DUSK had fallen, and the circle of
light shed by the lamp of Governor Mornway’s
writing-table just rescued from the surrounding dimness
his own imposing bulk, thrown back in a deep chair
in the lounging attitude habitual to him at that hour.
When the Governor of Midsylvania rested
he rested completely. Five minutes earlier he
had been bowed over his office desk, an Atlas with
the State on his shoulders; now, his working hours
over, he had the air of a man who has spent his day
in desultory pleasure, and means to end it in the
enjoyment of a good dinner. This freedom from
care threw into relief the hovering fidgetiness of
his sister, Mrs. Nimick, who, just outside the circle
of lamplight, haunted the warm gloom of the hearth,
from which the wood fire now and then sent up an exploring
flash into her face.
Mrs. Nimick’s presence did not
usually minister to repose; but the Governor’s
serenity was too deep to be easily disturbed, and he
felt the calmness of a man who knows there is a mosquito
in the room, but has drawn the netting close about
his head. This calmness reflected itself in the
accent with which he said, throwing himself back to
smile up at his sister: “You know I am not
going to make any appointments for a week.”
It was the day after the great reform
victory which had put John Mornway for the second
time at the head of his State, a triumph compared
with which even the mighty battle of his first election
sank into insignificance, and he leaned back with the
sense of unassailable placidity which follows upon
successful effort.
Mrs. Nimick murmured an apology.
“I didn’t understand—I saw in
this morning’s papers that the Attorney-General
was reappointed.”
“Oh, Fleetwood—his
reappointment was involved in the campaign. He’s
one of the principles I represent!”
Mrs. Nimick smiled a little tartly.
“It seems odd to some people to think of Mr.
Fleetwood in connection with principles.”
The Governor’s smile had no
answering acerbity; the mention of his Attorney-General’s
name had set his blood humming with the thrill of
the fight, and he wondered how it was that Fleetwood
had not already been in to clasp hands with him over
their triumph.
“No,” he said, good-humoredly,
“two years ago Fleetwood’s name didn’t
stand for principles of any sort; but I believed in
him, and look what he’s done for me! I
thought he was too big a man not to see in time that
statesmanship is a finer thing than practical politics,
and now that I’ve given him a chance to make
the discovery, he’s on the way to becoming just
such a statesman as the country needs.”
“Oh, it’s a great deal
easier and pleasanter to believe in people,”
replied Mrs. Nimick, in a tone full of occult allusion,
“and, of course, we all knew that Mr. Fleetwood
would have a hearing before any one else.”
The Governor took this imperturbably.
“Well, at any rate, he isn’t going to
fill all the offices in the State; there will probably
be one or two to spare after he has helped himself,
and when the time comes I’ll think over your
man. I’ll consider him.”
Mrs. Nimick brightened. “It
would make sucha difference to Jack—it
might mean anything to the poor boy to have Mr. Ashford
appointed!”
The Governor held up a warning hand.
“Oh, I know, one mustn’t
say that, or at least you mustn’t listen.
You’re so dreadfully afraid of nepotism.
But I’m not asking for anything for Jack—I
have never asked for a crust for any of us, thank
Heaven! No one can point to me—”
Mrs. Nimick checked herself suddenly and continued
in a more impersonal tone: “But there’s
no harm, surely, in my saying a word for Mr. Ashford,
when I know that he’s actually under consideration,
and I don’t see why the fact that Jack is in
his office should prevent my speaking.”
“On the contrary,” said
the Governor, “it implies, on your part, a personal
knowledge of Mr. Ashford’s qualifications which
may be of great help to me in reaching a decision.”
Mrs. Nimick never quite knew how to
meet him when he took that tone, and the flickering
fire made her face for a moment the picture of uncertainty;
then at all hazards she launched out: “Well,
I have Ella’s promise, at any rate.”
The Governor sat upright. “Ella’s
promise?”
“To back me up. She thoroughly approves
of him!”
The Governor smiled. “You
talk as if Ella had a political salonand distributed
lettres de cachet!I’m glad she approves
of Ashford; but if you think my wife makes my appointments
for me—” He broke off with a laugh
at the superfluity of such a protest.
Mrs. Nimick reddened. “One
never knows how you will take the simplest thing.
What harm is there in my saying that Ella approves
of Mr. Ashford? I thought you liked her to take
an interest in your work.”
“I like it immensely. But
I shouldn’t care to have it take that form.”
“What form?”
“That of promising to use her
influence to get people appointed. But you always
talk of politics in the vocabulary of European courts.
Thank Heaven, Ella has less imagination. She has
her sympathies, of course, but she doesn’t think
they can affect the distribution of offices.”
Mrs. Nimick gathered up her furs with
an air at once crestfallen and resentful. “I’m
sorry—I always seem to say the wrong thing.
I’m sure I came with the best intentions—it’s
natural that your sister should want to be with you
at such a happy moment.”
“Of course it is, my dear,”
exclaimed the Governor genially, as he rose to grasp
the hands with which she was nervously adjusting her
wraps.
