The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
- Performer: -
Book online «The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ». Author Henry James
âNo. Only she appears to have come down with such accumulations. And she wonât be here for ever,â Vanderbank hastened to mention. âCertainly not if you marry her.â
âBut isnât that at the same time,â Vanderbank asked, âjust the difficulty?â
Mitchy looked vague. âThe difficulty?â
âWhy as a married woman sheâll be steeped in it again.â
âSurelyââoh Mitchy could be candid! âBut the difference will be that for a married woman it wonât matter. It only matters for girls,â he plausibly continuedââand then only for those on whom no one takes pity.â
âThe trouble is,â said Vanderbankâbut quite as if uttering only a general truthââthat itâs just a thing that may sometimes operate as a bar to pity. Isnât it for the non-marrying girls that it doesnât particularly matter? For the others itâs such an odd preparation.â
âOh I donât mind it!â Mitchy declared.
Vanderbank visibly demurred. âAh but your choiceâ!â
âIs such a different sort of thing?â Mitchy, for the half-hour, in the ambiguous dusk, had never looked more droll. âThe young lady I named isnât my CHOICE.â
âWell then, thatâs only a sign the more that you do these things more easily.â
âOh âeasilyâ!â Mitchy murmured.
âWe oughtnât at any rate to keep it up,â said Vanderbank, who had looked at his watch. âTwelve twenty-fiveâgood-night. Shall I blow out the candles?â
âDo, please. Iâll close the windowââand Mitchy went to it. âIâll follow youâgood-night.â The candles after a minute were out and his friend had gone, but Mitchy, left in darkness face to face with the vague quiet garden, still stood there.
The footman, opening the door, mumbled his name without sincerity, and Vanderbank, passing in, found in factâfor he had caught the symptomâ the chairs and tables, the lighted lamps and the flowers alone in possession. He looked at his watch, which exactly marked eight, then turned to speak again to the servant, who had, however, without another sound and as if blushing for the house, already closed him in. There was nothing indeed but Mrs. Grendonâs want of promptness that failed of a welcome: her drawing-room, on the January night, showed its elegance through a suffusion of pink electricity which melted, at the end of the vista, into the faintly golden glow of a retreat still more sacred. Vanderbank walked after a moment into the second room, which also proved empty and which had its little globes of white fireâdiscreetly limited in numberâcoated with lemon-coloured silk. The walls, covered with delicate French mouldings, were so fair that they seemed vaguely silvered; the low French chimney had a French fire. There was a lemon-coloured stuff on the sofa and chairs, a wonderful polish on the floor that was largely exposed, and a copy of a French novel in blue paper on one of the spindle-legged tables. Vanderbank looked about him an instant as if generally struck, then gave himself to something that had particularly caught his eye. This was simply his own name written rather large on the cover of the French book and endowed, after he had taken the volume up, with the power to hold his attention the more closely the longer he looked at it. He uttered, for a private satisfaction, before letting the matter pass, a low confused sound; after which, flinging the book down with some emphasis in another place, he moved to the chimney-piece, where his eyes for a little intently fixed the small ashy wood-fire. When he raised them again it was, on the observation that the beautiful clock on the mantel was wrong, to consult once more his watch and then give a glance, in the chimney-glass, at the state of his moustache, the ends of which he twisted for a moment with due care. While so engaged he became aware of something else and, quickly facing about, recognised in the doorway of the room the other figure the glass had just reflected.
âOh YOU?â he said with a quick handshake. âMrs. Grendonâs down?â But he had already passed with Nanda, on their greeting, back into the first room, which contained only themselves, and she had mentioned that she believed Tishy to have said 8.15, which meant of course anything people liked.
âOh then thereâll be nobody till nine. I didnât, I suppose, sufficiently study my note; which didnât mention to me, by the way,â Vanderbank added, âthat you were to be here.â
âAh but why SHOULD it?â Nanda spoke again, however, before he could reply. âI dare say that when she wrote to you she didnât know.â
âKnow youâd come bang up to meet me?â Vanderbank laughed. âJolly at any rate, thanks to my mistake, to have in this way a quiet moment with you. You came on ahead of your mother?â
âOh noâIâm staying here.â
âOh!â said Vanderbank.
âMr. Longdon came up with meâI came here, Friday last, straight.â
âYou parted at the door?â he asked with marked gaiety.
She thought a momentâshe was more serious. âYesâbut only for a day or two. Heâs coming tonight.â
âGood. How delightful!â
âHeâll be glad to see you,â Nanda said, looking at the flowers.
âAwfully kind of him when Iâve been such a brute.â
âHowâa brute?â
âWell, I mean not writingânor going back.â
âOh I see,â Nanda simply returned.
It was a simplicity that, clearly enough, made her friend a little awkward. âHas heâaâminded? Hut he canât have complained!â he quickly added.
