The Carstyles belonged to the all-the-year-round
Millbrook of paper-mills, cable-cars, brick pavements
and church sociables, while Mrs. Vance, the aunt with
whom Vibart lived, was an ornament of the summer colony
whose big country-houses dotted the surrounding hills.
Mrs. Vance had, however, no difficulty in appeasing
the curiosity which Mrs. Carstyle’s enigmatic
utterances had aroused in the young man. Mrs.
Carstyle’s relentless veracity vented itself
mainly on the “summer people,” as they
were called: she did not propose that any one
within ten miles of Millbrook should keep a carriage
without knowing that she was entitled to keep one too.
Mrs. Vance remarked with a sigh that Mrs. Carstyle’s
annual demand to have her position understood came
in as punctually as the taxes and the water-rates.
“My dear, it’s simply
this: when Andrew Carstyle married her years ago—
Heaven knows why he did; he’s one of the Albany
Carstyles, you know, and she was a daughter of old
Deacon Ash of South Millbrook—well, when
he married her he had a tidy little income, and I
suppose the bride expected to set up an establishment
in New York and be hand-in-glove with the whole Carstyle
clan. But whether he was ashamed of her from the
first, or for some other unexplained reason, he bought
a country-place and settled down here for life.
For a few years they lived comfortably enough, and
she had plenty of smart clothes, and drove about in
a victoria calling on the summer people. Then,
when the beautiful Irene was about ten years old, Mr.
Carstyle’s only brother died, and it turned out
that he had made away with a lot of trust-property.
It was a horrid business: over three hundred
thousand dollars were gone, and of course most of it
had belonged to widows and orphans. As soon as
the facts were made known, Andrew Carstyle announced
that he would pay back what his brother had stolen.
He sold his country-place and his wife’s carriage,
and they moved to the little house they live in now.
Mr. Carstyle’s income is probably not as large
as his wife would like to have it thought, and though
I’m told he puts aside, a good part of it every
year to pay off his brother’s obligations, I
fancy the debt won’t be discharged for some
time to come. To help things along he opened
a law office—he had studied law in his youth—but
though he is said to be clever I hear that he has
very little to do. People are afraid of him:
he’s too dry and quiet. Nobody believes
in a man who doesn’t believe in himself, and
Mr. Carstyle always seems to be winking at you through
a slit in his professional manner. People don’t
like it—his wife doesn’t like it.
I believe she would have accepted the sacrifice of
the country-place and the carriage if he had struck
an attitude and talked about doing his duty.
It was his regarding the whole thing as a matter of
course that exasperated her. What is the use of
doing something difficult in a way that makes it look
perfectly easy? I feel sorry for Mrs. Carstyle.
She’s lost her house and her carriage, and she
hasn’t been allowed to be heroic.”
Vibart had listened attentively.
“I wonder what Miss Carstyle thinks of it?”
he mused.
Mrs. Vance looked at him with a tentative
smile. “I wonder what you think
of Miss Carstyle?” she returned,
His answer reassured her.
“I think she takes after her mother,”
he said.
“Ah,” cried his aunt cheerfully,
“then I needn’t write to your mother,
and I can have Irene at all my parties!”
Miss Carstyle was an important factor
in the restricted social combinations of a Millbrook
hostess. A local beauty is always a useful addition
to a Saturday-to-Monday house-party, and the beautiful
Irene was served up as a perennial novelty to the
jaded guests of the summer colony. As Vibart’s
aunt remarked, she was perfect till she became playful,
and she never became playful till the third day.
Under these conditions, it was natural
that Vibart should see a good deal of the young lady,
and before he was aware of it he had drifted into the
anomalous position of paying court to the daughter
in order to ingratiate himself with the father.
Miss Carstyle was beautiful, Vibart was young, and
the days were long in his aunt’s spacious and
distinguished house; but it was really the desire
to know something more of Mr. Carstyle that led the
young man to partake so often of that gentleman’s
overdone mutton. Vibart’s imagination had
been touched by the discovery that this little huddled-up
man, instead of travelling with the wind, was persistently
facing a domestic gale of considerable velocity.
That he should have paid off his brother’s debt
at one stroke was to the young man a conceivable feat;
but that he should go on methodically and uninterruptedly
accumulating the needed amount, under the perpetual
accusation of Irene’s inadequate frocks and
Mrs. Carstyle’s apologies for the mutton, seemed
to Vibart proof of unexampled heroism. Mr. Carstyle
was as inaccessible as the average American parent,
and led a life so detached from the preoccupations
of his womankind that Vibart had some difficulty in
fixing his attention. To Mr. Carstyle, Vibart
was simply the inevitable young man who had been hanging
about the house ever since Irene had left school; and
Vibart’s efforts to differentiate himself from
this enamored abstraction were hampered by Mrs. Carstyle’s
cheerful assumption that he was the young man,
and by Irene’s frank appropriation of his visits.
