<h3><SPAN name="VII" id="VII"></SPAN>VII</h3>
<p class="nind"><span class="letter">I</span> stayed him there while I put it to him that he would probably in fact
prefer to go back.</p>
<p>"You're not going then yourself?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't particularly want tea; and I may as well now confess to you
that I'm taking a lonely, unsociable walk. I don't enjoy such occasions
as these," I said, "unless I from time to time get off by myself
somewhere long enough to tell myself how much I do enjoy them. That's
what I was cultivating solitude for when I happened just now to come
upon you. When I found you there with Lady John there was nothing for me
but to make the best of it; but I'm glad of this chance to assure you
that, every appearance to the contrary notwithstanding, I wasn't
prowling about in search of you."</p>
<p>"Well," my companion frankly replied, "I'm glad you turned up. I wasn't
especially amusing myself."</p>
<p>"Oh, I think I know how little!"</p>
<p>He fixed me a moment with his pathetic old face, and I knew more than
ever that I was sorry for him. I was quite extraordinarily sorry, and I
wondered<SPAN name="page_110" id="page_110"></SPAN> whether I mightn't without offence or indiscretion really let
him see it. It was to this end I had held him and wanted a little to
keep him, and I was reassured as I felt him, though I had now released
him, linger instead of leaving me. I had made him uneasy last night, and
a new reason or two for my doing so had possibly even since then come
up; yet these things also would depend on the way he might take them.
The look with which he at present faced me seemed to hint that he would
take them as I hoped, and there was no curtness, but on the contrary the
dawn of a dim sense that I might possibly aid him, in the tone with
which he came half-way. "You 'know'?"</p>
<p>"Ah," I laughed, "I know everything!"</p>
<p>He didn't laugh; I hadn't seen him laugh, at Newmarch, once; he was
continuously, portentously grave, and I at present remembered how the
effect of this had told for me at luncheon, contrasted as it was with
that of Mrs. Server's desperate, exquisite levity. "You know I decidedly
have too much of that dreadful old woman?"</p>
<p>There was a sound in the question that would have made me, to my own
sense, start, though I as quickly hoped I had not done so to
Brissenden's. I couldn't have persuaded myself, however, that I had
escaped showing him the flush of my effort to show nothing. I had taken
his disgusted allusion as to Mrs. Brissenden, and the action of that
was<SPAN name="page_111" id="page_111"></SPAN> upsetting. But nothing, fortunately, was psychologically more
interesting than to grasp the next moment the truth of his reference. It
was only the fact of his himself looking so much older than Lady John
that had blinded me for an instant to the propriety of his not thinking
of her as young. She wasn't young as <i>he</i> had a right to call people,
and I felt a glow—also, I feared, too visible—as soon as I had seen
whom he meant. His meaning Lady John did me somehow so much good that I
believed it would have done me still more to hear him call her a
harridan or a Jezebel. It was none of my business; how little was
anything, when it came to that, my business!—yet indefinably,
unutterably, I felt assuaged for him and comforted. I verily believe it
hung in the balance a minute or two that in my impulse to draw him out,
so that I might give him my sympathy, I was prepared to risk overturning
the edifice of my precautions. I luckily, as it happened, did nothing of
the sort; I contrived to breathe consolingly on his secret without
betraying an intention. There was almost no one in the place save two or
three of the very youngest women whom he wouldn't have had a right to
call old. Lady John was a hag, then; Mrs. Server herself was more than
on the turn; Gilbert Long was fat and forty; and I cast about for some
light in which I could show that I—<i>� plus forte raison</i>—was a
pantaloon. "Of course you can't quite see the fun of<SPAN name="page_112" id="page_112"></SPAN> it, and it really
isn't fair to you. You struck me as much more in your element," I
ventured to add, "when, this morning, more than once, I chanced to
observe you led captive by Mrs. Server."</p>
<p>"Oh, that's a different affair," he answered with an accent that
promised a growth of confidence.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Server's an old woman," I continued, "but she can't seem to a
fellow like you as old as Lady John. She has at any rate more charm;
though perhaps not," I added, "quite so much talk."</p>
<p>On this he said an extraordinary thing, which all but made me start
again. "Oh, she hasn't any <i>talk</i>!"</p>
<p>I took, as quickly as possible, refuge in a surprised demurrer. "Not
<i>any</i>?"</p>
<p>"None to speak of."</p>
<p>I let all my wonder come. "But wasn't she chattering to you at
luncheon?" It forced him to meet my eyes at greater length, and I could
already see that my experiment—for insidiously and pardonably such I
wished to make it—was on the way to succeed. I had been right then, and
I knew where I stood. He couldn't have been "drawn" on his wife, and he
couldn't have been drawn, in the least directly, on himself, but as he
could thus easily be on Lady John, so likewise he could on other women,
