be disappointed if, after what must just have occurred for her, she didnât get something to put between the teeth of her so restless rumination, that cultivation of the fear, of which our young woman had already had glimpses, that she might have âgone too farâ in her irrepressible interest in other lives. What had just happenedâ âit pieced itself together for Charlotteâ âwas that the Assingham pair, drifting like everyone else, had had somewhere in the gallery, in the rooms, an accidental concussion; had it after the Colonel, over his balustrade, had observed, in the favouring high light, her public junction with the Prince. His very dryness, in this encounter, had, as always, struck a spark from his wifeâs curiosity, and, familiar, on his side, with all that she saw in things, he had thrown her, as a fine little bone to pick, some report of the way one of her young friends was âgoing onâ with another. He knew perfectlyâ âsuch at least was Charlotteâs liberal assumptionâ âthat she wasnât going on with anyone, but she also knew that, given the circumstances, she was inevitably to be sacrificed, in some form or another, to the humorous intercourse of the inimitable couple. The Prince meanwhile had also, under coercion, sacrificed her; the Ambassador had come up to him with a message from Royalty, to whom he was led away; after which she had talked for five minutes with Sir John Brinder, who had been of the Ambassadorâs company and who had rather artlessly remained with her. Fanny had then arrived in sight of them at the same moment as someone else she didnât know, someone who knew Mrs. Assingham and also knew Sir John. Charlotte had left it to her friendâs competence to throw the two others immediately together and to find a way for entertaining her in closer quarters. This was the little history of the vision, in her, that was now rapidly helping her to recognise a precious chance, the chance that mightnât again soon be so good for the vivid making of a point. Her point was before her; it was sharp, bright, true; above all it was her own. She had reached it quite by herself; no one, not even Amerigoâ âAmerigo least of all, who would have nothing to do with itâ âhad given her aid. To make it now with force for Fanny Assinghamâs benefit would see her further, in the direction in which the light had dawned, than any other spring she should, yet awhile, doubtless, be able to press. The direction was that of her greater freedomâ âwhich was all in the world she had in mind. Her opportunity had accordingly, after a few minutes of Mrs. Assinghamâs almost imprudently interested expression of face, positively acquired such a price for her that she may, for ourselves, while the intensity lasted, rather resemble a person holding out a small mirror at armâs length and consulting it with a special turn of the head. It was, in a word, with this value of her chance that she was intelligently playing when she said in answer to Fannyâs last question: âDonât you remember what you told me, on the occasion of something or other, the other day? That you believe thereâs nothing Iâm afraid of? So, my dear, donât ask me!â
âMaynât I ask you,â Mrs. Assingham returned, âhow the case stands with your poor husband?â
âCertainly, dear. Only, when you ask me as if I mightnât perhaps know what to think, it seems to me best to let you see that I know perfectly what to think.â
Mrs. Assingham hesitated; then, blinking a little, she took her risk. âYou didnât think that if it was a question of anyoneâs returning to him, in his trouble, it would be better you yourself should have gone?â
Well, Charlotteâs answer to this inquiry visibly shaped itself in the interest of the highest considerations. The highest considerations were good humour, candour, clearness and, obviously, the real truth. âIf we couldnât be perfectly frank and dear with each other, it would be ever so much better, wouldnât it? that we shouldnât talk about anything at all; which, however, would be dreadfulâ âand we certainly, at any rate, havenât yet come to it. You can ask me anything under the sun you like, because, donât you see? you canât upset me.â
âIâm sure, my dear Charlotte,â Fanny Assingham laughed, âI donât want to upset you.â
âIndeed, love, you simply couldât even if you thought it necessaryâ âthatâs all I mean. Nobody could, for it belongs to my situation that Iâm, by no merit of my own, just fixedâ âfixed as fast as a pin stuck, up to its head, in a cushion. Iâm placedâ âI canât imagine anyone more placed. There I am!â
Fanny had indeed never listened to emphasis more firmly applied, and it brought into her own eyes, though she had reasons for striving to keep them from betrayals, a sort of anxiety of intelligence. âI dare sayâ âbut your statement of your position, however you see it, isnât an answer to my inquiry. It seems to me, at the same time, I confess,â Mrs. Assingham added, âto give but the more reason for it. You speak of our being âfrank.â How can we possibly be anything else? If Maggie has gone off through finding herself too distressed to stay, and if sheâs willing to leave you and her husband to show here without her, arenât the grounds of her preoccupation more or less discussable?â
âIf theyâre not,â Charlotte replied, âitâs only from their being, in a way, too evident. Theyâre not grounds for meâ âthey werenât when I accepted Adamâs preference that I should come tonight without him: just as I accept, absolutely, as a fixed rule, all his preferences. But that doesnât alter the fact, of course, that my husbandâs daughter, rather than his wife, should have felt she could, after all, be the one to stay with him, the one to make the sacrifice of this hourâ âseeing, especially, that the daughter has a husband of her own in the field.â
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