SPRING IN BOND STREET
The visit to London was part of an
evolution of both body and mind to Rosalie Anstruthers.
In one of the wonderful modern hotels a suite of rooms
was engaged for them. The luxury which surrounded
them was not of the order Rosalie had vaguely connected
with hotels. Hotel-keepers had apparently learned
many things during the years of her seclusion.
Vanderpoels, at least, could so establish
themselves as not to greatly feel the hotel atmosphere.
Carefully chosen colours textures, and appointments
formed the background of their days, the food they
ate was a thing produced by art, the servants who
attended them were completely-trained mechanisms.
To sit by a window and watch the kaleidoscopic human
tide passing by on its way to its pleasure, to reach
its work, to spend its money in unending shops, to
show itself and its equipage in the park, was a wonderful
thing to Lady Anstruthers. It all seemed to be
a part of the life and quality of Betty, little Betty,
whom she had remembered only as a child, and who had
come to her a tall, strong young beauty, who had—it
was resplendently clear—never known a fear
in her life, and whose mere personality had the effect
of making fears seem unreal.
She was taken out in a luxurious little
brougham to shops whose varied allurements were placed
eagerly at her disposal. Respectful persons,
obedient to her most faintly-expressed desire, displayed
garments as wonderful as those the New York trunks
had revealed. She was besought to consider the
fitness of articles whose exquisiteness she was almost
afraid to look at. Her thin little body was wonderfully
fitted, managed, encouraged to make the most of its
long-ignored outlines.
“Her ladyship’s slenderness
is a great advantage,” said the wisely inciting
ones. “There is no such advantage as delicacy
of line.”
Summing up the character of their
customer with the saleswoman’s eye, they realised
the discretion of turning to Miss Vanderpoel for encouragement,
though she was the younger of the two, and bore no
title. They were aware of the existence of persons
of rank who were not lavish patrons, but the name
of Vanderpoel held most promising suggestions.
To an English shopkeeper the American has, of late
years, represented the spender—the type
which, whatsoever its rank and resources, has, mysteriously,
always money to hand over counters in exchange for
things it chances to desire to possess. Each
year surges across the Atlantic a horde of these fortunate
persons, who, to the sober, commercial British mind,
appear to be free to devote their existences to travel
and expenditure. This contingent appears shopping
in the various shopping thoroughfares; it buys clothes,
jewels, miscellaneous attractive things, making its
purchases of articles useful or decorative with a freedom
from anxiety in its enjoyment which does not mark the
mood of the ordinary shopper. In the everyday
purchaser one is accustomed to take for granted, as
a factor in his expenditure, a certain deliberation
and uncertainty; to the travelling American in Europe,
shopping appears to be part of the holiday which is
being made the most of. Surely, all the neat,
smart young persons who buy frocks and blouses, hats
and coats, hosiery and chains, cannot be the possessors
of large incomes; there must be, even in America,
a middle class of middle-class resources, yet these
young persons, male and female, and most frequently
unaccompanied by older persons—seeing what
they want, greet it with expressions of pleasure,
waste no time in appropriating and paying for it, and
go away as in relief and triumph—not as
in that sober joy which is clouded by afterthought.
The sales people are sometimes even vaguely cheered
by their gay lack of any doubt as to the wisdom of
their getting what they admire, and rejoicing in it.
If America always buys in this holiday mood, it must
be an enviable thing to be a shopkeeper in their New
York or Boston or San Francisco. Who would not
make a fortune among them? They want what they
want, and not something which seems to them less desirable,
but they open their purses and—frequently
with some amused uncertainty as to the differences
between sovereigns and half-sovereigns, florins and
half-crowns—they pay their bills with something
almost like glee. They are remarkably prompt
about bills—which is an excellent thing,
as they are nearly always just going somewhere else,
to France or Germany or Italy or Scotland or Siberia.
Those of us who are shopkeepers, or their salesmen,
do not dream that some of them have incomes no larger
than our own, that they work for their livings, that
they are teachers journalists, small writers or illustrators
of papers or magazines that they are unimportant soldiers
of fortune, but, with their queer American insistence
on exploration, and the ignoring of limitations, they
have, somehow, managed to make this exultant dash
for a few daring weeks or months of freedom and new
experience. If we knew this, we should regard
them from our conservative standpoint of provident
decorum as improvident lunatics, being ourselves unable
to calculate with their odd courage and their cheerful
belief in themselves. What we do know is that
they spend, and we are far from disdaining their patronage,
though most of them have an odd little familiarity
of address and are not stamped with that distinction
which causes us to realise the enormous difference
between the patron and the tradesman, and makes us
feel the worm we remotely like to feel ourselves,
though we would not for worlds acknowledge the fact.
