The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ
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âGo where?â Vanderbank appeared to have for the question less attention than usual.
âWell, to the place her companion will propose. Probablyâlike Anna Karenineâto one of the smaller Italian towns.â
âAnna Karenine? She isnât a bit like Anna.â
âOf course she isnât so clever,â said Mrs. Brook. âBut that would spoil her. So itâs all right.â
âIâm glad itâs all right,â Vanderbank laughed. âBut I dare say we shall still have her with us a while.â
âWe shall do that, I trust, whatever happens. Sheâll come up againâ sheâll remain, I feel, one of those enormous things that fate seems somehow to have given me as the occupation of my odd moments. I donât see,â Mrs. Brook added, âwhat still keeps her on the edge, which isnât an inch wide.â
Vanderbank looked this time as if he only tried to wonder. âIsnât it YOU?â
Mrs. Brook mused more deeply. âSometimes I think so. But I donât know.â
âYes, how CAN you of course know, since she canât tell you?â
âOh if I depended on her tellingâ!â Mrs. Brook shook out with this a sofa-cushion or two and sank into the corner she had arranged. The August afternoon was hot and the London air heavy; the room moreover, though agreeably bedimmed, gave out the staleness of the seasonâs end. âIf you hadnât come to-day,â she went on, âyouâd have missed me till I donât know when, for weâve let the Hovel againâwretchedly, but still weâve let itâand I go down on Friday to see that it isnât too filthy. Edward, whoâs furious at what Iâve taken for it, had his idea that we should go there this year ourselves.â
âAnd nowââVanderbank took her upââthat fond fancy has become simply the ghost of a dead thought, a ghost that, in company with a thousand predecessors, haunts the house in the twilight and pops at you out of odd corners.â
âOh Edwardâs dead thoughts are indeed a cheerful company and worthy of the perpetual mental mourning we seem to go about in. Theyâre worse than the relations weâre always losing without seeming to have any fewer, and I expect every day to hear that the Morning Post regrets to have to announce in that line too some new bereavement. The apparitions following the deaths of so many thoughts ARE particularly awful in the twilight, so that at this season, while the day drags and drags, Iâm glad to have any one with me who may keep them at a distance.â
Vanderbank had not sat down; slowly, familiarly he turned about. âAnd whereâs Nanda?â
âOh SHE doesnât helpâshe attracts rather the worst of the bogies. Edward and Nanda and Harold and I seated together are fairly a case for thatâwhat do you call it?âinvestigating Society. Deprived of the sweet resource of the Hovel,â Mrs. Brook continued, âwe shall each, from about the tenth on, forage somehow or other for ourselves. Mitchy perhaps,â she added, âwill insist on taking us to Baireuth.â
âThat will be the form, you mean, of his own forage?â
Mrs. Brook just hesitated. âUnless you should prefer to take it as the form of yours.â
Vanderbank appeared for a moment obligingly enough to turn this over, but with the effect of noting an objection. âOh Iâm afraid I shall have to grind straight through the month and that by the time Iâm free every Ring at Baireuth will certainly have been rung. Is it your idea to take Nanda?â he asked.
She reached out for another cushion. âIf itâs impossible for you to manage what I suggest why should that question interest you?â
âMy dear womanââand her visitor dropped into a chairââdo you suppose my interest depends on such poverties as what I can âmanageâ? You know well enough,â he went on in another tone, âwhy I care for Nanda and enquire about her.â
She was perfectly ready. âI know it, but only as a bad reason. Donât be too sure!â
For a moment they looked at each other. âDonât be so sure, you mean, that the elation of it may go to my head? Are you really warning me against vanity?â
âYour âreallys,â my dear Van, are a little formidable, but it strikes me that before I tell you thereâs something Iâve a right to ask. Are you âreallyâ what they call thinking of my daughter?â
âYour asking,â Vanderbank returned, âexactly shows the state of your knowledge of the matter. I donât quite see moreover why you speak as if I were paying an abrupt and unnatural attention. What have I done the last three months but talk to you about her? What have you done but talk to ME about her? From the moment you first spoke to meââmonstrously,â I remember you called itâof the difference made in your social life by her finally established, her perpetual, her inexorable participation: from that moment what have we both done but put our heads together over the question of keeping the place tidy, as you called itâor as I called it, was it?âfor the young female mind?â
Mrs. Brook faced serenely enough the directness of this challenge. âWell, what are you coming to? I spoke of the change in my life of course; I happen to be so constituted that my life has something to do with my mind and my mind something to do with my talk. Good talk: you knowâno one, dear Van, should know betterâwhat part for me that plays. Therefore when one has deliberately to make oneâs talk badâ!â
