The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
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Nanda heard him motionless to the end, taking also another minute to turn over what he had said. âWhat is it you like so in Lord Petherton?â she asked as she came to him.
âMy dear child, if you only could tell me! It would be, wouldnât it?âit must have beenâthe subject of some fairy-tale, if fairy-tales were made now, or better still of some Christmas pantomime: âThe Gnome and the Giant.ââ
Nanda appeared to tryânot with much successâto see it. âDo you find Lord Petherton a Gnome?â
Mitchy at first, for all reward, only glared at her. âCharming, Nandaâ charming!â
âA manâs giant enough for Lord Petherton,â she went on, âwhen his fortuneâs gigantic. He preys upon you.â
His hands in his pockets and his legs much apart, Mitchy sat there as in a posture adapted to her simplicity. âYouâre adorable. YOU donât. But it IS rather horrid, isnât it?â he presently went on.
Her momentary silence would have been by itself enough of an answer. âNothingâof all you speak of,â she nevertheless returned, âwill matter then. Sheâll so simplify your life.â He remained just as he was, only with his eyes on her; and meanwhile she had turned again to her window, through which a faint sun-streak began to glimmer and play. At sight of it she opened the casement to let in the warm freshness. âThe rain HAS stopped.â
âYou say you want me to save her. But what you really mean,â Mitchy resumed from the sofa, âisnât at all exactly that.â
Nanda, without heeding the remark, took in the sunshine. âIt will be charming now in the garden.â
Her friend got up, found his wonderful crossbarred cap, after a glance, on a neighbouring chair, and with it came toward her. âYour hope is thatâas Iâm good enough to be worth itâsheâll save ME.â
Nanda looked at him now. âShe will, Mitchyâshe WILL!â
They stood a moment in the recovered brightness; after which he mechanicallyâas with the pressure of quite another consciousnessâput on his cap. âWell then, shall that hope between us be the thingâ?â
âThe thing?ââshe just wondered.
âWhy that will have drawn us togetherâto hold us so, you knowâthis afternoon. I mean the secret we spoke of.â
She put out to him on this the hand he had taken a few minutes before, and he clasped it now only with the firmness it seemed to give and to ask for. âOh it will do for that!â she said as they went out together.
IIIIt had been understood that he was to take his leave on the morrow, though Vanderbank was to stay another day. Mr. Longdon had for the Sunday dinner invited three or four of his neighbours to âmeetâ the two gentlemen from town, so that it was not till the company had departed, or in other words till near bedtime, that our four friends could again have become aware, as between themselves, of that directness of mutual relation which forms the subject of our picture. It had not, however, prevented Nandaâs slipping upstairs as soon as the doctor and his wife had gone, and the manner indeed in which, on the stroke of eleven, Mr. Longdon conformed to his tradition of appropriating a particular candle was as positive an expression of it as any other. Nothing in him was more amiable than the terms maintained between the rigour of his personal habits and his free imagination of the habits of others. He deprecated as regards the former, it might have been seen, most signs of likeness, and no one had ever dared to learn how he would have handled a show of imitation. âThe way to flatter him,â Mitchy threw off five minutes later, âis not to make him think you resemble or agree with him, but to let him see how different you perceive he can bear to think you. I mean of course without hating you.â
âBut what interest have YOU,â Vanderbank asked, âin the way to flatter him?â
âMy dear fellow, more interest than you. I havenât been here all day without arriving at conclusions on the credit he has opened to youâ!â
âDo you mean the amount heâll settle?â
âYou have it in your power,â said Mitchy, âto make it anything you like.â
âAnd is he thenâso bloated?â
Mitchy was on his feet in the apartment in which their host had left them, and he had at first for this question but an expressive motion of the shoulders in respect to everything in the room. âSee, judge, guess, feel!â
But it was as if Vanderbank, before the fire, consciously controlled his own attention. âOh I donât care a hang!â
This passage took place in the library and as a consequence of their having confessed, as their friend faced them with his bedroom light, that a brief discreet vigil and a box of cigars would fix better than anything else the fine impression of the day. Mitchy might at that moment, on the evidence of the eyes Mr. Longdon turned to them and of which his innocent candle-flame betrayed the secret, have found matter for a measure of the almost extreme allowances he wanted them to want of him. They had only to see that the greater window was fast and to turn out the library lamp. It might really have amused them to stand a moment at the open door that, apart from this, was to testify to his conception of those who were not, in the smaller hours, as HE was. He had in fact by his retreatâand but too sensiblyâleft them there with a deal of midnight company. If one of these presences was the mystery he had himself mixed the manner of our young men showed a due expectation of the others. Mitchy, on hearing how little Vanderbank âcared,â only kept up a while longer that observant revolution in which he had spent much of his day, to which any fresh sense of any exhibition always promptly committed him, and which, had it not been controlled by infinite tact, might have affected the nerves of those in whom enjoyment was less rotary. He was silent long enough to suggest his fearing that almost anything he might say would appear too allusive; then at last once more he took his risk. âAwfully jolly old place!â
âIt is indeed,â Van only said; but his posture in the large chair he had pushed toward the open window was of itself almost an opinion. The August night was hot and the air that came in charged and sweet. Vanderbank smoked with his face to the dusky garden and the dim stars; at the end of a few moments more of which he glanced round. âDonât you think it rather stuffy with that big lamp? As those candles on the chimney are going we might put it out.â
âLike this?â The amiable Mitchy had straightway obliged his companion and he as promptly took in the effect of the diminished light on the character of the room, which he commended as if the depth of shadow produced were all this companion had sought. He might freshly have brought home to Vanderbank that a man sensitive to so many different things, and thereby always sure of something or other, could never really be incommoded; though that personage presently indeed showed himself occupied with another thought.
