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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI </h2>
<p>Although the old coaches, with their gay panels and the guard's horn, and
the humors of the box and the vicissitudes of the road, have long moldered
into dust so far as they were matter, and are preserved in the printed
pages of our novelists so far as they partook of the spirit, a journey to
London by express train can still be a very pleasant and romantic
adventure. Cassandra Otway, at the age of twenty-two, could imagine few
things more pleasant. Satiated with months of green fields as she was, the
first row of artisans' villas on the outskirts of London seemed to have
something serious about it, which positively increased the importance of
every person in the railway carriage, and even, to her impressionable
mind, quickened the speed of the train and gave a note of stern authority
to the shriek of the engine-whistle. They were bound for London; they must
have precedence of all traffic not similarly destined. A different
demeanor was necessary directly one stepped out upon Liverpool Street
platform, and became one of those preoccupied and hasty citizens for whose
needs innumerable taxi-cabs, motor-omnibuses, and underground railways
were in waiting. She did her best to look dignified and preoccupied too,
but as the cab carried her away, with a determination which alarmed her a
little, she became more and more forgetful of her station as a citizen of
London, and turned her head from one window to another, picking up eagerly
a building on this side or a street scene on that to feed her intense
curiosity. And yet, while the drive lasted no one was real, nothing was
ordinary; the crowds, the Government buildings, the tide of men and women
washing the base of the great glass windows, were all generalized, and
affected her as if she saw them on the stage.</p>
<p>All these feelings were sustained and partly inspired by the fact that her
journey took her straight to the center of her most romantic world. A
thousand times in the midst of her pastoral landscape her thoughts took
this precise road, were admitted to the house in Chelsea, and went
directly upstairs to Katharine's room, where, invisible themselves, they
had the better chance of feasting upon the privacy of the room's adorable
and mysterious mistress. Cassandra adored her cousin; the adoration might
have been foolish, but was saved from that excess and lent an engaging
charm by the volatile nature of Cassandra's temperament. She had adored a
great many things and people in the course of twenty-two years; she had
been alternately the pride and the desperation of her teachers. She had
worshipped architecture and music, natural history and humanity,
literature and art, but always at the height of her enthusiasm, which was
accompanied by a brilliant degree of accomplishment, she changed her mind
and bought, surreptitiously, another grammar. The terrible results which
governesses had predicted from such mental dissipation were certainly
apparent now that Cassandra was twenty-two, and had never passed an
examination, and daily showed herself less and less capable of passing
one. The more serious prediction that she could never possibly earn her
living was also verified. But from all these short strands of different
accomplishments Cassandra wove for herself an attitude, a cast of mind,
which, if useless, was found by some people to have the not despicable
virtues of vivacity and freshness. Katharine, for example, thought her a
most charming companion. The cousins seemed to assemble between them a
great range of qualities which are never found united in one person and
seldom in half a dozen people. Where Katharine was simple, Cassandra was
complex; where Katharine was solid and direct, Cassandra was vague and
evasive. In short, they represented very well the manly and the womanly
sides of the feminine nature, and, for foundation, there was the profound
unity of common blood between them. If Cassandra adored Katharine she was
incapable of adoring any one without refreshing her spirit with frequent
draughts of raillery and criticism, and Katharine enjoyed her laughter at
least as much as her respect.</p>
<p>Respect was certainly uppermost in Cassandra's mind at the present moment.
Katharine's engagement had appealed to her imagination as the first
engagement in a circle of contemporaries is apt to appeal to the
imaginations of the others; it was solemn, beautiful, and mysterious; it
gave both parties the important air of those who have been initiated into
some rite which is still concealed from the rest of the group. For
Katharine's sake Cassandra thought William a most distinguished and
interesting character, and welcomed first his conversation and then his
manuscript as the marks of a friendship which it flattered and delighted
her to inspire.</p>
<p>Katharine was still out when she arrived at Cheyne Walk. After greeting
her uncle and aunt and receiving, as usual, a present of two sovereigns
for "cab fares and dissipation" from Uncle Trevor, whose favorite niece
she was, she changed her dress and wandered into Katharine's room to await
her. What a great looking-glass Katharine had, she thought, and how mature
all the arrangements upon the dressing-table were compared to what she was
used to at home. Glancing round, she thought that the bills stuck upon a
skewer and stood for ornament upon the mantelpiece were astonishingly like
Katharine, There wasn't a photograph of William anywhere to be seen. The
room, with its combination of luxury and bareness, its silk dressing-gowns
and crimson slippers, its shabby carpet and bare walls, had a powerful air
of Katharine herself; she stood in the middle of the room and enjoyed the
sensation; and then, with a desire to finger what her cousin was in the
habit of fingering, Cassandra began to take down the books which stood in
a row upon the shelf above the bed. In most houses this shelf is the ledge
upon which the last relics of religious belief lodge themselves as if,
late at night, in the heart of privacy, people, skeptical by day, find
