<h2><SPAN name="page104"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>XII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Saltram</span> left me drawing my
breath more quickly and indeed almost in pain—as if I had
just perilously grazed the loss of something precious. I
didn’t quite know what it was—it had a shocking
resemblance to my honour. The emotion was the livelier
surely in that my pulses even yet vibrated to the pleasure with
which, the night before, I had rallied to the rare analyst, the
great intellectual adventurer and pathfinder. What had
dropped from me like a cumbersome garment as Saltram appeared
before me in the afternoon on the heath was the disposition to
haggle over his value. Hang it, one had to choose, one had
to put that value somewhere; so I would put it really high and
have done with it. Mrs. Mulville drove in for him at a
discreet hour—the earliest she could suppose him to have
got up; and I learned that Miss Anvoy would also have come had
she not been expecting a visit from Mr. Gravener. I was
perfectly mindful that I was under bonds to see this young lady,
and also that I had a letter to hand to her; but I took my time,
I waited from day to day. I left Mrs. Saltram to deal as
her apprehensions should prompt with the Pudneys. I knew at
last what I meant—I had ceased to wince at my
responsibility. I gave this supreme impression of Saltram
time to fade if it would; but it didn’t fade, and,
individually, it hasn’t faded even now. During the
month that I thus invited myself to stiffen again, Adelaide
Mulville, perplexed by my absence, wrote to me to ask why I
<i>was</i> so stiff. At that season of the year I was
usually oftener “with” them. She also wrote
that she feared a real estrangement had set in between Mr.
Gravener and her sweet young friend—a state of things but
half satisfactory to her so long as the advantage resulting to
Mr. Saltram failed to disengage itself from the merely nebulous
state. She intimated that her sweet young friend was, if
anything, a trifle too reserved; she also intimated that there
might now be an opening for another clever young man. There
never was the slightest opening, I may here parenthesise, and of
course the question can’t come up to-day. These are
old frustrations now. Ruth Anvoy hasn’t married, I
hear, and neither have I. During the month, toward the end,
I wrote to George Gravener to ask if, on a special errand, I
might come to see him, and his answer was to knock the very next
day at my door. I saw he had immediately connected my
enquiry with the talk we had had in the railway-carriage, and his
promptitude showed that the ashes of his eagerness weren’t
yet cold. I told him there was something I felt I ought in
candour to let him know—I recognised the obligation his
friendly confidence had laid on me.</p>
<p>“You mean Miss Anvoy has talked to you? She has
told me so herself,” he said.</p>
<p>“It wasn’t to tell you so that I wanted to see
you,” I replied; “for it seemed to me that such a
communication would rest wholly with herself. If however
she did speak to you of our conversation she probably told you I
was discouraging.”</p>
<p>“Discouraging?”</p>
<p>“On the subject of a present application of The Coxon
Fund.”</p>
<p>“To the case of Mr. Saltram? My dear fellow, I
don’t know what you call discouraging!” Gravener
cried.</p>
<p>“Well I thought I was, and I thought she thought I
was.”</p>
<p>“I believe she did, but such a thing’s measured by
the effect. She’s not
‘discouraged,’” he said.</p>
<p>“That’s her own affair. The reason I asked
you to see me was that it appeared to me I ought to tell you
frankly that—decidedly!—I can’t undertake to
produce that effect. In fact I don’t want
to!”</p>
<p>“It’s very good of you, damn you!” my
visitor laughed, red and really grave. Then he said:
“You’d like to see that scoundrel publicly
glorified—perched on the pedestal of a great complimentary
pension?”</p>
<p>I braced myself. “Taking one form of public
recognition with another it seems to me on the whole I should be
able to bear it. When I see the compliments that <i>are</i>
paid right and left I ask myself why this one shouldn’t
take its course. This therefore is what you’re
entitled to have looked to me to mention to you. I’ve
some evidence that perhaps would be really dissuasive, but I
propose to invite Mss Anvoy to remain in ignorance of
it.”</p>
<p>“And to invite me to do the same?”</p>
<p>“Oh you don’t require it—you’ve
evidence enough. I speak of a sealed letter that I’ve
been requested to deliver to her.”</p>
<p>“And you don’t mean to?”</p>
<p>“There’s only one consideration that would make
me,” I said.</p>
<p>Gravener’s clear handsome eyes plunged into mine a
minute, but evidently without fishing up a clue to this
motive—a failure by which I was almost wounded.
