TOWNLINSON & SHEPPARD
During the whole course of her interesting
life—and she had always found life interesting—Betty
Vanderpoel decided that she had known no experience
more absorbing than this morning spent in going over
the long-closed and deserted portions of the neglected
house. She had never seen anything like the place,
or as full of suggestion. The greater part of
it had simply been shut up and left to time and weather,
both of which had had their effects. The fine
old red roof, having lost tiles, had fallen into leaks
that let in rain, which had stained and rotted walls,
plaster, and woodwork; wind and storm had beaten through
broken window panes and done their worst with such
furniture and hangings as they found to whip and toss
and leave damp and spotted with mould. They passed
through corridors, and up and down short or long stairways,
with stained or faded walls, and sometimes with cracked
or fallen plastering and wainscotting. Here and
there the oak flooring itself was uncertain.
The rooms, whether large or small, all presented a
like aspect of potential beauty and comfort, utterly
uncared for and forlorn. There were many rooms,
but none more than scantily furnished, and a number
of them were stripped bare. Betty found herself
wondering how long a time it had taken the belongings
of the big place to dwindle and melt away into such
bareness.
“There was a time, I suppose,
when it was all furnished,” she said.
“All these rooms were shut up
when I came here,” Rosy answered. “I
suppose things worth selling have been sold. When
pieces of furniture were broken in one part of the
house, they were replaced by things brought from another.
No one cared. Nigel hates it all. He calls
it a rathole. He detests the country everywhere,
but particularly this part of it. After the first
year I had learned better than to speak to him of
spending money on repairs.”
“A good deal of money should
be spent on repairs,” reflected Betty, looking
about her.
She was standing in the middle of
a room whose walls were hung with the remains of what
had been chintz, covered with a pattern of loose clusters
of moss rosebuds. The dampness had rotted it until,
in some places, it had fallen away in strips from
its fastenings. A quaint, embroidered couch stood
in one corner, and as Betty looked at it, a mouse
crept from under the tattered valance, stared at her
in alarm and suddenly darted back again, in terror
of intrusion so unusual. A casement window swung
open, on a broken hinge, and a strong branch of ivy,
having forced its way inside, had thrown a covering
of leaves over the deep ledge, and was beginning to
climb the inner woodwork. Through the casement
was to be seen a heavenly spread of country, whose
rolling lands were clad softly in green pastures and
thick-branched trees.
“This is the Rosebud Boudoir,”
said Lady Anstruthers, smiling faintly. “All
the rooms have names. I thought them so delightful,
when I first heard them. The Damask Room—the
Tapestry Room—the White Wainscot Room—My
Lady’s Chamber. It almost broke my heart
when I saw what they looked like.”
“It would be very interesting,”
Betty commented slowly, “to make them look as
they ought to look.”
A remote fear rose to the surface
of the expression in Lady Anstruthers’ eyes.
She could not detach herself from certain recollections
of Nigel—of his opinions of her family—of
his determination not to allow it to enter as a factor
in either his life or hers. And Betty had come
to Stornham—Betty whom he had detested as
a child—and in the course of two days,
she had seemed to become a new part of the atmosphere,
and to make the dead despair of the place begin to
stir with life. What other thing than this was
happening as she spoke of making such rooms as the
Rosebud Boudoir “look as they ought to look,”
and said the words not as if they were part of a fantastic
vision, but as if they expressed a perfectly possible
thing?
Betty saw the doubt in her eyes, and
in a measure, guessed at its meaning. The time
to pause for argument had, however not arrived.
There was too much to be investigated, too much to
be seen. She swept her on her way. They
wandered on through some forty rooms, more or less;
they opened doors and closed them; they unbarred shutters
and let the sun stream in on dust and dampness and
cobwebs. The comprehension of the situation which
Betty gained was as valuable as it was enlightening.
The descent into the lower part of
the house was a new experience. Betty had not
before seen huge, flagged kitchens, vaulted servants’
halls, stone passages, butteries and dairies.
The substantial masonry of the walls and arched ceilings,
the stone stairway, and the seemingly endless offices,
were interestingly remote in idea from such domestic
modernities as chance views of up-to-date American
household workings had provided her.