solace in sipping one draught of the old charm for such sorrows or
perplexities as may steal from their hiding-places in the dark. But there
was no hymn-book here. By their battered covers and enigmatical contents,
Cassandra judged them to be old school-books belonging to Uncle Trevor,
and piously, though eccentrically, preserved by his daughter. There was no
end, she thought, to the unexpectedness of Katharine. She had once had a
passion for geometry herself, and, curled upon Katharine's quilt, she
became absorbed in trying to remember how far she had forgotten what she
once knew. Katharine, coming in a little later, found her deep in this
characteristic pursuit.</p>
<p>"My dear," Cassandra exclaimed, shaking the book at her cousin, "my whole
life's changed from this moment! I must write the man's name down at once,
or I shall forget—"</p>
<p>Whose name, what book, which life was changed Katharine proceeded to
ascertain. She began to lay aside her clothes hurriedly, for she was very
late.</p>
<p>"May I sit and watch you?" Cassandra asked, shutting up her book. "I got
ready on purpose."</p>
<p>"Oh, you're ready, are you?" said Katharine, half turning in the midst of
her operations, and looking at Cassandra, who sat, clasping her knees, on
the edge of the bed.</p>
<p>"There are people dining here," she said, taking in the effect of
Cassandra from a new point of view. After an interval, the distinction,
the irregular charm, of the small face with its long tapering nose and its
bright oval eyes were very notable. The hair rose up off the forehead
rather stiffly, and, given a more careful treatment by hairdressers and
dressmakers, the light angular figure might possess a likeness to a French
lady of distinction in the eighteenth century.</p>
<p>"Who's coming to dinner?" Cassandra asked, anticipating further
possibilities of rapture.</p>
<p>"There's William, and, I believe, Aunt Eleanor and Uncle Aubrey."</p>
<p>"I'm so glad William is coming. Did he tell you that he sent me his
manuscript? I think it's wonderful—I think he's almost good enough
for you, Katharine."</p>
<p>"You shall sit next to him and tell him what you think of him."</p>
<p>"I shan't dare do that," Cassandra asserted.</p>
<p>"Why? You're not afraid of him, are you?"</p>
<p>"A little—because he's connected with you."</p>
<p>Katharine smiled.</p>
<p>"But then, with your well-known fidelity, considering that you're staying
here at least a fortnight, you won't have any illusions left about me by
the time you go. I give you a week, Cassandra. I shall see my power fading
day by day. Now it's at the climax; but to-morrow it'll have begun to
fade. What am I to wear, I wonder? Find me a blue dress, Cassandra, over
there in the long wardrobe."</p>
<p>She spoke disconnectedly, handling brush and comb, and pulling out the
little drawers in her dressing-table and leaving them open. Cassandra,
sitting on the bed behind her, saw the reflection of her cousin's face in
the looking-glass. The face in the looking-glass was serious and intent,
apparently occupied with other things besides the straightness of the
parting which, however, was being driven as straight as a Roman road
through the dark hair. Cassandra was impressed again by Katharine's
maturity; and, as she enveloped herself in the blue dress which filled
almost the whole of the long looking-glass with blue light and made it the
frame of a picture, holding not only the slightly moving effigy of the
beautiful woman, but shapes and colors of objects reflected from the
background, Cassandra thought that no sight had ever been quite so
romantic. It was all in keeping with the room and the house, and the city
round them; for her ears had not yet ceased to notice the hum of distant
wheels.</p>
<p>They went downstairs rather late, in spite of Katharine's extreme speed in
getting ready. To Cassandra's ears the buzz of voices inside the
drawing-room was like the tuning up of the instruments of the orchestra.
It seemed to her that there were numbers of people in the room, and that
they were strangers, and that they were beautiful and dressed with the
greatest distinction, although they proved to be mostly her relations, and
the distinction of their clothing was confined, in the eyes of an
impartial observer, to the white waistcoat which Rodney wore. But they all
rose simultaneously, which was by itself impressive, and they all
exclaimed, and shook hands, and she was introduced to Mr. Peyton, and the
door sprang open, and dinner was announced, and they filed off, William
Rodney offering her his slightly bent black arm, as she had secretly hoped
he would. In short, had the scene been looked at only through her eyes, it
must have been described as one of magical brilliancy. The pattern of the
soup-plates, the stiff folds of the napkins, which rose by the side of
each plate in the shape of arum lilies, the long sticks of bread tied with
pink ribbon, the silver dishes and the sea-colored champagne glasses, with
the flakes of gold congealed in their stems—all these details,
together with a curiously pervasive smell of kid gloves, contributed to
her exhilaration, which must be repressed, however, because she was grown
up, and the world held no more for her to marvel at.</p>
<p>The world held no more for her to marvel at, it is true; but it held other
people; and each other person possessed in Cassandra's mind some fragment
of what privately she called "reality." It was a gift that they would
impart if you asked them for it, and thus no dinner-party could possibly
be dull, and little Mr. Peyton on her right and William Rodney on her left
were in equal measure endowed with the quality which seemed to her so
unmistakable and so precious that the way people neglected to demand it
was a constant source of surprise to her. She scarcely knew, indeed,
whether she was talking to Mr. Peyton or to William Rodney. But to one
who, by degrees, assumed the shape of an elderly man with a mustache, she
described how she had arrived in London that very afternoon, and how she
had taken a cab and driven through the streets. Mr. Peyton, an editor of
fifty years, bowed his bald head repeatedly, with apparent understanding.
At least, he understood that she was very young and pretty, and saw that
she was excited, though he could not gather at once from her words or
remember from his own experience what there was to be excited about. "Were
there any buds on the trees?" he asked. "Which line did she travel by?"</p>
<p>He was cut short in these amiable inquiries by her desire to know whether
he was one of those who read, or one of those who look out of the window?
Mr. Peyton was by no means sure which he did. He rather thought he did
both. He was told that he had made a most dangerous confession. She could
deduce his entire history from that one fact. He challenged her to
proceed; and she proclaimed him a Liberal Member of Parliament.</p>
<p>William, nominally engaged in a desultory conversation with Aunt Eleanor,
heard every word, and taking advantage of the fact that elderly ladies
have little continuity of conversation, at least with those whom they
esteem for their youth and their sex, he asserted his presence by a very
nervous laugh.</p>
<p>Cassandra turned to him directly. She was enchanted to find that,
instantly and with such ease, another of these fascinating beings was
offering untold wealth for her extraction.</p>
<p>"There's no doubt what YOU do in a railway carriage, William," she said,
making use in her pleasure of his first name. "You never ONCE look out of
the window; you read ALL the time."</p>
<p>"And what facts do you deduce from that?" Mr. Peyton asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, that he's a poet, of course," said Cassandra. "But I must confess
that I knew that before, so it isn't fair. I've got your manuscript with
me," she went on, disregarding Mr. Peyton in a shameless way. "I've got
all sorts of things I want to ask you about it."</p>
<p>William inclined his head and tried to conceal the pleasure that her
remark gave him. But the pleasure was not unalloyed. However susceptible
to flattery William might be, he would never tolerate it from people who
showed a gross or emotional taste in literature, and if Cassandra erred
even slightly from what he considered essential in this respect he would
express his discomfort by flinging out his hands and wrinkling his
forehead; he would find no pleasure in her flattery after that.</p>
<p>"First of all," she proceeded, "I want to know why you chose to write a
play?"</p>
<p>"Ah! You mean it's not dramatic?"</p>
<p>"I mean that I don't see what it would gain by being acted. But then does
Shakespeare gain? Henry and I are always arguing about Shakespeare. I'm
certain he's wrong, but I can't prove it because I've only seen
Shakespeare acted once in Lincoln. But I'm quite positive," she insisted,
"that Shakespeare wrote for the stage."</p>
<p>"You're perfectly right," Rodney exclaimed. "I was hoping you were on that
side. Henry's wrong—entirely wrong. Of course, I've failed, as all
the moderns fail. Dear, dear, I wish I'd consulted you before."</p>
<p>From this point they proceeded to go over, as far as memory served them,
the different aspects of Rodney's drama. She said nothing that jarred upon
him, and untrained daring had the power to stimulate experience to such an
extent that Rodney was frequently seen to hold his fork suspended before
him, while he debated the first principles of the art. Mrs. Hilbery
thought to herself that she had never seen him to such advantage; yes, he
was somehow different; he reminded her of some one who was dead, some one
who was distinguished—she had forgotten his name.</p>
<p>Cassandra's voice rose high in its excitement.</p>
<p>"You've not read 'The Idiot'!" she exclaimed.</p>
<p>"I've read 'War and Peace'," William replied, a little testily.</p>
<p>"'WAR AND PEACE'!" she echoed, in a tone of derision.</p>
<p>"I confess I don't understand the Russians."</p>
<p>"Shake hands! Shake hands!" boomed Uncle Aubrey from across the table.
"Neither do I. And I hazard the opinion that they don't themselves."</p>
<p>The old gentleman had ruled a large part of the Indian Empire, but he was
in the habit of saying that he had rather have written the works of
Dickens. The table now took possession of a subject much to its liking.
Aunt Eleanor showed premonitory signs of pronouncing an opinion. Although
she had blunted her taste upon some form of philanthropy for twenty-five
years, she had a fine natural instinct for an upstart or a pretender, and
knew to a hairbreadth what literature should be and what it should not be.
She was born to the knowledge, and scarcely thought it a matter to be
proud of.</p>
<p>"Insanity is not a fit subject for fiction," she announced positively.</p>
<p>"There's the well-known case of Hamlet," Mr. Hilbery interposed, in his
leisurely, half-humorous tones.</p>
<p>"Ah, but poetry's different, Trevor," said Aunt Eleanor, as if she had
special authority from Shakespeare to say so. "Different altogether. And
I've never thought, for my part, that Hamlet was as mad as they make out.
What is your opinion, Mr. Peyton?" For, as there was a minister of
literature present in the person of the editor of an esteemed review, she
deferred to him.</p>
<p>Mr. Peyton leant a little back in his chair, and, putting his head rather
on one side, observed that that was a question that he had never been able
to answer entirely to his satisfaction. There was much to be said on both
sides, but as he considered upon which side he should say it, Mrs. Hilbery
broke in upon his judicious meditations.</p>
<p>"Lovely, lovely Ophelia!" she exclaimed. "What a wonderful power it is—poetry!
I wake up in the morning all bedraggled; there's a yellow fog outside;
little Emily turns on the electric light when she brings me my tea, and
says, 'Oh, ma'am, the water's frozen in the cistern, and cook's cut her
finger to the bone.' And then I open a little green book, and the birds
are singing, the stars shining, the flowers twinkling—" She looked
about her as if these presences had suddenly manifested themselves round
her dining-room table.</p>
<p>"Has the cook cut her finger badly?" Aunt Eleanor demanded, addressing
herself naturally to Katharine.</p>
<p>"Oh, the cook's finger is only my way of putting it," said Mrs. Hilbery.
"But if she had cut her arm off, Katharine would have sewn it on again,"
she remarked, with an affectionate glance at her daughter, who looked, she
thought, a little sad. "But what horrid, horrid thoughts," she wound up,
laying down her napkin and pushing her chair back. "Come, let us find
something more cheerful to talk about upstairs."</p>
<p>Upstairs in the drawing-room Cassandra found fresh sources of pleasure,
first in the distinguished and expectant look of the room, and then in the
chance of exercising her divining-rod upon a new assortment of human
beings. But the low tones of the women, their meditative silences, the
beauty which, to her at least, shone even from black satin and the knobs
of amber which encircled elderly necks, changed her wish to chatter to a
more subdued desire merely to watch and to whisper. She entered with
delight into an atmosphere in which private matters were being
interchanged freely, almost in monosyllables, by the older women who now
accepted her as one of themselves. Her expression became very gentle and
sympathetic, as if she, too, were full of solicitude for the world which
was somehow being cared for, managed and deprecated by Aunt Maggie and
Aunt Eleanor. After a time she perceived that Katharine was outside the
community in some way, and, suddenly, she threw aside her wisdom and
gentleness and concern and began to laugh.</p>
<p>"What are you laughing at?" Katharine asked.</p>
<p>A joke so foolish and unfilial wasn't worth explaining.</p>
<p>"It was nothing—ridiculous—in the worst of taste, but still,
if you half shut your eyes and looked—" Katharine half shut her eyes
and looked, but she looked in the wrong direction, and Cassandra laughed
more than ever, and was still laughing and doing her best to explain in a
whisper that Aunt Eleanor, through half-shut eyes, was like the parrot in
the cage at Stogdon House, when the gentlemen came in and Rodney walked
straight up to them and wanted to know what they were laughing at.</p>
<p>"I utterly refuse to tell you!" Cassandra replied, standing up straight,
clasping her hands in front of her, and facing him. Her mockery was
delicious to him. He had not even for a second the fear that she had been
laughing at him. She was laughing because life was so adorable, so
enchanting.</p>
<p>"Ah, but you're cruel to make me feel the barbarity of my sex," he
replied, drawing his feet together and pressing his finger-tips upon an
imaginary opera-hat or malacca cane. "We've been discussing all sorts of
dull things, and now I shall never know what I want to know more than
anything in the world."</p>
<p>"You don't deceive us for a minute!" she cried. "Not for a second. We both
know that you've been enjoying yourself immensely. Hasn't he, Katharine?"</p>
<p>"No," she replied, "I think he's speaking the truth. He doesn't care much
for politics."</p>
<p>Her words, though spoken simply, produced a curious change in the light,
sparkling atmosphere. William at once lost his look of animation and said
seriously:</p>
<p>"I detest politics."</p>
<p>"I don't think any man has the right to say that," said Cassandra, almost
severely.</p>
<p>"I agree. I mean that I detest politicians," he corrected himself quickly.</p>
<p>"You see, I believe Cassandra is what they call a Feminist," Katharine
went on. "Or rather, she was a Feminist six months ago, but it's no good
supposing that she is now what she was then. That is one of her greatest
charms in my eyes. One never can tell." She smiled at her as an elder
sister might smile.</p>
<p>"Katharine, you make one feel so horribly small!" Cassandra exclaimed.</p>
<p>"No, no, that's not what she means," Rodney interposed. "I quite agree
that women have an immense advantage over us there. One misses a lot by
attempting to know things thoroughly."</p>
<p>"He knows Greek thoroughly," said Katharine. "But then he also knows a
good deal about painting, and a certain amount about music. He's very
cultivated—perhaps the most cultivated person I know."</p>
<p>"And poetry," Cassandra added.</p>
<p>"Yes, I was forgetting his play," Katharine remarked, and turning her head
as though she saw something that needed her attention in a far corner of
the room, she left them.</p>
<p>For a moment they stood silent, after what seemed a deliberate
introduction to each other, and Cassandra watched her crossing the room.</p>
<p>"Henry," she said next moment, "would say that a stage ought to be no
bigger than this drawing-room. He wants there to be singing and dancing as
well as acting—only all the opposite of Wagner—you
understand?"</p>
<p>They sat down, and Katharine, turning when she reached the window, saw
William with his hand raised in gesticulation and his mouth open, as if
ready to speak the moment Cassandra ceased.</p>
<p>Katharine's duty, whether it was to pull a curtain or move a chair, was
either forgotten or discharged, but she continued to stand by the window
without doing anything. The elderly people were all grouped together round
the fire. They seemed an independent, middle-aged community busy with its
own concerns. They were telling stories very well and listening to them
very graciously. But for her there was no obvious employment.</p>
<p>"If anybody says anything, I shall say that I'm looking at the river," she
thought, for in her slavery to her family traditions, she was ready to pay
for her transgression with some plausible falsehood. She pushed aside the
blind and looked at the river. But it was a dark night and the water was
barely visible. Cabs were passing, and couples were loitering slowly along
the road, keeping as close to the railings as possible, though the trees
had as yet no leaves to cast shadow upon their embraces. Katharine, thus
withdrawn, felt her loneliness. The evening had been one of pain, offering
her, minute after minute, plainer proof that things would fall out as she
had foreseen. She had faced tones, gestures, glances; she knew, with her
back to them, that William, even now, was plunging deeper and deeper into
the delight of unexpected understanding with Cassandra. He had almost told
her that he was finding it infinitely better than he could have believed.
She looked out of the window, sternly determined to forget private
misfortunes, to forget herself, to forget individual lives. With her eyes
upon the dark sky, voices reached her from the room in which she was
standing. She heard them as if they came from people in another world, a
world antecedent to her world, a world that was the prelude, the
antechamber to reality; it was as if, lately dead, she heard the living
talking. The dream nature of our life had never been more apparent to her,
never had life been more certainly an affair of four walls, whose objects
existed only within the range of lights and fires, beyond which lay
nothing, or nothing more than darkness. She seemed physically to have
stepped beyond the region where the light of illusion still makes it
desirable to possess, to love, to struggle. And yet her melancholy brought
her no serenity. She still heard the voices within the room. She was still
tormented by desires. She wished to be beyond their range. She wished
inconsistently enough that she could find herself driving rapidly through
the streets; she was even anxious to be with some one who, after a
moment's groping, took a definite shape and solidified into the person of
Mary Datchet. She drew the curtains so that the draperies met in deep
folds in the middle of the window.</p>
<p>"Ah, there she is," said Mr. Hilbery, who was standing swaying affably
from side to side, with his back to the fire. "Come here, Katharine. I
couldn't see where you'd got to—our children," he observed
parenthetically, "have their uses—I want you to go to my study,
Katharine; go to the third shelf on the right-hand side of the door; take
down 'Trelawny's Recollections of Shelley'; bring it to me. Then, Peyton,
you will have to admit to the assembled company that you have been
mistaken."</p>
<p>"'Trelawny's Recollections of Shelley.' The third shelf on the right of
the door," Katharine repeated. After all, one does not check children in
their play, or rouse sleepers from their dreams. She passed William and
Cassandra on her way to the door.</p>
<p>"Stop, Katharine," said William, speaking almost as if he were conscious
of her against his will. "Let me go." He rose, after a second's
hesitation, and she understood that it cost him an effort. She knelt one
knee upon the sofa where Cassandra sat, looking down at her cousin's face,
which still moved with the speed of what she had been saying.</p>
<p>"Are you—happy?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, my dear!" Cassandra exclaimed, as if no further words were needed.
"Of course, we disagree about every subject under the sun," she exclaimed,
"but I think he's the cleverest man I've ever met—and you're the
most beautiful woman," she added, looking at Katharine, and as she looked
her face lost its animation and became almost melancholy in sympathy with
Katharine's melancholy, which seemed to Cassandra the last refinement of
her distinction.</p>
<p>"Ah, but it's only ten o'clock," said Katharine darkly.</p>
<p>"As late as that! Well—?" She did not understand.</p>
<p>"At twelve my horses turn into rats and off I go. The illusion fades. But
I accept my fate. I make hay while the sun shines." Cassandra looked at
her with a puzzled expression.</p>
<p>"Here's Katharine talking about rats, and hay, and all sorts of odd
things," she said, as William returned to them. He had been quick. "Can
you make her out?"</p>
<p>Katharine perceived from his little frown and hesitation that he did not
find that particular problem to his taste at present. She stood upright at
once and said in a different tone:</p>
<p>"I really am off, though. I wish you'd explain if they say anything,
William. I shan't be late, but I've got to see some one."</p>
<p>"At this time of night?" Cassandra exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Whom have you got to see?" William demanded.</p>
<p>"A friend," she remarked, half turning her head towards him. She knew that
he wished her to stay, not, indeed, with them, but in their neighborhood,
in case of need.</p>
<p>"Katharine has a great many friends," said William rather lamely, sitting
down once more, as Katharine left the room.</p>
<p>She was soon driving quickly, as she had wished to drive, through the
lamp-lit streets. She liked both light and speed, and the sense of being
out of doors alone, and the knowledge that she would reach Mary in her
high, lonely room at the end of the drive. She climbed the stone steps
quickly, remarking the queer look of her blue silk skirt and blue shoes
upon the stone, dusty with the boots of the day, under the light of an
occasional jet of flickering gas.</p>
<p>The door was opened in a second by Mary herself, whose face showed not
only surprise at the sight of her visitor, but some degree of
embarrassment. She greeted her cordially, and, as there was no time for
explanations, Katharine walked straight into the sitting-room, and found
herself in the presence of a young man who was lying back in a chair and
holding a sheet of paper in his hand, at which he was looking as if he
expected to go on immediately with what he was in the middle of saying to
Mary Datchet. The apparition of an unknown lady in full evening dress
seemed to disturb him. He took his pipe from his mouth, rose stiffly, and
sat down again with a jerk.</p>
<p>"Have you been dining out?" Mary asked.</p>
