<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
<p>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, Hôtel Brighton, Paris.
Only understand and believe. 22nd to 26th, and certainly 8th and
9th. Perhaps others. Come. Mary.”</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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 Hôtel 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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
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