Mentally, and in our speech, both among our equals
and our superiors, we condescend to and patronise them
a little, though that, of course, is the fine old
insular attitude it would be un-British to discourage.
But, if we are not in the least definite concerning
the position and resources of these spenders as a
mass, we are quite sure of a select number. There
is mention of them in the newspapers, of the town
houses, the castles, moors, and salmon fishings they
rent, of their yachts, their presentations actually
at our own courts, of their presence at great balls,
at Ascot and Goodwood, at the opera on gala nights.
One staggers sometimes before the public summing-up
of the amount of their fortunes. These people
who have neither blood nor rank, these men who labour
in their business offices, are richer than our great
dukes, at the realising of whose wealth and possessions
we have at times almost turned pale.
“Them!” chaffed a costermonger
over his barrow. “Blimme, if some o’
them blokes won’t buy Buckin’am Pallis
an’ the ‘ole R’yal Fambly some mornin’
when they’re out shoppin’.”
The subservient attendants in more
than one fashionable shop Betty and her sister visit,
know that Miss Vanderpoel is of the circle, though
her father has not as yet bought or hired any great
estate, and his daughter has not been seen in London.
“Its queer we’ve never
heard of her being presented,” one shopgirl says
to another. “Just you look at her.”
She evidently knows what her ladyship
ought to buy—what can be trusted not to
overpower her faded fragility. The saleswomen,
even if they had not been devoured by alert curiosity,
could not have avoided seeing that her ladyship did
not seem to know what should be bought, and that Miss
Vanderpoel did, though she did not direct her sister’s
selection, but merely seemed to suggest with delicate
restraint. Her taste was wonderfully perceptive.
The things bought were exquisite, but a little colourless
woman could wear them all with advantage to her restrictions
of type.
As the brougham drove down Bond Street,
Betty called Lady Anstruthers’ attention to
more than one passer-by.
“Look, Rosy,” she said.
“There is Mrs. Treat Hilyar in the second carriage
to the right. You remember Josie Treat Hilyar
married Lord Varick’s son.”
In the landau designated an elderly
woman with wonderfully-dressed white hair sat smiling
and bowing to friends who were walking. Lady
Anstruthers, despite her eagerness, shrank back a little,
hoping to escape being seen.
“Oh, it is the Lows she is speaking
to—Tom and Alice—I did not know
they had sailed yet.”
The tall, well-groomed young man,
with the nice, ugly face, was showing white teeth
in a gay smile of recognition, and his pretty wife
was lightly waving a slim hand in a grey suede glove.
“How cheerful and nice-tempered
they look,” said Rosy. “Tom was only
twenty when I saw him last. Whom did he marry?”
“An English girl. Such
a love. A Devonshire gentleman’s daughter.
In New York his friends called her Devonshire Cream
and Roses. She is one of the pretty, flushy,
pink ones.”
“How nice Bond Street is on
a spring morning like this,” said Lady Anstruthers.
“You may laugh at me for saying it, Betty, but
somehow it seems to me more spring-like than the country.”
“How clever of you!” laughed
Betty. “There is so much truth in it.”
The people walking in the sunshine were all full of
spring thoughts and plans. The colours they wore,
the flowers in the women’s hats and the men’s
buttonholes belonged to the season. The cheerful
crowds of people and carriages had a sort of rushing
stir of movement which suggested freshness. Later
in the year everything looks more tired. Now things
were beginning and everyone was rather inclined to
believe that this year would be better than last.
“Look at the shop windows,” said Betty,
“full of whites and pinks and yellows and blues—the
colours of hyacinth and daffodil beds. It seems
as if they insist that there never has been a winter
and never will be one. They insist that there
never was and never will be anything but spring.”
“It’s in the air.”
Lady Anstruthers’ sigh was actually a happy one.
“It is just what I used to feel in April when
we drove down Fifth Avenue.”
Among the crowds of freshly-dressed
passers-by, women with flowery hats and light frocks
and parasols, men with touches of flower-colour on
the lapels of their coats, and the holiday look in
their faces, she noted so many of a familiar type
that she began to look for and try to pick them out
with quite excited interest.
“I believe that woman is an
American,” she would say. “That girl
looks as if she were a New Yorker,” again.
