The Awkward Age by Henry James (simple ebook reader txt) đ
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Mr. Longdon turned from his contemplation with a visible effort. âI feel obliged to you for taking it so; it mightnâtâone never knowsâhave amused you. As I told you there, the first thing I did was to ask Fernanda about the company; and when she mentioned your name I immediately said: âWould he like me to speak to him?ââ
âAnd what did Fernanda say?â
Mr. Longdon stared. âDo YOU call her Fernanda?â
Vanderbank felt ever so much more guilty than he would have expected. âYou think it too much in the manner we just mentioned?â
His friend hesitated; then with a smile a trifle strange: âPardon me; I didnât mentionââ
âNo, you didnât; and your scruple was magnificent. In point of fact,â Vanderbank pursued, âI DONâT call Mrs. Brookenham by her Christian name.â
Mr. Longdonâs clear eyes were searching. âUnless in speaking of her to others?â He seemed really to wish to know.
Vanderbank was but too ready to satisfy him. âI dare say we seem to you a vulgar lot of people. Thatâs not the way, I can see, you speak of ladies at Beccles.â
âOh if you laugh at meâ!â And his visitor turned off.
âDonât threaten me,â said Vanderbank, âor I WILL send away the cab. Of course I know what you mean. It will be tremendously interesting to hear how the sort of thing weâve fallen intoâoh we HAVE fallen in!âstrikes your fresh, your uncorrupted ear. Do have another cigarette. Sunk as I must appear to you it sometimes strikes even mine. But Iâm not sure as regards Mrs. Brookenham, whom Iâve known a long time.â
Mr. Longdon again took him up. âWhat do you people call a long time?â
Vanderbank considered. âAh there you are! And now weâre âwe peopleâ! Thatâs rightâgive it to us. Iâm sure that in one way or another itâs all earned. Well, Iâve known her ten years. But awfully well.â
âWhat do you call awfully well?â
âWe people?â Vanderbankâs enquirer, with his continued restless observation, moving nearer, the young man had laid on his shoulder the lightest of friendly hands. âDonât you perhaps ask too much? But no,â he added quickly and gaily, âof course you donât: if I donât look out I shall have exactly the effect on you I donât want. I dare say I donât know HOW well I know Mrs. Brookenham. Mustnât that sort of thing be put in a manner to the proof? What I meant to say just now was that I wouldnâtâat least I hope I shouldnâtâhave named her as I did save to an old friend.â
Mr. Longdon looked promptly satisfied and reassured. âYou probably heard me address her myself.â
âI did, but youâve your rights, and that wouldnât excuse me. The only thing is that I go to see her every Sunday.â
Mr. Longdon pondered and then, a little to Vanderbankâs surprise, at any rate to his deeper amusement, candidly asked: âOnly Fernanda? No other lady?â
âOh yes, several other ladies.â
Mr. Longdon appeared to hear this with pleasure. âYouâre quite right. We donât make enough of Sunday at Beccles.â
âOh we make plenty of it in London!â Vanderbank said. âAnd I think itâs rather in my interest I should mention that Mrs. Brookenham calls MEââ
His visitor covered him now with an attention that just operated as a check. âBy your Christian name?â
Before Vanderbank could in any degree attenuate âWhat IS your Christian name?â Mr. Longdon asked.
Vanderbank felt of a sudden almost guiltyâas if his answer could only impute extravagance to the lady. âMy Christian nameââhe blushed it out ââis Gustavus.â
His friend took a droll conscious leap. âAnd she calls you Gussy?â
âNo, not even Gussy. But I scarcely think I ought to tell you,â he pursued, âif she herself gave you no glimpse of the fact. Any implication that she consciously avoided it might make you see deeper depths.â
He spoke with pointed levity, but his companion showed him after an instant a face just coveredâand a little painfullyâwith the vision of the possibility brushed away by the joke. âOh Iâm not so bad as that!â Mr. Longdon modestly ejaculated.
âWell, she doesnât do it always,â Vanderbank laughed, âand itâs nothing moreover to what some people are called. Why, there was a fellow thereâ â He pulled up, however, and, thinking better of it, selected another instance. âThe Duchessâwerenât you introduced to the Duchess?ânever calls me anything but âVanderbankâ unless she calls me âcaro mio.â It wouldnât have taken much to make her appeal to YOU with an âI say, Longdon!â I can quite hear her.â
Mr. Longdon, focussing the effect of the sketch, pointed its moral with an indulgent: âOh well, a FOREIGN duchess!â He could make his distinctions.
âYes, sheâs invidiously, cruelly foreign,â Vanderbank agreed: âIâve never indeed seen a woman avail herself so cleverly, to make up for the obloquy of that state, of the benefits and immunities it brings with it. She has bloomed in the hot-house of her widowhoodâsheâs a Neapolitan hatched by an incubator.â
âA Neapolitan?ââMr. Longdon seemed all civilly to wish he had only known it.
âHer husband was one; but I believe that dukes at Naples are as thick as princes at Petersburg. Heâs dead, at any rate, poor man, and she has come back here to live.â
âGloomily, I should thinkâafter Naples?â Mr. Longdon threw out.
âOh it would take more than even a Neapolitan pastâ! Howeverââand the young man caught himself upââshe lives not in whatâs behind her, but in whatâs beforeâshe lives in her precious little Aggie.â
âLittle Aggie?â Mr. Longdon risked a cautious interest.