In the huge kitchen itself, an elderly
woman, rolling pastry, paused to curtsy to them, with
stolid curiosity in her heavy-featured face. In
her character as “single-handed” cook,
Mrs. Noakes had sent up uninviting meals to Lady Anstruthers
for several years, but she had not seen her ladyship
below stairs before. And this was the unexpected
arrival—the young lady there had been “talk
of” from the moment of her appearance.
Mrs. Noakes admitted with the grudgingness of a person
of uncheerful temperament, that looks like that always
would make talk. A certain degree of vague mental
illumination led her to agree with Robert, the footman,
that the stranger’s effectiveness was, perhaps,
also, not altogether a matter of good looks, and certainly
it was not an affair of clothes. Her brightish
blue dress, of rough cloth, was nothing particular,
notwithstanding the fit of it. There was “something
else about her.” She looked round the place,
not with the casual indifference of a fine young lady,
carelessly curious to see what she had not seen before,
but with an alert, questioning interest.
“What a big place,” she
said to her ladyship. “What substantial
walls! What huge joints must have been roasted
before such a fireplace.”
She drew near to the enormous, antiquated cooking
place.
“People were not very practical
when this was built,” she said. “It
looks as if it must waste a great deal of coal.
Is it——?” she looked at Mrs. Noakes.
“Do you like it?”
There was a practical directness in
the question for which Mrs. Noakes was not prepared.
Until this moment, it had apparently mattered little
whether she liked things or not. The condition
of her implements of trade was one of her grievances—the
ancient fireplace and ovens the bitterest.
“It’s out of order, miss,”
she answered. “And they don’t use
’em like this in these days.”
“I thought not,” said Miss Vanderpoel.
She made other inquiries as direct
and significant of the observing eye, and her passage
through the lower part of the establishment left Mrs.
Noakes and her companions in a strange but not unpleasurable
state of ferment.
“Think of a young lady that’s
never had nothing to do with kitchens, going straight
to that shameful old fireplace, and seeing what it
meant to the woman that’s got to use it.
‘Do you like it?’ she says. If she’d
been a cook herself, she couldn’t have put it
straighter. She’s got eyes.”
“She’s been using them
all over the place,” said Robert. “Her
and her ladyship’s been into rooms that’s
not been opened for years.”
“More shame to them that should
have opened ’em,” remarked Mrs. Noakes.
“Her ladyship’s a poor, listless thing—but
her spirit was broken long ago.
“This one will mend it for her,
perhaps,” said the man servant. “I
wonder what’s going to happen.”
“Well, she’s got a look
with her—the new one—as if where
she was things would be likely to happen. You
look out. The place won’t seem so dead
and alive if we’ve got something to think of
and expect.”
“Who are the solicitors Sir
Nigel employs?” Betty had asked her sister,
when their pilgrimage through the house had been completed.
Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard, a firm
which for several generations had transacted the legal
business of much more important estates than Stornham,
held its affairs in hand. Lady Anstruthers knew
nothing of them, but that they evidently did not approve
of the conduct of their client. Nigel was frequently
angry when he spoke of them. It could be gathered
that they had refused to allow him to do things he
wished to do—sell things, or borrow money
on them.
“I think we must go to London
and see them,” Betty suggested.
Rosy was agitated. Why should
one see them? What was there to be spoken of?
Their going, Betty explained would be a sort of visit
of ceremony—in a measure a precaution.
Since Sir Nigel was apparently not to be reached,
having given no clue as to where he intended to go,
it might be discreet to consult Messrs. Townlinson
& Sheppard with regard to the things it might be well
to do—the repairs it appeared necessary
to make at once. If Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard
approved of the doing of such work, Sir Nigel could
not resent their action, and say that in his absence
liberties had been taken. Such a course seemed
businesslike and dignified.
It was what Betty felt that her father
would do. Nothing could be complained of, which
was done with the knowledge and under the sanction
of the family solicitors.
“Then there are other things
we must do. We must go to shops and theatres.
It will be good for you to go to shops and theatres,
Rosy.”
“I have nothing but rags to
wear,” answered Lady Anstruthers, reddening.
“Then before we go we will have
things sent down. People can be sent from the
shops to arrange what we want.”