or on the particular one, at least, who mattered to me. I felt I really
knew what I was about, for to draw him on Mrs. Server was in truth to
draw him<SPAN name="page_113" id="page_113"></SPAN> indirectly on himself. It was indeed perhaps because I had by
this time in a measure expressed, in terms however general, the interest
with which he inspired me, that I now found myself free to shift the
ground of my indiscretion. I only wanted him to know that on the
question of Mrs. Server I was prepared to go as far with him as he
should care to move. How it came to me now that he was <i>the</i> absolutely
safe person in the house to talk of her with! "I was too far away from
you to hear," I had gone on; "and I could only judge of her flow of
conversation from the animated expression of her face. It was
extraordinarily animated. But that, I admit," I added, "strikes one
always as a sort of <i>parti pris</i> with her. She's never <i>not</i>
extraordinarily animated."</p>
<p>"She has no flow of conversation whatever," said Guy Brissenden.</p>
<p>I considered. "Really?"</p>
<p>He seemed to look at me quite without uneasiness now. "Why, haven't you
seen for yourself——?"</p>
<p>"How the case stands with her on that head? Do you mean haven't I talked
with her? Well, scarcely; for it's a fact that every man in the house
<i>but</i> I strikes me as having been deluged with that privilege: if
indeed," I laughed, "her absence of topics suffers it to be either a
privilege or a deluge! She affects me, in any case, as determined to
have nothing to do with me. She walks all the rest of<SPAN name="page_114" id="page_114"></SPAN> you about; she
gives you each your turn; me only she skips, she systematically ignores.
I'm half consoled for it, however," I wound up, "by seeing what short
innings any individual of you has. You personally strike me as having
had the longest."</p>
<p>Brissenden appeared to wonder where I was coming out, yet not as if he
feared it. There was even a particular place, if I could but guess it,
where he would have liked me to come. "Oh, she's extremely charming. But
of course she's strikingly odd."</p>
<p>"Odd?—really?"</p>
<p>"Why, in the sense, I mean, that I thought you suggested you've
noticed."</p>
<p>"That of extravagant vivacity? Oh, I've had to notice it at a distance,
without knowing what it represents."</p>
<p>He just hesitated. "You haven't any idea at all what it represents?"</p>
<p>"How should I have," I smiled, "when she never comes near me? I've
thought <i>that</i>, as I tell you, marked. What does her avoidance of <i>me</i>
represent? Has she happened, with you, to throw any light on it?"</p>
<p>"I think," said Brissenden after another moment, "that she's rather
afraid of you."</p>
<p>I could only be surprised. "The most harmless man in the house?"<SPAN name="page_115" id="page_115"></SPAN></p>
<p>"<i>Are</i> you really?" he asked—and there was a touch of the comic in
hearing him put it with his inveterate gravity.</p>
<p>"If you take me for anything else," I replied, "I doubt if you'll find
anyone to back you."</p>
<p>My companion, on this, looked away for a little, turned about, fixed his
eyes on the house, seemed, as with a drop of interest, on the point of
leaving me. But instead of leaving me he brought out the next moment: "I
don't want anyone to back me. I don't care. I didn't mean just now," he
continued, "that Mrs. Server has said to me anything against you, or
that she fears you because she dislikes you. She only told me she
thought you disliked <i>her</i>."</p>
<p>It gave me a kind of shock. "A creature so beautiful, and so—so——"</p>
<p>"So what?" he asked as I found myself checked by my desire to come to
her aid.</p>
<p>"Well, so brilliantly happy."</p>
<p>I had all his attention again. "Is that what she <i>is</i>?"</p>
<p>"Then don't you, with your opportunities, know?" I was conscious of
rather an inspiration, a part of which was to be jocose. "What are you
trying," I laughed, "to get out of me?"</p>
<p>It struck me luckily that, though he remained as proof against gaiety as
ever, he was, thanks to his preoccupation, not disagreeably affected by
my<SPAN name="page_116" id="page_116"></SPAN> tone. "Of course if you've no idea, I can get nothing."</p>
<p>"No idea of what?"</p>
<p>Then it was that I at last got it straight. "Well, of what's the matter
with her."</p>
<p>"Is there anything particular? If there <i>is</i>," I went on, "there's
something that I've got out of <i>you</i>!"</p>
<p>"How so, if you don't know what it is?"</p>
<p>"Do you mean if you yourself don't?" But without detaining him on this,
"Of what in especial do the signs," I asked, "consist?"</p>
<p>"Well, of everyone's thinking so—that there's something or other."</p>
<p>This again struck me, but it struck me too much. "Oh, everyone's a
fool!"</p>
<p>He saw, in his queer wan way, how it had done so. "Then you <i>have</i> your
own idea?"</p>
<p>I daresay my smile at him, while I waited, showed a discomfort. "Do you
mean people are talking about her?"</p>
<p>But he waited himself. "Haven't they shown you——?"</p>
<p>"No, no one has spoken. Moreover I wouldn't have let them."</p>
<p>"Then there you <i>are</i>!" Brissenden exclaimed. "If you've kept them off,
it must be because you differ with them."</p>
<p>"I shan't be sure of that," I returned, "till I<SPAN name="page_117" id="page_117"></SPAN> know what they think!
