The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
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âOh well, I remember her!â Mrs. Brook moaned with an accent that evidently struck her the next moment as so much out of place that she slightly deflected. She took Nandaâs parasol and held it as ifâa more delicate thing much than any one of hersâshe simply liked to have it. âHer clothesâat your age at leastâmust have been hideous. Was it at the place he took you to that he gave you tea?â she then went on.
âYes, at the Museum. We had an orgy in the refreshment-room. But he took me afterwards to Tishyâs, where we had another.â
âHe went IN with you?â Mrs. Brook had suddenly flashed into eagerness.
âOh yesâI made him.â
âHe didnât want to?â
âOn the contraryâvery much. But he doesnât do everything he wants,â said Nanda.
Mrs. Brook seemed to wonder. âYou mean youâve also to want it?â
âOh noâTHAT isnât enough. What I suppose I mean,â Nanda continued, âis that he doesnât do anything he doesnât want. But he does quite enough,â she added.
âAnd who then was at Tishyâs?â
âOh poor old Tish herself, naturally, and Carrie Donner.â
âAnd no one else?â
The girl just waited. âYes, Mr. Cashmore came in.â
Her mother gave a groan of impatience. âAh AGAIN?â
Nanda thought an instant. âHow do you mean, âagainâ? He just lives there as much as he ever did, and Tishy canât prevent him.â
âI was thinking of Mr. Longdonâof THEIR meeting. When he met him here that time he liked it so little. Did he like it any more to-day?â Mrs. Brook quavered.
âOh no, he hated it.â
âBut hadnât heâif he should go inâknown he WOULD?â
âYes, perfectly. But he wanted to see.â
âTo seeâ?â Mrs. Brook just threw out.
âWell, where I go so much. And he knew I wished it,â
âI donât quite see why,â Mrs. Brook mildly observed. And then as her daughter said nothing to help her: âAt any rate he did loathe it?â
Nanda, for a reply, simply after an instant put a question. âWell, how can he understand?â
âYou mean, like me, why you do go there so much? How can he indeed?â
âI donât mean that,â the girl returnedââitâs just that he understands perfectly, because he saw them all, in such an extraordinary wayâwell, what can I ever call it?âclutch me and cling to me.â
Mrs. Brook, with full gravity, considered this picture. âAnd was Mr. Cashmore to-day so ridiculous?â
âAh heâs not ridiculous, mammaâheâs very unhappy. He thinks now Lady Fanny probably wonât go, but he feels that may be after all only the worse for him.â
âShe WILL go,â Mrs. Brook answered with one of her roundabout approaches to decision. âHe IS too great an idiot. She was here an hour ago, and if ever a woman was packedâ!â
âWell,â Nanda objected, âbut doesnât she spend her time in packing and unpacking?â
This enquiry, however, scarce pulled up her mother. âNoâthough she HAS, no doubt, hitherto wasted plenty of labour. She has now a dozen boxesâI could see them there in her wonderful eyesâjust waiting to be called for. So if youâre counting on her not going, my dearâ!â Mrs. Brook gave a headshake that was the warning of wisdom.
âOh I donât care what she does!â Nanda replied. âWhat I meant just now was that Mr. Longdon couldnât understand why, with so much to make them so, they couldnât be decently happy.â
âAnd did he wish you to explain?â
âI tried to, but I didnât make it any better. He doesnât like them. He doesnât even care for Tish.â
âHe told you soâright out?â
âOh,â Nanda said, âof course I asked him. I didnât press him, because I never doâ!â
âYou never do?â Mrs. Brook broke in as with the glimpse of a new light.
The girl showed an indulgence for this interest that was for a moment almost elderly. âI enjoy awfully with him seeing just how to take him.â
Her tone and her face evidently put forth for her companion at this juncture something freshly, even quite supremely suggestive; and yet the effect of them on Mrs. Brookâs part was only a question so off-hand that it might already often have been asked. The motherâs eyes, to ask it, we may none the less add, attached themselves closely to the daughterâs, and her face just glowed. âYou like him so very awfully?â
It was as if the next instant Nanda felt herself on her guard. Yet she spoke with a certain surrender. âWell, itâs rather intoxicating to be oneâs selfâ!â She had only a drop over the choice of her term.
âSo tremendously made up to, you meanâeven by a little fussy ancient man? But DOESNâT he, my dear,â Mrs. Brook continued with encouragement, âmake up to you?â
A supposititious spectator would certainly on this have imagined in the girlâs face the delicate dawn of a sense that her mother had suddenly become vulgar, together with a general consciousness that the way to meet vulgarity was always to be frank and simple and above all to ignore. âHe makes one enjoy being liked so muchâliked better, I do think, than Iâve ever been liked by any one.â
If Mrs. Brook hesitated it was, however, clearly not because she had noticed. âNot better surely than by dear Mitchy? Or even if you come to that by Tishy herself.â
Nandaâs simplicity maintained itself. âOh Mr. Longdonâs different from Tishy.â
Her mother again hesitated. âYou mean of course he knows more?â
The girl considered it. âHe doesnât know MORE. But he knows other things. And heâs pleasanter than Mitchy.â
âYou mean because he doesnât want to marry you?â
It was as if she had not heard that Nanda continued: âWell, heâs more beautiful.â
âO-oh!â cried Mrs. Brook, with a drawn-out extravagance of comment that amounted to an impugnment of her taste even by herself.