âI donât take a liberty there,â Vanderbank smiled: âI speak only of the young Agnesina, a little girl, the Duchessâs niece, or rather I believe her husbandâs, whom she has adoptedâin the place of a daughter early lostâand has brought to England to marry.â
âAh to some great man of course!â
Vanderbank thought. âI donât know.â He gave a vague but expressive sigh. âSheâs rather lovely, little Aggie.â
Mr. Longdon looked conspicuously subtle. âThen perhaps YOUâRE the man!â
âDo I look like a âgreatâ one?â Vanderbank broke in.
His visitor, turning away from him, again embraced the room. âOh dear, yes!â
âWell then, to show how right you are, thereâs the young lady.â He pointed to an object on one of the tables, a small photograph with a very wide border of something that looked like crimson fur.
Mr. Longdon took up the picture; he was serious now. âSheâs very beautifulâbut sheâs not a little girl.â
âAt Naples they develop early. Sheâs only seventeen or eighteen, I suppose; but I never know how oldâor at least how youngâgirls are, and Iâm not sure. An aunt, at any rate, has of course nothing to conceal. She IS extremely prettyâwith extraordinary red hair and a complexion to match; great rarities I believe, in that race and latitude. She gave me the portraitâframe and all. The frame is Neapolitan enough and little Aggieâs charming.â Then Vanderbank subjoined: âBut not so charming as little Nanda.â
âLittle Nanda?âhave you got HER?â The old man was all eagerness.
âSheâs over there beside the lampâalso a present from the original.â
IIMr. Longdon had gone to the placeâlittle Nanda was in glazed white wood. He took her up and held her out; for a moment he said nothing, but presently, over his glasses, rested on his host a look intenser even than his scrutiny of the faded image. âDo they give their portraits now?â
âLittle girlsâinnocent lambs? Surelyâto old friends. Didnât they in your time?â
Mr. Longdon studied the portrait again; after which, with an exhalation of something between superiority and regret, âThey never did to me,â he returned.
âWell, you can have all you want now!â Vanderbank laughed.
His friend gave a slow droll headshake. âI donât want them ânowâ!â
âYou could do with them, my dear sir, still,â Vanderbank continued in the same manner, âevery bit I do!â
âIâm sure you do nothing you oughtnât.â Mr. Longdon kept the photograph and continued to look at it. âHer mother told me about herâpromised me I should see her next time.â
âYou mustâsheâs a great friend of mine.â
Mr. Longdon was really deep in it. âIs she clever?â
Vanderbank turned it over. âWell, youâll tell me if you think so.â
âAh with a child of seventeenâ!â Mr. Longdon murmured it as if in dread of having to pronounce. âThis one too IS seventeen?â
Vanderbank again considered. âEighteen.â He just hung fire once more, then brought out: âWell, call it nearly nineteen. Iâve kept her birthdays,â he laughed.
His companion caught at the idea. âUpon my honour I should like to! When is the next?â
âYouâve plenty of timeâthe fifteenth of June.â
âIâm only too sorry to wait.â Laying down the object he had been examining Mr. Longdon took another turn about the room, and his manner was such an appeal to his host to accept his restlessness that as he circulated the latter watched him with encouragement. âI said to you just now that I knew the mothers, but it would have been more to the point to say the grandmothers.â He stopped before his young friend, then nodded at the image of Nanda. âI knew HERS. She put it at something less.â
Vanderbank rather failed to understand. âThe old lady? Put what?â
Mr. Longdonâs face showed him as for a moment feeling his way. âIâm speaking of Mrs. Brookenham. She spoke of her daughter as only sixteen.â
Vanderbankâs amusement at the tone of this broke out. âShe usually does! She has done so, I think, for the last year or two.â
His visitor dropped upon his sofa as with the weight of something sudden and fresh; then from this place, with a sharp little movement, tossed into the fire the end of a cigarette. Vanderbank offered him another, and as he accepted it and took a light he said: âI donât know what youâre doing with meâI never at home smoke so much!â But he puffed away and, seated near, laid his hand on Vanderbankâs arm as to help himself to utter something too delicate not to be guarded and yet too important not to be risked. âNow thatâs the sort of thing I did meanâas one of my impressions.â Vanderbank continued at a loss and he went on: âI referâ if you donât mind my saying soâto what you said just now.â
Vanderbank was conscious of a deep desire to draw from him whatever might come; so sensible was it somehow that whatever in him was good was also thoroughly personal. But our young friend had to think a minute. âI see, I see. Nothingâs more probable than that Iâve said something nasty; but which of my particular horrors?â
âWell then, your conveying that she makes her daughter out youngerâ!â
âTo make herself out the same?â Vanderbank took him straight up. âIt was nasty my doing that? I see, I see. Yes, yes: I rather gave her away, and youâre struck by itâas is most delightful you SHOULD beâbecause youâre in every way of a better tradition and, knowing Mrs. Brookenhamâs my friend, canât conceive of oneâs playing on a friend a trick so vulgar and odious. It strikes you also probably as the kind of thing we must be constantly doing; it strikes you that right and left, probably, we keep giving each other away. Well, I dare say we do. Yes, âcome to think of it,â as they say in America, we do. But what shall I tell you? Practically we all know it and allow for it and itâs as broad as itâs long. Whatâs London life after all? Itâs tit for tat!â
âAh but what becomes of friendship?â Mr. Longdon earnestly and pleadingly asked, while he still held Vanderbankâs arm as
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