The Golden Bowl Henry James (spicy books to read txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
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Clearly now, for the girl, in spite of lucidity and logic, there was something in the way he said thingsâ â! She faced him in all her desire to please him, and then her word quite simply and definitely showed it. âI do like you, you know.â
Well, what could this do but stimulate his humour? âI see whatâs the matter with you. You wonât be quiet till youâve heard from the Prince himself. I think,â the happy man added, âthat Iâll go and secretly wire to him that youâd like, reply paid, a few words for yourself.â
It could apparently but encourage her further to smile. âReply paid for him, you meanâ âor for me?â
âOh, Iâll pay, with pleasure, anything back for youâ âas many words as you like.â And he went on, to keep it up. âNot requiring either to see your message.â
She could take it, visibly, as he meant it. âShould you require to see the Princeâs?â
âNot a bit. You can keep that also to yourself.â
On his speaking, however, as if his transmitting the hint were a real question, she appeared to considerâ âand almost as if for good tasteâ âthat the joke had gone far enough. âIt doesnât matter. Unless he speaks of his own movementâ â! And why should it be,â she asked, âa thing that would occur to him?â
âI really think,â Mr. Verver concurred, âthat it naturally wouldnât. He doesnât know youâre morbid.â
She just wonderedâ âbut she agreed. âNoâ âhe hasnât yet found it out. Perhaps he will, but he hasnât yet; and Iâm willing to give him meanwhile the benefit of the doubt.â So with this the situation, to her view, would appear to have cleared had she not too quickly had one of her restless relapses. âMaggie, however, does know Iâm morbid. She hasnât the benefit.â
âWell,â said Adam Verver a little wearily at last, âI think I feel that youâll hear from her yet.â It had even fairly come over him, under recurrent suggestion, that his daughterâs omission was surprising. And Maggie had never in her life been wrong for more than three minutes.
âOh, it isnât that I hold that Iâve a right to it,â Charlotte the next instant rather oddly qualifiedâ âand the observation itself gave him a further push.
âVery wellâ âI shall like it myself.â
At this then, as if moved by his way of constantlyâ âand more or less against his own contentionâ âcoming round to her, she showed how she could also always, and not less gently, come half way. âI speak of it only as the missing graceâ âthe grace thatâs in everything that Maggie does. It isnât my dueââ âshe kept it upâ ââbut, taking from you that we may still expect it, it will have the touch. It will be beautiful.â
âThen come out to breakfast.â Mr. Verver had looked at his watch. âIt will be here when we get back.â
âIf it isnâtââ âand Charlotte smiled as she looked about for a feather boa that she had laid down on descending from her roomâ ââif it isnât it will have had but that slight fault.â
He saw her boa on the arm of the chair from which she had moved to meet him, and, after he had fetched it, raising it to make its charming softness brush his faceâ âfor it was a wondrous product of Paris, purchased under his direct auspices the day beforeâ âhe held it there a minute before giving it up. âWill you promise me then to be at peace?â
She looked, while she debated, at his admirable present. âI promise you.â
âQuite forever?â
âQuite forever.â
âRemember,â he went on, to justify his demand, âremember that in wiring you sheâll naturally speak even more for her husband than she has done in wiring me.â
It was only at a word that Charlotte had a demur. âââNaturallyââ â?â
âWhy, our marriage puts him for you, you seeâ âor puts you for himâ âinto a new relation, whereas it leaves his relation to me unchanged. It therefore gives him more to say to you about it.â
âAbout its making me his stepmother-in-lawâ âor whatever I should become?â Over which, for a little, she not undivertedly mused. âYes, there may easily be enough for a gentleman to say to a young woman about that.â
âWell, Amerigo can always be, according to the case, either as funny or as serious as you like; and whichever he may be for you, in sending you a message, heâll be it all.â And then as the girl, with one of her so deeply and oddly, yet so tenderly, critical looks at him, failed to take up the remark, he found himself moved, as by a vague anxiety, to add a question. âDonât you think heâs charming?â
âOh, charming,â said Charlotte Stant. âIf he werenât I shouldnât mind.â
âNo more should I!â her friend harmoniously returned.
âAh, but you donât mind. You donât have to. You donât have to, I mean, as I have. Itâs the last folly ever to care, in an anxious way, the least particle more than one is absolutely forced. If I were you,â she went onâ ââif I had in my life, for happiness and power and peace, even a small fraction of what you have, it would take a great deal to make me waste my worry. I donât know,â she said, âwhat in the worldâ âthat didnât touch my luckâ âI should trouble my head about.â
âI quite understand youâ âyet doesnât it just depend,â Mr. Verver asked, âon what you call oneâs luck? Itâs exactly my luck that Iâm talking about. I shall be as sublime as you like when youâve made me all right. Itâs only when one is right that one really has the things you speak of. It isnât they,â he explained, âthat make one so: itâs the something else I want that makes them right. If youâll give me what I ask, youâll see.â
She had taken her boa and thrown it over her shoulders, and her eyes, while she still
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