<SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XII </h3>
<h3> WEDDINGS </h3>
<p>When they reached the house at Herne Hill the sisters were both in a
state of nervous tremor. Monica had only the vaguest idea of the kind
of person Mrs. Luke Widdowson would prove to be, and Virginia seemed to
herself to be walking in a dream.</p>
<p>'Have you been here often?' whispered the latter, as soon as they came
in view of the place. Its aspect delighted her, but the conflict of her
emotions was so disturbing that she had to pause and seek the support
of her sister's arm.</p>
<p>'I've never been inside,' Monica answered indistinctly. 'Come; we shall
be unpunctual.'</p>
<p>'I do wish you would tell me, dear—'</p>
<p>'I can't talk, Virgie. Try and keep quiet, and behave as if it were all
quite natural.'</p>
<p>This was altogether beyond Virginia's power. It happened most luckily,
though greatly to Widdowson's annoyance, that the sister-in-law, Mrs.
Luke Widdowson, arrived nearly half an hour later than the time she had
appointed. Led by the servant into a comfortable drawing-room, the
visitors were received by the master of the house alone; with a grim
smile, the result of his embarrassment, with profuse apologies and a
courtesy altogether excessive, Widdowson did his best to put them at
their ease—of course with small result. The sisters side by side on a
settee at one end of the room, and the host seated far away from them,
they talked with scarcely any understanding of what was said on either
side—the weather and the vastness of London serving as topics—until
of a sudden the door was thrown open, and there appeared a person of
such imposing presence that Virginia gave a start and Monica gazed in
painful fascination. Mrs. Luke was a tall and portly woman in the prime
of life, with rather a high colour; her features were handsome, but
without much refinement, their expression a condescending good-humour.
Her mourning garb, if mourning it could be called, represented an
extreme of the prevailing fashion; its glint and rustle inspired awe in
the female observer. A moment ago the drawing-room had seemed empty;
Mrs. Luke, in her sole person, filled and illumined it.</p>
<p>Widdowson addressed this resplendent personage by her Christian name,
his familiarity exciting in Monica an irrational surprise. He presented
the sisters to her, and Mrs. Luke, bowing grandly at a distance, drew
from her bosom a gold-rimmed <i>pince-nez</i>, through which she scrutinized
Monica. The smile which followed might have been interpreted in several
senses; Widdowson, alone capable of remarking it, answered with a look
of severe dignity.</p>
<p>Mrs. Luke had no thought of apologizing for the lateness of her
arrival, and it was evident that she did not intend to stay long. Her
purpose seemed to be to make the occasion as informal as possible.</p>
<p>'Do you, by chance, know the Hodgson Bulls?' she asked of her relative,
interrupting him in the nervous commonplaces with which he was
endeavouring to smooth the way to a general conversation. She had the
accent of cultivation, but spoke rather imperiously.</p>
<p>'I never heard of them,' was the cold reply.</p>
<p>'No? They live somewhere about here. I have to make a call on them. I
suppose my coachman will find the place.'</p>
<p>There was an awkward silence. Widdowson was about to say something to
Monica, when Mrs. Luke, who had again closely observed the girl through
the glasses, interposed in a gentle tone.</p>
<p>'Do you like this neighbourhood, Miss Madden?'</p>
<p>Monica gave the expected answer, her voice sounding very weak and timid
by comparison. And so, for some ten minutes, an appearance of dialogue
was sustained. Mrs. Luke, though still condescending, evinced a desire
to be agreeable; she smiled and nodded in reply to the girl's remarks,
and occasionally addressed Virginia with careful civility, conveying
the impression, perhaps involuntarily, that she commiserated the shy
and shabbily-dressed person. Tea was brought in, and after pretending
to take a cup, she rose for departure.</p>
<p>'Perhaps you will come and see me some day, Miss Madden,' fell from her
with unanticipated graciousness, as she stepped forward to the girl and
offered her hand. 'Edmund must bring you—at some quiet time when we
can talk. Very glad to have met you—very glad indeed.'</p>
<p>And the personage was gone; they heard her carriage roll away from
beneath the window. All three drew a breath of relief, and Widdowson,
suddenly quite another man, took a place near to Virginia, with whom in
a few minutes he was conversing in the friendliest way. Virginia,
experiencing a like relief, also became herself; she found courage to
ask needful questions, which in every case were satisfactorily met. Of
Mrs. Luke there was no word, but when they had taken their leave—the
visit lasted altogether some two hours—Monica and her sister discussed
that great lady with the utmost freedom. They agreed that she was
personally detestable.</p>
<p>'But very rich, my dear,' said Virginia in a murmuring voice. 'You can
see that. I have met such people before; they have a manner—oh! Of
course Mr. Widdowson will take you to call upon her.'</p>
<p>'When nobody else is likely to be there; that's what she meant,'
remarked Monica coldly.</p>
<p>'Never mind, my love. You don't wish for grand society. I am very glad
to tell you that Edmund impresses me very favourably. He is reserved,
but that is no fault. Oh, we must write to Alice at once! Her surprise!