However, I repeat," I added, "that I shouldn't even then care. I don't
mind admitting that she much interests me."</p>
<p>"There you are, there you are!" he said again.</p>
<p>"That's all that's the matter with her so far as <i>I</i>'m concerned. You
see, at any rate, how little it need make her afraid of me. She's lovely
and she's gentle and she's happy."</p>
<p>My friend kept his eyes on me. "What is there to interest you so in
that? Isn't it a description that applies here to a dozen other women?
You can't say, you know, that you're interested in <i>them</i>, for you just
spoke of them as so many fools."</p>
<p>There was a certain surprise for me in so much acuteness, which,
however, doubtless admonished me as to the need of presence of mind. "I
wasn't thinking of the ladies—I was thinking of the men."</p>
<p>"That's amiable to <i>me</i>," he said with his gentle gloom.</p>
<p>"Oh, my dear Brissenden, I except 'you.'"</p>
<p>"And why should you?"</p>
<p>I felt a trifle pushed. "I'll tell you some other time. And among the
ladies I except Mrs. Brissenden, with whom, as you may have noticed,
I've been having much talk."</p>
<p>"And will you tell me some other time about that too?" On which, as I
but amicably shook my head for no, he had his first dimness of
pleasantry. "I'll get it then from my wife."<SPAN name="page_118" id="page_118"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Never. She won't tell you."</p>
<p>"She has passed you her word? That won't alter the fact that she tells
me everything."</p>
<p>He really said it in a way that made me take refuge for an instant in
looking at my watch. "Are you going back to tea? If you are, I'll, in
spite of my desire to roam, walk twenty steps with you." I had already
again put my hand into his arm, and we strolled for a little till I
threw off that I was sure Mrs. Server was waiting for him. To this he
replied that if I wished to get rid of him he was as willing to take
that as anything else for granted—an observation that I, on my side,
answered with an inquiry, though an inquiry that had nothing to do with
it. "Do you also tell everything to Mrs. Brissenden?"</p>
<p>It brought him up shorter than I had expected. "Do you ask me that in
order that I shan't speak to her of this?"</p>
<p>I showed myself at a loss. "Of 'this'——?"</p>
<p>"Why, of what we've made out——"</p>
<p>"About Mrs. Server, you and I? You must act as to that, my dear fellow,
quite on your own discretion. All the more that what on earth <i>have</i> we
made out? I assure you I haven't a secret to confide to you about her,
except that I've never seen a person more unquenchably radiant."</p>
<p>He almost jumped at it. "Well, that's just it!"</p>
<p>"But just what?"<SPAN name="page_119" id="page_119"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Why, what they're all talking about. That she <i>is</i> so awfully radiant.
That she's so tremendously happy. It's the question," he explained, "of
what in the world she has to make her so."</p>
<p>I winced a little, but tried not to show it. "My dear man, how do <i>I</i>
know?"</p>
<p>"She <i>thinks</i> you know," he after a moment answered.</p>
<p>I could only stare. "Mrs. Server thinks I know what makes her happy?" I
the more easily represented such a conviction as monstrous in that it
truly had its surprise for me.</p>
<p>But Brissenden now was all with his own thought. "She <i>isn't</i> happy."</p>
<p>"You mean that that's what's the matter with her under her
appearance——? Then what makes the appearance so extraordinary?"</p>
<p>"Why, exactly what I mention—that one doesn't see anything whatever in
her to correspond to it."</p>
<p>I hesitated. "Do you mean in her circumstances?"</p>
<p>"Yes—or in her character. Her circumstances are nothing wonderful. She
has none too much money; she has had three children and lost them; and
nobody that belongs to her appears ever to have been particularly nice
to her."</p>
<p>I turned it over. "How you <i>do</i> get on with her!"<SPAN name="page_120" id="page_120"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Do you call it getting on with her to be the more bewildered the more I
see her?"</p>
<p>"Isn't to say you're bewildered only, on the whole, to say you're
charmed? That always—doesn't it?—describes more or less any engrossed
relation with a lovely lady."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm not sure I'm so charmed." He spoke as if he had thought this
particular question over for himself; he had his way of being lucid
without brightness. "I'm not at all easily charmed, you know," he the
next moment added; "and I'm not a fellow who goes about much after
women."</p>
<p>"Ah, that I never supposed! Why in the world <i>should</i> you? It's the last
thing!" I laughed. "But isn't this—quite (what shall one call it?)
