In the Cage
by
Henry James

Part 1 out of 2








This etext was prepared by David Price
ccx074@coventry.ac.uk, from the 1919 Martin Secker.





In the Cage




CHAPTER I



It had occurred to her early that in her position--that of a young
person spending, in framed and wired confinement, the life of a
guinea-pig or a magpie--she should know a great many persons
without their recognising the acquaintance. That made it an
emotion the more lively--though singularly rare and always, even
then, with opportunity still very much smothered--to see any one
come in whom she knew outside, as she called it, any one who could
add anything to the meanness of her function. Her function was to
sit there with two young men--the other telegraphist and the
counter-clerk; to mind the "sounder," which was always going, to
dole out stamps and postal-orders, weigh letters, answer stupid
questions, give difficult change and, more than anything else,
count words as numberless as the sands of the sea, the words of the
telegrams thrust, from morning to night, through the gap left in
the high lattice, across the encumbered shelf that her forearm
ached with rubbing. This transparent screen fenced out or fenced
in, according to the side of the narrow counter on which the human
lot was cast, the duskiest corner of a shop pervaded not a little,
in winter, by the poison of perpetual gas, and at all times by the
presence of hams, cheese, dried fish, soap, varnish, paraffin and
other solids and fluids that she came to know perfectly by their
smells without consenting to know them by their names.

The barrier that divided the little post-and-telegraph-office from
the grocery was a frail structure of wood and wire; but the social,
the professional separation was a gulf that fortune, by a stroke
quite remarkable, had spared her the necessity of contributing at
all publicly to bridge. When Mr. Cocker's young men stepped over
from behind the other counter to change a five-pound note--and Mr.
Cocker's situation, with the cream of the "Court Guide" and the
dearest furnished apartments, Simpkin's, Ladle's, Thrupp's, just
round the corner, was so select that his place was quite pervaded
by the crisp rustle of these emblems--she pushed out the sovereigns
as if the applicant were no more to her than one of the momentary,
the practically featureless, appearances in the great procession;
and this perhaps all the more from the very fact of the connexion
(only recognised outside indeed) to which she had lent herself with
ridiculous inconsequence. She recognised the others the less
because she had at last so unreservedly, so irredeemably,
recognised Mr. Mudge. However that might be, she was a little
ashamed of having to admit to herself that Mr. Mudge's removal to a
higher sphere--to a more commanding position, that is, though to a
much lower neighbourhood--would have been described still better as
a luxury than as the mere simplification, the corrected
awkwardness, that she contented herself with calling it. He had at
any rate ceased to be all day long in her eyes, and this left
something a little fresh for them to rest on of a Sunday. During
the three months of his happy survival at Cocker's after her
consent to their engagement she had often asked herself what it was
marriage would be able to add to a familiarity that seemed already
to have scraped the platter so clean. Opposite there, behind the
counter of which his superior stature, his whiter apron, his more
clustering curls and more present, too present, H's had been for a
couple of years the principal ornament, he had moved to and fro
before her as on the small sanded floor of their contracted future.
She was conscious now of the improvement of not having to take her
present and her future at once. They were about as much as she
could manage when taken separate.

She had, none the less, to give her mind steadily to what Mr. Mudge
had again written her about, the idea of her applying for a
transfer to an office quite similar--she couldn't yet hope for a
place in a bigger--under the very roof where he was foreman, so
that, dangled before her every minute of the day, he should see
her, as he called it, "hourly," and in a part, the far N.W.
district, where, with her mother, she would save on their two rooms
alone nearly three shillings. It would be far from dazzling to
exchange Mayfair for Chalk Farm, and it wore upon her much that he
could never drop a subject; still, it didn't wear as things HAD
worn, the worries of the early times of their great misery, her
own, her mother's and her elder sister's--the last of whom had
succumbed to all but absolute want when, as conscious and
incredulous ladies, suddenly bereft, betrayed, overwhelmed, they
had slipped faster and faster down the steep slope at the bottom of
which she alone had rebounded. Her mother had never rebounded any
more at the bottom than on the way; had only rumbled and grumbled
down and down, making, in respect of caps, topics and "habits," no
effort whatever--which simply meant smelling much of the time of
whiskey.



CHAPTER II



It was always rather quiet at Cocker's while the contingent from
Ladle's and Thrupp's and all the other great places were at
luncheon, or, as the young men used vulgarly to say, while the
animals were feeding. She had forty minutes in advance of this to
go home for her own dinner; and when she came back and one of the
young men took his turn there was often half an hour during which
she could pull out a bit of work or a book--a book from the place
where she borrowed novels, very greasy, in fine print and all about
fine folks, at a ha'penny a day. This sacred pause was one of the
numerous ways in which the establishment kept its finger on the
pulse of fashion and fell into the rhythm of the larger life. It
had something to do, one day, with the particular flare of
importance of an arriving customer, a lady whose meals were
apparently irregular, yet whom she was destined, she afterwards
found, not to forget. The girl was blasee; nothing could belong
more, as she perfectly knew, to the intense publicity of her
profession; but she had a whimsical mind and wonderful nerves; she
was subject, in short, to sudden flickers of antipathy and
sympathy, red gleams in the grey, fitful needs to notice and to
"care," odd caprices of curiosity. She had a friend who had
invented a new career for women--that of being in and out of
people's houses to look after the flowers. Mrs. Jordan had a
manner of her own of sounding this allusion; "the flowers," on her
lips, were, in fantastic places, in happy homes, as usual as the
coals or the daily papers. She took charge of them, at any rate,
in all the rooms, at so much a month, and people were quickly
finding out what it was to make over this strange burden of the
pampered to the widow of a clergyman. The widow, on her side,
dilating on the initiations thus opened up to her, had been
splendid to her young friend, over the way she was made free of the
greatest houses--the way, especially when she did the dinner-
tables, set out so often for twenty, she felt that a single step
more would transform her whole social position. On its being asked
of her then if she circulated only in a sort of tropical solitude,
with the upper servants for picturesque natives, and on her having
to assent to this glance at her limitations, she had found a reply
to the girl's invidious question. "You've no imagination, my
dear!"--that was because a door more than half open to the higher
life couldn't be called anything but a thin partition. Mrs.
Jordan's imagination quite did away with the thickness.

Our young lady had not taken up the charge, had dealt with it good-
humouredly, just because she knew so well what to think of it. It
was at once one of her most cherished complaints and most secret
supports that people didn't understand her, and it was accordingly
a matter of indifference to her that Mrs. Jordan shouldn't; even
though Mrs. Jordan, handed down from their early twilight of
gentility and also the victim of reverses, was the only member of
her circle in whom she recognised an equal. She was perfectly
aware that her imaginative life was the life in which she spent
most of her time; and she would have been ready, had it been at all
worth while, to contend that, since her outward occupation didn't
kill it, it must be strong indeed. Combinations of flowers and
green-stuff, forsooth! What SHE could handle freely, she said to
herself, was combinations of men and women. The only weakness in
her faculty came from the positive abundance of her contact with
the human herd; this was so constant, it had so the effect of
cheapening her privilege, that there were long stretches in which
inspiration, divination and interest quite dropped. The great
thing was the flashes, the quick revivals, absolute accidents all,
and neither to be counted on nor to be resisted. Some one had only
sometimes to put in a penny for a stamp and the whole thing was
upon her. She was so absurdly constructed that these were
literally the moments that made up--made up for the long stiffness
of sitting there in the stocks, made up for the cunning hostility
of Mr. Buckton and the importunate sympathy of the counter-clerk,
made up for the daily deadly flourishy letter from Mr. Mudge, made
up even for the most haunting of her worries, the rage at moments
of not knowing how her mother did "get it."

She had surrendered herself moreover of late to a certain expansion
of her consciousness; something that seemed perhaps vulgarly
accounted for by the fact that, as the blast of the season roared
louder and the waves of fashion tossed their spray further over the
counter, there were more impressions to be gathered and really--for
it came to that--more life to be led. Definite at any rate it was
that by the time May was well started the kind of company she kept
at Cocker's had begun to strike her as a reason--a reason she might
almost put forward for a policy of procrastination. It sounded
silly, of course, as yet, to plead such a motive, especially as the
fascination of the place was after all a sort of torment. But she
liked her torment; it was a torment she should miss at Chalk Farm.
She was ingenious and uncandid, therefore, about leaving the
breadth of London a little longer between herself and that
austerity. If she hadn't quite the courage in short to say to Mr.
Mudge that her actual chance for a play of mind was worth any week
the three shillings he desired to help her to save, she yet saw
something happen in the course of the month that in her heart of
hearts at least answered the subtle question. This was connected
precisely with the appearance of the memorable lady.



CHAPTER III



She pushed in three bescribbled forms which the girl's hand was
quick to appropriate, Mr. Buckton having so frequent a perverse
instinct for catching first any eye that promised the sort of
entertainment with which she had her peculiar affinity. The
amusements of captives are full of a desperate contrivance, and one
of our young friend's ha'pennyworths had been the charming tale of
"Picciola." It was of course the law of the place that they were
never to take no notice, as Mr. Buckton said, whom they served; but
this also never prevented, certainly on the same gentleman's own
part, what he was fond of describing as the underhand game. Both
her companions, for that matter, made no secret of the number of
favourites they had among the ladies; sweet familiarities in spite
of which she had repeatedly caught each of them in stupidities and
mistakes, confusions of identity and lapses of observation that
never failed to remind her how the cleverness of men ends where the
cleverness of women begins. "Marguerite, Regent Street. Try on at
six. All Spanish lace. Pearls. The full length." That was the
first; it had no signature. "Lady Agnes Orme, Hyde Park Place.
Impossible to-night, dining Haddon. Opera to-morrow, promised
Fritz, but could do play Wednesday. Will try Haddon for Savoy, and
anything in the world you like, if you can get Gussy. Sunday
Montenero. Sit Mason Monday, Tuesday. Marguerite awful. Cissy."
That was the second. The third, the girl noted when she took it,
was on a foreign form: "Everard, Hotel Brighton, Paris. Only
understand and believe. 22nd to 26th, and certainly 8th and 9th.
Perhaps others. Come. Mary."

Mary was very handsome, the handsomest woman, she felt in a moment,
she had ever seen--or perhaps it was only Cissy. Perhaps it was
both, for she had seen stranger things than that--ladies wiring to
different persons under different names. She had seen all sorts of
things and pieced together all sorts of mysteries. There had once
been one--not long before--who, without winking, sent off five over
five different signatures. Perhaps these represented five
different friends who had asked her--all women, just as perhaps now
Mary and Cissy, or one or other of them, were wiring by deputy.
Sometimes she put in too much--too much of her own sense; sometimes
she put in too little; and in either case this often came round to
her afterwards, for she had an extraordinary way of keeping clues.
When she noticed she noticed; that was what it came to. There were
days and days, there were weeks sometimes, of vacancy. This arose
often from Mr. Buckton's devilish and successful subterfuges for
keeping her at the sounder whenever it looked as if anything might
arouse; the sounder, which it was equally his business to mind,
being the innermost cell of captivity, a cage within the cage,
fenced oft from the rest by a frame of ground glass. The counter-
clerk would have played into her hands; but the counter-clerk was
really reduced to idiocy by the effect of his passion for her. She
flattered herself moreover, nobly, that with the unpleasant
conspicuity of this passion she would never have consented to be
obliged to him. The most she would ever do would be always to
shove off on him whenever she could the registration of letters, a
job she happened particularly to loathe. After the long stupors,
at all events, there almost always suddenly would come a sharp
taste of something; it was in her mouth before she knew it; it was
in her mouth now.