Her delight!'</p>
<p>When, on the next day, Monica met her betrothed in Regent's Park—she
still lived with Mildred Vesper, but no longer went to Great Portland
Street—their talk was naturally of Mrs. Luke. Widdowson speedily led
to the topic.</p>
<p>'I had told you,' he said, with careful accent, 'that I see very little
of her. I can't say that I like her, but she is a very difficult person
to understand, and I fancy she often gives offence when she doesn't at
all mean it. Still, I hope you were not—displeased?'</p>
<p>Monica avoided a direct answer.</p>
<p>'Shall you take me to see her?' were her words.</p>
<p>'If you will go, dear. And I have no doubt she will be present at our
wedding. Unfortunately, she's my only relative; or the only one I know
anything about. After our marriage I don't think we shall see much of
her—'</p>
<p>'No, I dare say not,' was Monica's remark. And thereupon they turned to
pleasanter themes.</p>
<p>That morning Widdowson had received from his sister-in-law a scribbled
post-card, asking him to call upon Mrs. Luke early the day that
followed. Of course this meant that the lady was desirous of further
talk concerning Miss Madden. Unwillingly, but as a matter of duty, he
kept the appointment. It was at eleven in the morning, and, when
admitted to the flat in Victoria Street which was his relative's abode,
he had to wait a quarter of an hour for the lady's appearance.</p>
<p>Luxurious fashion, as might have been expected, distinguished Mrs.
Luke's drawing-room. Costly and beautiful things superabounded; perfume
soothed the air. Only since her bereavement had Mrs. Widdowson been
able to indulge this taste for modern exuberance in domestic adornment.
The deceased Luke was a plain man of business, who clung to the
fashions which had been familiar to him in his youth; his second wife
found a suburban house already furnished, and her influence with him
could not prevail to banish the horrors amid which he chose to live:
chairs in maroon rep, Brussels carpets of red roses on a green ground,
horse-hair sofas of the most uncomfortable shape ever designed,
antimacassars everywhere, chimney ornaments of cut glass trembling in
sympathy with the kindred chandeliers. She belonged to an obscure
branch of a house that culminated in an obscure baronetcy; penniless
and ambitious, she had to thank her imposing physique for rescue at a
perilous age, and though despising Mr. Luke Widdowson for his plebeian
tastes, she shrewdly retained the good-will of a husband who seemed no
candidate for length of years. The money-maker died much sooner than
she could reasonably have hoped, and left her an income of four
thousand pounds. Thereupon began for Mrs. Luke a life of feverish
aspiration. The baronetcy to which she was akin had inspired her, even
from childhood, with an aristocratic ideal; a handsome widow of only
eight-and-thirty, she resolved that her wealth should pave the way for
her to a titled alliance. Her acquaintance lay among City people, but
with the opportunities of freedom it was soon extended to the sphere of
what is known as smart society; her flat in Victoria Street attracted a
heterogeneous cluster of pleasure-seekers and fortune-hunters, among
them one or two vagrant members of the younger aristocracy. She lived
at the utmost pace compatible with technical virtue. When, as shortly
happened, it became evident that her income was not large enough for
her serious purpose, she took counsel with an old friend great in
finance, and thenceforth the excitement of the gambler gave a new zest
to her turbid existence. Like most of her female associates, she had
free recourse to the bottle; but for such stimulus the life of a smart
woman would be physically impossible. And Mrs. Luke enjoyed life,
enjoyed it vastly. The goal of her ambition, if all went well in the
City, was quite within reasonable hope. She foretasted the day when a
vulgar prefix would no longer attach to her name, and when the journals
of society would reflect her rising effulgence.</p>
<p>Widdowson was growing impatient, when his relative at length appeared.