The magic of the name, standing for
great wealth, could, it was true, bring to them, not
only the contents of shops, but the people who showed
them, and were ready to carry out any orders.
The name of Vanderpoel already stood, in London, for
inexhaustible resource. Yes, it was simple enough
to send for politely subservient saleswomen to bring
what one wanted.
The being reminded in every-day matters
of the still real existence of the power of this magic
was the first step in the rebuilding of Lady Anstruthers.
To realise that the wonderful and yet simple necromancy
was gradually encircling her again, had its parallel
in the taking of a tonic, whose effect was cumulative.
She herself did not realise the working of it.
But Betty regarded it with interest. She saw it
was good for her, merely to look on at the unpacking
of the New York boxes, which the maid, sent for from
London, brought down with her.
As the woman removed, from tray after
tray, the tissue-paper-enfolded layers of garments,
Lady Anstruthers sat and watched her with normal,
simply feminine interest growing in her eyes.
The things were made with the absence of any limit
in expenditure, the freedom with delicate stuffs and
priceless laces which belonged only to her faint memories
of a lost past.
Nothing had limited the time spent
in the embroidering of this apparently simple linen
frock and coat; nothing had restrained the hand holding
the scissors which had cut into the lace which adorned
in appliques and filmy frills this exquisitely charming
ball dress.
“It is looking back so far,”
she said, waving her hand towards them with an odd
gesture. “To think that it was once all
like—like that.”
She got up and went to the things,
turning them over, and touching them with a softness,
almost expressing a caress. The names of the makers
stamped on bands and collars, the names of the streets
in which their shops stood, moved her. She heard
again the once familiar rattle of wheels, and the
rush and roar of New York traffic.
Betty carried on the whole matter
with lightness. She talked easily and casually,
giving local colour to what she said. She described
the abnormally rapid growth of the places her sister
had known in her teens, the new buildings, new theatres,
new shops, new people, the later mode of living, much
of it learned from England, through the unceasing
weaving of the Shuttle.
“Changing—changing—changing.
That is what it is always doing—America.
We have not reached repose yet. One wonders how
long it will be before we shall. Now we are always
hurrying breathlessly after the next thing—the
new one—which we always think will be the
better one. Other countries built themselves
slowly. In the days of their building, the pace
of life was a march. When America was born, the
march had already begun to hasten, and as a nation
we began, in our first hour, at the quickening speed.
Now the pace is a race. New York is a kaleidoscope.
I myself can remember it a wholly different thing.
One passes down a street one day, and the next there
is a great gap where some building is being torn down—a
few days later, a tall structure of some sort is touching
the sky. It is wonderful, but it does not tend
to calm the mind. That is why we cross the Atlantic
so much. The sober, quiet-loving blood our forbears
brought from older countries goes in search of rest.
Mixed with other things, I feel in my own being a resentment
against newness and disorder, and an insistence on
the atmosphere of long-established things.”
But for years Lady Anstruthers had
been living in the atmosphere of long-established
things, and felt no insistence upon it. She yearned
to hear of the great, changing Western world—of
the great, changing city. Betty must tell her
what the changes were. What were the differences
in the streets—where had the new buildings
been placed? How had Fifth Avenue and Madison
Avenue and Broadway altered? Were not Gramercy
Park and Madison Square still green with grass and
trees? Was it all different? Would she not
know the old places herself? Though it seemed
a lifetime since she had seen them, the years which
had passed were really not so many.
It was good for her to talk and be
talked to in this manner Betty saw. Still handling
her subject lightly, she presented picture after picture.
Some of them were of the wonderful, feverish city itself—the
place quite passionately loved by some, as passionately
disliked by others. She herself had fallen into
the habit, as she left childhood behind her, of looking
at it with interested wonder—at its riot
of life and power, of huge schemes, and almost superhuman
labours, of fortunes so colossal that they seemed
monstrosities in their relation to the world.
People who in Rosalie’s girlhood had lived in
big ugly brownstone fronts, had built for themselves
or for their children, houses such as, in other countries,
would have belonged to nobles and princes, spending
fortunes upon their building, filling them with treasures
brought from foreign lands, from palaces, from art
galleries, from collectors. Sometimes strange
people built such houses and lived strange lavish,
ostentatious lives in them, forming an overstrained,
abnormal, pleasure-chasing world of their own.