To Cissy, to Mary, whichever it was, she found her curiosity going
out with a rush, a mute effusion that floated back to her, like a
returning tide, the living colour and splendour of the beautiful
head, the light of eyes that seemed to reflect such utterly other
things than the mean things actually before them; and, above all,
the high curt consideration of a manner that even at bad moments
was a magnificent habit and of the very essence of the innumerable
things--her beauty, her birth, her father and mother, her cousins
and all her ancestors--that its possessor couldn't have got rid of
even had she wished. How did our obscure little public servant
know that for the lady of the telegrams this was a bad moment? How
did she guess all sorts of impossible things, such as, almost on
the very spot, the presence of drama at a critical stage and the
nature of the tie with the gentleman at the Hotel Brighton? More
than ever before it floated to her through the bars of the cage
that this at last was the high reality, the bristling truth that
she had hitherto only patched up and eked out--one of the
creatures, in fine, in whom all the conditions for happiness
actually met, and who, in the air they made, bloomed with an
unwitting insolence. What came home to the girl was the way the
insolence was tempered by something that was equally a part of the
distinguished life, the custom of a flowerlike bend to the less
fortunate--a dropped fragrance, a mere quick breath, but which in
fact pervaded and lingered. The apparition was very young, but
certainly married, and our fatigued friend had a sufficient store
of mythological comparison to recognise the port of Juno.
Marguerite might be "awful," but she knew how to dress a goddess.

Pearls and Spanish lace--she herself, with assurance, could see
them, and the "full length" too, and also red velvet bows, which,
disposed on the lace in a particular manner (she could have placed
them with the turn of a hand) were of course to adorn the front of
a black brocade that would be like a dress in a picture. However,
neither Marguerite nor Lady Agnes nor Haddon nor Fritz nor Gussy
was what the wearer of this garment had really come in for. She
had come in for Everard--and that was doubtless not his true name
either. If our young lady had never taken such jumps before it was
simply that she had never before been so affected. She went all
the way. Mary and Cissy had been round together, in their single
superb person, to see him--he must live round the corner; they had
found that, in consequence of something they had come, precisely,
to make up for or to have another scene about, he had gone off--
gone off just on purpose to make them feel it; on which they had
come together to Cocker's as to the nearest place; where they had
put in the three forms partly in order not to put in the one alone.
The two others in a manner, covered it, muffled it, passed it off.
Oh yes, she went all the way, and this was a specimen of how she
often went. She would know the hand again any time. It was as
handsome and as everything else as the woman herself. The woman
herself had, on learning his flight, pushed past Everard's servant
and into his room; she had written her missive at his table and
with his pen. All this, every inch of it, came in the waft that
she blew through and left behind her, the influence that, as I have
said, lingered. And among the things the girl was sure of,
happily, was that she should see her again.



CHAPTER IV



She saw her in fact, and only ten days later; but this time not
alone, and that was exactly a part of the luck of it. Not unaware-
-as how could her observation have left her so?--of the
possibilities through which it could range, our young lady had ever
since had in her mind a dozen conflicting theories about Everard's
type; as to which, the instant they came into the place, she felt
the point settled with a thump that seemed somehow addressed
straight to her heart. That organ literally beat faster at the
approach of the gentleman who was this time with Cissy, and who, as
seen from within the cage, became on the spot the happiest of the
happy circumstances with which her mind had invested the friend of
Fritz and Gussy. He was a very happy circumstance indeed as, with
his cigarette in his lips and his broken familiar talk caught by
his companion, he put down the half-dozen telegrams it would take
them together several minutes to dispatch. And here it occurred,
oddly enough, that if, shortly before the girl's interest in his
companion had sharpened her sense for the messages then
transmitted, her immediate vision of himself had the effect, while
she counted his seventy words, of preventing intelligibility. His
words were mere numbers, they told her nothing whatever; and after
he had gone she was in possession of no name, of no address, of no
meaning, of nothing but a vague sweet sound and an immense
impression. He had been there but five minutes, he had smoked in
her face, and, busy with his telegrams, with the tapping pencil and
the conscious danger, the odious betrayal that would come from a
mistake, she had had no wandering glances nor roundabout arts to
spare. Yet she had taken him in; she knew everything; she had made
up her mind.

He had come back from Paris; everything was re-arranged; the pair
were again shoulder to shoulder in their high encounter with life,
their large and complicated game. The fine soundless pulse of this
game was in the air for our young woman while they remained in the
shop. While they remained? They remained all day; their presence
continued and abode with her, was in everything she did till
nightfall, in the thousands of other words she counted, she
transmitted, in all the stamps she detached and the letters she
weighed and the change she gave, equally unconscious and unerring
in each of these particulars, and not, as the run on the little
office thickened with the afternoon hours, looking up at a single
ugly face in the long sequence, nor really hearing the stupid
questions that she patiently and perfectly answered. All patience
was possible now, all questions were stupid after his, all faces
were ugly. She had been sure she should see the lady again; and
even now she should perhaps, she should probably, see her often.
But for him it was totally different; she should never never see
him. She wanted it too much. There was a kind of wanting that
helped--she had arrived, with her rich experience, at that
generalisation; and there was another kind that was fatal. It was
this time the fatal kind; it would prevent.

Well, she saw him the very next day, and on this second occasion it
was quite different; the sense of every syllable he paid for was
fiercely distinct; she indeed felt her progressive pencil, dabbing
as if with a quick caress the marks of his own, put life into every
stroke. He was there a long time--had not brought his forms filled
out but worked them off in a nook on the counter; and there were
other people as well--a changing pushing cluster, with every one to
mind at once and endless right change to make and information to
produce. But she kept hold of him throughout; she continued, for
herself, in a relation with him as close as that in which, behind
the hated ground glass, Mr. Buckton luckily continued with the
sounder. This morning everything changed, but rather to
dreariness; she had to swallow the rebuff to her theory about fatal
desires, which she did without confusion and indeed with absolute
levity; yet if it was now flagrant that he did live close at hand--
at Park Chambers--and belonged supremely to the class that wired
everything, even their expensive feelings (so that, as he never
wrote, his correspondence cost him weekly pounds and pounds, and he
might be in and out five times a day) there was, all the same,
involved in the prospect, and by reason of its positive excess of
light, a perverse melancholy, a gratuitous misery. This was at
once to give it a place in an order of feelings on which I shall
presently touch.

Meanwhile, for a month, he was very constant. Cissy, Mary, never
re-appeared with him; he was always either alone or accompanied
only by some gentleman who was lost in the blaze of his glory.
There was another sense, however--and indeed there was more than
one--in which she mostly found herself counting in the splendid
creature with whom she had originally connected him. He addressed
this correspondent neither as Mary nor as Cissy; but the girl was
sure of whom it was, in Eaten Square, that he was perpetually
wiring to--and all so irreproachably!--as Lady Bradeen. Lady
Bradeen was Cissy, Lady Bradeen was Mary, Lady Bradeen was the
friend of Fritz and of Gussy, the customer of Marguerite, and the
close ally in short (as was ideally right, only the girl had not
yet found a descriptive term that was) of the most magnificent of
men. Nothing could equal the frequency and variety of his
communications to her ladyship but their extraordinary, their
abysmal propriety. It was just the talk--so profuse sometimes that
she wondered what was left for their real meetings--of the very
happiest people. Their real meetings must have been constant, for
half of it was appointments and allusions, all swimming in a sea of
other allusions still, tangled in a complexity of questions that
gave a wondrous image of their life. If Lady Bradeen was Juno it
was all certainly Olympian. If the girl, missing the answers, her
ladyship's own outpourings, vainly reflected that Cocker's should
have been one of the bigger offices where telegrams arrived as well
as departed, there were yet ways in which, on the whole, she
pressed the romance closer by reason of the very quantity of
imagination it demanded and consumed. The days and hours of this
new friend, as she came to account him, were at all events
unrolled, and however much more she might have known she would
still have wished to go beyond. In fact she did go beyond; she
went quite far enough.

But she could none the less, even after a month, scarce have told
if the gentlemen who came in with him recurred or changed; and this
in spite of the fact that they too were always posting and wiring,
smoking in her face and signing or not signing. The gentlemen who
came in with him were nothing when he was there. They turned up
alone at other times--then only perhaps with a dim richness of
reference. He himself, absent as well as present, was all. He was
very tall, very fair, and had, in spite of his thick
preoccupations, a good-humour that was exquisite, particularly as
it so often had the effect of keeping him on. He could have
reached over anybody, and anybody--no matter who--would have let
him; but he was so extraordinarily kind that he quite pathetically
waited, never waggling things at her out of his turn nor saying
"Here!" with horrid sharpness. He waited for pottering old ladies,
for gaping slaveys, for the perpetual Buttonses from Thrupp's; and
the thing in all this that she would have liked most unspeakably to
put to the test was the possibility of her having for him a
personal identity that might in a particular way appeal. There
were moments when he actually struck her as on her side, as
arranging to help, to support, to spare her.

But such was the singular spirit of our young friend that she could
remind herself with a pang that when people had awfully good
manners--people of that class,--you couldn't tell. These manners
were for everybody, and it might be drearily unavailing for any
poor particular body to be overworked and unusual. What he did
take for granted was all sorts of facility; and his high
pleasantness, his relighting of cigarettes while he waited, his
unconscious bestowal of opportunities, of boons, of blessings, were
all a part of his splendid security, the instinct that told him
there was nothing such an existence as his could ever lose by. He
was somehow all at once very bright and very grave, very young and
immensely complete; and whatever he was at any moment it was always
as much as all the rest the mere bloom of his beatitude. He was
sometimes Everard, as he had been at the Hotel Brighton, and he was
sometimes Captain Everard. He was sometimes Philip with his
surname and sometimes Philip without it. In some directions he was
merely Phil, in others he was merely Captain. There were relations
in which he was none of these things, but a quite different person-
-"the Count." There were several friends for whom he was William.
There were several for whom, in allusion perhaps to his complexion,
he was "the Pink 'Un." Once, once only by good luck, he had,
coinciding comically, quite miraculously, with another person also
near to her, been "Mudge." Yes, whatever he was, it was a part of
his happiness--whatever he was and probably whatever he wasn't.
And his happiness was a part--it became so little by little--of
something that, almost from the first of her being at Cocker's, had
been deeply with the girl.