ââBadâ?â Vanderbank, in his amusement, fell back in his chair. âDear Mrs. Brook, youâre too delightful!â
âYou know what I meanâstupid, flat, fourth-rate. When one has to haul in sail to that degreeâand for a perfectly outside reasonâthereâs nothing strange in oneâs taking a friend sometimes into the confidence of oneâs irritation.â
âAh,â Vanderbank protested, âyou do yourself injustice. Irritation hasnât been for you the only consequence of the affair.â
Mrs. Brook gloomily thought. âNo, noâIâve had my calmness: the calmness of deep despair. Iâve seemed to see everything go.â
âOh how can you say that,â her visitor demanded, âwhen just what weâve most been agreed upon so often is the practical impossibility of making any change? Hasnât it seemed as if we really canât overcome conversational habits so thoroughly formed?â
Again Mrs. Brook reflected. âAs if our way of looking at things were too serious to be trifled with? I donât knowâI think itâs only you who have denied our sacrifices, our compromises and concessions. I myself have constantly felt smothered in them. But there it is,â she impatiently went on. âWhat I donât admit is that youâve given me ground to take for a proof of your âintentionsââto use the odious termâyour association with me on behalf of the preposterous fiction, as it after all is, of Nandaâs blankness of mind.â
Vanderbankâs head, in his chair, was thrown back; his eyes ranged over the top of the room. âThere never has been any mystery about my thinking herâall in her own wayâthe nicest girl in London. She IS.â
His companion was silent a little. âShe is, by all means. Well,â she then added, âso far as I may have been alive to the fact of any oneâs thinking her so, itâs not out of place I should mention to you the difference made in my appreciation of it by our delightful little stay at Mertle. My views for Nanda,â said Mrs. Brook, âhave somehow gone up.â
Vanderbank was prompt to show how he could understand it. âSo that you wouldnât consider even Mitchy now?â
But his friend took no notice of the question. âThe way Mr. Longdon distinguishes her is quite the sort of thing that gives a girl, as Harold says, a âleg up.â Itâs awfully curious and has made me think: he isnât anything whatever, as London estimates go, in himselfâso that what is it, pray, that makes him, when âadded onâ to her, so double Nandaâs value? I somehow or other see, through his being known to back her and through the pretty story of his loyalty to mamma and all the rest of it (oh if one chose to WORK that!) ever so much more of a chance for her.â
Vanderbankâs eyes were on the ceiling. âIt IS curious, isnât it?â though I think heâs rather more âin himself,â even for the London estimate, than you quite understand.â He appeared to give her time to take this up, but as she said nothing he pursued: âI dare say that if even I now WERE to enter myself it would strike you as too late.â
Her attention to this was but indirect. âItâs awfully vulgar to be talking about it, but I canât help feeling that something possibly rather big will come of Mr. Longdon.â
âAh weâve touched on that before,â said Vanderbank, âand you know you did think something might come even for me.â
She continued however, as if she scarce heard him, to work out her own vision. âItâs very true that up to nowââ
âWell, up to now?â he asked as she faltered.
She faltered still a little. âI do say the most hideous things. But we HAVE said worse, havenât we? Up to now, I mean, he hasnât given her anything. Unless indeed,â she mused, âshe may have had something without telling me.â
Vanderbank went much straighter. âWhat sort of thing have you in mind? Are you thinking of money?â
âYes. Isnât it awful?â
âThat you should think of it?â
âThat I should talk this way.â Her friend was apparently not prepared with an assent, and she quickly enough pursued: âIf he HAD given her any it would come out somehow in her expenditure. She has tremendous liberty and is very secretive, but still it would come out.â
âHe wouldnât give her any without letting you know. Nor would she, without doing so,â Vanderbank added, âtake it.â
âAh,â Mrs. Brook quietly said, âshe hates me enough for anything.â
âThatâs only your romantic theory.â
Once more she appeared not to hear him; she gave the discussion another turn. âHas he given YOU anything?â
Her visitor smiled. âNot so much as a cigarette. Iâve always my pockets full of them, and HE never: so he only takes mine. Oh Mrs. Brook,â he continued, âwith me tooâthough Iâve also tremendous liberty!âit would come out.â
âI think youâd let me know,â she returned.
âYes, Iâd let you know.â
Silence, upon this, fell between them a little; which she was the first to break. âShe has gone with him this afternoonâby solemn appointmentâ to the South Kensington Museum.â
There was something in Mrs. Brookâs dolorous drop that yet presented the news as a portent so great that he was moved again to mirth. âAh thatâs where she is? Then I confess she has scored. He has never taken ME to the South Kensington Museum.â
âYou were asking what weâre going to do,â she went on. âWhat I meant wasâabout Baireuthâthat the
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