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<h2> II </h2>
<p>Next day was (not unnaturally) Sunday. At half-past ten in the morning,
according to his wont, Philip Christy was seated in the drawing-room at
his sister's house, smooth silk hat in gloved hand, waiting for Frida and
her husband, Robert Monteith, to go to church with him. As he sat there,
twiddling his thumbs, or beating the devil's tattoo on the red Japanese
table, the housemaid entered. "A gentleman to see you, sir," she said,
handing Philip a card. The young man glanced at it curiously. A visitor to
call at such an early hour!—and on Sunday morning too! How extremely
odd! This was really most irregular!</p>
<p>So he looked down at the card with a certain vague sense of inarticulate
disapproval. But he noticed at the same time it was finer and clearer and
more delicately engraved than any other card he had ever yet come across.
It bore in simple unobtrusive letters the unknown name, "Mr. Bertram
Ingledew."</p>
<p>Though he had never heard it before, name and engraving both tended to
mollify Philip's nascent dislike. "Show the gentleman in, Martha," he said
in his most grandiose tone; and the gentleman entered.</p>
<p>Philip started at sight of him. It was his friend the Alien. Philip was
quite surprised to see his madman of last night; and what was more
disconcerting still, in the self-same grey tweed home-spun suit he had
worn last evening. Now, nothing can be more gentlemanly, don't you know,
than a grey home-spun, IN its proper place; but its proper place Philip
Christy felt was certainly NOT in a respectable suburb on a Sunday
morning.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon," he said frigidly, rising from his seat with his
sternest official air—the air he was wont to assume in the anteroom
at the office when outsiders called and wished to interview his chief "on
important public business." "To what may I owe the honour of this visit?"
For he did not care to be hunted up in his sister's house at a moment's
notice by a most casual acquaintance, whom he suspected of being an
escaped lunatic.</p>
<p>Bertram Ingledew, for his part, however, advanced towards his companion of
last night with the frank smile and easy bearing of a cultivated
gentleman. He was blissfully unaware of the slight he was putting upon the
respectability of Brackenhurst by appearing on Sunday in his grey tweed
suit; so he only held out his hand as to an ordinary friend, with the
simple words, "You were so extremely kind to me last night, Mr. Christy,
that as I happen to know nobody here in England, I ventured to come round
and ask your advice in unexpected circumstances that have since arisen."</p>
<p>When Bertram Ingledew looked at him, Philip once more relented. The man's
eye was so captivating. To say the truth, there was something taking about
the mysterious stranger—a curious air of unconscious superiority—so
that, the moment he came near, Philip felt himself fascinated. He only
answered, therefore, in as polite a tone as he could easily muster, "Why,
how did you get to know my name, or to trace me to my sister's?"</p>
<p>"Oh, Miss Blake told me who you were and where you lived," Bertram replied
most innocently: his tone was pure candour; "and when I went round to your
lodgings just now, they explained that you were out, but that I should
probably find you at Mrs. Monteith's; so of course I came on here."</p>
<p>Philip denied the applicability of that naive "of course" in his inmost
soul: but it was no use being angry with Mr. Bertram Ingledew. So much he
saw at once; the man was so simple-minded, so transparently natural, one
could not be angry with him. One could only smile at him, a superior
cynical London-bred smile, for an unsophisticated foreigner. So the Civil
Servant asked with a condescending air, "Well, what's your difficulty?
I'll see if peradventure I can help you out of it." For he reflected to
himself in a flash that as Ingledew had apparently a good round sum in
gold and notes in his pocket yesterday, he was not likely to come
borrowing money this morning.</p>
<p>"It's like this, you see," the Alien answered with charming simplicity, "I
haven't got any luggage."</p>
<p>"Not got any luggage!" Philip repeated, awestruck, letting his jaw fall
short, and stroking his clean-shaven chin with one hand. He was more
doubtful than ever now as to the man's sanity or respectability. If he was
not a lunatic, then surely he must be this celebrated Perpignan murderer,
whom everybody was talking about, and whom the French police were just
then engaged in hunting down for extradition.</p>
<p>"No; I brought none with me on purpose," Mr. Ingledew replied, as
innocently as ever. "I didn't feel quite sure about the ways, or the
customs, or the taboos of England. So I had just this one suit of clothes
made, after an English pattern of the present fashion, which I was lucky
enough to secure from a collector at home; and I thought I'd buy
everything else I wanted when I got to London. I brought nothing at all in
the way of luggage with me."</p>
<p>"Not even brush and comb?" Philip interposed, horrified.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, naturally, just the few things one always takes in a
vade-mecum," Bertram Ingledew answered, with a gracefully deprecatory wave
of the hand, which Philip thought pretty enough, but extremely foreign.