“That man’s face looks as if it belonged
to Broadway. Oh, Betty! do you think I am right?
I should say those girls getting out of the hansom
to go into Burnham & Staples’ came from out
West and are going to buy thousands of things.
Don’t they look like it?”
She began to lean forward and look
on at things with an interest so unlike her Stornham
listlessness that Betty’s heart was moved.
Her face looked alive, and little
waves of colour rose under her skin. Several
times she laughed the natural little laugh of her girlhood
which it had seemed almost too much to expect to hear
again. The first of these laughs came when she
counted her tenth American, a tall Westerner of the
cartoon type, sauntering along with an expression of
speculative enjoyment on his odd face, and evidently,
though furtively, chewing tobacco.
“I absolutely love him, Betty,”
she cried. “You couldn’t mistake him
for anything else.”
“No,” answered Betty,
feeling that she loved him herself, “not if you
found him embalmed in the Pyramids.”
They pleased themselves immensely,
trying to guess what he would buy and take home to
his wife and girls in his Western town—though
Western towns were very grand and amazing in these
days, Betty explained, and knew they could give points
to New York. He would not buy the things he would
have bought fifteen years ago. Perhaps, in fact,
his wife and daughters had come with him to London
and stayed at the Metropole or the Savoy, and were
at this moment being fitted by tailors and modistes
patronised by Royalty.
“Rosy, look! Do you see
who that is? Do you recognise her? It is
Mrs. Bellingham. She was little Mina Thalberg.
She married Captain Bellingham. He was quite
poor, but very well born—a nephew of Lord
Dunholm’s. He could not have married a poor
girl—but they have been so happy together
that Mina is growing fat, and spends her days in taking
reducing treatments. She says she wouldn’t
care in the least, but Dicky fell in love with her
waist and shoulder line.”
The plump, pretty young woman getting
out of her victoria before a fashionable hairdresser’s
looked radiant enough. She had not yet lost the
waist and shoulder line, though her pink frock fitted
her with discreet tightness. She paused a moment
to pat and fuss prettily over the two blooming, curly
children who were to remain under the care of the
nurse, who sat on the back seat, holding the baby on
her lap.
“I should not have known her,”
said Rosy. “She has grown pretty. She
wasn’t a pretty child.”
“It’s happiness—and
the English climate—and Captain Dicky.
They adore each other, and laugh at everything like
a pair of children. They were immensely popular
in New York last winter, when they visited Mina’s
people.”
The effect of the morning upon Lady
Anstruthers was what Betty had hoped it might be.
The curious drawing near of the two nations began to
dawn upon her as a truth. Immured in the country,
not sufficiently interested in life to read newspapers,
she had heard rumours of some of the more important
marriages, but had known nothing of the thousand small
details which made for the weaving of the web.
Mrs. Treat Hilyar driving in a leisurely, accustomed
fashion down Bond Street, and smiling casually at
her compatriots, whose “sailing” was as
much part of the natural order of their luxurious
lives as their carriages, gave a definiteness to the
situation. Mina Thalberg, pulling down the embroidered
frocks over the round legs of her English-looking
children, seemed to narrow the width of the Atlantic
Ocean between Liverpool and the docks on the Hudson
River.
She returned to the hotel with an
appetite for lunch and a new expression in her eyes
which made Ughtred stare at her.
“Mother,” he said, “you
look different. You look well. It isn’t
only your new dress and your hair.”
The new style of her attire had certainly
done much, and the maid who had been engaged to attend
her was a woman who knew her duties. She had
been called upon in her time to make the most of hair
offering much less assistance to her skill than was
supplied by the fine, fair colourlessness she had
found dragged back from her new mistress’s forehead.
It was not dragged back now, but had really been done
wonders with. Rosalie had smiled a little when
she had looked at herself in the glass after the first
time it was so dressed.
“You are trying to make me look
as I did when mother saw me last, Betty,” she
said. “I wonder if you possibly could.”
“Let us believe we can,”
laughed Betty. “And wait and see.”
It seemed wise neither to make nor
receive visits. The time for such things had
evidently not yet come. Even the mention of the
Worthingtons led to the revelation that Rosalie shrank
from immediate contact with people. When she
felt stronger, when she became more accustomed to the
thought, she might feel differently, but just now,
to be luxuriously one with the enviable part of London,
to look on, to drink in, to drive here and there,
doing the things she liked to do, ordering what was
required at Stornham, was like the creating for her
of a new heaven and a new earth.
