<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p>A year after he had come to live with them Mr. and Mrs. Moreen
suddenly gave up the villa at Nice. Pemberton had got used
to suddenness, having seen it practised on a considerable scale
during two jerky little tours—one in Switzerland the first
summer, and the other late in the winter, when they all ran down
to Florence and then, at the end of ten days, liking it much less
than they had intended, straggled back in mysterious
depression. They had returned to Nice “for
ever,” as they said; but this didn’t prevent their
squeezing, one rainy muggy May night, into a second-class
railway-carriage—you could never tell by which class they
would travel—where Pemberton helped them to stow away a
wonderful collection of bundles and bags. The explanation
of this manœuvre was that they had determined to spend the
summer “in some bracing place”; but in Paris they
dropped into a small furnished apartment—a fourth floor in
a third-rate avenue, where there was a smell on the staircase and
the portier was hateful—and passed the next four months in
blank indigence.</p>
<p>The better part of this baffled sojourn was for the preceptor
and his pupil, who, visiting the Invalides and Notre Dame, the
Conciergerie and all the museums, took a hundred remunerative
rambles. They learned to know their Paris, which was
useful, for they came back another year for a longer stay, the
general character of which in Pemberton’s memory to-day
mixes pitiably and confusedly with that of the first. He
sees Morgan’s shabby knickerbockers—the everlasting
pair that didn’t match his blouse and that as he grew
longer could only grow faded. He remembers the particular
holes in his three or four pair of coloured stockings.</p>
<p>Morgan was dear to his mother, but he never was better dressed
than was absolutely necessary—partly, no doubt, by his own
fault, for he was as indifferent to his appearance as a German
philosopher. “My dear fellow, you <i>are</i> coming
to pieces,” Pemberton would say to him in sceptical
remonstrance; to which the child would reply, looking at him
serenely up and down: “My dear fellow, so are you! I
don’t want to cast you in the shade.” Pemberton
could have no rejoinder for this—the assertion so closely
represented the fact. If however the deficiencies of his
own wardrobe were a chapter by themselves he didn’t like
his little charge to look too poor. Later he used to say
“Well, if we’re poor, why, after all, shouldn’t
we look it?” and he consoled himself with thinking there
was something rather elderly and gentlemanly in Morgan’s
disrepair—it differed from the untidiness of the urchin who
plays and spoils his things. He could trace perfectly the
degrees by which, in proportion as her little son confined
himself to his tutor for society, Mrs. Moreen shrewdly forbore to
renew his garments. She did nothing that didn’t show,
neglected him because he escaped notice, and then, as he
illustrated this clever policy, discouraged at home his public
appearances. Her position was logical enough—those
members of her family who did show had to be showy.</p>
<p>During this period and several others Pemberton was quite
aware of how he and his comrade might strike people; wandering
languidly through the Jardin des Plantes as if they had nowhere
to go, sitting on the winter days in the galleries of the Louvre,
so splendidly ironical to the homeless, as if for the advantage
of the calorifère. They joked about it sometimes: it
was the sort of joke that was perfectly within the boy’s
compass. They figured themselves as part of the vast vague
hand-to-mouth multitude of the enormous city and pretended they
were proud of their position in it—it showed them
“such a lot of life” and made them conscious of a
democratic brotherhood. If Pemberton couldn’t feel a
sympathy in destitution with his small companion—for after
all Morgan’s fond parents would never have let him really
suffer—the boy would at least feel it with him, so it came
to the same thing. He used sometimes to wonder what people
would think they were—to fancy they were looked askance at,
as if it might be a suspected case of kidnapping. Morgan
wouldn’t be taken for a young patrician with a
preceptor—he wasn’t smart enough; though he might
pass for his companion’s sickly little brother. Now
and then he had a five-franc piece, and except once, when they
bought a couple of lovely neckties, one of which he made
Pemberton accept, they laid it out scientifically in old
books. This was sure to be a great day, always spent on the
quays, in a rummage of the dusty boxes that garnish the
parapets. Such occasions helped them to live, for their
books ran low very soon after the beginning of their
acquaintance. Pemberton had a good many in England, but he
was obliged to write to a friend and ask him kindly to get some
fellow to give him something for them.</p>
<p>If they had to relinquish that summer the advantage of the
bracing climate the young man couldn’t but suspect this
failure of the cup when at their very lips to have been the
effect of a rude jostle of his own. This had represented
his first blow-out, as he called it, with his patrons; his first
successful attempt—though there was little other success
about it—to bring them to a consideration of his impossible
position. As the ostensible eve of a costly journey the
moment had struck him as favourable to an earnest protest, the
presentation of an ultimatum. Ridiculous as it sounded, he
had never yet been able to compass an uninterrupted private
interview with the elder pair or with either of them
singly. They were always flanked by their elder children,
and poor Pemberton usually had his own little charge at his
side. He was conscious of its being a house in which the
surface of one’s delicacy got rather smudged; nevertheless
he had preserved the bloom of his scruple against announcing to
Mr. and Mrs. Moreen with publicity that he shouldn’t be
able to go on longer without a little money. He was still
simple enough to suppose Ulick and Paula and Amy might not know
that since his arrival he had only had a hundred and forty
francs; and he was magnanimous enough to wish not to compromise
their parents in their eyes. Mr. Moreen now listened to
him, as he listened to every one and to every thing, like a man
of the world, and seemed to appeal to him—though not of
course too grossly—to try and be a little more of one
himself. Pemberton recognised in fact the importance of the
character—from the advantage it gave Mr. Moreen. He
was not even confused or embarrassed, whereas the young man in
his service was more so than there was any reason for.
