Where Angels Fear to Tread E. M. Forster (popular books of all time txt) đ
- Author: E. M. Forster
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She tried to speak, and then went away weeping bitterly.
The two men stared at each other. By a common impulse they ran onto the loggia. They were just in time to see Miss Abbott disappear among the trees.
âWhat is it?â asked Philip again. There was no answer, and somehow he did not want an answer. Some strange thing had happened which he could not presume to understand. He would find out from Miss Abbott, if ever he found out at all.
âWell, your business,â said Gino, after a puzzled sigh.
âOur businessâ âMiss Abbott has told you of that.â
âNo.â
âBut surelyâ ââ
âShe came for business. But she forgot about it; so did I.â
Perfetta, who had a genius for missing people, now returned, loudly complaining of the size of Monteriano and the intricacies of its streets. Gino told her to watch the baby. Then he offered Philip a cigar, and they proceeded to the business.
VIIIâMad!â screamed Harrietâ ââabsolutely stark, staring, raving mad!â
Philip judged it better not to contradict her.
âWhatâs she here for? Answer me that. Whatâs she doing in Monteriano in August? Why isnât she in Normandy? Answer that. She wonât. I can: sheâs come to thwart us; sheâs betrayed usâ âgot hold of motherâs plans. Oh, goodness, my head!â
He was unwise enough to reply, âYou mustnât accuse her of that. Though she is exasperating, she hasnât come here to betray us.â
âThen why has she come here? Answer me that.â
He made no answer. But fortunately his sister was too much agitated to wait for one. âBursting in on meâ âcrying and looking a disgusting sightâ âand says she has been to see the Italian. Couldnât even talk properly; pretended she had changed her opinions. What are her opinions to us? I was very calm. I said: âMiss Abbott, I think there is a little misapprehension in this matter. My mother, Mrs. Herritonâ ââ Oh, goodness, my head! Of course youâve failedâ âdonât trouble to answerâ âI know youâve failed. Whereâs the baby, pray? Of course you havenât got it. Dear sweet Caroline wonât let you. Oh, yes, and weâre to go away at once and trouble the father no more. Those are her commands. Commands! Commands!â And Harriet also burst into tears.
Philip governed his temper. His sister was annoying, but quite reasonable in her indignation. Moreover, Miss Abbott had behaved even worse than she supposed.
âIâve not got the baby, Harriet, but at the same time I havenât exactly failed. I and Signor Carella are to have another interview this afternoon, at the CaffĂš Garibaldi. He is perfectly reasonable and pleasant. Should you be disposed to come with me, you would find him quite willing to discuss things. He is desperately in want of money, and has no prospect of getting any. I discovered that. At the same time, he has a certain affection for the child.â For Philipâs insight, or perhaps his opportunities, had not been equal to Miss Abbottâs.
Harriet would only sob, and accuse her brother of insulting her; how could a lady speak to such a horrible man? That, and nothing else, was enough to stamp Caroline. Oh, poor Lilia!
Philip drummed on the bedroom windowsill. He saw no escape from the deadlock. For though he spoke cheerfully about his second interview with Gino, he felt at the bottom of his heart that it would fail. Gino was too courteous: he would not break off negotiations by sharp denial; he loved this civil, half-humorous bargaining. And he loved fooling his opponent, and did it so nicely that his opponent did not mind being fooled.
âMiss Abbott has behaved extraordinarily,â he said at last; âbut at the same timeâ ââ
His sister would not hear him. She burst forth again on the madness, the interference, the intolerable duplicity of Caroline.
âHarriet, you must listen. My dear, you must stop crying. I have something quite important to say.â
âI shall not stop crying,â said she. But in time, finding that he would not speak to her, she did stop.
âRemember that Miss Abbott has done us no harm. She said nothing to him about the matter. He assumes that she is working with us: I gathered that.â
âWell, she isnât.â
âYes; but if youâre careful she may be. I interpret her behaviour thus: She went to see him, honestly intending to get the child away. In the note she left me she says so, and I donât believe sheâd lie.â
âI do.â
âWhen she got there, there was some pretty domestic scene between him and the baby, and she has got swept off in a gush of sentimentalism. Before very long, if I know anything about psychology, there will be a reaction. Sheâll be swept back.â
âI donât understand your long words. Say plainlyâ ââ
âWhen sheâs swept back, sheâll be invaluable. For she has made quite an impression on him. He thinks her so nice with the baby. You know, she washed it for him.â
âDisgusting!â
Harrietâs ejaculations were more aggravating than the rest of her. But Philip was averse to losing his temper. The access of joy that had come to him yesterday in the theatre promised to be permanent. He was more anxious than heretofore to be charitable towards the world.
âIf you want to carry off the baby, keep your peace with Miss Abbott. For if she chooses, she can help you better than I can.â
âThere can be no peace between me and her,â said Harriet gloomily.
âDid youâ ââ
âOh, not all I wanted. She went away before I had finished speakingâ âjust like those cowardly people!â âinto the church.â
âInto Santa Deodataâs?â
âYes; Iâm sure she needs it. Anything more unchristianâ ââ
In time Philip went to the church also, leaving his sister a little calmer and a little disposed to think over his advice. What had come over Miss Abbott? He had always thought her both stable and sincere. That conversation he had had with her last Christmas in the train to Charing Crossâ âthat alone furnished him with a parallel. For the second time, Monteriano must have turned her head. He was not angry with her, for he was quite indifferent to the outcome of their expedition.
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