<p>"Are you working?" Katharine inquired simultaneously.</p>
<p>The young man shook his head, as if he disowned his share in the question
with some irritation.</p>
<p>"Well, not exactly," Mary replied. "Mr. Basnett had brought some papers to
show me. We were going through them, but we'd almost done.... Tell us
about your party."</p>
<p>Mary had a ruffled appearance, as if she had been running her fingers
through her hair in the course of her conversation; she was dressed more
or less like a Russian peasant girl. She sat down again in a chair which
looked as if it had been her seat for some hours; the saucer which stood
upon the arm contained the ashes of many cigarettes. Mr. Basnett, a very
young man with a fresh complexion and a high forehead from which the hair
was combed straight back, was one of that group of "very able young men"
suspected by Mr. Clacton, justly as it turned out, of an influence upon
Mary Datchet. He had come down from one of the Universities not long ago,
and was now charged with the reformation of society. In connection with
the rest of the group of very able young men he had drawn up a scheme for
the education of labor, for the amalgamation of the middle class and the
working class, and for a joint assault of the two bodies, combined in the
Society for the Education of Democracy, upon Capital. The scheme had
already reached the stage in which it was permissible to hire an office
and engage a secretary, and he had been deputed to expound the scheme to
Mary, and make her an offer of the Secretaryship, to which, as a matter of
principle, a small salary was attached. Since seven o'clock that evening
he had been reading out loud the document in which the faith of the new
reformers was expounded, but the reading was so frequently interrupted by
discussion, and it was so often necessary to inform Mary "in strictest
confidence" of the private characters and evil designs of certain
individuals and societies that they were still only half-way through the
manuscript. Neither of them realized that the talk had already lasted
three hours. In their absorption they had forgotten even to feed the fire,
and yet both Mr. Basnett in his exposition, and Mary in her interrogation,
carefully preserved a kind of formality calculated to check the desire of
the human mind for irrelevant discussion. Her questions frequently began,
"Am I to understand—" and his replies invariably represented the
views of some one called "we."</p>
<p>By this time Mary was almost persuaded that she, too, was included in the
"we," and agreed with Mr. Basnett in believing that "our" views, "our"
society, "our" policy, stood for something quite definitely segregated
from the main body of society in a circle of superior illumination.</p>
<p>The appearance of Katharine in this atmosphere was extremely incongruous,
and had the effect of making Mary remember all sorts of things that she
had been glad to forget.</p>
<p>"You've been dining out?" she asked again, looking, with a little smile,
at the blue silk and the pearl-sewn shoes.</p>
<p>"No, at home. Are you starting something new?" Katharine hazarded, rather
hesitatingly, looking at the papers.</p>
<p>"We are," Mr. Basnett replied. He said no more.</p>
<p>"I'm thinking of leaving our friends in Russell Square," Mary explained.</p>
<p>"I see. And then you will do something else."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm afraid I like working," said Mary.</p>
<p>"Afraid," said Mr. Basnett, conveying the impression that, in his opinion,
no sensible person could be afraid of liking to work.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Katharine, as if he had stated this opinion aloud. "I should
like to start something—something off one's own bat—that's
what I should like."</p>
<p>"Yes, that's the fun," said Mr. Basnett, looking at her for the first time
rather keenly, and refilling his pipe.</p>
<p>"But you can't limit work—that's what I mean," said Mary. "I mean
there are other sorts of work. No one works harder than a woman with
little children."</p>
<p>"Quite so," said Mr. Basnett. "It's precisely the women with babies we
want to get hold of." He glanced at his document, rolled it into a
cylinder between his fingers, and gazed into the fire. Katharine felt that
in this company anything that one said would be judged upon its merits;
one had only to say what one thought, rather barely and tersely, with a
curious assumption that the number of things that could properly be
thought about was strictly limited. And Mr. Basnett was only stiff upon
the surface; there was an intelligence in his face which attracted her
intelligence.</p>
<p>"When will the public know?" she asked.</p>
<p>"What d'you mean—about us?" Mr. Basnett asked, with a little smile.</p>
<p>"That depends upon many things," said Mary. The conspirators looked
pleased, as if Katharine's question, with the belief in their existence
which it implied, had a warming effect upon them.</p>
<p>"In starting a society such as we wish to start (we can't say any more at
present)," Mr. Basnett began, with a little jerk of his head, "there are
two things to remember—the Press and the public. Other societies,
which shall be nameless, have gone under because they've appealed only to
cranks. If you don't want a mutual admiration society, which dies as soon
as you've all discovered each other's faults, you must nobble the Press.
You must appeal to the public."</p>
<p>"That's the difficulty," said Mary thoughtfully.</p>
<p>"That's where she comes in," said Mr. Basnett, jerking his head in Mary's
direction. "She's the only one of us who's a capitalist. She can make a
whole-time job of it. I'm tied to an office; I can only give my spare
time. Are you, by any chance, on the look-out for a job?" he asked
Katharine, with a queer mixture of distrust and deference.</p>
<p>"Marriage is her job at present," Mary replied for her.</p>
<p>"Oh, I see," said Mr. Basnett. He made allowances for that; he and his
friends had faced the question of sex, along with all others, and assigned
it an honorable place in their scheme of life. Katharine felt this beneath
the roughness of his manner; and a world entrusted to the guardianship of
Mary Datchet and Mr. Basnett seemed to her a good world, although not a
romantic or beautiful place or, to put it figuratively, a place where any
line of blue mist softly linked tree to tree upon the horizon. For a
moment she thought she saw in his face, bent now over the fire, the
features of that original man whom we still recall every now and then,
although we know only the clerk, barrister, Governmental official, or
workingman variety of him. Not that Mr. Basnett, giving his days to
commerce and his spare time to social reform, would long carry about him
any trace of his possibilities of completeness; but, for the moment, in
his youth and ardor, still speculative, still uncramped, one might imagine
him the citizen of a nobler state than ours. Katharine turned over her
small stock of information, and wondered what their society might be going
to attempt. Then she remembered that she was hindering their business, and
rose, still thinking of this society, and thus thinking, she said to Mr.
Basnett:</p>
<p>"Well, you'll ask me to join when the time comes, I hope."</p>
<p>He nodded, and took his pipe from his mouth, but, being unable to think of
anything to say, he put it back again, although he would have been glad if
she had stayed.</p>
<p>Against her wish, Mary insisted upon taking her downstairs, and then, as
there was no cab to be seen, they stood in the street together, looking
about them.</p>
<p>"Go back," Katharine urged her, thinking of Mr. Basnett with his papers in
his hand.</p>
<p>"You can't wander about the streets alone in those clothes," said Mary,
but the desire to find a cab was not her true reason for standing beside
Katharine for a minute or two. Unfortunately for her composure, Mr.
Basnett and his papers seemed to her an incidental diversion of life's
serious purpose compared with some tremendous fact which manifested itself
as she stood alone with Katharine. It may have been their common
womanhood.</p>
<p>"Have you seen Ralph?" she asked suddenly, without preface.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Katharine directly, but she did not remember when or where she
had seen him. It took her a moment or two to remember why Mary should ask
her if she had seen Ralph.</p>
<p>"I believe I'm jealous," said Mary.</p>
<p>"Nonsense, Mary," said Katharine, rather distractedly, taking her arm and
beginning to walk up the street in the direction of the main road. "Let me
see; we went to Kew, and we agreed to be friends. Yes, that's what
happened." Mary was silent, in the hope that Katharine would tell her
more. But Katharine said nothing.</p>
<p>"It's not a question of friendship," Mary exclaimed, her anger rising, to
her own surprise. "You know it's not. How can it be? I've no right to
interfere—" She stopped. "Only I'd rather Ralph wasn't hurt," she
concluded.</p>
<p>"I think he seems able to take care of himself," Katharine observed.
Without either of them wishing it, a feeling of hostility had risen
between them.</p>
<p>"Do you really think it's worth it?" said Mary, after a pause.</p>
<p>"How can one tell?" Katharine asked.</p>
<p>"Have you ever cared for any one?" Mary demanded rashly and foolishly.</p>
<p>"I can't wander about London discussing my feelings—Here's a cab—no,
there's some one in it."</p>
<p>"We don't want to quarrel," said Mary.</p>
<p>"Ought I to have told him that I wouldn't be his friend?" Katharine asked.
"Shall I tell him that? If so, what reason shall I give him?"</p>
<p>"Of course you can't tell him that," said Mary, controlling herself.</p>
<p>"I believe I shall, though," said Katharine suddenly.</p>
<p>"I lost my temper, Katharine; I shouldn't have said what I did."</p>
<p>"The whole thing's foolish," said Katharine, peremptorily. "That's what I
say. It's not worth it." She spoke with unnecessary vehemence, but it was
not directed against Mary Datchet. Their animosity had completely
disappeared, and upon both of them a cloud of difficulty and darkness
rested, obscuring the future, in which they had both to find a way.</p>
<p>"No, no, it's not worth it," Katharine repeated. "Suppose, as you say,
it's out of the question—this friendship; he falls in love with me.
I don't want that. Still," she added, "I believe you exaggerate; love's
not everything; marriage itself is only one of the things—" They had
reached the main thoroughfare, and stood looking at the omnibuses and
passers-by, who seemed, for the moment, to illustrate what Katharine had
said of the diversity of human interests. For both of them it had become
one of those moments of extreme detachment, when it seems unnecessary ever
again to shoulder the burden of happiness and self-assertive existence.
Their neighbors were welcome to their possessions.</p>
<p>"I don't lay down any rules,"' said Mary, recovering herself first, as
they turned after a long pause of this description. "All I say is that you
should know what you're about—for certain; but," she added, "I
expect you do."</p>
<p>At the same time she was profoundly perplexed, not only by what she knew
of the arrangements for Katharine's marriage, but by the impression which
she had of her, there on her arm, dark and inscrutable.</p>
<p>They walked back again and reached the steps which led up to Mary's flat.
Here they stopped and paused for a moment, saying nothing.</p>
<p>"You must go in," said Katharine, rousing herself. "He's waiting all this
time to go on with his reading." She glanced up at the lighted window near
the top of the house, and they both looked at it and waited for a moment.
A flight of semicircular steps ran up to the hall, and Mary slowly mounted
the first two or three, and paused, looking down upon Katharine.</p>
<p>"I think you underrate the value of that emotion," she said slowly, and a
little awkwardly. She climbed another step and looked down once more upon
the figure that was only partly lit up, standing in the street with a
colorless face turned upwards. As Mary hesitated, a cab came by and
Katharine turned and stopped it, saying as she opened the door:</p>
<p>"Remember, I want to belong to your society—remember," she added,
having to raise her voice a little, and shutting the door upon the rest of
her words.</p>
<p>Mary mounted the stairs step by step, as if she had to lift her body up an
extremely steep ascent. She had had to wrench herself forcibly away from
Katharine, and every step vanquished her desire. She held on grimly,
encouraging herself as though she were actually making some great physical
effort in climbing a height. She was conscious that Mr. Basnett, sitting
at the top of the stairs with his documents, offered her solid footing if
she were capable of reaching it. The knowledge gave her a faint sense of
exaltation.</p>
<p>Mr. Basnett raised his eyes as she opened the door.</p>
<p>"I'll go on where I left off," he said. "Stop me if you want anything
explained."</p>
<p>He had been re-reading the document, and making pencil notes in the margin
while he waited, and he went on again as if there had been no
interruption. Mary sat down among the flat cushions, lit another
cigarette, and listened with a frown upon her face.</p>
<p>Katharine leant back in the corner of the cab that carried her to Chelsea,
conscious of fatigue, and conscious, too, of the sober and satisfactory
nature of such industry as she had just witnessed. The thought of it
composed and calmed her. When she reached home she let herself in as
quietly as she could, in the hope that the household was already gone to
bed. But her excursion had occupied less time than she thought, and she
heard sounds of unmistakable liveliness upstairs. A door opened, and she
drew herself into a ground-floor room in case the sound meant that Mr.
Peyton were taking his leave. From where she stood she could see the
stairs, though she was herself invisible. Some one was coming down the
stairs, and now she saw that it was William Rodney. He looked a little
strange, as if he were walking in his sleep; his lips moved as if he were
acting some part to himself. He came down very slowly, step by step, with
one hand upon the banisters to guide himself. She thought he looked as if
he were in some mood of high exaltation, which it made her uncomfortable
to witness any longer unseen. She stepped into the hall. He gave a great
start upon seeing her and stopped.</p>
<p>"Katharine!" he exclaimed. "You've been out?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Yes.... Are they still up?"</p>
<p>He did not answer, and walked into the ground-floor room through the door
which stood open.</p>
<p>"It's been more wonderful than I can tell you," he said, "I'm incredibly
happy—"</p>
<p>He was scarcely addressing her, and she said nothing. For a moment they
stood at opposite sides of a table saying nothing. Then he asked her
quickly, "But tell me, how did it seem to you? What did you think,
Katharine? Is there a chance that she likes me? Tell me, Katharine!"</p>
<p>Before she could answer a door opened on the landing above and disturbed
them. It disturbed William excessively. He started back, walked rapidly
into the hall, and said in a loud and ostentatiously ordinary tone:</p>
<p>"Good night, Katharine. Go to bed now. I shall see you soon. I hope I
shall be able to come to-morrow."</p>
<p>Next moment he was gone. She went upstairs and found Cassandra on the
landing. She held two or three books in her hand, and she was stooping to
look at others in a little bookcase. She said that she could never tell
which book she wanted to read in bed, poetry, biography, or metaphysics.</p>
<p>"What do you read in bed, Katharine?" she asked, as they walked upstairs
side by side.</p>
<p>"Sometimes one thing—sometimes another," said Katharine vaguely.
Cassandra looked at her.</p>
<p>"D'you know, you're extraordinarily queer," she said. "Every one seems to
me a little queer. Perhaps it's the effect of London."</p>
<p>"Is William queer, too?" Katharine asked.</p>
<p>"Well, I think he is a little," Cassandra replied. "Queer, but very
fascinating. I shall read Milton to-night. It's been one of the happiest
nights of my life, Katharine," she added, looking with shy devotion at her
cousin's beautiful face.</p>
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