The passing of even ten years in New York counted itself
almost as a generation; the fashions, customs, belongings
of twenty years ago wore an air of almost picturesque
antiquity.
“It does not take long to make
an ‘old New Yorker,’” she said.
“Each day brings so many new ones.”
There were, indeed, many new ones,
Lady Anstruthers found. People who had been poor
had become hugely rich, a few who had been rich had
become poor, possessions which had been large had swelled
to unnatural proportions. Out of the West had
risen fortunes more monstrous than all others.
As she told one story after another, Bettina realised,
as she had done often before, that it was impossible
to enter into description of the life and movements
of the place, without its curiously involving some
connection with the huge wealth of it—with
its influence, its rise, its swelling, or waning.
“Somehow one cannot free one’s
self from it. This is the age of wealth and invention—but
of wealth before all else. Sometimes one is tired—tired
of it.”
“You would not be tired of it
if—well, if you were I, said Lady Anstruthers
rather pathetically.
“Perhaps not,” Betty answered. “Perhaps
not.”
She herself had seen people who were
not tired of it in the sense in which she was—the
men and women, with worn or intently anxious faces,
hastening with the crowds upon the pavements, all hastening
somewhere, in chase of that small portion of the wealth
which they earned by their labour as their daily share;
the same men and women surging towards elevated railroad
stations, to seize on places in the homeward-bound
trains; or standing in tired-looking groups, waiting
for the approach of an already overfull street car,
in which they must be packed together, and swing to
the hanging straps, to keep upon their feet. Their
way of being weary of it would be different from hers,
they would be weary only of hearing of the mountains
of it which rolled themselves up, as it seemed, in
obedience to some irresistible, occult force.
On the day after Stornham village
had learned that her ladyship and Miss Vanderpoel
had actually gone to London, the dignified firm of
Townlinson & Sheppard received a visit which created
some slight sensation in their establishment, though
it had not been entirely unexpected. It had,
indeed, been heralded by a note from Miss Vanderpoel
herself, who had asked that the appointment be made.
Men of Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard’s indubitable
rank in their profession could not fail to know the
significance of the Vanderpoel name. They knew
and understood its weight perfectly well. When
their client had married one of Reuben Vanderpoel’s
daughters, they had felt that extraordinary good fortune
had befallen him and his estate. Their private
opinion had been that Mr. Vanderpoel’s knowledge
of his son-in-law must have been limited, or that
he had curiously lax American views of paternal duty.
The firm was highly reputable, long established strictly
conservative, and somewhat insular in its point of
view. It did not understand, or seek to understand,
America. It had excellent reasons for thoroughly
understanding Sir Nigel Anstruthers. Its opinions
of him it reserved to itself. If Messrs. Townlinson
& Sheppard had been asked to give a daughter into
their client’s keeping, they would have flatly
refused to accept the honour proposed. Mr. Townlinson
had, indeed, at the time of the marriage, admitted
in strict confidence to his partner that for his part
he would have somewhat preferred to follow a daughter
of his own to her tomb. After the marriage the
firm had found the situation confusing and un-English.
There had been trouble with Sir Nigel, who had plainly
been disappointed. At first it had appeared that
the American magnate had shown astuteness in refraining
from leaving his son-in-law a free hand. Lady
Anstruthers’ fortune was her own and not her
husband’s. Mr. Townlinson, paying a visit
to Stornham and finding the bride a gentle, childish-looking
girl, whose most marked expression was one of growing
timorousness, had returned with a grave face.
He foresaw the result, if her family did not stand
by her with firmness, which he also foresaw her husband
would prevent if possible. It became apparent
that the family did not stand by her—or
were cleverly kept at a distance. There was a
long illness, which seemed to end in the seclusion
from the world, brought about by broken health.
Then it was certain that what Mr. Townlinson had foreseen
had occurred. The inexperienced girl had been
bullied into submission. Sir Nigel had gained
the free hand, whatever the means he had chosen to
employ. Most improper—most improper,
the whole affair. He had a great deal of money,
but none of it was used for the benefit of the estate—his
deformed boy’s estate. Advice, dignified
remonstrance, resulted only in most disagreeable scenes.
Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard could not exceed certain
limits. The manner in which the money was spent
was discreditable. There were avenues a respectable
firm knew only by rumour, there were insane gambling
speculations, which could only end in disaster, there
were things one could not decently concern one’s
self with. Lady Anstruthers’ family had
doubtless become indignant and disgusted, and had dropped
the whole affair. Sad for the poor woman, but
not unnatural.
And now appears a Miss Vanderpoel,
who wishes to appoint an interview with Messrs. Townlinson
& Sheppard. What does she wish to say? The
family is apparently taking the matter up. Is
this lady an elder or a younger sister of Lady Anstruthers?
Is she an older woman of that strong and rather trying
American type one hears of, or is she younger than
her ladyship, a pretty, indignant, totally unpractical
girl, outraged by the state of affairs she has discovered,
foolishly coming to demand of Messrs. Townlinson &
Sheppard an explanation of things they are not responsible
for? Will she, perhaps, lose her temper, and accuse
and reproach, or even—most unpleasant to
contemplate—shed hysterical tears?
It fell to Mr. Townlinson to receive
her in the absence of Mr. Sheppard, who had been called
to Northamptonshire to attend to great affairs.
He was a stout, grave man with a heavy, well-cut face,
and, when Bettina entered his room, his courteous
reception of her reserved his view of the situation
entirely.
She was not of the mature and rather
alarming American type he had imagined possible, he
felt some relief in marking at once. She was also
not the pretty, fashionable young lady who might have
come to scold him, and ask silly, irrational questions.
His ordinarily rather unillumined
countenance changed somewhat in expression when she
sat down and began to speak. Mr. Townlinson was
impressed by the fact that it was at once unmistakably
evident that whatsoever her reason for coming, she
had not presented herself to ask irrelevant or unreasonable
questions. Lady Anstruthers, she explained without
superfluous phrase, had no definite knowledge of her
husband’s whereabouts, and it had seemed possible
that Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard might have received
some information more recent that her own. The
impersonal framing of this inquiry struck Mr. Townlinson
as being in remarkably good taste, since it conveyed
no condemnation of Sir Nigel, and no desire to involve
Mr. Townlinson in expressing any. It refrained
even from implying that the situation was an unusual
one, which might be open to criticism. Excellent
reserve and great cleverness, Mr. Townlinson commented
inwardly. There were certainly few young ladies
who would have clearly realised that a solicitor cannot
be called upon to commit himself, until he has had
time to weigh matters and decide upon them. His
long and varied experience had included interviews
in which charming, emotional women had expected him
at once to “take sides.” Miss Vanderpoel
exhibited no signs of expecting anything of this kind,
even when she went on with what she had come to say.
Stornham Court and its surroundings were depreciating
seriously in value through need of radical repairs
etc. Her sister’s comfort was naturally
involved, and, as Mr. Townlinson would fully understand,
her nephew’s future. The sooner the process
of dilapidation was arrested, the better and with
the less difficulty. The present time was without
doubt better than an indefinite future. Miss
Vanderpoel, having fortunately been able to come to
Stornham, was greatly interested, and naturally desirous
of seeing the work begun. Her father also would
be interested. Since it was not possible to consult
Sir Nigel, it had seemed proper to consult his solicitors
in whose hands the estate had been for so long a time.
She was aware, it seemed, that not only Mr. Townlinson,
but Mr. Townlinson’s father, and also his grandfather,
had legally represented the Anstruthers, as well as
many other families. As there seemed no necessity
for any structural changes, and the work done was such
as could only rescue and increase the value of the
estate, could there be any objection to its being
begun without delay?
Certainly an unusual young lady.
It would be interesting to discover how well she knew
Sir Nigel, since it seemed that only a knowledge of
him—his temper, his bitter, irritable vanity,
could have revealed to her the necessity of the precaution
she was taking without even intimating that it was
a precaution. Extraordinarily clever girl.
Mr. Townlinson wore an air of quiet,
business-like reflection.
“You are aware, Miss Vanderpoel,
that the present income from the estate is not such
as would justify anything approaching the required
expenditure?”
“Yes, I am aware of that.
The expense would be provided for by my father.”
