<h2><SPAN name="page73"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>IX</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> thing I had been most sensible
of in that talk with George Gravener was the way Saltram’s
name kept out of it. It seemed to me at the time that we
were quite pointedly silent about him; but afterwards it appeared
more probable there had been on my companion’s part no
conscious avoidance. Later on I was sure of this, and for
the best of reasons—the simple reason of my perceiving more
completely that, for evil as well as for good, he said nothing to
Gravener’s imagination. That honest man didn’t
fear him—he was too much disgusted with him. No more
did I, doubtless, and for very much the same reason. I
treated my friend’s story as an absolute confidence; but
when before Christmas, by Mrs. Saltram, I was informed of Lady
Coxon’s death without having had news of Miss Anvoy’s
return, I found myself taking for granted we should hear no more
of these nuptials, in which, as obscurely unnatural, I now saw I
had never <i>too</i> disconcertedly believed. I began to
ask myself how people who suited each other so little could
please each other so much. The charm was some material
charm, some afffinity, exquisite doubtless, yet superficial some
surrender to youth and beauty and passion, to force and grace and
fortune, happy accidents and easy contacts. They might dote
on each other’s persons, but how could they know each
other’s souls? How could they have the same
prejudices, how could they have the same horizon? Such
questions, I confess, seemed quenched but not answered when, one
day in February, going out to Wimbledon, I found our young lady
in the house. A passion that had brought her back across
the wintry ocean was as much of a passion as was needed. No
impulse equally strong indeed had drawn George Gravener to
America; a circumstance on which, however, I reflected only long
enough to remind myself that it was none of my business.
Ruth Anvoy was distinctly different, and I felt that the
difference was not simply that of her marks of mourning.
Mrs. Mulville told me soon enough what it was: it was the
difference between a handsome girl with large expectations and a
handsome girl with only four hundred a year. This
explanation indeed didn’t wholly content me, not even when
I learned that her mourning had a double cause—learned that
poor Mr. Anvoy, giving way altogether, buried under the ruins of
his fortune and leaving next to nothing, had died a few weeks
before.</p>
<p>“So she has come out to marry George Gravener?” I
commented. “Wouldn’t it have been prettier of
him to have saved her the trouble?”</p>
<p>“Hasn’t the House just met?” Adelaide
replied. “And for Mr. Gravener the
House—!” Then she added: “I gather that
her having come is exactly a sign that the marriage is a little
shaky. If it were quite all right a self-respecting girl
like Ruth would have waited for him over there.”</p>
<p>I noted that they were already Ruth and Adelaide, but what I
said was: “Do you mean she’ll have had to return to
<i>make</i> it so?”</p>
<p>“No, I mean that she must have come out for some reason
independent of it.” Adelaide could only surmise,
however, as yet, and there was more, as we found, to be
revealed. Mrs. Mulville, on hearing of her arrival, had
brought the young lady out in the green landau for the
Sunday. The Coxons were in possession of the house in
Regent’s Park, and Miss Anvoy was in dreary lodgings.
George Gravener had been with her when Adelaide called, but had
assented graciously enough to the little visit at
Wimbledon. The carriage, with Mr. Saltram in it but not
mentioned, had been sent off on some errand from which it was to
return and pick the ladies up. Gravener had left them
together, and at the end of an hour, on the Saturday afternoon,
the party of three had driven out to Wimbledon. This was
the girl’s second glimpse of our great man, and I was
interested in asking Mrs. Mulville if the impression made by the
first appeared to have been confirmed. On her replying
after consideration, that of course with time and opportunity it
couldn’t fail to be, but that she was disappointed, I was
sufficiently struck with her use of this last word to question
her further.</p>
<p>“Do you mean you’re disappointed because you judge
Miss Anvoy to be?”</p>
<p>“Yes; I hoped for a greater effect last evening.
We had two or three people, but he scarcely opened his
mouth.”</p>
<p>“He’ll be all the better to-night,” I opined
after a moment. Then I pursued: “What particular
importance do you attach to the idea of her being
impressed?”</p>
<p>Adelaide turned her mild pale eyes on me as for rebuke of my
levity. “Why the importance of her being as happy as
<i>we</i> are!”</p>
<p>I’m afraid that at this my levity grew. “Oh
that’s a happiness almost too great to wish a
person!” I saw she hadn’t yet in her mind what
I had in mine, and at any rate the visitor’s actual bliss
was limited to a walk in the garden with Kent Mulville.