Neither was he surprised—at least any more than a gentleman
had to be who freely confessed himself a little
shocked—though not perhaps strictly at Pemberton.</p>
<p>“We must go into this, mustn’t we, dear?” he
said to his wife. He assured his young friend that the
matter should have his very best attention; and he melted into
space as elusively as if, at the door, he were taking an
inevitable but deprecatory precedence. When, the next
moment, Pemberton found himself alone with Mrs. Moreen it was to
hear her say “I see, I see”—stroking the
roundness of her chin and looking as if she were only hesitating
between a dozen easy remedies. If they didn’t make
their push Mr. Moreen could at least disappear for several
days. During his absence his wife took up the subject again
spontaneously, but her contribution to it was merely that she had
thought all the while they were getting on so beautifully.
Pemberton’s reply to this revelation was that unless they
immediately put down something on account he would leave them on
the spot and for ever. He knew she would wonder how he
would get away, and for a moment expected her to enquire.
She didn’t, for which he was almost grateful to her, so
little was he in a position to tell.</p>
<p>“You won’t, you <i>know</i> you
won’t—you’re too interested,” she
said. “You are interested, you know you are, you dear
kind man!” She laughed with almost condemnatory
archness, as if it were a reproach—though she
wouldn’t insist; and flirted a soiled pocket-handkerchief
at him.</p>
<p>Pemberton’s mind was fully made up to take his step the
following week. This would give him time to get an answer
to a letter he had despatched to England. If he did in the
event nothing of the sort—that is if he stayed another year
and then went away only for three months—it was not merely
because before the answer to his letter came (most unsatisfactory
when it did arrive) Mr. Moreen generously counted out to him, and
again with the sacrifice to “form” of a marked man of
the world, three hundred francs in elegant ringing gold. He
was irritated to find that Mrs. Moreen was right, that he
couldn’t at the pinch bear to leave the child. This
stood out clearer for the very reason that, the night of his
desperate appeal to his patrons, he had seen fully for the first
time where he was. Wasn’t it another proof of the
success with which those patrons practised their arts that they
had managed to avert for so long the illuminating flash? It
descended on our friend with a breadth of effect which perhaps
would have struck a spectator as comical, after he had returned
to his little servile room, which looked into a close court where
a bare dirty opposite wall took, with the sound of shrill
clatter, the reflexion of lighted back windows. He had
simply given himself away to a band of adventurers. The
idea, the word itself, wore a romantic horror for him—he
had always lived on such safe lines. Later it assumed a
more interesting, almost a soothing, sense: it pointed a moral,
and Pemberton could enjoy a moral. The Moreens were
adventurers not merely because they didn’t pay their debts,
because they lived on society, but because their whole view of
life, dim and confused and instinctive, like that of clever
colour-blind animals, was speculative and rapacious and
mean. Oh they were “respectable,” and that only
made them more immondes. The young man’s analysis,
while he brooded, put it at last very simply—they were
adventurers because they were toadies and snobs. That was
the completest account of them—it was the law of their
being. Even when this truth became vivid to their ingenious
inmate he remained unconscious of how much his mind had been
prepared for it by the extraordinary little boy who had now
become such a complication in his life. Much less could he
then calculate on the information he was still to owe the
extraordinary little boy.</p>
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