She threw herself into a deep chair, crossed her legs, and gazed at him
mockingly.</p>
<p>'Well, it isn't quite so bad as I feared, Edmund.'</p>
<p>'What do you mean?'</p>
<p>'Oh, she's a decent enough little girl, I can see. But you're a silly
fellow for all that. You couldn't have deceived me, you know. If
there'd been anything—you understand?—I should have spotted it at
once.'</p>
<p>'I don't relish this kind of talk,' observed Widdowson acidly. 'In
plain English, you supposed I was going to marry some one about whom I
couldn't confess the truth.'</p>
<p>'Of course I did. Now come; tell me how you got to know her.'</p>
<p>The man moved uneasily, but in the end related the whole story. Mrs.
Luke kept nodding, with an amused air.</p>
<p>'Yes, yes; she managed it capitally. Clever little witch. Fetching eyes
she has.'</p>
<p>'If you sent for me to make insulting remarks—'</p>
<p>'Bosh! I'll come to the wedding gaily. But you're a silly fellow. Now,
why didn't you come and ask me to find you a wife? Why, I know two or
three girls of really good family who would have jumped, simply jumped,
at a man with your money. Pretty girls too. But you always were so
horribly unpractical. Don't you know, my dear boy, that there are heaps
of ladies, real ladies, waiting the first decent man who offers them
five or six hundred a year? Why haven't you used the opportunities that
you knew I could put in your way?'</p>
<p>Widdowson rose from his seat and stood stiffly.</p>
<p>'I see you don't understand me in the least. I am going to marry
because, for the first time in my life, I have met the woman whom I can
respect and love.'</p>
<p>'That's very nice and proper. But why shouldn't you respect and love a
girl who belongs to good society?'</p>
<p>'Miss Madden is a lady,' he replied indignantly.</p>
<p>'Oh—yes—to be sure,' hummed the other, letting her head roll back.
'Well, bring her here some day when we can lunch quietly together. I
see it's no use. You're not a sharp man, Edmund.'</p>
<p>'Do you seriously tell me,' asked Widdowson, with grave curiosity,
'that there are ladies in good society who would have married me just
because I have a few hundreds a year?'</p>
<p>'My dear boy, I would get together a round dozen in two or three days.
Girls who would make good, faithful wives, in mere gratitude to the man
who saved them from—horrors.'</p>
<p>'Excuse me if I say that I don't believe it.'</p>
<p>Mrs. Luke laughed merrily, and the conversation went on in this strain
for another ten minutes. At the end, Mrs. Luke made herself very
agreeable, praised Monica for her sweet face and gentle manners, and so
dismissed the solemn man with a renewed promise to countenance the
marriage by her gracious presence.</p>
<p>When Rhoda Nunn returned from her holiday it wanted but a week to
Monica's wedding, so speedily had everything been determined and
arranged. Miss Barfoot, having learnt from Virginia all that was to be
known concerning Mr. Widdowson, felt able to hope for the best; a grave
husband, of mature years, and with means more than sufficient, seemed,
to the eye of experience, no unsuitable match for a girl such as
Monica. This view of the situation caused Rhoda to smile with
contemptuous tolerance.</p>
<p>'And yet,' she remarked, 'I have heard you speak severely of such
marriages.'</p>
<p>'It isn't the ideal wedlock,' replied Miss Barfoot. 'But so much in
life is compromise. After all, she may regard him more affectionally
than we imagine.'</p>
<p>'No doubt she has weighed advantages. If the prospects you offered her
had proved more to her taste she would have dismissed this elderly
admirer. His fate has been decided during the last few weeks. It's
probable that the invitation to your Wednesday evenings gave her a hope
of meeting young men.'</p>
<p>'I see no harm if it did,' said Miss Barfoot, smiling. 'But Miss Vesper
would very soon undeceive her on that point.'</p>
<p>'I hardly thought of her as a girl likely to make chance friendships
with men in highways and by-ways.'</p>
<p>'No more did I; and that makes all the more content with what has come
about. She ran a terrible risk, poor child. You see, Rhoda, nature is
too strong for us.'</p>