Later in the afternoon I also took one, and I saw nothing of Miss
Anvoy till dinner, at which we failed of the company of Saltram,
who had caused it to be reported that he was indisposed and lying
down. This made us, most of us—for there were other
friends present—convey to each other in silence some of the
unutterable things that in those years our eyes had inevitably
acquired the art of expressing. If a fine little American
enquirer hadn’t been there we would have expressed them
otherwise, and Adelaide would have pretended not to hear. I
had seen her, before the very fact, abstract herself nobly; and I
knew that more than once, to keep it from the servants, managing,
dissimulating cleverly, she had helped her husband to carry him
bodily to his room. Just recently he had been so wise and
so deep and so high that I had begun to get nervous—to
wonder if by chance there were something behind it, if he were
kept straight for instance by the knowledge that the hated
Pudneys would have more to tell us if they chose. He was
lying low, but unfortunately it was common wisdom with us in this
connexion that the biggest splashes took place in the quietest
pools. We should have had a merry life indeed if all the
splashes had sprinkled us as refreshingly as the waters we were
even then to feel about our ears. Kent Mulville had been up
to his room, but had come back with a face that told as few tales
as I had seen it succeed in telling on the evening I waited in
the lecture-room with Miss Anvoy. I said to myself that our
friend had gone out, but it was a comfort that the presence of a
comparative stranger deprived us of the dreary duty of suggesting
to each other, in respect of his errand, edifying possibilities
in which we didn’t ourselves believe. At ten
o’clock he came into the drawing-room with his waistcoat
much awry but his eyes sending out great signals. It was
precisely with his entrance that I ceased to be vividly conscious
of him. I saw that the crystal, as I had called it, had
begun to swing, and I had need of my immediate attention for Miss
Anvoy.</p>
<p>Even when I was told afterwards that he had, as we might have
said to-day, broken the record, the manner in which that
attention had been rewarded relieved me of a sense of loss.
I had of course a perfect general consciousness that something
great was going on: it was a little like having been etherised to
hear Herr Joachim play. The old music was in the air; I
felt the strong pulse of thought, the sink and swell, the flight,
the poise, the plunge; but I knew something about one of the
listeners that nobody else knew, and Saltram’s monologue
could reach me only through that medium. To this hour
I’m of no use when, as a witness, I’m appealed
to—for they still absurdly contend about it—as to
whether or no on that historic night he was drunk; and my
position is slightly ridiculous, for I’ve never cared to
tell them what it really was I was taken up with. What I
got out of it is the only morsel of the total experience that is
quite my own. The others were shared, but this is
incommunicable. I feel that now, I’m bound to say,
even in thus roughly evoking the occasion, and it takes something
from my pride of clearness. However, I shall perhaps be as
clear as is absolutely needful if I remark that our young lady
was too much given up to her own intensity of observation to be
sensible of mine. It was plainly not the question of her
marriage that had brought her back. I greatly enjoyed this
discovery and was sure that had that question alone been involved
she would have stirred no step. In this case doubtless
Gravener would, in spite of the House of Commons, have found
means to rejoin her. It afterwards made me uncomfortable
for her that, alone in the lodging Mrs. Mulville had put before
me as dreary, she should have in any degree the air of waiting
for her fate; so that I was presently relieved at hearing of her
having gone to stay at Coldfield. If she was in England at
all while the engagement stood the only proper place for her was
under Lady Maddock’s wing. Now that she was
unfortunate and relatively poor, perhaps her prospective
sister-in-law would be wholly won over.</p>
<p>There would be much to say, if I had space, about the way her
behaviour, as I caught gleams of it, ministered to the image that
had taken birth in my mind, to my private amusement, while that
other night I listened to George Gravener in the
railway-carriage. I watched her in the light of this queer
possibility—a formidable thing certainly to meet—and
I was aware that it coloured, extravagantly perhaps, my
interpretation of her very looks and tones. At Wimbledon
for instance it had appeared to me she was literally afraid of
Saltram, in dread of a coercion that she had begun already to
feel. I had come up to town with her the next day and had
been convinced that, though deeply interested, she was immensely
on her guard. She would show as little as possible before
she should be ready to show everything. What this final
exhibition might be on the part of a girl perceptibly so able to
think things out I found it great sport to forecast. It
would have been exciting to be approached by her, appealed to by
her for advice; but I prayed to heaven I mightn’t find
myself in such a predicament. If there was really a present
rigour in the situation of which Gravener had sketched for me the
elements, she would have to get out of her difficulty by
herself. It wasn’t I who had launched her and it
wasn’t I who could help her. I didn’t fail to
ask myself why, since I couldn’t help her, I should think
so much about her. It was in part my suspense that was
responsible for this; I waited impatiently to see whether she
wouldn’t have told Mrs. Mulville a portion at least of what
I had learned from Gravener. But I saw Mrs. Mulville was
still reduced to wonder what she had come out again for if she
hadn’t come as a conciliatory bride. That she had
come in some other character was the only thing that fitted all
the appearances. Having for family reasons to spend some
time that spring in the west of England, I was in a manner out of
earshot of the great oceanic rumble—I mean of the
continuous hum of Saltram’s thought—and my uneasiness
tended to keep me quiet. There was something I wanted so
little to have to say that my prudence surmounted my
curiosity. I only wondered if Ruth Anvoy talked over the
idea of The Coxon Fund with Lady Maddock, and also somewhat why I
didn’t hear from Wimbledon. I had a reproachful note
about something or other from Mrs. Saltram, but it contained no
mention of Lady Coxon’s niece, on whom her eyes had been
much less fixed since the recent untoward events.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />