<h2><SPAN name="page27"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>V</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">He</span> learned what he had asked some
three or four days later, after Morris Townsend, with his cousin,
had called in Washington Square. Mrs. Penniman did not tell
her brother, on the drive home, that she had intimated to this
agreeable young man, whose name she did not know, that, with her
niece, she should be very glad to see him; but she was greatly
pleased, and even a little flattered, when, late on a Sunday
afternoon, the two gentlemen made their appearance. His
coming with Arthur Townsend made it more natural and easy; the
latter young man was on the point of becoming connected with the
family, and Mrs. Penniman had remarked to Catherine that, as he
was going to marry Marian, it would be polite in him to
call. These events came to pass late in the autumn, and
Catherine and her aunt had been sitting together in the closing
dusk, by the firelight, in the high back parlour.</p>
<p>Arthur Townsend fell to Catherine’s portion, while his
companion placed himself on the sofa, beside Mrs. Penniman.
Catherine had hitherto not been a harsh critic; she was easy to
please—she liked to talk with young men. But
Marian’s betrothed, this evening, made her feel vaguely
fastidious; he sat looking at the fire and rubbing his knees with
his hands. As for Catherine, she scarcely even pretended to
keep up the conversation; her attention had fixed itself on the
other side of the room; she was listening to what went on between
the other Mr. Townsend and her aunt. Every now and then he
looked over at Catherine herself and smiled, as if to show that
what he said was for her benefit too. Catherine would have
liked to change her place, to go and sit near them, where she
might see and hear him better. But she was afraid of
seeming bold—of looking eager; and, besides, it would not
have been polite to Marian’s little suitor. She
wondered why the other gentleman had picked out her
aunt—how he came to have so much to say to Mrs. Penniman,
to whom, usually, young men were not especially devoted.
She was not at all jealous of Aunt Lavinia, but she was a little
envious, and above all she wondered; for Morris Townsend was an
object on which she found that her imagination could exercise
itself indefinitely. His cousin had been describing a house
that he had taken in view of his union with Marian, and the
domestic conveniences he meant to introduce into it; how Marian
wanted a larger one, and Mrs. Almond recommended a smaller one,
and how he himself was convinced that he had got the neatest
house in New York.</p>
<p>“It doesn’t matter,” he said;
“it’s only for three or four years. At the end
of three or four years we’ll move. That’s the
way to live in New York—to move every three or four
years. Then you always get the last thing. It’s
because the city’s growing so quick—you’ve got
to keep up with it. It’s going straight up
town—that’s where New York’s going. If I
wasn’t afraid Marian would be lonely, I’d go up
there—right up to the top—and wait for it. Only
have to wait ten years—they’d all come up after
you. But Marian says she wants some neighbours—she
doesn’t want to be a pioneer. She says that if
she’s got to be the first settler she had better go out to
Minnesota. I guess we’ll move up little by little;
when we get tired of one street we’ll go higher. So
you see we’ll always have a new house; it’s a great
advantage to have a new house; you get all the latest
improvements. They invent everything all over again about
every five years, and it’s a great thing to keep up with
the new things. I always try and keep up with the new
things of every kind. Don’t you think that’s a
good motto for a young couple—to keep ‘going
higher’? That’s the name of that piece of
poetry—what do they call
it?—<i>Excelsior</i>!”</p>
<p>Catherine bestowed on her junior visitor only just enough
attention to feel that this was not the way Mr. Morris Townsend
had talked the other night, or that he was talking now to her
fortunate aunt. But suddenly his aspiring kinsman became
more interesting. He seemed to have become conscious that
she was affected by his companion’s presence, and he
thought it proper to explain it.</p>
<p>“My cousin asked me to bring him, or I shouldn’t
have taken the liberty. He seemed to want very much to
come; you know he’s awfully sociable. I told him I
wanted to ask you first, but he said Mrs. Penniman had invited
him. He isn’t particular what he says when he wants
to come somewhere! But Mrs. Penniman seems to think
it’s all right.”</p>
<p>“We are very glad to see him,” said
Catherine. And she wished to talk more about him; but she
hardly knew what to say. “I never saw him
before,” she went on presently.</p>
<p>Arthur Townsend stared.</p>
<p>“Why, he told me he talked with you for over half an
hour the other night.”</p>
<p>“I mean before the other night. That was the first
time.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he has been away from New York—he has been
all round the world. He doesn’t know many people
here, but he’s very sociable, and he wants to know every
one.”</p>
<p>“Every one?” said Catherine.</p>
<p>“Well, I mean all the good ones. All the pretty
young ladies—like Mrs. Penniman!” and Arthur Townsend
gave a private laugh.</p>
<p>“My aunt likes him very much,” said Catherine.</p>
<p>“Most people like him—he’s so
brilliant.”</p>
<p>“He’s more like a foreigner,” Catherine
suggested.</p>
<p>“Well, I never knew a foreigner!” said young
Townsend, in a tone which seemed to indicate that his ignorance
had been optional.</p>
<p>“Neither have I,” Catherine confessed, with more
humility. “They say they are generally
brilliant,” she added vaguely.</p>
<p>“Well, the people of this city are clever enough for
me. I know some of them that think they are too clever for
me; but they ain’t!”</p>
<p>“I suppose you can’t be too clever,” said
Catherine, still with humility.</p>
<p>“I don’t know. I know some people that call
my cousin too clever.”</p>
<p>Catherine listened to this statement with extreme interest,
and a feeling that if Morris Townsend had a fault it would
naturally be that one. But she did not commit herself, and
in a moment she asked: “Now that he has come back, will he
stay here always?”</p>
<p>“Ah,” said Arthur, “if he can get something
to do.”</p>
<p>“Something to do?”</p>
<p>“Some place or other; some business.”</p>
<p>“Hasn’t he got any?” said Catherine, who had
never heard of a young man—of the upper class—in this
situation.</p>
<p>“No; he’s looking round. But he can’t
find anything.”</p>
<p>“I am very sorry,” Catherine permitted herself to
observe.</p>
<p>“Oh, he doesn’t mind,” said young
Townsend. “He takes it easy—he isn’t in a
hurry. He is very particular.”</p>
<p>Catherine thought he naturally would be, and gave herself up
for some moments to the contemplation of this idea, in several of
its bearings.</p>
<p>“Won’t his father take him into his
business—his office?” she at last inquired.</p>
<p>“He hasn’t got any father—he has only got a
sister. Your sister can’t help you much.”</p>
<p>It seemed to Catherine that if she were his sister she would
disprove this axiom. “Is she—is she
pleasant?” she asked in a moment.</p>
<p>“I don’t know—I believe she’s very
respectable,” said young Townsend. And then he looked
across to his cousin and began to laugh. “Look here,
we are talking about you,” he added.</p>
<p>Morris Townsend paused in his conversation with Mrs. Penniman,
and stared, with a little smile. Then he got up, as if he
were going.</p>
<p>“As far as you are concerned, I can’t return the
compliment,” he said to Catherine’s companion.
“But as regards Miss Sloper, it’s another
affair.”</p>
<p>Catherine thought this little speech wonderfully well turned;
but she was embarrassed by it, and she also got up. Morris
Townsend stood looking at her and smiling; he put out his hand
for farewell. He was going, without having said anything to
her; but even on these terms she was glad to have seen him.</p>
<p>“I will tell her what you have said—when you
go!” said Mrs. Penniman, with an insinuating laugh.</p>
<p>Catherine blushed, for she felt almost as if they were making
sport of her. What in the world could this beautiful young
man have said? He looked at her still, in spite of her
blush; but very kindly and respectfully.</p>
<p>“I have had no talk with you,” he said, “and
that was what I came for. But it will be a good reason for
coming another time; a little pretext—if I am obliged to
give one. I am not afraid of what your aunt will say when I
go.”</p>
<p>With this the two young men took their departure; after which
Catherine, with her blush still lingering, directed a serious and
interrogative eye to Mrs. Penniman. She was incapable of
elaborate artifice, and she resorted to no jocular
device—to no affectation of the belief that she had been
maligned—to learn what she desired.</p>
<p>“What did you say you would tell me?” she
asked.</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman came up to her, smiling and nodding a little,
looked at her all over, and gave a twist to the knot of ribbon in
her neck. “It’s a great secret, my dear child;
but he is coming a-courting!”</p>
<p>Catherine was serious still. “Is that what he told
you!”</p>
<p>“He didn’t say so exactly. But he left me to
guess it. I’m a good guesser.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean a-courting me?”</p>
<p>“Not me, certainly, miss; though I must say he is a
hundred times more polite to a person who has no longer extreme
youth to recommend her than most of the young men. He is
thinking of some one else.” And Mrs. Penniman gave
her niece a delicate little kiss. “You must be very
gracious to him.”</p>
<p>Catherine stared—she was bewildered. “I
don’t understand you,” she said; “he
doesn’t know me.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, he does; more than you think. I have told
him all about you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Aunt Penniman!” murmured Catherine, as if
this had been a breach of trust. “He is a perfect
stranger—we don’t know him.” There was
infinite, modesty in the poor girl’s “we.”</p>
<p>Aunt Penniman, however, took no account of it; she spoke even
with a touch of acrimony. “My dear Catherine, you
know very well that you admire him!”</p>
<p>“Oh, Aunt Penniman!” Catherine could only murmur
again. It might very well be that she admired
him—though this did not seem to her a thing to talk
about. But that this brilliant stranger—this sudden
apparition, who had barely heard the sound of her
voice—took that sort of interest in her that was expressed
by the romantic phrase of which Mrs. Penniman had just made use:
this could only be a figment of the restless brain of Aunt
Lavinia, whom every one knew to be a woman of powerful
imagination.</p>
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