<p>Rhoda threw her head back.</p>
<p>'And the delight of her sister! It is really pathetic. The mere fact
that Monica is to be married blinds the poor woman to every possibility
of misfortune.' In the course of the same conversation, Rhoda remarked
thoughtfully,—</p>
<p>'It strikes me that Mr. Widdowson must be of a confiding nature. I
don't think men in general, at all events those with money, care to
propose marriage to girls they encounter by the way.'</p>
<p>'I suppose he saw that the case was exceptional.'</p>
<p>'How was he to see that?'</p>
<p>'You are severe. Her shop training accounts for much. The elder sisters
could never have found a husband in this way. The revelation must have
shocked them at first.'</p>
<p>Rhoda dismissed the subject lightly, and henceforth showed only the
faintest interest in Monica's concerns.</p>
<p>Monica meanwhile rejoiced in her liberation from the work and
philosophic severities of Great Portland Street. She saw Widdowson
somewhere or other every day, and heard him discourse on the life that
was before them, herself for the most part keeping silence. Together
they called upon Mrs. Luke, and had luncheon with her. Monica was not
displeased with her reception, and began secretly to hope that more
than a glimpse of that gorgeous world might some day be vouchsafed to
her.</p>
<p>Apart from her future husband, Monica was in a sportive mood, with
occasional fits of exhilaration which seemed rather unnatural. She had
declared to Mildred her intention of inviting Miss Nunn to the wedding,
and her mind was evidently set on carrying out this joke, as she
regarded it. When the desire was intimated by letter, Rhoda replied
with a civil refusal: she would be altogether out of place at such a
ceremony, but hoped that Monica would accept her heartiest good wishes.
Virginia was then dispatched to Queen's Road, and appealed so movingly
that the prophetess at length yielded. On hearing this Monica danced
with delight, and her companion in Rutland Street could not help
sharing her merriment.</p>
<p>The ceremony was performed at a church at Herne Hill. By an odd
arrangement—like everything else in the story of this pair, a result
of social and personal embarrassments—Monica's belongings, including
her apparel for the day, were previously dispatched to the bridegroom's
house, whither, in company with Virginia, the bride went early in the
morning. It was one of the quietest of weddings, but all ordinary
formalities were complied with, Widdowson having no independent views
on the subject. Present were Virginia (to give away the bride), Miss
Vesper (who looked decidedly odd in a pretty dress given her by
Monica), Rhoda Nunn (who appeared to advantage in a costume of quite
unexpected appropriateness), Mrs. Widdowson (an imposing figure,
evidently feeling that she had got into strange society), and, as
friend of the bridegroom, one Mr. Newdick, a musty and nervous City
clerk. Depression was manifest on every countenance, not excepting
Widdowson's; the man had such a stern, gloomy look, and held himself
with so much awkwardness, that he might have been imagined to stand
here on compulsion. For an hour before going to the church, Monica
cried and seemed unutterably doleful; she had not slept for two nights;
her face was ghastly. Virginia's gladness gave way just before the
company assembled, and she too shed many tears.</p>
<p>There was a breakfast, more dismal fooling than even this species of
fooling is wont to be. Mr. Newdick, trembling and bloodless, proposed
Monica's health; Widdowson, stern and dark as ever, gloomily responded;
and then, <i>that</i> was happily over. By one o'clock the gathering began
to disperse. Monica drew Rhoda Nunn aside.</p>
<p>'It was very kind of you to come,' she whispered, with half a sob. 'It
all seems very silly, and I'm sure you have wished yourself away a
hundred times. I am really, seriously, grateful to you.'</p>
<p>Rhoda put a hand on each side of the girl's face, and kissed her, but
without saying a word; and thereupon left the house. Mildred Vesper,
after changing her dress in the room used by Monica, as she had done on
arriving, went off by train to her duties in Great Portland Street.