innocently—rather a peculiar case?"</p>
<p>My question produced in him a little gesture of elation—a gesture
emphasised by a snap of his forefinger and thumb. "I knew you knew it
was special! I knew you've been thinking about it!"</p>
<p>"You certainly," I replied with assurance, "have, during the last five
minutes, made me do so with some sharpness. I don't pretend that I don't
now recognise that there <i>must</i> be something the matter. I only
desire—not unnaturally—that there <i>should</i> be, to put me in the right
for having thought, if, as you're so sure, such a freedom as that can be
brought home to me. If Mrs. Server is beautiful<SPAN name="page_121" id="page_121"></SPAN> and gentle and
strange," I speciously went on, "what are those things but an
attraction?"</p>
<p>I saw how he had them, whatever they were, before him as he slowly shook
his head. "They're not an attraction. They're too queer."</p>
<p>I caught in an instant my way to fall in with him; and not the less that
I by this time felt myself committed, up to the intellectual eyes, to
ascertaining just <i>how</i> queer the person under discussion might be. "Oh,
of course I'm not speaking of her as a party to a silly flirtation, or
an object of any sort of trivial pursuit. But there are so many
different ways of being taken."</p>
<p>"For a fellow like you. But not for a fellow like me. For me there's
only one."</p>
<p>"To be, you mean, in love?"</p>
<p>He put it a little differently. "Well, to be thoroughly pleased."</p>
<p>"Ah, that's doubtless the best way and the firm ground. And you mean
you're <i>not</i> thoroughly pleased with Mrs. Server?"</p>
<p>"No—and yet I want to be kind to her. Therefore what's the matter?"</p>
<p>"Oh, if it's what's the matter with <i>you</i> you ask me, that extends the
question. If you want to be kind to her, you get on with her, as we were
saying, quite enough for my argument. And isn't the matter also, after
all," I demanded, "that you simply feel she desires you to be kind?"<SPAN name="page_122" id="page_122"></SPAN></p>
<p>"She does that." And he looked at me as with the sense of drawing from
me, for his relief, some greater help than I was as yet conscious of the
courage to offer. "It <i>is</i> that she desires me. She likes it. And the
extraordinary thing is that <i>I</i> like it."</p>
<p>"And why in the world shouldn't you?"</p>
<p>"Because she terrifies me. She has something to hide."</p>
<p>"But, my dear man," I asked with a gaiety singularly out of relation to
the small secret thrill produced in me by these words—"my dear man,
what woman who's worth anything hasn't?"</p>
<p>"Yes, but there are different ways. What <i>she</i> tries for is this false
appearance of happiness."</p>
<p>I weighed it. "But isn't that the best thing?"</p>
<p>"It's terrible to have to keep it up."</p>
<p>"Ah, but if you don't <i>for</i> her? If it all comes on herself?"</p>
<p>"It doesn't," Guy Brissenden presently said. "I do—'for' her—help to
keep it up." And then, still unexpectedly to me, came out the rest of
his confession. "I want to—I try to; that's what I mean by being kind
to her, and by the gratitude with which she takes it. One feels that one
doesn't want her to break down."</p>
<p>It was on this—from the poignant touch in it—that I at last felt I had
burnt my ships and didn't care how much I showed I was with him. "Oh,
but she won't. You must keep her going."<SPAN name="page_123" id="page_123"></SPAN></p>
<p>He stood a little with a thumb in each pocket of his trousers, and his
melancholy eyes ranging far over my head—over the tops of the highest
trees. "Who am <i>I</i> to keep people going?"</p>
<p>"Why, you're just the man. Aren't you happy?"</p>
<p>He still ranged the tree-tops. "Yes."</p>
<p>"Well, then, you belong to the useful class. You've the wherewithal to
give. It's the happy people who should help the others."</p>
<p>He had, in the same attitude, another pause. "It's easy for <i>you</i> to
talk!"</p>
<p>"Because I'm not happy?"</p>
<p>It made him bring his eyes again down to me. "I think you're a little so
now at my expense."</p>
<p>I shook my head reassuringly. "It doesn't cost you anything if—as I
confess to it now—I do to some extent understand."</p>
<p>"That's more, then, than—after talking of it this way with you—I feel
that <i>I</i> do!"</p>
<p>He had brought that out with a sudden sigh, turning away to go on; so