Mrs. Nimick, who lived a little way
out of town, and whose visits to her brother were
apparently achieved at the cost of immense effort
and mysterious complications, had come to congratulate
him on his victory, and to sound him regarding the
nomination to a coveted post of the lawyer in whose
firm her eldest son was a clerk. In the urgency
of the latter errand she had rather lost sight of the
former, but her face softened as the Governor, keeping
both her hands in his, said in the voice which always
seemed to put the most generous interpretation on
her motives: “I was sure you would be one
of the first to give me your blessing.”
“Oh, your success—no
one feels it more than I do!” sighed Mrs. Nimick,
always at home in the emotional key. “I
keep in the background. I make no noise, I claim
no credit, but whatever happens, no one shall ever
prevent my rejoicing in my brother’s success!”
Mrs. Nimick’s felicitations
were always couched in the conditional, with a side-glance
at dark contingencies, and the Governor, smiling at
the familiar construction, returned cheerfully:
“I don’t see why any one should want to
deprive you of that privilege.”
“They couldn’t—they
couldn’t—” Mrs. Nimick heroically
affirmed.
“Well, I’m in the saddle
for another two years at any rate, so you had better
put in all the rejoicing you can.”
“Whatever happens—whatever
happens!” cried Mrs. Nimick, melting on his
bosom.
“The only thing likely to happen
at present is that you will miss your train if I let
you go on saying nice things to me much longer.”
Mrs. Nimick at this dried her eyes,
renewed her clutch on her draperies, and stood glancing
sentimentally about the room while her brother rang
for the carriage.
“I take away a lovely picture
of you,” she murmured. “It’s
wonderful what you’ve made of this hideous house.”
“Ah, not I, but Ella—there
she doesreign undisputed,” he acknowledged,
following her glance about the library, which wore
an air of permanent habitation, of slowly formed intimacy
with its inmates, in marked contrast to the gaudy
impersonality of the usual executive apartment.
“Oh, she’s wonderful,
quite wonderful. I see she has got those imported
damask curtains she was looking at the other day at
Fielding’s. When I am asked how she does
it all, I always say it’s beyond me!”
Mrs. Nimick murmured.
“It’s an art like another,”
smiled the Governor. “Ella has been used
to living in tents and she has the knack of giving
them a wonderful look of permanence.”
“She certainly makes the most
extraordinary bargains—all the knack in
the world won’t take the place of such curtains
and carpets.”
“Are they good? I’m
glad to hear it. But all the good curtains and
carpets won’t make a house comfortable to live
in. There’s where the knack comes in, you
see.”
He recalled with a shudder the lean
Congressional years—the years before his
marriage—when Mrs. Nimick had lived with
him in Washington, and the daily struggle in the House
had been combined with domestic conflicts almost equally
recurrent. The offer of a foreign mission, though
disconnecting him from active politics, had the advantage
of freeing him from his sister’s tutelage, and
in Europe, where he remained for two years, he had
met the lady who was to become his wife. Mrs.
Renfield was the widow of one of the diplomatists
who languish in perpetual first secretary-ship at our
various embassies. Her life had given her ease
without triviality, and a sense of the importance
of politics seldom found in ladies of her nationality.
She regarded a public life as the noblest and most
engrossing of careers, and combined with great social
versatility an equal gift for reading blue-books and
studying debates. So sincere was the latter taste
that she passed without regret from the amenities
of a European life well stocked with picturesque intimacies
to the rawness of the Midsylvanian capital. She
helped Mornway in his fight for the Governorship as
a man likes to be helped by a woman—by
her tact, her good looks, her memory for faces, her
knack of saying the right thing to the right person,
and her capacity for obscure hard work in the background
of his public activity. But, above all, she helped
him by making his private life smooth and harmonious.
For a man careless of personal ease, Mornway was singularly
alive to the domestic amenities. Attentive service,
well-ordered dinners, brightly burning fires, and a
scent of flowers in the house—these material
details, which had come to seem the extension of his
wife’s personality, the inevitable result of
her nearness, were as agreeable to him after five
years of marriage as in the first surprise of his
introduction to them. Mrs. Nimick had kept house
jerkily and vociferously; Ella performed the same task
silently and imperceptibly, and the results were all
in favor of the latter method. Though neither
the Governor nor his wife had large means, the household,
under Mrs. Mornway’s guidance, took on an air
of sober luxury as agreeable to her husband as it was
exasperating to her sister-in-law. The domestic
machinery ran without a jar. There were no upheavals,
no debts, no squalid cookless hiatuses between intervals
of showy hospitality; the household moved along on
lines of quiet elegance and comfort, behind which only
the eye of the housekeeping sex could have detected
a gradually increasing scale of expense.
Such an eye was now projected on the
Governor’s surroundings, and its explorations
were summed up in the tone in which Mrs. Nimick repeated
from the threshold: “I always say I don’t
see how she does it!”
The tone did not escape the Governor,
but it disturbed him no more than the buzz of a baffled
insect. Poor Grace! It was not his fault
if her husband was given to chimerical investments,
if her sons were “unsatisfactory,” and
her cooks would not stay with her; but it was natural
that these facts should throw into irritating contrast
the ease and harmony of his own domestic life.
It made him all the sorrier for his sister to know
that her envy did not penetrate to the essence of
his happiness, but lingered on those external signs
of well-being which counted for so little in the sum
total of his advantages. Poor Mrs. Nimick’s
life seemed doubly thin and mean when one remembered
that, beneath its shabby surface, there were no compensating
riches of the spirit.