When, one night, Betty took her with
Ughtred to the theatre, it was to see a play written
by an American, played by American actors, produced
by an American manager. They had even engaged
in theatrical enterprise, it seemed, their actors
played before London audiences, London actors played
in American theatres, vibrating almost yearly between
the two continents and reaping rich harvests.
Hearing rumours of this in the past, Lady Anstruthers
had scarcely believed it entirely true. Now the
practical reality was brought before her. The
French, who were only separated from the English metropolis
by a mere few miles of Channel, did not exchange their
actors year after year in increasing numbers, making
a mere friendly barter of each other’s territory,
as though each land was common ground and not divided
by leagues of ocean travel.
“It seems so wonderful,”
Lady Anstruthers argued. “I have always
felt as if they hated each other.”
“They did once—but
how could it last between those of the same blood—of
the same tongue? If we were really aliens we might
be a menace. But we are of their own.”
Betty leaned forward on the edge of the box, looking
out over the crowded house, filled with almost as many
Americans as English faces. She smiled, reflecting.
“We were children put out to nurse and breathe
new air in the country, and now we are coming home,
vigorous, and full-grown.”
She studied the audience for some
minutes, and, as her glance wandered over the stalls,
it took in more than one marked variety of type.
Suddenly it fell on a face she delightedly recognised.
It was that of the nice, speculative-eyed Westerner
they had seen enjoying himself in Bond Street.
“Rosy,” she said, “there
is the Western man we love. Near the end of the
fourth row.”
Lady Anstruthers looked for him with eagerness.
“Oh, I see him! Next to the big one with
the reddish hair.”
Betty turned her attention to the
man in question, whom she had not chanced to notice.
She uttered an exclamation of surprise and interest.
“The big man with the red hair.
How lovely that they should chance to sit side by
side—the big one is Lord Mount Dunstan!”
The necessity of seeing his solicitors,
who happened to be Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard,
had brought Lord Mount Dunstan to town. After
a day devoted to business affairs, he had been attracted
by the idea of going to the theatre to see again a
play he had already seen in New York. It would
interest him to observe its exact effect upon a London
audience. While he had been in New York, he had
gone with something of the same feeling to see a great
English actor play to a crowded house. The great
actor had been one who had returned to the country
for a third or fourth time, and, in the enthusiasm
he had felt in the atmosphere about him, Mount Dunstan
had seen not only pleasure and appreciation of the
man’s perfect art, but—at certain
tumultuous outbursts—an almost emotional
welcome. The Americans, he had said to himself,
were creatures of warmer blood than the English.
The audience on that occasion had been, in mass, American.
The audience he made one of now, was made up of both
nationalities, and, in glancing over it, he realised
how large was the number of Americans who came yearly
to London. As Lady Anstruthers had done, he found
himself selecting from the assemblage the types which
were manifestly American, and those obviously English.
In the seat next to himself sat a man of a type he
felt he had learned by heart in the days of his life
as Jem Salter. At a short distance fluttered
brilliantly an English professional beauty, with her
male and female court about her. In the stage
box, made sumptuous with flowers, was a royal party.
As this party had entered, “God
save the Queen” had been played, and, in rising
with the audience during the entry, he had recalled
that the tune was identical with that of an American
national air. How unconsciously inseparable—in
spite of the lightness with which they regarded the
curious tie between them—the two countries
were. The people upon the stage were acting as
if they knew their public, their bearing suggesting
no sense of any barrier beyond the footlights.
It was the unconsciousness and lightness of the mutual
attitude which had struck him of late. Punch
had long jested about “Fair Americans,”
who, in their first introduction to its pages, used
exotic and cryptic language, beginning every sentence
either with “I guess,” or “Say, Stranger”;
its male American had been of the Uncle Sam order
and had invariably worn a “goatee.”
American witticisms had represented the Englishman
in plaid trousers, opening his remarks with “Chawley,
deah fellah,” and unfailingly missing the point
of any joke. Each country had cherished its type
and good-naturedly derided it. In time this had
modified itself and the joke had changed in kind.
Many other things had changed, but the lightness of
treatment still remained. And yet their blood
was mingling itself with that of England’s noblest
and oldest of name, their wealth was making solid
again towers and halls which had threatened to crumble.