that we took a few steps more. "You've nothing to trouble about," I then
freely remarked, "but that you <i>are</i> as kind as the case requires and
that you do help. I daresay that you'll find her even now on the terrace
looking out for you." I patted his back, as we went a little further,
but as I still preferred to stay away from the house I presently stopped
again. "Don't fall below<SPAN name="page_124" id="page_124"></SPAN> your chance. <i>Noblesse oblige.</i> We'll pull her
through."</p>
<p>"You say 'we,'" he returned, "but you do keep out of it!"</p>
<p>"Why should you wish me to interfere with you?" I asked. "I wouldn't
keep out of it if she wanted me as much as she wants you. That, by your
own admission, is exactly what she doesn't."</p>
<p>"Well, then," said Brissenden, "I'll make her go for you. I think I want
your assistance quite as much as she can want mine."</p>
<p>"Oh," I protested for this, "I've really given you already every ounce
of mine I can squeeze out. And you know for yourself far more than I
do."</p>
<p>"No, I don't!"—with which he became quite sharp; "for you know <i>how</i>
you know it—which I've not a notion of. It's just what I think," he
continued, facing me again, "you ought to tell me."</p>
<p>"I'm a little in doubt of what you're talking of, but I suppose you to
allude to the oddity of my being so much interested without my having
been more informed."</p>
<p>"You've got some clue," Brissenden said; "and a clue is what I myself
want."</p>
<p>"Then get it," I laughed, "from Mrs. Server!"</p>
<p>He wondered. "Does she know?"</p>
<p>I had still, after all, to dodge a little. "Know what?"</p>
<p>"Why, that you've found out what she has to hide."<SPAN name="page_125" id="page_125"></SPAN></p>
<p>"You're perfectly free to ask her. I wonder even that you haven't done
so yet."</p>
<p>"Well," he said with the finest stroke of unconsciousness he had yet
shown me—"well, I suppose it's because I'm afraid of her."</p>
<p>"But not too much afraid," I risked suggesting, "to be hoping at this
moment that you'll find her if you go back to where most of our party is
gathered. You're not going for tea—you're going for Mrs. Server: just
of whom it was, as I say, you were thinking while you sat there with
Lady John. So what is it you so greatly fear?"</p>
<p>It was as if I could see through his dim face a sort of gratitude for my
making all this out to him. "I don't know that it's anything that she
may do to <i>me</i>." He could make it out in a manner for himself. "It's as
if something might happen to her. It's what I told you—that she may
break down. If you ask me how, or in what," he continued, "how can I
tell you? In whatever it is that she's trying to do. I don't understand
it." Then he wound up with a sigh that, in spite of its softness, he
imperfectly stifled. "But it's something or other!"</p>
<p>"What would it be, then," I asked, "but what you speak of as what I've
'found out'? The effort you distinguish in her is the effort of
concealment—vain, as I gather it strikes you both, so far as <i>I</i>, in my
supernatural acuteness, am concerned."<SPAN name="page_126" id="page_126"></SPAN></p>
<p>Following this with the final ease to which my encouragement directly
ministered, he yet gave me, before he had quite arrived, a queer
sidelong glance. "Wouldn't it really be better if you were to tell me? I
don't ask her myself, you see. I don't put things to her in that way."</p>
<p>"Oh, no—I've shown you how I do see. That's a part of your admirable
consideration. But I must repeat that nothing would induce me to tell
you."</p>
<p>His poor old face fairly pleaded. "But I want so to know."</p>
<p>"Ah, there it is!" I almost triumphantly laughed.</p>
<p>"There what is?"</p>
<p>"Why, everything. What I've divined, between you and Mrs. Server, as the
tie. Your wanting so to know."</p>
<p>I felt as if he were now, intellectually speaking, plastic wax in my
hand. "And her wanting me not to?"</p>
<p>"Wanting <i>me</i> not to," I smiled.</p>
<p>He puzzled it out. "And being willing, therefore——"</p>
<p>"That you—you only, for sympathy, for fellowship, for the wild wonder
of it—<i>should</i> know? Well, for all those things, and in spite of what
you call your fear, <i>try</i> her!" With which now at last I quitted him.<SPAN name="page_127" id="page_127"></SPAN></p>
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