"Beyond that, nothing. I felt it would be best, you see, to set oneself up
in things of the country in the country itself. One's surer then of
getting exactly what's worn in the society one mixes in."</p>
<p>For the first and only time, as he said those words, the stranger struck a
chord that was familiar to Philip. "Oh, of course," the Civil Servant
answered, with brisk acquiescence, "if you want to be really up to date in
your dress, you must go to first-rate houses in London for everything.
Nobody anywhere can cut like a good London tailor."</p>
<p>Bertram Ingledew bowed his head. It was the acquiescent bow of the utter
outsider who gives no opinion at all on the subject under discussion,
because he does not possess any. As he probably came, in spite of his
disclaimer, from America or the colonies, which are belated places,
toiling in vain far in the rear of Bond Street, Philip thought this an
exceedingly proper display of bashfulness, especially in a man who had
only landed in England yesterday. But Bertram went on half-musingly. "And
you had told me," he said, "I'm sure not meaning to mislead me, there were
no formalities or taboos of any kind on entering into lodgings. However, I
found, as soon as I'd arranged to take the rooms and pay four guineas a
week for them, which was a guinea more than she asked me, Miss Blake would
hardly let me come in at all unless I could at once produce my luggage."
He looked comically puzzled. "I thought at first," he continued, gazing
earnestly at Philip, "the good lady was afraid I wouldn't pay her what I'd
agreed, and would go away and leave her in the lurch without a penny,—which
was naturally a very painful imputation. But when I offered to let her
have three weeks' rent in advance, I saw that wasn't all: there was a
taboo as well; she couldn't let me in without luggage, she said, because
it would imperil some luck or talisman to which she frequently alluded as
the Respectability of her Lodgings. This Respectability seems a very great
fetich. I was obliged at last, in order to ensure a night's lodging of any
sort, to appease it by promising I'd go up to London by the first train
to-day, and fetch down my luggage."</p>
<p>"Then you've things at Charing Cross, in the cloak-room perhaps?" Philip
suggested, somewhat relieved; for he felt sure Bertram Ingledew must have
told Miss Blake it was HE who had recommended him to Heathercliff House
for furnished apartments.</p>
<p>"Oh, dear, no; nothing," Bertram responded cheerfully. "Not a sack to my
back. I've only what I stand up in. And I called this morning just to ask
as I passed if you could kindly direct me to an emporium in London where I
could set myself up in all that's necessary."</p>
<p>"A WHAT?" Philip interposed, catching quick at the unfamiliar word with
blank English astonishment, and more than ever convinced, in spite of
denial, that the stranger was an American.</p>
<p>"An emporium," Bertram answered, in the most matter-of-fact voice: "a
magazine, don't you know; a place where they supply things in return for
money. I want to go up to London at once this morning and buy what I
require there."</p>
<p>"Oh, A SHOP, you mean," Philip replied, putting on at once his most
respectable British sabbatarian air. "I can tell you of the very best
tailor in London, whose cut is perfect; a fine flower of tailors: but NOT
to-day. You forget you're in England, and this is Sunday. On the
Continent, it's different: but you'll find no decent shops here open
to-day in town or country."</p>
<p>Bertram Ingledew drew one hand over his high white brow with a strangely
puzzled air. "No more I will," he said slowly, like one who by degrees
half recalls with an effort some forgotten fact from dim depths of his
memory. "I ought to have remembered, of course. Why, I knew that, long
ago. I read it in a book on the habits and manners of the English people.
But somehow, one never recollects these taboo days, wherever one may be,
till one's pulled up short by them in the course of one's travels. Now,
what on earth am I to do? A box, it seems, is the Open, Sesame of the
situation. Some mystic value is attached to it as a moral amulet. I don't
believe that excellent Miss Blake would consent to take me in for a second
night without the guarantee of a portmanteau to respectablise me."</p>
<p>We all have moments of weakness, even the most irreproachable Philistine
among us; and as Bertram said those words in rather a piteous voice, it
occurred to Philip Christy that the loan of a portmanteau would be a
Christian act which might perhaps simplify matters for the handsome and
engaging stranger. Besides, he was sure, after all—mystery or no
mystery—Bertram Ingledew was Somebody. That nameless charm of
dignity and distinction impressed him more and more the longer he talked
with the Alien. "Well, I think, perhaps, I could help you," he hazarded
after a moment, in a dubious tone; though to be sure, if he lent the
portmanteau, it would be like cementing the friendship for good or for
evil; which Philip, being a prudent young man, felt to be in some ways a
trifle dangerous; for who borrows a portmanteau must needs bring it back
again—which opens the door to endless contingencies. "I MIGHT be
able—"</p>
<p>At that moment, their colloquy was suddenly interrupted by the entry of a
lady who immediately riveted Bertram Ingledew's attention. She was tall
and dark, a beautiful woman, of that riper and truer beauty in face and
form that only declares itself as character develops. Her features were
clear cut, rather delicate than regular; her eyes were large and lustrous;
her lips not too thin, but rich and tempting; her brow was high, and
surmounted by a luscious wealth of glossy black hair which Bertram never
remembered to have seen equalled before for its silkiness of texture and
its strange blue sheen, like a plate of steel, or the grass of the
prairies. Gliding grace distinguished her when she walked. Her motion was
equable. As once the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were
fair, and straightway coveted them, even so Bertram Ingledew looked on
Frida Monteith, and saw at the first glance she was a woman to be desired,
a soul high-throned, very calm and beautiful.</p>
<p>She stood there for a moment and faced him, half in doubt, in her flowing
Oriental or Mauresque robe (for she dressed, as Philip would have said,
"artistically"), waiting to be introduced the while, and taking good heed,
as she waited, of the handsome stranger. As for Philip, he hesitated, not
quite certain in his own mind on the point of etiquette—say rather
of morals—whether one ought or ought not to introduce "the ladies of
one's family" to a casual stranger picked up in the street, who confesses
he has come on a visit to England without a letter of introduction or even
that irreducible minimum of respectability—a portmanteau. Frida,
however, had no such scruples. She saw the young man was good-looking and
gentlemanly, and she turned to Philip with the hasty sort of glance that
says as plainly as words could say it, "Now, then! introduce me."</p>
<p>Thus mutely exhorted, though with a visible effort, Philip murmured half
inarticulately, in a stifled undertone, "My sister, Mrs. Monteith—Mr.
Bertram Ingledew," and then trembled inwardly.</p>
<p>It was a surprise to Bertram that the beautiful woman with the soul in her
eyes should turn out to be the sister of the very commonplace young man
with the boiled-fish expression he had met by the corner; but he disguised
his astonishment, and only interjected, as if it were the most natural
remark in the world: "I'm pleased to meet you. What a lovely gown! and how
admirably it becomes you!"</p>
<p>Philip opened his eyes aghast. But Frida glanced down at the dress with a
glance of approbation. The stranger's frankness, though quaint, was really
refreshing.</p>
<p>"I'm so glad you like it," she said, taking the compliment with quiet
dignity, as simply as it was intended. "It's all my own taste; I chose the
stuff and designed the make of it. And I know who this is, Phil, without
your troubling to tell me; it's the gentleman you met in the street last
night, and were talking about at dinner."</p>
<p>"You're quite right," Philip answered, with a deprecating look (as who
should say, aside, "I really couldn't help it"). "He—he's rather in
a difficulty." And then he went on to explain in a few hurried words to
Frida, with sundry shrugs and nods of profoundest import, that the
supposed lunatic or murderer or foreigner or fool had gone to Miss Blake's
without luggage of any sort; and that, "Perhaps"—very dubitatively—"a
portmanteau or bag might help him out of his temporary difficulties."</p>
<p>"Why, of course," Frida cried impulsively, with prompt decision; "Robert's
Gladstone bag and my little brown trunk would be the very things for him.
I could lend them to him at once, if only we can get a Sunday cab to take
them."</p>
<p>"NOT before service, surely," Philip interposed, scandalised. "If he were
to take them now, you know, he'd meet all the church-people."</p>
<p>"Is it taboo, then, to face the clergy with a Gladstone bag?" Bertram
asked quite seriously, in that childlike tone of simple inquiry that
Philip had noticed more than once before in him. "Your bonzes object to
meet a man with luggage? They think it unlucky?"</p>
<p>Frida and Philip looked at one another with quick glances, and laughed.</p>
<p>"Well, it's not exactly tabooed," Frida answered gently; "and it's not so
much the rector himself, you know, as the feelings of one's neighbours.