âOh he never complains.â
âNo, noâit isnât in him. But itâs just that,â said Vanderbank, âthat makes one feel so base. Iâve been ferociously busy.â
âHe knows thatâhe likes it,â Nanda returned. âHe delights in your work. And Iâve done what I can for him.â
âAh,â said her companion, âyouâve evidently brought him round. I mean to this lady.â
âTo Tishy? Oh of course I canât leave herâwith nobody.â
âNoââVanderbank became jocose againââthatâs a London necessity. You canât leave anybody with nobodyâexposed to everybody.â
Mild as it was, however, Nanda missed the pleasantry. âMr. Grendonâs not here.â
âWhere is he then?â
âYachtingâbut she doesnât know.â
âThen she and you are just doing this together?â
âWell,â said Nanda, âsheâs dreadfully frightened.â
âOh she mustnât allow herself,â he returned, âto be too much carried away by it. But weâre to have your mother?â
âYes, and papa. Itâs really for Mitchy and Aggie,â the girl went onâ âbefore they go abroad.â
âAh then I see what youâve come up for! Tishy and I arenât in it. Itâs all for Mitchy.â
âIf you mean thereâs nothing I wouldnât do for him youâre quite right. He has always been of a kindness to meâ!â
âThat culminated in marrying your friend?â Vanderbank asked. âIt was charming certainly, and I donât mean to diminish the merit of it. But Aggie herself, I gather, is of a charm nowâ!â
âIsnât she?ââNanda was eager. âHasnât she come out?â
âWith a boundâinto the arena. But when a young personâs out with Mitchyâ!â
âOh you mustnât say anything against that. Iâve been out with him myself.â
âAh but my dear childâ!â Van frankly argued.
It was not, however, a thing to notice. âI knew it would be just so. It always is when theyâve been like that.â
âDo you mean as she apparently WAS? But doesnât it make one wonder a little IF she was?â
âOh she wasâI know she was. And weâre also to have Harold,â Nanda continuedââanother of Mitchyâs beneficiaries. It WOULD be a banquet, wouldnât it? if we were to have them all.â
Vanderbank hesitated, and the look he fixed on the door might have suggested a certain open attention to the arrival of their hostess or the announcement of other guests. âIf you havenât got them all, the beneficiaries, youâve got, in having me, I should suppose, about the biggest.â
âAh what has he done for you?â Nanda asked.
Again her friend hung fire. âDo you remember something you said to me down there in August?â
She looked vague but quite unembarrassed. âI remember but too well that I chattered.â
âYou declared to me that you knew everything.â
âOh yesâand I said so to Mitchy too.â
âWell, my dear child, you donât.â
âBecause I donât knowâ?â
âYes, what makes ME the victim of his insatiable benevolence.â
âAh well, if youâve no doubt of it yourself thatâs all thatâs required. Iâm quite GLAD to hear of something I donât know,â Nanda pursued. âAnd weâre to have Harold too,â she repeated.
âAs a beneficiary? Then we SHALL fill up! Harold will give us a stamp.â
âWonât he? I hear of nothing but his success. Mother wrote me that people are frantic for him; and,â said the girl after an instant, âdo you know what Cousin Jane wrote me?â
âWhat WOULD she now? Iâm trying to think.â
Nanda relieved him of this effort. âWhy that mother has transferred to him all the scruples she feltââeven to excessââin MY time, about what we might pick up among you all that wouldnât be good for us.â
âThatâs a neat one for ME!â Vanderbank declared. âAnd I like your talk about your antediluvian âtime.ââ
âOh itâs all over.â
âWhat exactly is it,â Vanderbank presently demanded, âthat you describe in that manner?â
âWell, my little hour. And the danger of picking up.â
âThereâs none of it here?â
Nanda appeared frankly to judge. âNoâbecause, really, Tishy, donât you see? is natural. We just talk.â
Vanderbank showed his interest. âWhereas at your motherâsâ?â
âWell, you were all afraid.â
Vanderbank laughed straight out. âDo you mind my telling her that?â
âOh she knows it. Iâve heard her say herself you were.â
âAh I was,â he concurred. âYou know weâve spoken of that before.â
âIâm speaking now of all of you,â said Nanda. âBut it was she who was most so, for she triedâI know she did, she told me soâto control you. And it was when, you were most controlledâ!â
Vanâs amusement took it up. âThat we were most detrimental?â
âYes, because of course whatâs so awfully unutterable is just what we most notice. Tishy knows that,â Nanda wonderfully observed.
As the reflexion of her tone might have been caught by an observer in Vanderbankâs face it was in all probability caught by his interlocutress, who superficially, however, need have recognised thereâ what was all she showedâbut the right manner of waiting for dinner. âThe better way then is to dash right in? Thatâs what our friend here does?â
âOh you know what she does!â the girl replied as with a sudden drop of interest in the question. She turned at the moment to the opening of the door.
It was Tishy who at last appeared, and her guest had his greeting ready. âWeâre talking of the delicate matters as to which you think itâs better to dash right in; but Iâm bound to say your inviting a hungry man to dinner doesnât appear to be one of them.â
The sign of Tishy Grendonâas it had been often called in a society in which variety of reference had brought to high perfection, for usual safety, the sense of signsâwas a retarded facial glimmer that, in respect to any subject, closed up the rear of the procession. It had been said of her indeed that when processions were at all rapid she was usually to be found, on a false impression of her whereabouts, mixed up with the next; so that now, for instance, by the time she had reached the point of saying to Vanderbank âAre you REALLY hungry?â Nanda had begun to appeal to him for some praise of their hostessâs appearance. This was of course with soft looks up and down at her clothes. âIsnât she too nice? Did you ever see anything so lovely?â
âIâm so faint with inanition,â Van replied to Mrs. Grendon, âthatâlike the traveller in the desert, isnât it?âI only make out, as an oasis or a mirage, a sweet green rustling blur. I donât trust
Comments (0)