Ancient family jewels glittered on slender, young American
necks, and above—sometimes somewhat careless—young
American brows. And yet, so far, one was casual
in one’s thought of it all, still. On his
own part he was obstinate Briton enough to rebel against
and resent it. They were intruders. He resented
them as he had resented in his boyhood the historical
fact that, after all, an Englishman was a German—a
savage who, five hundred years after the birth of
Christ, had swooped upon Early Briton from his Engleland
and Jutland, and ravaging with fire and sword, had
conquered and made the land his possession, ravishing
its very name from it and giving it his own.
These people did not come with fire and sword, but
with cable and telephone, and bribes of gold and fair
women, but they were encroaching like the sea, which,
in certain parts of the coast, gained a few inches
or so each year. He shook his shoulders impatiently,
and stiffened, feeling illogically antagonistic towards
the good-natured, lantern-jawed man at his side.
The lantern-jawed man looked good-natured
because he was smiling, and he was smiling because
he saw something which pleased him in one of the boxes.
His expression of unqualified approval
naturally directed Mount Dunstan’s eye to the
point in question, where it remained for some moments.
This was because he found it resting upon Miss Vanderpoel,
who sat before him in luminous white garments, and
with a brilliant spark of ornament in the dense shadow
of her hair. His sensation at the unexpected
sight of her would, if it had expressed itself physically,
have taken the form of a slight start. The luminous
quality did not confine itself to the whiteness of
her garments. He was aware of feeling that she
looked luminous herself—her eyes, her cheek,
the smile she bent upon the little woman who was her
companion. She was a beautifully living thing.
Naturally, she was being looked at
by others than himself. She was one of those
towards whom glasses in a theatre turn themselves inevitably.
The sweep and lift of her black hair would have drawn
them, even if she had offered no other charm.
Yes, he thought, here was another of them. To
whom was she bringing her good looks and her millions?
There were men enough who needed money, even if they
must accept it under less alluring conditions.
In the box next to the one occupied by the royal party
was a man who was known to be waiting for the advent
of some such opportunity. His was a case of dire,
if outwardly stately, need. He was young, but
a fool, and not noted for personal charms, yet he
had, in one sense, great things to offer. There
were, of course, many chances that he might offer
them to her. If this happened, would she accept
them? There was really no objection to him but
his dulness, consequently there seemed many chances
that she might. There was something akin to the
pomp of royalty in the power her father’s wealth
implied. She could scarcely make an ordinary
marriage. It would naturally be a sort of state
affair. There were few men who had enough to
offer in exchange for Vanderpoel millions, and of
the few none had special attractions. The one
in the box next to the royal party was a decent enough
fellow. As young princesses were not infrequently
called upon, by the mere exclusion of royal blood,
to become united to young or mature princes without
charm, so American young persons who were of royal
possessions must find themselves limited. If
you felt free to pick and choose from among young
men in the Guards or young attaches in the Diplomatic
Service with twopence a year, you might get beauty
or wit or temperament or all three by good luck, but
if you were of a royal house of New York or Chicago,
you would probably feel you must draw lines and choose
only such splendours as accorded with, even while
differing from, your own.
Any possible connection of himself
with such a case did not present itself to him.
If it had done so, he would have counted himself,
haughtily, as beyond the pale. It was for other
men to do things of the sort; a remote antagonism
of his whole being warred against the mere idea.
It was bigoted prejudice, perhaps, but it was a strong
thing.
A lovely shoulder and a brilliant
head set on a long and slender neck have no nationality
which can prevent a man’s glance turning naturally
towards them. His turned again during the last
act of the play, and at a moment when he saw something
rather like the thing he had seen when the Meridiana
moved away from the dock and the exalted Miss Vanderpoel
leaning upon the rail had held out her arms towards
the child who had brought his toy to her as a farewell
offering.
Sitting by her to-night was a boy
with a crooked back—Mount Dunstan remembered
hearing that the Anstruthers had a deformed son—and
she was leaning towards him, her hand resting on his
shoulder, explaining something he had not quite grasped
in the action of the play. The absolute adoration
in the boy’s uplifted eyes was an interesting
thing to take in, and the radiant warmth of her bright
look was as unconscious of onlookers as it had been
when he had seen it yearning towards the child on
the wharf. Hers was the temperament which gave—which
gave. He found himself restraining a smile because
her look brought back to him the actual sound of the
New York youngster’s voice.
“I wanted to kiss you, Betty,
oh, I did so want to kiss you!”
Anstruthers’ boy—poor
little beggar—looked as if he, too, in the
face of actors and audience, and brilliance of light,
wanted to kiss her.