The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âI see,â said Mrs. Brook blandly, âand he likes you in return as much as he despises me. That makes it all rightâmakes me somehow so happy for you. Thereâs something in himâwhat is it?âthat suggests the oncle dâAmerique, the eccentric benefactor, the fairy godmother. Heâs a little of an old womanâbut all the better for it.â She hung fire but an instant before she pursued: âWhat can we make him do for you?â
Vanderbank at this was very blank. âDo for me?â
âHow can any one love you,â she asked, âwithout wanting to show it in some way? You know all the ways, dear Van,â she breathed, âin which I want to show it.â
He might have known them, something suddenly fixed in his face appeared to say, but they were not what was, on this speech of hers, most immediately present to him. âThat for instance is the tone not to take with him.â
âThere you are!â she sighed with discouragement. âWell, only TELL me.â Then as he said nothing: âI must be more like mamma?â
His expression confessed to his feeling an awkwardness. âYouâre perhaps not quite enough like her.â
âOh I know that if he deplores me as I am now she would have done so quite as much; in fact probably, as seeing it nearer, a good deal more. Sheâd have despised me even more than he. But if itâs a question,â Mrs. Brook went on, âof not saying what mamma wouldnât, how can I know, donât you see, what she WOULD have said?â Mrs. Brook became as wonderful as if she saw in her friendâs face some admiring reflexion of the fine freedom of mind thatâin such a connexion quite as much as in any otherâshe could always show. âOf course I revere mamma just as much as he does, and there was everything in her to revere. But she was none the less in every way a charming woman too, and I donât know, after all, do I? what even sheâin their peculiar relationâmay not have said to him.â
Vanderbankâs laugh came back. âVery goodâvery good. I return to my first idea. Try with him whatever comes into your head. Youâre a woman of genius after all, and genius mostly justifies itself. To make you right,â he went on pleasantly and inexorably, âmight perhaps be to make you wrong. Since you HAVE so great a charm trust it not at all or all in all. That, I dare say, is all you can do. Thereforeâyesâbe yourself.â
These remarks were followed on either side by the repetition of a somewhat intenser mutual gaze, though indeed the speakerâs eyes had more the air of meeting his friendâs than of seeking them. âI canât be YOU certainly, Van,â Mrs. Brook sadly brought forth.
âI know what you mean by that,â he rejoined in a moment. âYou mean Iâm hypocritical.â
âHypocritical?â
âIâm diplomatic and calculatingâI donât show him how bad I am; whereas with you he knows the worst.â
Of this observation Mrs. Brook, whose eyes attached themselves again to Mr. Longdon, took at first no further notice than might have been indicated by the way it set her musing.
ââCalculatingâ?ââshe at last took him up. âOn what is there to calculate?â
âWhy,â said Vanderbank, âif, as you just hinted, heâs a blessing in disguiseâ! I perfectly admit,â he resumed, âthat Iâm capable of sacrifices to keep on good terms with him.â
âYouâre not afraid heâll bore you?â
âOh yesâdistinctly.â
âBut heâll be worth it? Then,â Mrs. Brook said as he appeared to assent, âheâll be worth a great deal.â She continued to watch Mr. Longdon, who, without his glasses, stared straight at the floor while Mr. Cashmore talked to him. She pursued, however, dispassionately enough: âHe must be of a narrownessâ!â
âOh beautiful!â
She was silent again. âI shall broaden him. YOU wonât.â
âHeaven forbid!â Vanderbank heartily concurred. âBut none the less, as Iâve said, Iâll help you.â
Her attention was still fixed. âIt will be him youâll help. If youâre to make sacrifices to keep on good terms with him the first sacrifice will be of me.â Then on his leaving this remark so long unanswered that she had finally looked at him again: âIâm perfectly prepared for it.â
It was as if, jocosely enough, he had had time to make up his mind how to meet her. âWhat will you haveâwhen he loved my mother?â
Nothing could have been droller than the gloom of her surprise. âYours too?â
âI didnât tell you the other dayâout of delicacy.â
Mrs. Brookenham darkly thought. âHE didnât tell me either.â
âThe same consideration deterred him. But if I didnât speak of it,â Vanderbank continued, âwhen I arranged with you, after meeting him here at dinner, that you should come to tea with him at my roomsâif I didnât mention it then it wasnât because I hadnât learnt it early.â
Mrs. Brook more deeply sounded this affair, but she spoke with the exaggerated mildness that was the form mostly taken by her gaiety. âIt was because of course it makes him out such a wretch! What becomes in that case of his loyalty?â
âTo YOUR motherâs memory? Oh itâs all rightâhe has it quite straight. She came later. Mine, after my fatherâs death, had refused him. But you see he might have been my stepfather.â
Mrs. Brookenham took it in, but she had suddenly a brighter light. âHe might have been my OWN father! Besides,â she went on, âif his line is to love the mothers why on earth doesnât he love ME? Iâm in all conscience enough of one.â
âAh but isnât there in your case the fact of a daughter?â Vanderbank asked with a slight embarrassment.