“Most generous on Mr. Vanderpoel’s
part,” Mr. Townlinson commented. “The
estate would, of course, increase greatly in value.”
Circumstances had prevented her father
from visiting Stornham, Miss Vanderpoel explained,
and this had led to his being ignorant of a condition
of things which he might have remedied. She did
not explain what the particular circumstances which
had separated the families had been, but Mr. Townlinson
thought he understood. The condition existing
could be remedied now, if Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard
saw no obstacles other than scarcity of money.
Mr. Townlinson’s summing up
of the matter expressed in effect that he saw none.
The estate had been a fine one in its day. During
the last sixty years it had become much impoverished.
With conservative decorum of manner, he admitted that
there had not been, since Sir Nigel’s marriage,
sufficient reason for the neglect of dilapidations.
The firm had strongly represented to Sir Nigel that
certain resources should not be diverted from the
proper object of restoring the property, which was
entailed upon his son. The son’s future
should beyond all have been considered in the dispensing
of his mother’s fortune.
He, by this time, comprehended fully
that he need restrain no dignified expression of opinion
in his speech with this young lady. She had come
to consult with him with as clear a view of the proprieties
and discretions demanded by his position as he had
himself. And yet each, before the close of the
interview, understood the point of view of the other.
What he recognised was that, though she had not seen
Sir Nigel since her childhood, she had in some astonishing
way obtained an extraordinary insight into his character,
and it was this which had led her to take her present
step. She might not realise all she might have
to contend with, but her conservative and formal action
had surrounded her and her sister with a certain barrier
of conventional protection, at once self-controlled,
dignified, and astutely intelligent.
“Since, as you say, no structural
changes are proposed, such as an owner might resent,
and as Lady Anstruthers is the mother of the heir,
and as Lady Anstruthers’ father undertakes to
defray all expenditure, no sane man could object to
the restoration of the property. To do so would
be to cause public opinion to express itself strongly
against him. Such action would place him grossly
in the wrong.” Then he added with deliberation,
realising that he was committing himself, and feeling
firmly willing to do so for reasons of his own, “Sir
Nigel is a man who objects strongly to putting himself—publicly—in
the wrong.”
“Thank you,” said Miss Vanderpoel.
He had said this of intention for
her enlightenment, and she was aware that he had done
so.
“This will not be the first
time that American fortunes have restored English
estates,” Mr. Townlinson continued amiably.
“There have been many notable cases of late
years. We shall be happy to place ourselves at
your disposal at all times, Miss Vanderpoel. We
are obliged to you for your consideration in the matter.”
“Thank you,” said Miss
Vanderpoel again. “I wished to be sure that
I should not be infringing any English rule I had
no knowledge of.”
“You will be infringing none.
You have been most correct and courteous.”
Before she went away Mr. Townlinson
felt that he had been greatly enlightened as to what
a young lady might know and be. She gave him
singularly clear details as to what was proposed.
There was so much to be done that he found himself
opening his eyes slightly once or twice. But,
of course, if Mr. Vanderpoel was prepared to spend
money in a lavish manner, it was all to the good so
far as the estate was concerned. They were stupendous,
these people, and after all the heir was his grandson.
And how striking it was that with all this power and
readiness to use it, was evidently combined, even in
this beautiful young person, the clearest business
sense of the situation. What was done would be
for the comfort of Lady Anstruthers and the future
of her son. Sir Nigel, being unable to sell either
house or lands, could not undo it.
When Mr. Townlinson accompanied his
visitor to her carriage with dignified politeness
he felt somewhat like an elderly solicitor who had
found himself drawn into the atmosphere of a sort of
intensely modern fairy tale. He saw two of his
under clerks, with the impropriety of middle-class
youth, looking out of an office window at the dark
blue brougham and the tall young lady, whose beauty
bloomed in the sunshine. He did not, on the whole,
wonder at, though he deplored, the conduct of the
young men. But they, of course, saw only what
they colloquially described to each other as a “rippin’
handsome girl.” They knew nothing of the
interesting interview.
He himself returned to his private
room in a musing mood and thought it all over, his
mind dwelling on various features of the international
situation, and more than once he said aloud:
“Most remarkable. Very remarkable, indeed.”