<h2><SPAN name="page46"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>VI</h2>
<p>I <span class="smcap">had</span> almost avoided the general
election, but some of its consequences, on my return, had smartly
to be faced. The season, in London, began to breathe again
and to flap its folded wings. Confidence, under the new
Ministry, was understood to be reviving, and one of the symptoms,
in a social body, was a recovery of appetite. People once
more fed together, and it happened that, one Saturday night, at
somebody’s house, I fed with George Gravener. When
the ladies left the room I moved up to where he sat and begged to
congratulate him. “On my election?” he asked
after a moment; so that I could feign, jocosely, not to have
heard of that triumph and to be alluding to the rumour of a
victory still more personal. I dare say I coloured however,
for his political success had momentarily passed out of my
mind. What was present to it was that he was to marry that
beautiful girl; and yet his question made me conscious of some
discomposure—I hadn’t intended to put this before
everything. He himself indeed ought gracefully to have done
so, and I remember thinking the whole man was in this assumption
that in expressing my sense of what he had won I had fixed my
thoughts on his “seat.” We straightened the
matter out, and he was so much lighter in hand than I had lately
seen him that his spirits might well have been fed from a twofold
source. He was so good as to say that he hoped I should
soon make the acquaintance of Miss Anvoy, who, with her aunt, was
presently coming up to town. Lady Coxon, in the country,
had been seriously unwell, and this had delayed their
arrival. I told him I had heard the marriage would be a
splendid one; on which, brightened and humanised by his luck, he
laughed and said “Do you mean for her?” When I
had again explained what I meant he went on: “Oh
she’s an American, but you’d scarcely know it;
unless, perhaps,” he added, “by her being used to
more money than most girls in England, even the daughters of rich
men. That wouldn’t in the least do for a fellow like
me, you know, if it wasn’t for the great liberality of her
father. He really has been most kind, and
everything’s quite satisfactory.” He added that
his eldest brother had taken a tremendous fancy to her and that
during a recent visit at Coldfield she had nearly won over Lady
Maddock. I gathered from something he dropped later on that
the free-handed gentleman beyond the seas had not made a
settlement, but had given a handsome present and was apparently
to be looked to, across the water, for other favours.
People are simplified alike by great contentments and great
yearnings, and, whether or no it was Gravener’s directness
that begot my own, I seem to recall that in some turn taken by
our talk he almost imposed it on me as an act of decorum to ask
if Miss Anvoy had also by chance expectations from her
aunt. My enquiry drew out that Lady Coxon, who was the
oddest of women, would have in any contingency to act under her
late husband’s will, which was odder still, saddling her
with a mass of queer obligations complicated with queer
loopholes. There were several dreary people, Coxon cousins,
old maids, to whom she would have more or less to minister.
Gravener laughed, without saying no, when I suggested that the
young lady might come in through a loophole; then suddenly, as if
he suspected my turning a lantern on him, he declared quite
dryly: “That’s all rot—one’s moved by
other springs!”</p>
<p>A fortnight later, at Lady Coxon’s own house, I
understood well enough the springs one was moved by.
Gravener had spoken of me there as an old friend, and I received
a gracious invitation to dine. The Knight’s widow was
again indisposed—she had succumbed at the eleventh hour; so
that I found Miss Anvoy bravely playing hostess without even
Gravener’s help, since, to make matters worse, he had just
sent up word that the House, the insatiable House, with which he
supposed he had contracted for easier terms, positively declined
to release him. I was struck with the courage, the grace
and gaiety of the young lady left thus to handle the fauna and
flora of the Regent’s Park. I did what I could to
help her to classify them, after I had recovered from the
confusion of seeing her slightly disconcerted at perceiving in
the guest introduced by her intended the gentleman with whom she
had had that talk about Frank Saltram. I had at this moment
my first glimpse of the fact that she was a person who could
carry a responsibility; but I leave the reader to judge of my
sense of the aggravation, for either of us, of such a burden,
when I heard the servant announce Mrs. Saltram. From what
immediately passed between the two ladies I gathered that the
latter had been sent for post-haste to fill the gap created by
the absence of the mistress of the house.
“Good!” I remember crying, “she’ll be put
by me;” and my apprehension was promptly justified.