“What does the letter contain?”</p>
<p>“It’s sealed, as I tell you, and I don’t
know what it contains.”</p>
<p>“Why is it sent through you?”</p>
<p>“Rather than you?” I wondered how to put the
thing. “The only explanation I can think of is that
the person sending it may have imagined your relations with Miss
Anvoy to be at an end—may have been told this is the case
by Mrs. Saltram.”</p>
<p>“My relations with Miss Anvoy are not at an end,”
poor Gravener stammered.</p>
<p>Again for an instant I thought. “The offer I
propose to make you gives me the right to address you a question
remarkably direct. Are you still engaged to Miss
Anvoy?”</p>
<p>“No, I’m not,” he slowly brought out.
“But we’re perfectly good friends.”</p>
<p>“Such good friends that you’ll again become
prospective husband and wife if the obstacle in your path be
removed?”</p>
<p>“Removed?” he anxiously repeated.</p>
<p>“If I send Miss Anvoy the letter I speak of she may give
up her idea.”</p>
<p>“Then for God’s sake send it!”</p>
<p>“I’ll do so if you’re ready to assure me
that her sacrifice would now presumably bring about your
marriage.”</p>
<p>“I’d marry her the next day!” my visitor
cried.</p>
<p>“Yes, but would she marry <i>you</i>? What I ask
of you of course is nothing less than your word of honour as to
your conviction of this. If you give it me,” I said,
“I’ll engage to hand her the letter before
night.”</p>
<p>Gravener took up his hat; turning it mechanically round he
stood looking a moment hard at its unruffled perfection.
Then very angrily honestly and gallantly, “Hand it to the
devil!” he broke out; with which he clapped the hat on his
head and left me.</p>
<p>“Will you read it or not?” I said to Ruth Anvoy,
at Wimbledon, when I had told her the story of Mrs.
Saltram’s visit.</p>
<p>She debated for a time probably of the briefest, but long
enough to make me nervous. “Have you brought it with
you?”</p>
<p>“No indeed. It’s at home, locked
up.”</p>
<p>There was another great silence, and then she said “Go
back and destroy it.”</p>
<p>I went back, but I didn’t destroy it till after
Saltram’s death, when I burnt it unread. The Pudneys
approached her again pressingly, but, prompt as they were, The
Coxon Fund had already become an operative benefit and a general
amaze: Mr. Saltram, while we gathered about, as it were, to watch
the manna descend, had begun to draw the magnificent
income. He drew it as he had always drawn everything, with
a grand abstracted gesture. Its magnificence, alas, as all
the world now knows, quite quenched him; it was the beginning of
his decline. It was also naturally a new grievance for his
wife, who began to believe in him as soon as he was blighted, and
who at this hour accuses us of having bribed him, on the whim of
a meddlesome American, to renounce his glorious office, to
become, as she says, like everybody else. The very day he
found himself able to publish he wholly ceased to produce.
This deprived us, as may easily be imagined, of much of our
occupation, and especially deprived the Mulvilles, whose want of
self-support I never measured till they lost their great
inmate. They’ve no one to live on now.
Adelaide’s most frequent reference to their destitution is
embodied in the remark that dear far-away Ruth’s intentions
were doubtless good. She and Kent are even yet looking for
another prop, but no one presents a true sphere of
usefulness. They complain that people are
self-sufficing. With Saltram the fine type of the child of
adoption was scattered, the grander, the elder style.
They’ve got their carriage back, but what’s an empty
carriage? In short I think we were all happier as well as
poorer before; even including George Gravener, who by the deaths
of his brother and his nephew has lately become Lord
Maddock. His wife, whose fortune clears the property, is
criminally dull; he hates being in the Upper House, and
hasn’t yet had high office. But what are these
accidents, which I should perhaps apologise for mentioning, in
the light of the great eventual boon promised the patient by the
rate at which The Coxon Fund must be rolling up?</p>
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