It contributed to Nandaâs quietness. âHeâs one of the most beautiful people in the world.â
Her companion at this, with a quick wonder, fixed her. âDOES he, my dear, want to marry you?â
âYesâto all sorts of ridiculous people.â
âBut I meanâwould you take HIM?â
Nanda, rising, met the question with a short ironic âYes!â that showed her first impatience. âItâs so charming being liked without being approved.â
But Mrs. Brook only wanted to know. âHe doesnât approveâ?â
âNo, but it makes no difference. Itâs all exactly rightâit doesnât matter.â
Mrs. Brook seemed to wonder, however, exactly how these things could be. âHe doesnât want you to give up anything?â She looked as if swiftly thinking what Nanda MIGHT give up.
âOh yes, everything.â
It was as if for an instant she found her daughter inscrutable; then she had a strange smile. âMe?â
The girl was perfectly prompt. âEverything. But he wouldnât like me nearly so much if I really did.â
Her mother had a further pause. âDoes he want to ADOPT you?â Then more quickly and sadly, though also a little as if lacking nerve to push the research: âWe couldnât give you up, Nanda.â
âThank you so much, mamma. But we shanât be very much tried,â Nanda said, âbecause what it comes to seems to be that Iâm really what you may call adopting HIM. I mean Iâm little by little changing himâgradually showing him that, as I couldnât possibly have been different, and as also of course one canât keep giving up, the only way is for him not to mind, and to take me just as I am. That, donât you see? is what he would never have expected to do.â
Mrs. Brook recognised in a manner the explanation, but still had her wistfulness. âButâaâto take you, âas you are,â WHERE?â
âWell, to the South Kensington Museum.â
âOh!â said Mrs. Brook. Then, however, in a more exemplary tone: âDo you enjoy so very much your long hours with him?â
Nanda appeared for an instant to think how to express it. âWell, weâre great friends.â
âAnd always talking about Granny?â
âOh noâreally almost never now.â
âHe doesnât think so awfully much of her?â There was an oddity of eagerness in the questionâa hope, a kind of dash, for something that might have been in Nandaâs interest.
The girl met these things only with obliging gravity. âI think heâs losing any sense of my likeness. Heâs too used to itâor too many things that are too different now cover it up.â
âWell,â said Mrs. Brook as she took this in, âI think itâs awfully clever of you to get only the good of him and have none of the worry.â
Nanda wondered. âThe worry?â
âYou leave that all to ME,â her mother went on, but quite forgivingly. âI hope at any rate that the good, for you, will be real.â
âReal?â the girl, remaining vague, again echoed.
Mrs. Brook showed for this not perhaps an irritation, but a flicker of austerity. âYou must remember weâve a great many things to think about. There are things we must take for granted in each otherâwe must all help in our way to pull the coach. Thatâs what I mean by worry, and if you donât have any so much the better for you. For me itâs in the dayâs work. Your father and I have most to think about always at this time, as you perfectly knowâwhen we have to turn things round and manage somehow or other to get out of town, have to provide and pinch, to meet all the necessities, with money, money, money at every turn running away like water. The children this year seem to fit into nothing, into nowhere, and Haroldâs more dreadful than he has ever been, doing nothing at all for himself and requiring everything to be done for him. He talks about his American girl, with millions, whoâs so awfully taken with him, but I canât find out anything about her: the only one, just now, that people seem to have heard of is the one Booby Mangerâs engaged to. The Mangers literally snap up everything,â Mrs. Brook quite wailingly now continued: âthe Jew man, so gigantically richâwho is he? Baron Schack or Schmackâ who has just taken Cumberland House and who has the awful stammerâor what is it? no roof to his mouthâis to give that horrid little Algie, to do his conversation for him, four hundred a year, which Harold pretended to me that, of all the rush of young menâdozens!âHE was most in the running for. Your fatherâs settled gloom is terrible, and I bear all the brunt of it; we get literally nothing this year for the Hovel, yet have to spend on it heaven knows what; and everybody, for the next three months, in Scotland and everywhere, has asked us for the wrong time and nobody for the right: so that I assure you I donât know where to turnâwhich doesnât however in the least prevent every one coming to me with their own selfish troubles.â It was as if Mrs. Brook had found the cup of her secret sorrows suddenly jostled by some touch of which the perversity, though not completely noted at the moment, proved, as she a little let herself go, sufficient to make it flow over; but she drew, the next thing, from her daughterâs stillness a reflexion of the vanity of such heat and speedily recovered herself as if in order with more dignity to point the moral. âI can carry my burden and shall do so to the end; but we must each remember that we shall fall to pieces if we donât manage to keep hold of some little idea of responsibility. I positively canât arrange without knowing when it is you go to him.â
âTo Mr. Longdon? Oh whenever I like,â Nanda replied very gently and simply.
âAnd when shall you be so good as to like?â
âWell, he
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