Mrs. Saltram taken in to dinner, and taken in as a consequence of
an appeal to her amiability, was Mrs. Saltram with a
vengeance. I asked myself what Miss Anvoy meant by doing
such things, but the only answer I arrived at was that Gravener
was verily fortunate. She hadn’t happened to tell him
of her visit to Upper Baker Street, but she’d certainly
tell him to-morrow; not indeed that this would make him like any
better her having had the innocence to invite such a person as
Mrs. Saltram on such an occasion. It could only strike me
that I had never seen a young woman put such ignorance into her
cleverness, such freedom into her modesty; this, I think, was
when, after dinner, she said to me frankly, with almost jubilant
mirth: “Oh you don’t admire Mrs.
Saltram?” Why should I? This was truly a young
person without guile. I had briefly to consider before I
could reply that my objection to the lady named was the objection
often uttered about people met at the social board—I knew
all her stories. Then as Miss Anvoy remained momentarily
vague I added: “Those about her husband.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, but there are some new ones.”</p>
<p>“None for me. Ah novelty would be
pleasant!”</p>
<p>“Doesn’t it appear that of late he has been
particularly horrid?”</p>
<p>“His fluctuations don’t matter”, I returned,
“for at night all cats are grey. You saw the shade of
this one the night we waited for him together. What will
you have? He has no dignity.”</p>
<p>Miss Anvoy, who had been introducing with her American
distinctness, looked encouragingly round at some of the
combinations she had risked. “It’s too bad I
can’t see him.”</p>
<p>“You mean Gravener won’t let you?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t asked him. He lets me do
everything.”</p>
<p>“But you know he knows him and wonders what some of us
see in him.”</p>
<p>“We haven’t happened to talk of him,” the
girl said.</p>
<p>“Get him to take you some day out to see the
Mulvilles.”</p>
<p>“I thought Mr. Saltram had thrown the Mulvilles
over.”</p>
<p>“Utterly. But that won’t prevent his being
planted there again, to bloom like a rose, within a month or
two.”</p>
<p>Miss Anvoy thought a moment. Then, “I should like
to see them,” she said with her fostering smile.</p>
<p>“They’re tremendously worth it. You
mustn’t miss them.”</p>
<p>“I’ll make George take me,” she went on as
Mrs. Saltram came up to interrupt us. She sniffed at this
unfortunate as kindly as she had smiled at me and, addressing the
question to her, continued: “But the chance of a
lecture—one of the wonderful lectures? Isn’t
there another course announced?”</p>
<p>“Another? There are about thirty!” I
exclaimed, turning away and feeling Mrs. Saltram’s little
eyes in my back. A few days after this I heard that
Gravener’s marriage was near at hand—was settled for
Whitsuntide; but as no invitation had reached me I had my doubts,
and there presently came to me in fact the report of a
postponement. Something was the matter; what was the matter
was supposed to be that Lady Coxon was now critically ill.
I had called on her after my dinner in the Regent’s Park,
but I had neither seen her nor seen Miss Anvoy. I forget
to-day the exact order in which, at this period, sundry incidents
occurred and the particular stage at which it suddenly struck me,
making me catch my breath a little, that the progression, the
acceleration, was for all the world that of fine drama.
This was probably rather late in the day, and the exact order
doesn’t signify. What had already occurred was some
accident determining a more patient wait. George Gravener,
whom I met again, in fact told me as much, but without signs of
perturbation. Lady Coxon had to be constantly attended to,
and there were other good reasons as well. Lady Coxon had
to be so constantly attended to that on the occasion of a second
attempt in the Regent’s Park I equally failed to obtain a
sight of her niece. I judged it discreet in all the
conditions not to make a third; but this didn’t matter, for
it was through Adelaide Mulville that the side-wind of the
comedy, though I was at first unwitting, began to reach me.
I went to Wimbledon at times because Saltram was there, and I
went at others because he wasn’t. The Pudneys, who
had taken him to Birmingham, had already got rid of him, and we
had a horrible consciousness of his wandering roofless, in
dishonour, about the smoky Midlands, almost as the injured Lear
wandered on the storm-lashed heath. His room, upstairs, had
been lately done up (I could hear the crackle of the new chintz)
and the difference only made his smirches and bruises, his
splendid tainted genius, the more tragic. If he
wasn’t barefoot in the mire he was sure to be
unconventionally shod. These were the things Adelaide and
I, who were old enough friends to stare at each other in silence,
talked about when we didn’t speak. When we spoke it
was only about the brilliant girl George Gravener was to marry
and whom he had brought out the other Sunday. I could see
that this presentation had been happy, for Mrs. Mulville
commemorated it after her sole fashion of showing confidence in a
new relation. “She likes me—she likes
me”: her native humility exulted in that measure of
success. We all knew for ourselves how she liked those who
liked her, and as regards Ruth Anvoy she was more easily won over
than Lady Maddock.</p>
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