âI think I ought to mention to you that Iâve told him how you and Mrs. Brook now both know. I did so this afternoon on our way back from churchâI hadnât done it before. He took me a walk round to show me more of the place, and that gave me my chance. But he doesnât mind,â Vanderbank continued. âThe only thing is that Iâve thought it may possibly make him speak to you, so that itâs better you should know he knows. But he told me definitely Nanda doesnât.â
Mitchy took this in with an attention that spoke of his already recognising how the less tempered darkness favoured talk. âAnd is that all that passed between you?â
âWell, practically; except of course that I made him understand, I think, how it happened that I havenât kept my own counsel.â
âOh but you HAVEâdidnât he at least feel?âor perhaps even have done better, when youâve two such excellent persons to keep it FOR you. Canât he easily believe how we feel with you?â
Vanderbank appeared for a minute to leave this appeal unheeded; he continued to stare into the garden while he smoked and swung the long leg he had thrown over the arm of the chair. When he at last spoke, however, it was with some emphasisâperhaps even with some vulgarity. âOh rot!â
Mitchy hovered without an arrest. âYou mean he CANâT feel?â
âI mean it isnât true. Iâve no illusions about you. I know how youâre both affected, though I of course perfectly trust you.â
Mitchy had a short silence. âTrust us not to speak?â
âNot to speak to Nanda herselfâthough of course too if you spoke to others,â Vanderbank went on, âtheyâd immediately rush and tell her.â
âIâve spoken to no one,â said Mitchy. âIâm sure of it. And neither has Mrs. Brook.â
âIâm glad youâre sure of that also,â Mitchy returned, âfor itâs only doing her justice.â
âOh Iâm quite confident of it,â said Vanderbank. âAnd without asking her?â
âPerfectly.â
âAnd youâre equally sure, without asking, that I havenât betrayed you?â After which, while, as if to let the question lie there in its folly, Vanderbank said nothing, his friend pursued: âI came, I must tell you, terribly near it to-day.â
âWhy must you tell me? Your coming ânearâ doesnât concern me, and I take it you donât suppose Iâm watching or sounding you. Mrs. Brook will have come terribly near,â Vanderbank continued as if to make the matter free; âbut she wonât have done it either. Sheâll have been distinctly temptedâ!â
âBut she wonât have fallen?â Mitchy broke in. âExactlyâthere we are. I was distinctly tempted and I didnât fall. I think your certainty about Mrs. Brook,â he added, âshows you do know her. Sheâs incapable of anything deliberately nasty.â
âOh of anything nasty in any way,â Vanderbank said musingly and kindly.
âYes; one knows on the whole what she WONâT do.â After which, for a period, Mitchy roamed and reflected. âBut in spite of the assurance given you by Mr. Longdonâor perhaps indeed just because of your having taken itâI think I ought to mention to you my belief that Nanda does know of his offer to you. I mean by having guessed it.â
âOh!â said Vanderbank.
âThereâs in fact more still,â his companion pursuedââthat I feel I should like to mention to you.â
âOh!â Vanderbank at first only repeated. But after a moment he said: âMy dear fellow, Iâm much obliged.â
âThe thing I speak of is something I should at any rate have said, and I should have looked out for some chance if we had not had this one.â Mitchy spoke as if his friendâs last words were not of consequence, and he continued as Vanderbank got up and, moving rather aimlessly, came and stood with his back to the chimney. âMy only hesitation would have been caused by its entailing our going down into things in a way that, face to faceâgiven the private nature of the thingsâI dare say most men donât particularly enjoy. But if you donât mindâ!â
âOh I donât mind. In fact, as I tell you, I recognise an obligation to you.â Vanderbank, with his shoulders against the high mantel, uttered this
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