Mrs. Brookenham stared. âWhat good does that do me?â
âWhy, didnât she tell you?â
âNanda? She told me he doesnât like her any better than he likes me.â
Vanderbank in his turn showed surprise. âThatâs really what she said?â
âShe had on her return from your rooms a most unusual fit of frankness, for she generally tells me nothing.â
âWell,â said Vanderbank, âhow did she put it?â
Mrs. Brook reflectedârecovered it. ââI like him awfully, but I am not in the least HIS idea.ââ
âHis idea of what?â
âThatâs just what I asked her. Of the proper grandchild for mamma.â
Vanderbank hesitated. âWell, she isnât.â Then after another pause: âBut sheâll do.â
His companion gave him a deep look. âYouâll make her?â
He got up, and on seeing him move Mr. Longdon also rose, so that, facing each other across the room, they exchanged a friendly signal or two. âIâll make her.â
IIITheir hostessâs account of Mr. Cashmoreâs motive for his staying on was so far justified as that Vanderbank, while Mr. Longdon came over to Mrs. Brook, appeared without difficulty further to engage him. The lady in question meanwhile had drawn her old friend down, and her present method of approach would have interested an observer aware of the unhappy conviction she had just privately expressed. Some trace indeed of the glimpse of it enjoyed by Mr. Cashmereâs present interlocutor might have been detected in the restlessness that Vanderbankâs desire to keep the other pair uninterrupted was still not able to banish from his attitude. Not, however, that Mrs. Brook took the smallest account of it as she quickly broke out: âHow can we thank you enough, my dear man, for your extraordinary kindness?â The reference was vivid, yet Mr. Longdon looked so blank about it that she had immediately to explain. âI mean to dear Van, who has told us of your giving him the great happinessâunless heâs too dreadfully mistakenâof letting him really know you. Heâs such a tremendous friend of ours that nothing so delightful can befall him without its affecting us in the same way.â She had proceeded with confidence, but suddenly she pulled up. âDonât tell me he IS mistakenâI shouldnât be able to bear it.â She challenged the pale old man with a loveliness that was for the moment absolutely juvenile. âArenât you letting himâreally?â
Mr. Longdonâs smile was queer. âI canât prevent him. Iâm not a great houseâto give orders to go over me. The kindness is Mr. Vanderbankâs own, and Iâve taken up, Iâm afraid, a great deal of his precious time.â
âYou have indeed.â Mrs. Brook was undiscouraged. âHe has been talking with me just now of nothing else. You may say,â she went on, âthat itâs I who have kept him at it. So I have, for his pleasureâs a joy to us. If you canât prevent what he feels, you know, you canât prevent either what WE feel.â
Mr. Longdonâs face reflected for a minute something he could scarcely have supposed her acute enough to make out, the struggle between his real mistrust of her, founded on the unconscious violence offered by her nature to his every memory of her mother, and his sense on the other hand of the high propriety of his liking her; to which latter force his interest in Vanderbank was a contribution, inasmuch as he was obliged to recognise on the part of the pair an alliance it would have been difficult to explain at Beccles. âPerhaps I donât quite see the value of what your husband and you and I are in a position to do for him.â
âDo you mean because heâs himself so clever?â
âWell,â said Mr. Longdon, âI dare say thatâs at the bottom of my feeling so proud to be taken up by him. I think of the young men of MY time and see that he takes in more. But thatâs what you all do,â he rather helplessly sighed. âYouâre very, very wonderful!â
She met him with an almost extravagant eagerness that the meeting should be just where he wished. âI donât take in everything, but I take in all I can. Thatâs a great affair in London to-day, and I often feel as if I were a circus-woman, in pink tights and no particular skirts, riding half a dozen horses at once. Weâre all in the troupe now, I suppose,â she smiled, âand we must travel with the show. But when you say weâre different,â she added, âthink, after all, of mamma.â
Mr. Longdon stared. âItâs from her you ARE different.â
âAh but she had an awfully fine mind. Weâre not cleverer than she.â
His conscious honest eyes looked away an instant. âItâs perhaps enough for the present that youâre cleverer than I! I was very glad the other day,â he continued, âto make the acquaintance of your daughter. I hoped I should find her with you.â
If Mrs. Brook cast about it was but for a few seconds. âIf she had known you were coming she would certainly have been here. She wanted so to please you.â Then as her visitor took no further notice of this speech than to ask if Nanda were out of the house she had to admit it as an aggravation of failure; but she pursued in the next breath: âOf course you wonât care, but she raves about you.â
He appeared indeed at first not to care. âIsnât she eighteen?ââit was oddly abrupt.
âI have to think. Wouldnât it be nearer twenty?â Mrs. Brook audaciously returned. She tried again. âShe told me all about your interview. I stayed away on purposeâI had my idea.â
âAnd what WAS your idea?â
âI thought sheâd remind you more of mamma if I wasnât there. But sheâs a little person who sees. Perhaps you didnât think it, but she knew.â
âAnd what did she know?â asked Mr. Longdon, who was unable, however, to keep from his tone a certain coldness which really deprived the question of its proper curiosity.
Mrs. Brook just showed the chill
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