This is a very respectable neighbourhood—oh, quite dreadfully
respectable—and people in the houses about might make a talk of it
if a cab drove away from the door as they were passing. I think, Phil,
you're right. He'd better wait till the church-people are finished."</p>
<p>"Respectability seems to be a very great object of worship in your
village," Bertram suggested in perfect good faith. "Is it a local cult, or
is it general in England?"</p>
<p>Frida glanced at him, half puzzled. "Oh, I think it's pretty general," she
answered, with a happy smile. "But perhaps the disease is a little more
epidemic about here than elsewhere. It affects the suburbs: and my
brother's got it just as badly as any one."</p>
<p>"As badly as any one!" Bertram repeated with a puzzled air. "Then you
don't belong to that creed yourself? You don't bend the knee to this
embodied abstraction?—it's your brother who worships her, I suppose,
for the family?"</p>
<p>"Yes; he's more of a devotee than I am," Frida went on, quite frankly, but
not a little surprised at so much freedom in a stranger. "Though we're all
of us tarred with the same brush, no doubt. It's a catching complaint, I
suppose, respectability."</p>
<p>Bertram gazed at her dubiously. A complaint, did she say? Was she serious
or joking? He hardly understood her. But further discussion was cut short
for the moment by Frida good-humouredly running upstairs to see after the
Gladstone bag and brown portmanteau, into which she crammed a few useless
books and other heavy things, to serve as make-weights for Miss Blake's
injured feelings.</p>
<p>"You'd better wait a quarter of an hour after we go to church," she said,
as the servant brought these necessaries into the room where Bertram and
Philip were seated. "By that time nearly all the church-people will be
safe in their seats; and Phil's conscience will be satisfied. You can tell
Miss Blake you've brought a little of your luggage to do for to-day, and
the rest will follow from town to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>"Oh, how very kind you are!" Bertram exclaimed, looking down at her
gratefully. "I'm sure I don't know what I should ever have done in this
crisis without you."</p>
<p>He said it with a warmth which was certainly unconventional. Frida
coloured and looked embarrassed. There was no denying he was certainly a
most strange and untrammelled person.</p>
<p>"And if I might venture on a hint," Philip put in, with a hasty glance at
his companion's extremely unsabbatical costume, "it would be that you
shouldn't try to go out much to-day in that suit you're wearing; it looks
peculiar, don't you know, and might attract attention."</p>
<p>"Oh, is that a taboo too?" the stranger put in quickly, with an anxious
air. "Now, that's awfully kind of you. But it's curious, as well; for two
or three people passed my window last night, all Englishmen, as I judged,
and all with suits almost exactly like this one—which was copied, as
I told you, from an English model."</p>
<p>"Last night; oh, yes," Philip answered. "Last night was Saturday; that
makes all the difference. The suit's right enough in its way, of course,—very
neat and gentlemanly; but NOT for Sunday. You're expected on Sundays to
put on a black coat and waistcoat, you know, like the ones I'm wearing."</p>
<p>Bertram's countenance fell. "And if I'm seen in the street like this," he
asked, "will they do anything to me? Will the guardians of the peace—the
police, I mean—arrest me?"</p>
<p>Frida laughed a bright little laugh of genuine amusement.</p>
<p>"Oh, dear, no," she said merrily; "it isn't an affair of police at all;
not so serious as that: it's only a matter of respectability."</p>
<p>"I see," Bertram answered. "Respectability's a religious or popular, not
an official or governmental, taboo. I quite understand you. But those are
often the most dangerous sort. Will the people in the street, who adore
Respectability, be likely to attack me or mob me for disrespect to their
fetich?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not," Frida replied, flushing up. He seemed to be carrying a
joke too far. "This is a free country. Everybody wears and eats and drinks
just what he pleases."</p>
<p>"Well, that's all very interesting to me," the Alien went on with a
charming smile, that disarmed her indignation; "for I've come here on
purpose to collect facts and notes about English taboos and similar
observances. I'm Secretary of a Nomological Society at home, which is
interested in pagodas, topes, and joss-houses; and I've been travelling in
Africa and in the South Sea Islands for a long time past, working at
materials for a History of Taboo, from its earliest beginnings in the
savage stage to its fully developed European complexity; so of course all
you say comes home to me greatly. Your taboos, I foresee, will prove a
most valuable and illustrative study."</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon," Philip interposed stiffly, now put upon his mettle.
"We have NO taboos at all in England. You're misled, no doubt, by a mere
playful facon de parler, which society indulges in. England, you must
remember, is a civilised country, and taboos are institutions that belong
to the lowest and most degraded savages."</p>
<p>But Bertram Ingledew gazed at him in the blankest astonishment. "No
taboos!" he exclaimed, taken aback. "Why, I've read of hundreds. Among
nomological students, England has always been regarded with the greatest
interest as the home and centre of the highest and most evolved taboo
development. And you yourself," he added with a courteous little bow,
"have already supplied me with quite half a dozen. But perhaps you call
them by some other name among yourselves; though in origin and essence, of
course, they're precisely the same as the other taboos I've been examining
so long in Asia and Africa. However, I'm afraid I'm detaining you from the
function of your joss-house. You wish, no doubt, to make your genuflexions
in the Temple of Respectability."</p>
<p>And he reflected silently on the curious fact that the English give
themselves by law fifty-two weekly holidays a year, and compel themselves
by custom to waste them entirely in ceremonial observances.</p>
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