CHAPTER V



This was neither more nor less than the queer extension of her
experience, the double life that, in the cage, she grew at last to
lead. As the weeks went on there she lived more and more into the
world of whiffs and glimpses, she found her divinations work faster
and stretch further. It was a prodigious view as the pressure
heightened, a panorama fed with facts and figures, flushed with a
torrent of colour and accompanied with wondrous world-music. What
it mainly came to at this period was a picture of how London could
amuse itself; and that, with the running commentary of a witness so
exclusively a witness, turned for the most part to a hardening of
the heart. The nose of this observer was brushed by the bouquet,
yet she could never really pluck even a daisy. What could still
remain fresh in her daily grind was the immense disparity, the
difference and contrast, from class to class, of every instant and
every motion. There were times when all the wires in the country
seemed to start from the little hole-and-corner where she plied for
a livelihood, and where, in the shuffle of feet, the flutter of
"forms," the straying of stamps and the ring of change over the
counter, the people she had fallen into the habit of remembering
and fitting together with others, and of having her theories and
interpretations of, kept up before her their long procession and
rotation. What twisted the knife in her vitals was the way the
profligate rich scattered about them, in extravagant chatter over
their extravagant pleasures and sins, an amount of money that would
have held the stricken household of her frightened childhood, her
poor pinched mother and tormented father and lost brother and
starved sister, together for a lifetime. During her first weeks
she had often gasped at the sums people were willing to pay for the
stuff they transmitted--the "much love"s, the "awful" regrets, the
compliments and wonderments and vain vague gestures that cost the
price of a new pair of boots. She had had a way then of glancing
at the people's faces, but she had early learnt that if you became
a telegraphist you soon ceased to be astonished. Her eye for types
amounted nevertheless to genius, and there were those she liked and
those she hated, her feeling for the latter of which grew to a
positive possession, an instinct of observation and detection.
There were the brazen women, as she called them, of the higher and
the lower fashion, whose squanderings and graspings, whose
struggles and secrets and love-affairs and lies, she tracked and
stored up against them till she had at moments, in private, a
triumphant vicious feeling of mastery and ease, a sense of carrying
their silly guilty secrets in her pocket, her small retentive
brain, and thereby knowing so much more about them than they
suspected or would care to think. There were those she would have
liked to betray, to trip up, to bring down with words altered and
fatal; and all through a personal hostility provoked by the
lightest signs, by their accidents of tone and manner, by the
particular kind of relation she always happened instantly to feel.

There were impulses of various kinds, alternately soft and severe,
to which she was constitutionally accessible and which were
determined by the smallest accidents. She was rigid in general on
the article of making the public itself affix its stamps, and found
a special enjoyment in dealing to that end with some of the ladies
who were too grand to touch them. She had thus a play of
refinement and subtlety greater, she flattered herself, than any of
which she could be made the subject; and though most people were
too stupid to be conscious of this it brought her endless small
consolations and revenges. She recognised quite as much those of
her sex whom she would have liked to help, to warn, to rescue, to
see more of; and that alternative as well operated exactly through
the hazard of personal sympathy, her vision for silver threads and
moonbeams and her gift for keeping the clues and finding her way in
the tangle. The moonbeams and silver threads presented at moments
all the vision of what poor SHE might have made of happiness.
Blurred and blank as the whole thing often inevitably, or
mercifully, became, she could still, through crevices and crannies,
be stupefied, especially by what, in spite of all seasoning,
touched the sorest place in her consciousness, the revelation of
the golden shower flying about without a gleam of gold for herself.
It remained prodigious to the end, the money her fine friends were
able to spend to get still more, or even to complain to fine
friends of their own that they were in want. The pleasures they
proposed were equalled only by those they declined, and they made
their appointments often so expensively that she was left wondering
at the nature of the delights to which the mere approaches were so
paved with shillings. She quivered on occasion into the perception
of this and that one whom she would on the chance have just simply
liked to BE. Her conceit, her baffled vanity, was possibly
monstrous; she certainly often threw herself into a defiant
conviction that she would have done the whole thing much better.
But her greatest comfort, mostly, was her comparative vision of the
men; by whom I mean the unmistakeable gentlemen, for she had no
interest in the spurious or the shabby and no mercy at all for the
poor. She could have found a sixpence, outside, for an appearance
of want; but her fancy, in some directions so alert, had never a
throb of response for any sign of the sordid. The men she did
track, moreover, she tracked mainly in one relation, the relation
as to which the cage convinced her, she believed, more than
anything else could have done, that it was quite the most diffused.

She found her ladies, in short, almost always in communication with
her gentlemen, and her gentlemen with her ladies, and she read into
the immensity of their intercourse stories and meanings without
end. Incontestably she grew to think that the men cut the best
figure; and in this particular, as in many others, she arrived at a
philosophy of her own, all made up of her private notations and
cynicisms. It was a striking part of the business, for example,
that it was much more the women, on the whole, who were after the
men than the men who were after the women: it was literally
visible that the general attitude of the one sex was that of the
object pursued and defensive, apologetic and attenuating, while the
light of her own nature helped her more or less to conclude as to
the attitude of the other. Perhaps she herself a little even fell
into the custom of pursuit in occasionally deviating only for
gentlemen from her high rigour about the stamps. She had early in
the day made up her mind, in fine, that they had the best manners;
and if there were none of them she noticed when Captain Everard was
there, there were plenty she could place and trace and name at
other times, plenty who, with their way of being "nice" to her, and
of handling, as if their pockets were private tills loose mixed
masses of silver and gold, were such pleasant appearances that she
could envy them without dislike. THEY never had to give change--
they only had to get it. They ranged through every suggestion,
every shade of fortune, which evidently included indeed lots of bad
luck as well as of good, declining even toward Mr. Mudge and his
bland firm thrift, and ascending, in wild signals and rocket-
flights, almost to within hail of her highest standard. So from
month to month she went on with them all, through a thousand ups
and downs and a thousand pangs and indifferences. What virtually
happened was that in the shuffling herd that passed before her by
far the greater part only passed--a proportion but just appreciable
stayed. Most of the elements swam straight away, lost themselves
in the bottomless common, and by so doing really kept the page
clear. On the clearness therefore what she did retain stood
sharply out; she nipped and caught it, turned it over and interwove
it.



CHAPTER VI



She met Mrs. Jordan when she could, and learned from her more and
more how the great people, under her gentle shake and after going
through everything with the mere shops, were waking up to the gain
of putting into the hands of a person of real refinement the
question that the shop-people spoke of so vulgarly as that of the
floral decorations. The regular dealers in these decorations were
all very well; but there was a peculiar magic in the play of taste
of a lady who had only to remember, through whatever intervening
dusk, all her own little tables, little bowls and little jars and
little other arrangements, and the wonderful thing she had made of
the garden of the vicarage. This small domain, which her young
friend had never seen, bloomed in Mrs. Jordan's discourse like a
new Eden, and she converted the past into a bank of violets by the
tone in which she said "Of course you always knew my one passion!"
She obviously met now, at any rate, a big contemporary need,
measured what it was rapidly becoming for people to feel they could
trust her without a tremor. It brought them a peace that--during
the quarter of an hour before dinner in especial--was worth more to
them than mere payment could express. Mere payment, none the less,
was tolerably prompt; she engaged by the month, taking over the
whole thing; and there was an evening on which, in respect to our
heroine, she at last returned to the charge. "It's growing and
growing, and I see that I must really divide the work. One wants
an associate--of one's own kind, don't you know? You know the look
they want it all to have?--of having come, not from a florist, but
from one of themselves. Well, I'm sure YOU could give it--because
you ARE one. Then we SHOULD win. Therefore just come in with me."

"And leave the P.O.?"

"Let the P.O. simply bring you your letters. It would bring you
lots, you'd see: orders, after a bit, by the score." It was on
this, in due course, that the great advantage again came up: "One
seems to live again with one's own people." It had taken some
little time (after their having parted company in the tempest of
their troubles and then, in the glimmering dawn, finally sighted
each other again) for each to admit that the other was, in her
private circle, her only equal, but the admission came, when it did
come, with an honest groan; and since equality was named, each
found much personal profit in exaggerating the other's original
grandeur. Mrs. Jordan was ten years the older, but her young
friend was struck with the smaller difference this now made: it
had counted otherwise at the time when, much more as a friend of
her mother's, the bereaved lady, without a penny of provision and
with stopgaps, like their own, all gone, had, across the sordid
landing on which the opposite doors of the pair of scared miseries
opened and to which they were bewilderedly bolted, borrowed coals
and umbrellas that were repaid in potatoes and postage-stamps. It
had been a questionable help, at that time, to ladies submerged,
floundering, panting, swimming for their lives, that they were
ladies; but such an advantage could come up again in proportion as
others vanished, and it had grown very great by the time it was the
only ghost of one they possessed. They had literally watched it
take to itself a portion of the substance of each that had
departed; and it became prodigious now, when they could talk of it
together, when they could look back at it across a desert of
accepted derogation, and when, above all, they could together work
up a credulity about it that neither could otherwise work up.
Nothing was really so marked as that they felt the need to
cultivate this legend much more after having found their feet and
stayed their stomachs in the ultimate obscure than they had done in
the upper air of mere frequent shocks. The thing they could now
oftenest say to each other was that they knew what they meant; and
the sentiment with which, all round, they knew it was known had
well-nigh amounted to a promise not again to fall apart.

Mrs. Jordan was at present fairly dazzling on the subject of the
way that, in the practice of her fairy art, as she called it, she
more than peeped in--she penetrated. There was not a house of the
great kind--and it was of course only a question of those, real
homes of luxury--in which she was not, at the rate such people now
had things, all over the place. The girl felt before the picture
the cold breath of disinheritance as much as she had ever felt it
in the cage; she knew moreover how much she betrayed this, for the
experience of poverty had begun, in her life, too early, and her
ignorance of the requirements of homes of luxury had grown, with
other active knowledge, a depth of simplification. She had
accordingly at first often found that in these colloquies she could
only pretend she understood. Educated as she had rapidly been by
her chances at Cocker's, there were still strange gaps in her
learning--she could never, like Mrs. Jordan, have found her way
about one of the "homes." Little by little, however, she had
caught on, above all in the light of what Mrs. Jordan's redemption
had materially made of that lady, giving her, though the years and
the struggles had naturally not straightened a feature, an almost
super-eminent air. There were women in and out of Cocker's who
were quite nice and who yet didn't look well; whereas Mrs. Jordan
looked well and yet, with her extraordinarily protrusive teeth, was
by no means quite nice. It would seem, mystifyingly, that it might
really come from all the greatness she could live with. It was
fine to hear her talk so often of dinners of twenty and of her
doing, as she said, exactly as she liked with them. She spoke as
if, for that matter, she invited the company. "They simply give me
the table--all the rest, all the other effects, come afterwards."



CHAPTER VII



"Then you DO see them?" the girl again asked.

Mrs. Jordan hesitated, and indeed the point had been ambiguous
before. "Do you mean the guests?"