Virginia alone remained to see the married couple start for their
honeymoon. They were going into Cornwall, and on the return journey
would manage to see Miss Madden at her Somerset retreat. For the
present, Virginia was to live on at Mrs. Conisbee's, but not in the old
way; henceforth she would have proper attendance, and modify her
vegetarian diet—at the express bidding of the doctor, as she explained
to her landlady.</p>
<p>Though that very evening Everard Barfoot made a call upon his friends
in Chelsea, the first since Rhoda's return from Cheddar, he heard
nothing of the event that marked the day. But Miss Nunn appeared to him
unlike herself; she was absent, had little to say, and looked, what he
had never yet known her, oppressed by low spirits. For some reason or
other Miss Barfoot left the room.</p>
<p>'You are thinking with regret of your old home,' Everard remarked,
taking a seat nearer to Miss Nunn.'</p>
<p>'No. Why should you fancy that?'</p>
<p>'Only because you seem rather sad.'</p>
<p>'One is sometimes.'</p>
<p>'I like to see you with that look. May I remind you that you promised
me some flowers from Cheddar?'</p>
<p>'Oh, so I did,' exclaimed the other in a tone of natural recollection.
'I have brought them, scientifically pressed between blotting-paper.
I'll fetch them.'</p>
<p>When she returned it was together with Miss Barfoot, and the
conversation became livelier.</p>
<p>A day or two after this Everard left town, and was away for three
weeks, part of the time in Ireland.</p>
<p>'I left London for a while,' he wrote from Killarney to his cousin,
'partly because I was afraid I had begun to bore you and Miss Nunn.
Don't you regret giving me permission to call upon you? The fact is, I
can't live without intelligent female society; talking with women, as I
talk with you two, is one of my chief enjoyments. I hope you won't get
tired of my visits; in fact, they are all but a necessity to me, as I
have discovered since coming away. But it was fair that you should have
a rest.'</p>
<p>'Don't be afraid,' Miss Barfoot replied to this part of his letter. 'We
are not at all weary of your conversation. The truth is, I like it much
better than in the old days. You seem to me to have a healthier mind,
and I am quite sure that the society of intelligent women (we affect no
foolish self-depreciation, Miss Nunn and I) is a good thing for you.
Come back to us as soon as you like; I shall welcome you.'</p>
<p>It happened that his return to England was almost simultaneous with the
arrival from Madeira of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Barfoot. Everard at once
went to see his brother, who for the present was staying at Torquay.
Ill-health dictated his choice of residence; Thomas was still suffering
from the results of his accident; his wife had left him at a hotel, and
was visiting relatives in different parts of England. The brothers
exhibited much affectionate feeling after their long separation; they
spent a week together, and planned for another meeting when Mrs. Thomas
should have returned to her husband.</p>
<p>An engagement called Everard back to town. He was to be present at the
wedding of his friend Micklethwaite, now actually on the point of
taking place. The mathematician had found a suitable house, very small
and of very low rental, out at South Tottenham, and thither was
transferred the furniture which had been in his bride's possession
since the death of her parents; Micklethwaite bought only a few new
things. By discreet inquiry, Barfoot had discovered that 'Fanny,'
though musically inclined, would not possess a piano, her old
instrument being quite worn out and not worth the cost of conveyance;
thus it came to pass that, a day or two before the wedding,
Micklethwaite was astonished by the arrival of an instrument of the
Cottage species, mysteriously addressed to a person not yet in
existence, Mrs. Micklethwaite.</p>
<p>'You scoundrel!' he cried, when, on the next day, Barfoot presented
himself at the house. 'This is <i>your</i> doing. What the deuce do you
mean? A man who complains of poverty! Well, it's the greatest kindness
I ever received, that's all. Fanny will be devoted to you. With music
in the house, our blind sister will lead quite a different life.
Confound it! I want to begin crying. Why, man, I'm not accustomed to
receive presents, even as a proxy; I haven't had one since I was a
schoolboy.'</p>
<p>'That's an audacious statement. When you told me that Miss Wheatley
never allowed your birthday to pass without sending something.'</p>
<p>'Oh, Fanny! But I have never thought of Fanny as a separate person.
Upon my word, now I think of it, I never have. Fanny and I have been
one for ages.'</p>
<p>That evening the sisters arrived from their country home. Micklethwaite
gave up the house to them, and went to a lodging.</p>
<p>It was with no little curiosity that, on the appointed morning, Barfoot
repaired to South Tottenham. He had seen a photograph of Miss Wheatley,
but it dated from seventeen years ago. Standing in her presence, he was
moved with compassion, and with another feeling more rarely excited in
him by a women's face, that of reverential tenderness. Impossible to
recognize in this countenance the features known to him from the
portrait. At three-and-twenty she had possessed a sweet, simple
comeliness on which any man's eye would have rested with pleasure; at
forty she was wrinkled, hollow-cheeked, sallow, indelible weariness
stamped upon her brow and lips. She looked much older than Mary
Barfoot, though they were just of an age. And all this for want of a
little money. The life of a pure, gentle, tender-hearted woman worn
away in hopeless longing and in hard struggle for daily bread. As she
took his hand and thanked him with an exquisite modesty for the present
she had received, Everard felt a lump rise in his throat. He was
ashamed to notice that the years had dealt so unkindly with her; fixing
his look upon her eyes, he gladdened at the gladness which shone in
them, at the soft light which they could still shed forth.</p>
<p>Micklethwaite was probably unconscious of the poor woman's faded
appearance. He had seen her from time to time, and always with the love
which idealizes. In his own pathetic phrase, she was simply a part of
himself; he no more thought of criticizing her features than of
standing before the glass to mark and comment upon his own. It was
enough to glance at him as he took his place beside her, the proudest
and happiest of men. A miracle had been wrought for him; kind fate, in
giving her to his arms, had blotted out those long years of sorrow, and
to-day Fanny was the betrothed of his youth, beautiful in his sight as
when first he looked upon her.</p>
<p>Her sister, younger by five years, had more regular lineaments, but she
too was worn with suffering, and her sightless eyes made it more
distressing to contemplate her. She spoke cheerfully, however, and
laughed with joy in Fanny's happiness. Barfoot pressed both her hands
with the friendliest warmth.</p>
<p>One vehicle conveyed them all to the church, and in half an hour the
lady to whom the piano was addressed had come into being. The simplest
of transformations; no bridal gown, no veil, no wreath; only the gold
ring for symbol of union. And it might have happened nigh a score of
years ago; nigh a score of years lost from the span of human life—all
for want of a little money.</p>
<p>'I will say good-bye to you here,' muttered Everard to his friend at
the church door.</p>
<p>The married man gripped him by the arm.</p>
<p>'You will do nothing of the kind.—Fanny, he wants to be off at
once!—You won't go until you have heard my wife play something on that
blessed instrument.'</p>
<p>So all entered a cab again and drove back to the house. A servant who
had come with Fanny from the country, a girl of fifteen, opened the
door to them, smiling and curtseying. And all sat together in happy
talk, the blind woman gayest among them; she wished to have the
clergyman described to her, and the appearance of the church. Then Mrs.
Micklethwaite placed herself at the piano, and played simple,
old-fashioned music, neither well nor badly, but to the infinite
delight of two of her hearers.</p>
<p>'Mr. Barfoot,' said the sister at length, 'I have known your name for a
long time, but I little thought to meet you on such a day as this, and
to owe you such endless thanks. So long as I can have music I forget
that I can't see.</p>
<p>'Barfoot is the finest fellow on earth,' exclaimed Micklethwaite. 'At
least, he would be if he understood Trilinear Co-ordinates.'</p>
<p>'Are <i>you</i> strong in mathematics, Mrs. Micklethwaite?' asked Everard.</p>
<p>'I? Oh dear, no! I never got much past the Rule of Three. But Tom has
forgiven me that long ago.'</p>
<p>'I don't despair of getting you into plane trigonometry, Fanny. We will
gossip about sines and co-sines before we die.'</p>
<p>It was said half-seriously, and Everard could not but burst into
laughter.</p>
<p>He sat down with them to their plain midday meal, and early in the
afternoon took his leave. He had no inclination to go home, if the
empty fiat could be dignified with such a name. After reading the
papers at his club, he walked aimlessly about the streets until it was
time to return to the same place for dinner. Then he sat with a cigar,
dreaming, and at half-past eight went to the Royal Oak Station, and
journeyed to Chelsea.</p>
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