scrap
quickly, for he could not have come on a better day,
when up there waiting and watching for her was, she
knew, the enamoured Briggs, “I’m really
very glad indeed to see you. Tell me about mother.”