Her young friend, cautious about an undue exposure of innocence,
was not quite sure. "Well--the people who live there."

"Lady Ventnor? Mrs. Bubb? Lord Rye? Dear, yes. Why they LIKE
one."

"But does one personally KNOW them?" our young lady went on, since
that was the way to speak. "I mean socially, don't you know?--as
you know ME."

"They're not so nice as you!" Mrs. Jordan charmingly cried. "But I
SHALL see more and more of them."

Ah this was the old story. "But how soon?"

"Why almost any day. Of course," Mrs. Jordan honestly added,
"they're nearly always out."

"Then why do they want flowers all over?"

"Oh that doesn't make any difference." Mrs. Jordan was not
philosophic; she was just evidently determined it SHOULDN'T make
any. "They're awfully interested in my ideas, and it's inevitable
they should meet me over them."

Her interlocutress was sturdy enough. "What do you call your
ideas?"

Mrs. Jordan's reply was fine. "If you were to see me some day with
a thousand tulips you'd discover."

"A thousand?"--the girl gaped at such a revelation of the scale of
it; she felt for the instant fairly planted out. "Well, but if in
fact they never do meet you?" she none the less pessimistically
insisted.

"Never? They OFTEN do--and evidently quite on purpose. We have
grand long talks."

There was something in our young lady that could still stay her
from asking for a personal description of these apparitions; that
showed too starved a state. But while she considered she took in
afresh the whole of the clergyman's widow. Mrs. Jordan couldn't
help her teeth, and her sleeves were a distinct rise in the world.
A thousand tulips at a shilling clearly took one further than a
thousand words at a penny; and the betrothed of Mr. Mudge, in whom
the sense of the race for life was always acute, found herself
wondering, with a twinge of her easy jealousy, if it mightn't after
all then, for HER also, be better--better than where she was--to
follow some such scent. Where she was was where Mr. Buckton's
elbow could freely enter her right side and the counter-clerk's
breathing--he had something the matter with his nose--pervade her
left ear. It was something to fill an office under Government, and
she knew but too well there were places commoner still than
Cocker's; but it needed no great range of taste to bring home to
her the picture of servitude and promiscuity she couldn't but offer
to the eye of comparative freedom. She was so boxed up with her
young men, and anything like a margin so absent, that it needed
more art than she should ever possess to pretend in the least to
compass, with any one in the nature of an acquaintance--say with
Mrs. Jordan herself, flying in, as it might happen, to wire
sympathetically to Mrs. Bubb--an approach to a relation of elegant
privacy. She remembered the day when Mrs. Jordan HAD, in fact, by
the greatest chance, come in with fifty-three words for Lord Rye
and a five-pound note to change. This had been the dramatic manner
of their reunion--their mutual recognition was so great an event.
The girl could at first only see her from the waist up, besides
making but little of her long telegram to his lordship. It was a
strange whirligig that had converted the clergyman's widow into
such a specimen of the class that went beyond the sixpence.

Nothing of the occasion, all the more, had ever become dim; least
of all the way that, as her recovered friend looked up from
counting, Mrs. Jordan had just blown, in explanation, through her
teeth and through the bars of the cage: "I DO flowers, you know."
Our young woman had always, with her little finger crooked out, a
pretty movement for counting; and she had not forgotten the small
secret advantage, a sharpness of triumph it might even have been
called, that fell upon her at this moment and avenged her for the
incoherence of the message, an unintelligible enumeration of
numbers, colours, days, hours. The correspondence of people she
didn't know was one thing; but the correspondence of people she did
had an aspect of its own for her even when she couldn't understand
it. The speech in which Mrs. Jordan had defined a position and
announced a profession was like a tinkle of bluebells; but for
herself her one idea about flowers was that people had them at
funerals, and her present sole gleam of light was that lords
probably had them most. When she watched, a minute later, through
the cage, the swing of her visitor's departing petticoats, she saw
the sight from the waist down; and when the counter-clerk, after a
mere male glance, remarked, with an intention unmistakeably low,
"Handsome woman!" she had for him the finest of her chills: "She's
the widow of a bishop." She always felt, with the counter-clerk,
that it was impossible sufficiently to put it on; for what she
wished to express to him was the maximum of her contempt, and that
element in her nature was confusedly stored. "A bishop" was
putting it on, but the counter-clerk's approaches were vile. The
night, after this, when, in the fulness of time, Mrs. Jordan
mentioned the grand long talks, the girl at last brought out:
"Should I see them?--I mean if I WERE to give up everything for
you."

Mrs. Jordan at this became most arch. "I'd send you to all the
bachelors!"

Our young lady could be reminded by such a remark that she usually
struck her friend as pretty. "Do THEY have their flowers?"

"Oceans. And they're the most particular." Oh it was a wonderful
world. "You should see Lord Rye's."

"His flowers?"

"Yes, and his letters. He writes me pages on pages--with the most
adorable little drawings and plans. You should see his diagrams!"



CHAPTER VIII



The girl had in course of time every opportunity to inspect these
documents, and they a little disappointed her; but in the mean
while there had been more talk, and it had led to her saying, as if
her friend's guarantee of a life of elegance were not quite
definite: "Well, I see every one at MY place."

"Every one?"

"Lots of swells. They flock. They live, you know, all round, and
the place is filled with all the smart people, all the fast people,
those whose names are in the papers--mamma has still The Morning
Post--and who come up for the season."

Mrs. Jordan took this in with complete intelligence. "Yes, and I
dare say it's some of your people that I do."

Her companion assented, but discriminated. "I doubt if you 'do'
them as much as I! Their affairs, their appointments and
arrangements, their little games and secrets and vices--those
things all pass before me."

This was a picture that could make a clergyman's widow not
imperceptibly gasp; it was in intention moreover something of a
retort to the thousand tulips. "Their vices? Have they got
vices?"

Our young critic even more overtly stared then with a touch of
contempt in her amusement: "Haven't you found THAT out?" The
homes of luxury then hadn't so much to give. "I find out
everything."

Mrs. Jordan, at bottom a very meek person, was visibly struck. "I
see. You do 'have' them."

"Oh I don't care! Much good it does me!"

Mrs. Jordan after an instant recovered her superiority. "No--it
doesn't lead to much." Her own initiations so clearly did. Still-
-after all; and she was not jealous: "There must be a charm."

"In seeing them?" At this the girl suddenly let herself go. "I
hate them. There's that charm!"

Mrs. Jordan gaped again. "The REAL 'smarts'?"

"Is that what you call Mrs. Bubb? Yes--it comes to me; I've had
Mrs. Bubb. I don't think she has been in herself, but there are
things her maid has brought. Well, my dear!"--and the young person
from Cocker's, recalling these things and summing them up, seemed
suddenly to have much to say. She didn't say it, however; she
checked it; she only brought out: "Her maid, who's horrid--SHE
must have her!" Then she went on with indifference: "They're TOO
real! They're selfish brutes."

Mrs. Jordan, turning it over, adopted at last the plan of treating
it with a smile. She wished to be liberal. "Well, of course, they
do lay it out."

"They bore me to death," her companion pursued with slightly more
temperance.

But this was going too far. "Ah that's because you've no
sympathy!"

The girl gave an ironic laugh, only retorting that nobody could
have any who had to count all day all the words in the dictionary;
a contention Mrs. Jordan quite granted, the more that she shuddered
at the notion of ever failing of the very gift to which she owed
the vogue--the rage she might call it--that had caught her up.
Without sympathy--or without imagination, for it came back again to
that--how should she get, for big dinners, down the middle and
toward the far corners at all? It wasn't the combinations, which
were easily managed: the strain was over the ineffable
simplicities, those that the bachelors above all, and Lord Rye
perhaps most of any, threw off--just blew off like cigarette-puffs-
-such sketches of. The betrothed of Mr. Mudge at all events
accepted the explanation, which had the effect, as almost any turn
of their talk was now apt to have, of bringing her round to the
terrific question of that gentleman. She was tormented with the
desire to get out of Mrs. Jordan, on this subject, what she was
sure was at the back of Mrs. Jordan's head; and to get it out of
her, queerly enough, if only to vent a certain irritation at it.
She knew that what her friend would already have risked if she
hadn't been timid and tortuous was: "Give him up--yes, give him
up: you'll see that with your sure chances you'll be able to do
much better."

Our young woman had a sense that if that view could only be put
before her with a particular sniff for poor Mr. Mudge she should
hate it as much as she morally ought. She was conscious of not, as
yet, hating it quite so much as that. But she saw that Mrs. Jordan
was conscious of something too, and that there was a degree of
confidence she was waiting little by little to arrive at. The day
came when the girl caught a glimpse of what was still wanting to
make her friend feel strong; which was nothing less than the
prospect of being able to announce the climax of sundry private
dreams. The associate of the aristocracy had personal
calculations--matter for brooding and dreaming, even for peeping
out not quite hopelessly from behind the window-curtains of lonely
lodgings. If she did the flowers for the bachelors, in short,
didn't she expect that to have consequences very different from
such an outlook at Cocker's as she had pronounced wholly desperate?
There seemed in very truth something auspicious in the mixture of
bachelors and flowers, though, when looked hard in the eye, Mrs.
Jordan was not quite prepared to say she had expected a positive
proposal from Lord Rye to pop out of it. Our young woman arrived
at last, none the less, at a definite vision of what was in her
mind. This was a vivid foreknowledge that the betrothed of Mr.
Mudge would, unless conciliated in advance by a successful rescue,
almost hate her on the day she should break a particular piece of
news. How could that unfortunate otherwise endure to hear of what,
under the protection of Lady Ventnor, was after all so possible



CHAPTER IX



Meanwhile, since irritation sometimes relieved her, the betrothed
of Mr. Mudge found herself indebted to that admirer for amounts of
it perfectly proportioned to her fidelity. She always walked with
him on Sundays, usually in the Regent's Park, and quite often, once
or twice a month he took her, in the Strand or thereabouts, to see
a piece that was having a run. The productions he always preferred
were the really good ones--Shakespeare, Thompson or some funny
American thing; which, as it also happened that she hated vulgar
plays, gave him ground for what was almost the fondest of his
approaches, the theory that their tastes were, blissfully, just the
same. He was for ever reminding her of that, rejoicing over it and
being affectionate and wise about it. There were times when she
wondered how in the world she could "put up with" him, how she
could put up with any man so smugly unconscious of the immensity of
her difference. It was just for this difference that, if she was
to be liked at all, she wanted to be liked, and if that was not the
source of Mr. Mudge's admiration, she asked herself what on earth
COULD be? She was not different only at one point, she was
different all round; unless perhaps indeed in being practically
human, which her mind just barely recognised that he also was. She
would have made tremendous concessions in other quarters: there
was no limit for instance to those she would have made to Captain
Everard; but what I have named was the most she was prepared to do
for Mr. Mudge. It was because HE was different that, in the oddest
way, she liked as well as deplored him; which was after all a proof
that the disparity, should they frankly recognise it, wouldn't
necessarily be fatal. She felt that, oleaginous--too oleaginous--
as he was, he was somehow comparatively primitive: she had once,
during the portion of his time at Cocker's that had overlapped her
own, seen him collar a drunken soldier, a big violent man who,
having come in with a mate to get a postal-order cashed, had made a
grab at the money before his friend could reach it and had so
determined, among the hams and cheeses and the lodgers from
Thrupp's, immediate and alarming reprisals, a scene of scandal and
consternation. Mr. Buckton and the counter-clerk had crouched
within the cage, but Mr. Mudge had, with a very quiet but very
quick step round the counter, an air of masterful authority she
shouldn't soon forget, triumphantly interposed in the scrimmage,
parted the combatants and shaken the delinquent in his skin. She
had been proud of him at that moment, and had felt that if their
affair had not already been settled the neatness of his execution
would have left her without resistance.