In this extremity he suddenly observed
a slight but significant change in the manner of the
two ladies. Irene, instead of charging him with
being sarcastic and horrid, and declaring herself
unable to believe a word he said, began to receive
his remarks with the impersonal smile which he had
seen her accord to the married men of his aunt’s
house-parties; while Mrs. Carstyle, talking over his
head to an invisible but evidently sympathetic and
intelligent listener, debated the propriety of Irene’s
accepting an invitation to spend the month of August
at Narragansett. When Vibart, rashly trespassing
on the rights of this unseen oracle, remarked that
a few weeks at the seashore would make a delightful
change for Miss Carstyle, the ladies looked at him
and then laughed.
It was at this point that Vibart,
for the first time, found himself observed by Mr.
Carstyle. They were grouped about the debris of
a luncheon which had ended precipitously with veal
stew (Mrs. Carstyle explaining that poor cooks always
failed with their sweet dish when there was company)
and Mr. Carstyle, his hands thrust in his pockets,
his lean baggy-coated shoulders pressed against his
chair-back, sat contemplating his guest with a smile
of unmistakable approval. When Vibart caught his
eye the smile vanished, and Mr. Carstyle, dropping
his glasses from the bridge of his thin nose, looked
out of the window with the expression of a man determined
to prove an alibi. But Vibart was sure of the
smile: it had established, between his host and
himself, a complicity which Mr. Carstyle’s attempted
evasion served only to confirm.
On the strength of this incident Vibart,
a few days later, called at Mr. Carstyle’s office.
Ostensibly, the young man had come to ask, on his
aunt’s behalf, some question on a point at issue
between herself and the Millbrook telephone company;
but his purpose in offering to perform the errand
had been the hope of taking up his intercourse with
Mr. Carstyle where that gentleman’s smile had
left it. Vibart was not disappointed. In
a dingy office, with a single window looking out on
a blank wall, he found Mr. Carstyle, in an alpaca
coat, reading Montaigne.
It evidently did not occur to him
that Vibart had come on business, and the warmth of
his welcome gave the young man a sense of furnishing
the last word in a conjugal argument in which, for
once, Mr. Carstyle had come off triumphant.
The legal question disposed of, Vibart
reverted to Montaigne: had Mr. Carstyle seen
young So-and-so’s volume of essays? There
was one on Montaigne that had a decided flavor:
the point of view was curious. Vibart was surprised
to find that Mr. Carstyle had heard of young So-and-so.
Clever young men are given to thinking that their elders
have never got beyond Macaulay; but Mr. Carstyle seemed
sufficiently familiar with recent literature not to
take it too seriously. He accepted Vibart’s
offer of young So-and-so’s volume, admitting
that his own library was not exactly up-to-date.
Vibart went away musing. The
next day he came back with the volume of essays.
It seemed to be tacitly understood that he was to call
at the office when he wished to see Mr. Carstyle,
whose legal engagements did not seriously interfere
with the pursuit of literature.
For a week or ten days Mrs. Carstyle,
in Vibart’s presence, continued to take counsel
with her unseen adviser on the subject of her daughter’s
visit to Narragansett. Once or twice Irene dropped
her impersonal smile to tax Vibart with not caring
whether she went or not; and Mrs. Carstyle seized
a moment of tete-a-tete to confide in him that
the dear child hated the idea of leaving, and was
going only because her friend Mrs. Higby would not
let her off. Of course, if it had not been for
Mr. Carstyle’s peculiarities they would have
had their own seaside home—at Newport,
probably: Mrs. Carstyle preferred the tone of
Newport—and Irene would not have been dependent
on the charity of her friends; but as it was,
they must be thankful for small mercies, and Mrs. Higby
was certainly very kind in her way, and had a charming
social position—for Narragansett.
These confidences, however, were soon
superseded by an exchange, between mother and daughter,
of increasingly frequent allusions to the delights
of Narragansett, the popularity of Mrs. Higby, and
the jolliness of her house; with an occasional reference
on Mrs. Carstyle’s part to the probability of
Hewlett Bain’s being there as usual—hadn’t
Irene heard from Mrs. Higby that he was to be there?
Upon this note Miss Carstyle at length departed, leaving
Vibart to the undisputed enjoyment of her father’s
company.
Vibart had at no time a keen taste
for the summer joys of Millbrook, and the family obligation
which, for several months of the year, kept him at
his aunt’s side (Mrs. Vance was a childless widow
and he filled the onerous post of favorite nephew)
gave a sense of compulsion to the light occupations
that chequered his leisure. Mrs. Vance, who fancied
herself lonely when he was away, was too much engaged
with notes, telegrams and arriving and departing guests,
to do more than breathlessly smile upon his presence,
or implore him to take the dullest girl of the party
for a drive (and would he go by way of Millbrook,
like a dear, and stop at the market to ask why the
lobsters hadn’t come?); and the house itself,
and the guests who came and went in it like people
rushing through a railway-station, offered no points
of repose to his thoughts. Some houses are companions
in themselves: the walls, the book-shelves, the
very chairs and tables, have the qualities of a sympathetic
mind; but Mrs. Vance’s interior was as impersonal
as the setting of a classic drama.
These conditions made Vibart cultivate
an assiduous exchange of books between himself and
Mr. Carstyle. The young man went down almost daily
to the little house in the town, where Mrs. Carstyle,
who had now an air of receiving him in curl-papers,
and of not always immediately distinguishing him from
the piano-tuner, made no effort to detain him on his
way to her husband’s study.