Their affair had been settled by other things: by the evident
sincerity of his passion and by the sense that his high white apron
resembled a front of many floors. It had gone a great way with her
that he would build up a business to his chin, which he carried
quite in the air. This could only be a question of time; he would
have all Piccadilly in the pen behind his ear. That was a merit in
itself for a girl who had known what she had known. There were
hours at which she even found him good-looking, though, frankly
there could be no crown for her effort to imagine on the part of
the tailor or the barber some such treatment of his appearance as
would make him resemble even remotely a man of the world. His very
beauty was the beauty of a grocer, and the finest future would
offer it none too much room consistently to develop. She had
engaged herself in short to the perfection of a type, and almost
anything square and smooth and whole had its weight for a person
still conscious herself of being a mere bruised fragment of
wreckage. But it contributed hugely at present to carry on the two
parallel lines of her experience in the cage and her experience out
of it. After keeping quiet for some time about this opposition she
suddenly--one Sunday afternoon on a penny chair in the Regent's
Park--broke, for him, capriciously, bewilderingly, into an
intimation of what it came to. He had naturally pressed more and
more on the point of her again placing herself where he could see
her hourly, and for her to recognise that she had as yet given him
no sane reason for delay he had small need to describe himself as
unable to make out what she was up to. As if, with her absurd bad
reasons, she could have begun to tell him! Sometimes she thought
it would be amusing to let him have them full in the face, for she
felt she should die of him unless she once in a while stupefied
him; and sometimes she thought it would be disgusting and perhaps
even fatal. She liked him, however, to think her silly, for that
gave her the margin which at the best she would always require; and
the only difficulty about this was that he hadn't enough
imagination to oblige her. It produced none the less something of
the desired effect--to leave him simply wondering why, over the
matter of their reunion, she didn't yield to his arguments. Then
at last, simply as if by accident and out of mere boredom on a day
that was rather flat, she preposterously produced her own. "Well,
wait a bit. Where I am I still see things." And she talked to him
even worse, if possible, than she had talked to Jordan.

Little by little, to her own stupefaction, she caught that he was
trying to take it as she meant it and that he was neither
astonished nor angry. Oh the British tradesman--this gave her an
idea of his resources! Mr. Mudge would be angry only with a person
who, like the drunken soldier in the shop, should have an
unfavourable effect on business. He seemed positively to enter,
for the time and without the faintest flash of irony or ripple of
laughter, into the whimsical grounds of her enjoyment of Cocker's
custom, and instantly to be casting up whatever it might, as Mrs.
Jordan had said, lead to. What he had in mind was not of course
what Mrs. Jordan had had: it was obviously not a source of
speculation with him that his sweetheart might pick up a husband.
She could see perfectly that this was not for a moment even what he
supposed she herself dreamed of. What she had done was simply to
give his sensibility another push into the dim vast of trade. In
that direction it was all alert, and she had whisked before it the
mild fragrance of a "connexion." That was the most he could see in
any account of her keeping in, on whatever roundabout lines, with
the gentry; and when, getting to the bottom of this, she quickly
proceeded to show him the kind of eye she turned on such people and
to give him a sketch of what that eye discovered, she reduced him
to the particular prostration in which he could still be amusing to
her.



CHAPTER X



"They're the most awful wretches, I assure you--the lot all about
there."

"Then why do you want to stay among them?"

"My dear man, just because they ARE. It makes me hate them so."

"Hate them? I thought you liked them."

"Don't be stupid. What I 'like' is just to loathe them. You
wouldn't believe what passes before my eyes."

"Then why have you never told me? You didn't mention anything
before I left."

"Oh I hadn't got round to it then. It's the sort of thing you
don't believe at first; you have to look round you a bit and then
you understand. You work into it more and more. Besides," the
girl went on, "this is the time of the year when the worst lot come
up. They're simply packed together in those smart streets. Talk
of the numbers of the poor! What I can vouch for is the numbers of
the rich! There are new ones every day, and they seem to get
richer and richer. Oh, they do come up!" she cried, imitating for
her private recreation--she was sure it wouldn't reach Mr. Mudge--
the low intonation of the counter-clerk.

"And where do they come from?" her companion candidly enquired.

She had to think a moment; then she found something. "From the
'spring meetings.' They bet tremendously."

"Well, they bet enough at Chalk Farm, if that's all."

"It ISN'T all. It isn't a millionth part!" she replied with some
sharpness. "It's immense fun"--she HAD to tantalise him. Then as
she had heard Mrs. Jordan say, and as the ladies at Cocker's even
sometimes wired, "It's quite too dreadful!" She could fully feel
how it was Mr. Mudge's propriety, which was extreme--he had a
horror of coarseness and attended a Wesleyan chapel--that prevented
his asking for details. But she gave him some of the more
innocuous in spite of himself, especially putting before him how,
at Simpkin's and Ladle's, they all made the money fly. That was
indeed what he liked to hear: the connexion was not direct, but
one was somehow more in the right place where the money was flying
than where it was simply and meagrely nesting. The air felt that
stir, he had to acknowledge, much less at Chalk Farm than in the
district in which his beloved so oddly enjoyed her footing. She
gave him, she could see, a restless sense that these might be
familiarities not to be sacrificed; germs, possibilities, faint
foreshowings--heaven knew what--of the initiation it would prove
profitable to have arrived at when in the fulness of time he should
have his own shop in some such paradise. What really touched him--
that was discernible--was that she could feed him with so much mere
vividness of reminder, keep before him, as by the play of a fan,
the very wind of the swift bank-notes and the charm of the
existence of a class that Providence had raised up to be the
blessing of grocers. He liked to think that the class was there,
that it was always there, and that she contributed in her slight
but appreciable degree to keep it up to the mark. He couldn't have
formulated his theory of the matter, but the exuberance of the
aristocracy was the advantage of trade, and everything was knit
together in a richness of pattern that it was good to follow with
one's finger-tips. It was a comfort to him to be thus assured that
there were no symptoms of a drop. What did the sounder, as she
called it, nimbly worked, do but keep the ball going?

What it came to therefore for Mr. Mudge was that all enjoyments
were, as might be said, inter-related, and that the more people had
the more they wanted to have. The more flirtations, as he might
roughly express it, the more cheese and pickles. He had even in
his own small way been dimly struck with the linked sweetness
connecting the tender passion with cheap champagne, or perhaps the
other way round. What he would have liked to say had he been able
to work out his thought to the end was: "I see, I see. Lash them
up then, lead them on, keep them going: some of it can't help,
some time, coming OUR way." Yet he was troubled by the suspicion
of subtleties on his companion's part that spoiled the straight
view. He couldn't understand people's hating what they liked or
liking what they hated; above all it hurt him somewhere--for he had
his private delicacies--to see anything BUT money made out of his
betters. To be too enquiring, or in any other way too free, at the
expense of the gentry was vaguely wrong; the only thing that was
distinctly right was to be prosperous at any price. Wasn't it just
because they were up there aloft that they were lucrative? He
concluded at any rate by saying to his young friend: "If it's
improper for you to remain at Cocker's, then that falls in exactly
with the other reasons I've put before you for your removal."

"Improper?"--her smile became a prolonged boldness. "My dear boy,
there's no one like you!"

"I dare say," he laughed; "but that doesn't help the question."

"Well," she returned, "I can't give up my friends. I'm making even
more than Mrs. Jordan."

Mr. Mudge considered. "How much is SHE making?"

"Oh you dear donkey!"--and, regardless of all the Regent's Park,
she patted his cheek. This was the sort of moment at which she was
absolutely tempted to tell him that she liked to be near Park
Chambers. There was a fascination in the idea of seeing if, on a
mention of Captain Everard, he wouldn't do what she thought he
might; wouldn't weigh against the obvious objection the still more
obvious advantage. The advantage of course could only strike him
at the best as rather fantastic; but it was always to the good to
keep hold when you HAD hold, and such an attitude would also after
all involve a high tribute to her fidelity. Of one thing she
absolutely never doubted: Mr. Mudge believed in her with a belief-
-! She believed in herself too, for that matter: if there was a
thing in the world no one could charge her with it was being the
kind of low barmaid person who rinsed tumblers and bandied slang.
But she forbore as yet to speak; she had not spoken even to Mrs.
Jordan; and the hush that on her lips surrounded the Captain's name
maintained itself as a kind of symbol of the success that, up to
this time, had attended something or other--she couldn't have said
what--that she humoured herself with calling, without words, her
relation with him.



CHAPTER XI



She would have admitted indeed that it consisted of little more
than the fact that his absences, however frequent and however long,
always ended with his turning up again. It was nobody's business
in the world but her own if that fact continued to be enough for
her. It was of course not enough just in itself; what it had taken
on to make it so was the extraordinary possession of the elements
of his life that memory and attention had at last given her. There
came a day when this possession on the girl's part actually seemed
to enjoy between them, while their eyes met, a tacit recognition
that was half a joke and half a deep solemnity. He bade her good
morning always now; he often quite raised his hat to her. He
passed a remark when there was time or room, and once she went so
far as to say to him that she hadn't seen him for "ages." "Ages"
was the word she consciously and carefully, though a trifle
tremulously used; "ages" was exactly what she meant. To this he
replied in terms doubtless less anxiously selected, but perhaps on
that account not the less remarkable, "Oh yes, hasn't it been
awfully wet?" That was a specimen of their give and take; it fed
her fancy that no form of intercourse so transcendent and distilled
had ever been established on earth. Everything, so far as they
chose to consider it so, might mean almost anything. The want of
margin in the cage, when he peeped through the bars, wholly ceased
to be appreciable. It was a drawback only in superficial commerce.
With Captain Everard she had simply the margin of the universe. It
may be imagined therefore how their unuttered reference to all she
knew about him could in this immensity play at its ease. Every
time he handed in a telegram it was an addition to her knowledge:
what did his constant smile mean to mark if it didn't mean to mark
that? He never came into the place without saying to her in this
manner: "Oh yes, you have me by this time so completely at your
mercy that it doesn't in the least matter what I give you now.
You've become a comfort, I assure you!"

She had only two torments; the greatest of which was that she
couldn't, not even once or twice, touch with him on some individual
fact. She would have given anything to have been able to allude to
one of his friends by name, to one of his engagements by date, to
one of his difficulties by the solution. She would have given
almost as much for just the right chance--it would have to be
tremendously right--to show him in some sharp sweet way that she
had perfectly penetrated the greatest of these last and now lived
with it in a kind of heroism of sympathy. He was in love with a
woman to whom, and to any view of whom, a lady-telegraphist, and
especially one who passed a life among hams and cheeses, was as the
sand on the floor; and what her dreams desired was the possibility
of its somehow coming to him that her own interest in him could
take a pure and noble account of such an infatuation and even of
such an impropriety. As yet, however, she could only rub along
with the hope that an accident, sooner or later, might give her a
lift toward popping out with something that would surprise and
perhaps even, some fine day, assist him. What could people mean
moreover--cheaply sarcastic people--by not feeling all that could
be got out of the weather? SHE felt it all, and seemed literally
to feel it most when she went quite wrong, speaking of the stuffy
days as cold, of the cold ones as stuffy, and betraying how little
she knew, in her cage, of whether it was foul or fair. It was for
that matter always stuffy at Cocker's, and she finally settled down
to the safe proposition that the outside element was "changeable."
Anything seemed true that made him so radiantly assent.

This indeed is a small specimen of her cultivation of insidious
ways of making things easy for him--ways to which of course she
couldn't be at all sure he did real justice. Real justice was not
of this world: she had had too often to come back to that; yet,
strangely, happiness was, and her traps had to be set for it in a
manner to keep them unperceived by Mr. Buckton and the counter-
clerk. The most she could hope for apart from the question, which
constantly flickered up and died down, of the divine chance of his
consciously liking her, would be that, without analysing it, he
should arrive at a vague sense that Cocker's was--well, attractive;
easier, smoother, sociably brighter, slightly more picturesque, in
short more propitious in general to his little affairs, than any
other establishment just thereabouts. She was quite aware that
they couldn't be, in so huddled a hole, particularly quick; but she
found her account in the slowness--she certainly could bear it if
HE could. The great pang was that just thereabouts post-offices
were so awfully thick. She was always seeing him in imagination in
other places and with other girls. But she would defy any other
girl to follow him as she followed. And though they weren't, for
so many reasons, quick at Cocker's, she could hurry for him when,
through an intimation light as air, she gathered that he was
pressed.

When hurry was, better still, impossible, it was because of the
pleasantest thing of all, the particular element of their contact--
she would have called it their friendship--that consisted of an
almost humorous treatment of the look of some of his words. They
would never perhaps have grown half so intimate if he had not, by
the blessing of heaven, formed some of his letters with a
queerness--! It was positive that the queerness could scarce have
been greater if he had practised it for the very purpose of
bringing their heads together over it as far as was possible to
heads on different sides of a wire fence. It had taken her truly
but once or twice to master these tricks, but, at the cost of
striking him perhaps as stupid, she could still challenge them when
circumstances favoured. The great circumstance that favoured was
that she sometimes actually believed he knew she only feigned
perplexity. If he knew it therefore he tolerated it; if he
tolerated it he came back; and if he came back he liked her. This
was her seventh heaven; and she didn't ask much of his liking--she
only asked of it to reach the point of his not going away because
of her own. He had at times to be away for weeks; he had to lead
lets life; he had to travel--there were places to which he was
constantly wiring for "rooms": all this she granted him, forgave
him; in fact, in the long run, literally blessed and thanked him
for. If he had to lead his life, that precisely fostered his
leading it so much by telegraph: therefore the benediction was to
come in when he could. That was all she asked--that he shouldn't
wholly deprive her.

Sometimes she almost felt that he couldn't have deprived her even
had he been minded, by reason of the web of revelation that was
woven between them. She quite thrilled herself with thinking what,
with such a lot of material, a bad girl would do. It would be a
scene better than many in her ha'penny novels, this going to him in
the dusk of evening at Park Chambers and letting him at last have
it. "I know too much about a certain person now not to put it to
you--excuse my being so lurid--that it's quite worth your while to
buy me off. Come, therefore; buy me!" There was a point indeed at
which such flights had to drop again--the point of an unreadiness
to name, when it came to that, the purchasing medium. It wouldn't
certainly be anything so gross as money, and the matter accordingly
remained rather vague, all the more that SHE was not a bad girl.
It wasn't for any such reason as might have aggravated a mere minx
that she often hoped he would again bring Cissy. The difficulty of
this, however, was constantly present to her, for the kind of
communion to which Cocker's so richly ministered rested on the fact
that Cissy and he were so often in different places. She knew by
this time all the places--Suchbury, Monkhouse, Whiteroy, Finches--
and even how the parties on these occasions were composed; but her
subtlety found ways to make her knowledge fairly protect and
promote their keeping, as she had heard Mrs. Jordan say, in touch.
So, when he actually sometimes smiled as if he really felt the
awkwardness of giving her again one of the same old addresses, all
her being went out in the desire--which her face must have
expressed--that he should recognise her forbearance to criticise as
one of the finest tenderest sacrifices a woman had ever made for
love.



CHAPTER XII



She was occasionally worried, however this might be, by the
impression that these sacrifices, great as they were, were nothing
to those that his own passion had imposed; if indeed it was not
rather the passion of his confederate, which had caught him up and
was whirling him round like a great steam-wheel. He was at any
rate in the strong grip of a dizzy splendid fate; the wild wind of
his life blew him straight before it. Didn't she catch in his face
at times, even through his smile and his happy habit, the gleam of
that pale glare with which a bewildered victim appeals, as he
passes, to some pair of pitying eyes? He perhaps didn't even
himself know how scared he was; but SHE knew. They were in danger,
they were in danger, Captain Everard and Lady Bradeen: it beat
every novel in the shop. She thought of Mr. Mudge and his safe
sentiment; she thought of herself and blushed even more for her
tepid response to it. It was a comfort to her at such moments to
feel that in another relation--a relation supplying that affinity
with her nature that Mr. Mudge, deluded creature, would never
supply--she should have been no more tepid than her ladyship. Her
deepest soundings were on two or three occasions of finding herself
almost sure that, if she dared, her ladyship's lover would have
gathered relief from "speaking" to her. She literally fancied once
or twice that, projected as he was toward his doom, her own eyes
struck him, while the air roared in his ears, as the one pitying
pair in the crowd. But how could he speak to her while she sat
sandwiched there between the counter-clerk and the sounder?

She had long ago, in her comings and goings made acquaintance with
Park Chambers and reflected as she looked up at their luxurious
front that they of course would supply the ideal setting for the
ideal speech. There was not an object in London that, before the
season was over, was more stamped upon her brain. She went
roundabout to pass it, for it was not on the short way; she passed
on the opposite side of the street and always looked up, though it
had taken her a long time to be sure of the particular set of
windows. She had made that out finally by an act of audacity that
at the time had almost stopped her heart-beats and that in
retrospect greatly quickened her blushes. One evening she had
lingered late and watched--watched for some moment when the porter,
who was in uniform and often on the steps, had gone in with a
visitor. Then she followed boldly, on the calculation that he
would have taken the visitor up and that the hall would be free.
The hall WAS free, and the electric light played over the gilded
and lettered board that showed the names and numbers of the
occupants of the different floors. What she wanted looked straight
at her--Captain Everard was on the third. It was as if, in the
immense intimacy of this, they were, for the instant and the first
time, face to face outside the cage. Alas! they were face to face
but a second or two: she was whirled out on the wings of a panic
fear that he might just then be entering or issuing. This fear was
indeed, in her shameless deflexions, never very far from her, and
was mixed in the oddest way with depressions and disappointments.
It was dreadful, as she trembled by, to run the risk of looking to
him as if she basely hung about; and yet it was dreadful to be
obliged to pass only at such moments as put an encounter out of the
question.

At the horrible hour of her first coming to Cocker's he was always-
-it was to be hoped--snug in bed; and at the hour of her final
departure he was of course--she had such things all on her
fingers'-ends--dressing for dinner. We may let it pass that if she
couldn't bring herself to hover till he was dressed, this was
simply because such a process for such a person could only be
terribly prolonged. When she went in the middle of the day to her
own dinner she had too little time to do anything but go straight,
though it must be added that for a real certainty she would
joyously have omitted the repast. She had made up her mind as to
there being on the whole no decent pretext to justify her flitting
casually past at three o'clock in the morning. That was the hour
at which, if the ha'penny novels were not all wrong, he probably
came home for the night. She was therefore reduced to the vainest
figuration of the miraculous meeting toward which a hundred
impossibilities would have to conspire. But if nothing was more
impossible than the fact, nothing was more intense than the vision.
What may not, we can only moralise, take place in the quickened
muffled perception of a young person with an ardent soul? All our
humble friend's native distinction, her refinement of personal
grain, of heredity, of pride, took refuge in this small throbbing
spot; for when she was most conscious of the objection of her
vanity and the pitifulness of her little flutters and manoeuvres,
then the consolation and the redemption were most sure to glow
before her in some just discernible sign. He did like her!



CHAPTER XIII



He never brought Cissy back, but Cissy came one day without him, as
fresh as before from the hands of Marguerite, or only, at the
season's end, a trifle less fresh. She was, however, distinctly
less serene. She had brought nothing with her and looked about
with impatience for the forms and the place to write. The latter
convenience, at Cocker's, was obscure and barely adequate, and her
clear voice had the light note of disgust which her lover's never
showed as she responded with a "There?" of surprise to the gesture
made by the counter-clerk in answer to her sharp question. Our
young friend was busy with half a dozen people, but she had
dispatched them in her most businesslike manner by the time her
ladyship flung through the bars this light of re-appearance. Then
the directness with which the girl managed to receive the
accompanying missive was the result of the concentration that had
caused her to make the stamps fly during the few minutes occupied
by the production of it. This concentration, in turn, may be
described as the effect of the apprehension of imminent relief. It
was nineteen days, counted and checked off, since she had seen the
object of her homage; and as, had he been in London, she should,
with his habits, have been sure to see him often, she was now about
to learn what other spot his presence might just then happen to
sanctify. For she thought of them, the other spots, as
ecstatically conscious of it, expressively happy in it.

But, gracious, how handsome was her ladyship, and what an added
price it gave him that the air of intimacy he threw out should have
flowed originally from such a source! The girl looked straight
through the cage at the eyes and lips that must so often have been
so near as own--looked at them with a strange passion that for an
instant had the result of filling out some of the gaps, supplying
the missing answers, in his correspondence. Then as she made out
that the features she thus scanned and associated were totally
unaware of it, that they glowed only with the colour of quite other
and not at all guessable thoughts, this directly added to their
splendour, gave the girl the sharpest impression she had yet
received of the uplifted, the unattainable plains of heaven, and
yet at the same time caused her to thrill with a sense of the high
company she did somehow keep. She was with the absent through her
ladyship and with her ladyship through the absent. The only pang--
but it didn't matter--was the proof in the admirable face, in the
sightless preoccupation of its possessor, that the latter hadn't a
notion of her. Her folly had gone to the point of half believing
that the other party to the affair must sometimes mention in Eaton
Square the extraordinary little person at the place from which he
so often wired. Yet the perception of her visitor's blankness
actually helped this extraordinary little person, the next instant,
to take refuge in a reflexion that could be as proud as it liked.
"How little she knows, how little she knows!" the girl cried to
herself; for what did that show after all but that Captain
Everard's telegraphic confidant was Captain Everard's charming
secret? Our young friend's perusal of her ladyship's telegram was
literally prolonged by a momentary daze: what swam between her and
the words, making her see them as through rippled shallow sunshot
water, was the great, the perpetual flood of "How much I know--how
much I know!" This produced a delay in her catching that, on the
face, these words didn't give her what she wanted, though she was
prompt enough with her remembrance that her grasp was, half the
time, just of what was NOT on the face. "Miss Dolman, Parade
Lodge, Parade Terrace, Dover. Let him instantly know right one,
Hotel de France, Ostend. Make it seven nine four nine six one.
Wire me alternative Burfield's."

The girl slowly counted. Then he was at Ostend. This hooked on
with so sharp a click that, not to feel she was as quickly letting
it all slip from her, she had absolutely to hold it a minute longer
and to do something to that end. Thus it was that she did on this
occasion what she never did--threw off a "Reply paid?" that sounded
officious, but that she partly made up for by deliberately affixing
the stamps and by waiting till she had done so to give change. She
had, for so much coolness, the strength that she considered she
knew all about Miss Dolman.

"Yes--paid." She saw all sorts of things in this reply, even to a
small suppressed start of surprise at so correct an assumption;
even to an attempt the next minute at a fresh air of detachment.
"How much, with the answer?" The calculation was not abstruse, but
our intense observer required a moment more to make it, and this
gave her ladyship time for a second thought. "Oh just wait!" The
white begemmed hand bared to write rose in sudden nervousness to
the side of the wonderful face which, with eyes of anxiety for the
paper on the counter, she brought closer to the bars of the cage.
"I think I must alter a word!" On this she recovered her telegram
and looked over it again; but she had a new, an obvious trouble,
and studied it without deciding and with much of the effect of
making our young woman watch her.

This personage, meanwhile, at the sight of her expression, had
decided on the spot. If she had always been sure they were in
danger her ladyship's expression was the best possible sign of it.
There was a word wrong, but she had lost the right one, and much
clearly depended on her finding it again. The girl, therefore,
sufficiently estimating the affluence of customers and the
distraction of Mr. Buckton and the counter-clerk, took the jump and
gave it. "Isn't it Cooper's?"

It was as if she had bodily leaped--cleared the top of the cage and
alighted on her interlocutress. "Cooper's?"--the stare was
heightened by a blush. Yes, she had made Juno blush.

This was all the greater reason for going on. "I mean instead of
Burfield's."

Our young friend fairly pitied her; she had made her in an instant
so helpless, and yet not a bit haughty nor outraged. She was only
mystified and scared. "Oh, you know--?"

"Yes, I know!" Our young friend smiled, meeting the other's eyes,
and, having made Juno blush, proceeded to patronise her. "I'LL do
it"--she put out a competent hand. Her ladyship only submitted,
confused and bewildered, all presence of mind quite gone; and the
next moment the telegram was in the cage again and its author out
of the shop. Then quickly, boldly, under all the eyes that might
have witnessed her tampering, the extraordinary little person at
Cocker's made the proper change. People were really too giddy, and
if they WERE, in a certain case, to be caught, it shouldn't be the
fault of her own grand memory. Hadn't it been settled weeks
before?--for Miss Dolman it was always to be "Cooper's."



CHAPTER XIV



But the summer "holidays" brought a marked difference; they were
holidays for almost every one but the animals in the cage. The
August days were flat and dry, and, with so little to feed it, she
was conscious of the ebb of her interest in the secrets of the
refined. She was in a position to follow the refined to the extent
of knowing--they had made so many of their arrangements with her
aid--exactly where they were; yet she felt quite as if the panorama
had ceased unrolling and the band stopped playing. A stray member
of the latter occasionally turned up, but the communications that
passed before her bore now largely on rooms at hotels, prices of
furnished houses, hours of trains, dates of sailings and
arrangements for being "met"; she found them for the most part
prosaic and coarse. The only thing was that they brought into her
stuffy corner as straight a whiff of Alpine meadows and Scotch
moors as she might hope ever to inhale; there were moreover in
especial fat hot dull ladies who had out with her, to exasperation,
the terms for seaside lodgings, which struck her as huge, and the
matter of the number of beds required, which was not less
portentous: this in reference to places of which the names--
Eastbourne, Folkestone, Cromer, Scarborough, Whitby--tormented her
with something of the sound of the plash of water that haunts the
traveller in the desert. She had not been out of London for a
dozen years, and the only thing to give a taste to the present dead
weeks was the spice of a chronic resentment. The sparse customers,
the people she did see, were the people who were "just off"--off on
the decks of fluttered yachts, off to the uttermost point of rocky
headlands where the very breeze was then playing for the want of
which she said to herself that she sickened.

There was accordingly a sense in which, at such a period, the great
differences of the human condition could press upon her more than
ever; a circumstance drawing fresh force in truth from the very
fact of the chance that at last, for a change, did squarely meet
her--the chance to be "off," for a bit, almost as far as anybody.
They took their turns in the cage as they took them both in the
shop and at Chalk Farm; she had known these two months that time
was to be allowed in September--no less than eleven days--for her
personal private holiday. Much of her recent intercourse with Mr.
Mudge had consisted of the hopes and fears, expressed mainly by
himself, involved in the question of their getting the same dates--
a question that, in proportion as the delight seemed assured,
spread into a sea of speculation over the choice of where and how.
All through July, on the Sunday evenings and at such other odd
times as he could seize, he had flooded their talk with wild waves
of calculation. It was practically settled that, with her mother,
somewhere "on the south coast" (a phrase of which she liked the
sound) they should put in their allowance together; but she already
felt the prospect quite weary and worn with the way he went round
and round on it. It had become his sole topic, the theme alike of
his most solemn prudences and most placid jests, to which every
opening led for return and revision and in which every little
flower of a foretaste was pulled up as soon as planted. He had
announced at the earliest day--characterising the whole business,
from that moment, as their "plans," under which name he handled it
as a Syndicate handles a Chinese or other Loan--he had promptly
declared that the question must be thoroughly studied, and he
produced, on the whole subject, from day to day, an amount of
information that excited her wonder and even, not a little, as she
frankly let him know, her disdain. When she thought of the danger
in which another pair of lovers rapturously lived she enquired of
him anew why he could leave nothing to chance. Then she got for
answer that this profundity was just his pride, and he pitted
Ramsgate against Bournemouth and even Boulogne against Jersey--for
he had great ideas--with all the mastery of detail that was some
day, professionally, to carry him afar.

The longer the time since she had seen Captain Everard the more she
was booked, as she called it, to pass Park Chambers; and this was
the sole amusement that in the lingering August days and the
twilights sadly drawn out it was left her to cultivate. She had
long since learned to know it for a feeble one, though its
feebleness was perhaps scarce the reason for her saying to herself
each evening as her time for departure approached: "No, no--not
to-night." She never failed of that silent remark, any more than
she failed of feeling, in some deeper place than she had even yet
fully sounded, that one's remarks were as weak as straws and that,
however one might indulge in them at eight o'clock, one's fate
infallibly declared itself in absolute indifference to them at
about eight-fifteen. Remarks were remarks, and very well for that;
but fate was fate, and this young lady's was to pass Park Chambers
every night in the working week. Out of the immensity of her
knowledge of the life of the world there bloomed on these occasions
as specific remembrance that it was regarded in that region, in
August and September, as rather pleasant just to be caught for
something or other in passing through town. Somebody was always
passing and somebody might catch somebody else. It was in full
cognisance of this subtle law that she adhered to the most
ridiculous circuit she could have made to get home. One warm dull
featureless Friday, when an accident had made her start from
Cocker's a little later than usual, she became aware that something
of which the infinite possibilities had for so long peopled her
dreams was at last prodigiously upon her, though the perfection in
which the conditions happened to present it was almost rich enough
to be but the positive creation of a dream. She saw, straight
before her, like a vista painted in a picture, the empty street and
the lamps that burned pale in the dusk not yet established. It was
into the convenience of this quiet twilight that a gentleman on the
doorstep of the Chambers gazed with a vagueness that our young
lady's little figure violently trembled, in the approach, with the
measure of its power to dissipate. Everything indeed grew in a
flash terrific and distinct; her old uncertainties fell away from
her, and, since she was so familiar with fate, she felt as if the
very nail that fixed it were driven in by the hard look with which,
for a moment, Captain Everard awaited her.

The vestibule was open behind him and the porter as absent as on
the day she had peeped in; he had just come out--was in town, in a
tweed suit and a pot hat, but between two journeys--duly bored over
his evening and at a loss what to do with it. Then it was that she
was glad she had never met him in that way before: she reaped with
such ecstasy the benefit of his not being able to think she passed
often. She jumped in two seconds to the determination that he
should even suppose it to be the very first time and the very
oddest chance: this was while she still wondered if he would
identify or notice her. His original attention had not, she
instinctively knew, been for the young woman at Cocker's; it had
only been for any young woman who might advance to the tune of her
not troubling the quiet air, and in fact the poetic hour, with
ugliness. Ah but then, and just as she had reached the door, came
his second observation, a long light reach with which, visibly and
quite amusedly, he recalled and placed her. They were on different
sides, but the street, narrow and still, had only made more of a
stage for the small momentary drama. It was not over, besides, it
was far from over, even on his sending across the way, with the
pleasantest laugh she had ever heard, a little lift of his hat and
an "Oh good evening!" It was still less over on their meeting, the
next minute, though rather indirectly and awkwardly, in the middle,
of the road--a situation to which three or four steps of her own
had unmistakeably contributed--and then passing not again to the
side on which she had arrived, but back toward the portal of Park
Chambers.

"I didn't know you at first. Are you taking a walk?"

"Ah I don't take walks at night! I'm going home after my work."

"Oh!"

That was practically what they had meanwhile smiled out, and his
exclamation to which for a minute he appeared to have nothing to
add, left them face to face and in just such an attitude as, for
his part, he might have worn had he been wondering if he could
properly ask her to come in. During this interval in fact she
really felt his question to be just "HOW properly--?" It was
simply a question of the degree of properness.



CHAPTER XV



She never knew afterwards quite what she had done to settle it, and
at the time she only knew that they presently moved, with
vagueness, yet with continuity, away from the picture of the
lighted vestibule and the quiet stairs and well up the street
together. This also must have been in the absence of a definite
permission, of anything vulgarly articulate, for that matter, on
the part of either; and it was to be, later on, a thing of
remembrance and reflexion for her that the limit of what just here
for a longish minute passed between them was his taking in her
thoroughly successful deprecation, though conveyed without pride or
sound or touch, of the idea that she might be, out of the cage, the
very shop-girl at large that she hugged the theory she wasn't.
Yes, it was strange, she afterwards thought, that so much could
have come and gone and yet not disfigured the dear little intense
crisis either with impertinence or with resentment, with any of the
horrid notes of that kind of acquaintance. He had taken no
liberty, as she would have so called it; and, through not having to
betray the sense of one, she herself had, still more charmingly,
taken none. On the spot, nevertheless, she could speculate as to
what it meant that, if his relation with Lady Bradeen continued to
be what her mind had built it up to, he should feel free to proceed
with marked independence. This was one of the questions he was to
leave her to deal with--the question whether people of his sort
still asked girls up to their rooms when they were so awfully in
love with other women. Could people of his sort do that without
what people of her sort would call being "false to their love"?
She had already a vision of how the true answer was that people of
her sort didn't, in such cases, matter--didn't count as infidelity,
counted only as something else: she might have been curious, since
it came to that, to see exactly what.

Strolling together slowly in their summer twilight and their empty
corner of Mayfair, they found themselves emerge at last opposite to
one of the smaller gates of the Park; upon which, without any
particular word about it--they were talking so of other things--
they crossed the street and went in and sat down on a bench. She
had gathered by this time one magnificent hope about him--the hope
he would say nothing vulgar. She knew thoroughly what she meant by
that; she meant something quite apart from any matter of his being
"false." Their bench was not far within; it was near the Park Lane
paling and the patchy lamplight and the rumbling cabs and 'buses.
A strange emotion had come to her, and she felt indeed excitement
within excitement; above all a conscious joy in testing him with
chances he didn't take. She had an intense desire he should know
the type she really conformed to without her doing anything so low
as tell him, and he had surely begun to know it from the moment he
didn't seize the opportunities into which a common man would
promptly have blundered. These were on the mere awkward surface,
and THEIR relation was beautiful behind and below them. She had
questioned so little on the way what they might be doing that as
soon as they were seated she took straight hold of it. Her hours,
her confinement, the many conditions of service in the post-office,
had--with a glance at his own postal resources and alternatives--
formed, up to this stage, the subject of their talk. "Well, here
we are, and it may be right enough; but this isn't the least, you
know, where I was going."

"You were going home?"

"Yes, and I was already rather late. I was going to my supper."

"You haven't had it?"

"No indeed!"

"Then you haven't eaten--?"

He looked of a sudden so extravagantly concerned that she laughed
out. "All day? Yes, we do feed once. But that was long ago. So
I must presently say good-bye."

"Oh deary ME!" he exclaimed with an intonation so droll and yet a
touch so light and a distress so marked--a confession of
helplessness for such a case, in short, so unrelieved--that she at
once felt sure she had made the great difference plain. He looked
at her with the kindest eyes and still without saying what she had
known he wouldn't. She had known he wouldn't say "Then sup with
ME!" but the proof of it made her feel as if she had feasted.

"I'm not a bit hungry," she went on.

"Ah you MUST be, awfully!" he made answer, but settling himself on
the bench as if, after all, that needn't interfere with his
spending his evening. "I've always quite wanted the chance to
thank you for the trouble you so often take for me."

"Yes, I know," she replied; uttering the words with a sense of the
situation far deeper than any pretence of not fitting his allusion.
She immediately felt him surprised and even a little puzzled at her
frank assent; but for herself the trouble she had taken could only,
in these fleeting minutes--they would probably never come back--be
all there like a little hoard of gold in her lap. Certainly he
might look at it, handle it, take up the pieces. Yet if he
understood anything he must understand all. "I consider you've
already immensely thanked me." The horror was back upon her of
having seemed to hang about for some reward. "It's awfully odd you
should have been there just the one time--!"

"The one time you've passed my place?"

"Yes; you can fancy I haven't many minutes to waste. There was a
place to-night I had to stop at."

"I see, I see--" he knew already so much about her work. "It must
be an awful grind--for a lady."

"It is, but I don't think I groan over it any more than my
companions--and you've seen THEY'RE not ladies!" She mildly
jested, but with an intention. "One gets used to things, and there
are employments I should have hated much more." She had the finest
conception of the beauty of not at least boring him. To whine, to
count up her wrongs, was what a barmaid or a shop-girl would do,
and it was quite enough to sit there like one of these.

"If you had had another employment," he remarked after a moment,
"we might never have become acquainted."

"It's highly probable--and certainly not in the same way." Then,
still with her heap of gold in her lap and something of the pride
of it in her manner of holding her head, she continued not to move-
-she only smiled at him. The evening had thickened now; the
scattered lamps were red; the Park, all before them, was full of
obscure and ambiguous life; there were other couples on other
benches whom it was impossible not to see, yet at whom it was
impossible to look. "But I've walked so much out of my way with
you only just to show you that--that"--with this she paused; it was
not after all so easy to express--"that anything you may have
thought is perfectly true."

"Oh I've thought a tremendous lot!" her companion laughed. "Do you
mind my smoking?"

"Why should I? You always smoke THERE."

"At your place? Oh yes, but here it's different."

"No," she said as he lighted a cigarette, "that's just what it
isn't. It's quite the same."

"Well, then, that's because 'there' it's so wonderful!"

"Then you're conscious of how wonderful it is?" she returned.

He jerked his handsome head in literal protest at a doubt. "Why
that's exactly what I mean by my gratitude for all your trouble.
It has been just as if you took a particular interest." She only
looked at him by way of answer in such sudden headlong
embarrassment, as she was quite aware, that while she remained
silent he showed himself checked by her expression. "You HAVE--
haven't you?--taken a particular interest?"

"Oh a particular interest!" she quavered out, feeling the whole
thing--her headlong embarrassment--get terribly the better of her,
and wishing, with a sudden scare, all the more to keep her emotion
down. She maintained her fixed smile a moment and turned her eyes
over the peopled darkness, unconfused now, because there was
something much more confusing. This, with a fatal great rush, was
simply the fact that they were thus together. They were near,
near, and all she had imagined of that had only become more true,
more dreadful and overwhelming. She stared straight away in
silence till she felt she looked an idiot; then, to say something,
to say nothing, she attempted a sound which ended in a flood of
tears.



CHAPTER XVI



Her tears helped her really to dissimulate, for she had instantly,
in so public a situation, to recover herself. They had come and
gone in half a minute, and she immediately explained them. "It's
only because I'm tired. It's that--it's that!" Then she added a
trifle incoherently: "I shall never see you again."

"Ah but why not?" The mere tone in which her companion asked this
satisfied her once for all as to the amount of imagination for
which she could count on him. It was naturally not large: it had
exhausted itself in having arrived at what he had already touched
upon--the sense of an intention in her poor zeal at Cocker's. But
any deficiency of this kind was no fault in him: he wasn't obliged
to have an inferior cleverness--to have second-rate resources and
virtues. It had been as if he almost really believed she had
simply cried for fatigue, and he accordingly put in some kind
confused plea--"You ought really to take something: won't you have
something or other SOMEWHERE?" to which she had made no response
but a headshake of a sharpness that settled it. "Why shan't we all
the more keep meeting?"

"I mean meeting this way--only this way. At my place there--THAT
I've nothing to do with, and I hope of course you'll turn up, with
your correspondence, when it suits you. Whether I stay or not, I
mean; for I shall probably not stay."

"You're going somewhere else?" he put it with positive anxiety.

"Yes, ever so far away--to the other end of London. There are all
sorts of reasons I can't tell you; and it's practically settled.
It's better for me, much; and I've only kept on at Cocker's for
YOU."

"For me?"

Making out in the dusk that he fairly blushed, she now measured how
far he had been from knowing too much. Too much, she called it at
present; and that was easy, since it proved so abundantly enough
for her that he should simply be where he was. "As we shall never
talk this way but to-night--never, never again!--here it all is.
I'll say it; I don't care what you think; it doesn't matter; I only
want to help you. Besides, you're kind--you're kind. I've been
thinking then of leaving for ever so long. But you've come so
often--at times--and you've had so much to do, and it has been so
pleasant and interesting, that I've remained, I've kept putting off
any change. More than once, when I had nearly decided, you've
turned up again and I've thought 'Oh no!' That's the simple fact!"
She had by this time got her confusion down so completely that she
could laugh. "This is what I meant when I said to you just now
that I 'knew.' I've known perfectly that you knew I took trouble
for you; and that knowledge has been for me, and I seemed to see it
was for you, as if there were something--I don't know what to call
it!--between us. I mean something unusual and good and awfully
nice--something not a bit horrid or vulgar."

She had by this time, she could see, produced a great effect on
him; but she would have spoken the truth to herself had she at the
same moment declared that she didn't in the least care: all the
more that the effect must be one of extreme perplexity. What, in
it all, was visibly clear for him, none the less, was that he was
tremendously glad he had met her. She held him, and he was
astonished at the force of it; he was intent, immensely
considerate. His elbow was on the back of the seat, and his head,
with the pot-hat pushed quite back, in a boyish way, so that she
really saw almost for the first time his forehead and hair, rested
on the hand into which he had crumpled his gloves. "Yes," he
assented, "it's not a bit horrid or vulgar."

She just hung fire a moment, then she brought out the whole truth.
"I'd do anything for you. I'd do anything for you." Never in her
life had she known anything so high and fine as this, just letting
him have it and bravely and magnificently leaving it. Didn't the
place, the associations and circumstances, perfectly make it sound
what it wasn't? and wasn't that exactly the beauty?

So she bravely and magnificently left it, and little by little she
felt him take it up, take it down, as if they had been on a satin
sofa in a boudoir. She had never seen a boudoir, but there had
been lots of boudoirs in the telegrams. What she had said at all
events sank into him, so that after a minute he simply made a
movement that had the result of placing his hand on her own--
presently indeed that of her feeling herself firmly enough grasped.
There was no pressure she need return, there was none she need
decline; she just sat admirably still, satisfied for the time with
the surprise and bewilderment of the impression she made on him.
His agitation was even greater on the whole than she had at first
allowed for. "I say, you know, you mustn't think of leaving!" he
at last broke out.

"Of leaving Cocker's, you mean?"

"Yes, you must stay on there, whatever happens, and help a fellow."

She was silent a little, partly because it was so strange and
exquisite to feel him watch her as if it really mattered to him and
he were almost in suspense. "Then you HAVE quite recognised what
I've tried to do?" she asked.

"Why, wasn't that exactly what I dashed over from my door just now
to thank you for?"

"Yes; so you said."

"And don't you believe it?"

She looked down a moment at his hand, which continued to cover her
own; whereupon he presently drew it back, rather restlessly folding
his arms. Without answering his question she went on: "Have you
ever spoken of me?"

"Spoken of you?"

"Of my being there--of my knowing, and that sort of thing."

"Oh never to a human creature!" he eagerly declared.

She had a small drop at this, which was expressed in another pause,


 


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