<h2><SPAN name="page56"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>IX</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was a regular custom with the
family in Washington Square to go and spend Sunday evening at
Mrs. Almond’s. On the Sunday after the conversation I
have just narrated, this custom was not intermitted and on this
occasion, towards the middle of the evening, Dr. Sloper found
reason to withdraw to the library, with his brother-in-law, to
talk over a matter of business. He was absent some twenty
minutes, and when he came back into the circle, which was
enlivened by the presence of several friends of the family, he
saw that Morris Townsend had come in and had lost as little time
as possible in seating himself on a small sofa, beside
Catherine. In the large room, where several different
groups had been formed, and the hum of voices and of laughter was
loud, these two young persons might confabulate, as the Doctor
phrased it to himself, without attracting attention. He saw
in a moment, however, that his daughter was painfully conscious
of his own observation. She sat motionless, with her eyes
bent down, staring at her open fan, deeply flushed, shrinking
together as if to minimise the indiscretion of which she
confessed herself guilty.</p>
<p>The Doctor almost pitied her. Poor Catherine was not
defiant; she had no genius for bravado; and as she felt that her
father viewed her companion’s attentions with an
unsympathising eye, there was nothing but discomfort for her in
the accident of seeming to challenge him. The Doctor felt,
indeed, so sorry for her that he turned away, to spare her the
sense of being watched; and he was so intelligent a man that, in
his thoughts, he rendered a sort of poetic justice to her
situation.</p>
<p>“It must be deucedly pleasant for a plain inanimate girl
like that to have a beautiful young fellow come and sit down
beside her and whisper to her that he is her slave—if that
is what this one whispers. No wonder she likes it, and that
she thinks me a cruel tyrant; which of course she does, though
she is afraid—she hasn’t the animation
necessary—to admit it to herself. Poor old
Catherine!” mused the Doctor; “I verily believe she
is capable of defending me when Townsend abuses me!”</p>
<p>And the force of this reflexion, for the moment, was such in
making him feel the natural opposition between his point of view
and that of an infatuated child, that he said to himself that he
was perhaps, after all, taking things too hard and crying out
before he was hurt. He must not condemn Morris Townsend
unheard. He had a great aversion to taking things too hard;
he thought that half the discomfort and many of the
disappointments of life come from it; and for an instant he asked
himself whether, possibly, he did not appear ridiculous to this
intelligent young man, whose private perception of incongruities
he suspected of being keen. At the end of a quarter of an
hour Catherine had got rid of him, and Townsend was now standing
before the fireplace in conversation with Mrs. Almond.</p>
<p>“We will try him again,” said the Doctor.
And he crossed the room and joined his sister and her companion,
making her a sign that she should leave the young man to
him. She presently did so, while Morris looked at him,
smiling, without a sign of evasiveness in his affable eye.</p>
<p>“He’s amazingly conceited!” thought the
Doctor; and then he said aloud: “I am told you are looking
out for a position.”</p>
<p>“Oh, a position is more than I should presume to call
it,” Morris Townsend answered. “That sounds so
fine. I should like some quiet work—something to turn
an honest penny.”</p>
<p>“What sort of thing should you prefer?”</p>
<p>“Do you mean what am I fit for? Very little, I am
afraid. I have nothing but my good right arm, as they say
in the melodramas.”</p>
<p>“You are too modest,” said the Doctor.
“In addition to your good right arm, you have your subtle
brain. I know nothing of you but what I see; but I see by
your physiognomy that you are extremely intelligent.”</p>
<p>“Ah,” Townsend murmured, “I don’t know
what to answer when you say that! You advise me, then, not
to despair?”</p>
<p>And he looked at his interlocutor as if the question might
have a double meaning. The Doctor caught the look and
weighed it a moment before he replied. “I should be
very sorry to admit that a robust and well-disposed young man
need ever despair. If he doesn’t succeed in one
thing, he can try another. Only, I should add, he should
choose his line with discretion.”</p>
<p>“Ah, yes, with discretion,” Morris Townsend
repeated sympathetically. “Well, I have been
indiscreet, formerly; but I think I have got over it. I am
very steady now.” And he stood a moment, looking down
at his remarkably neat shoes. Then at last, “Were you
kindly intending to propose something for my advantage?” he
inquired, looking up and smiling.</p>
<p>“Damn his impudence!” the Doctor exclaimed
privately. But in a moment he reflected that he himself
had, after all, touched first upon this delicate point, and that
his words might have been construed as an offer of
assistance. “I have no particular proposal to
make,” he presently said; “but it occurred to me to
let you know that I have you in my mind. Sometimes one
hears of opportunities. For instance—should you
object to leaving New York—to going to a
distance?”</p>
<p>“I am afraid I shouldn’t be able to manage
that. I must seek my fortune here or nowhere. You
see,” added Morris Townsend, “I have ties—I
have responsibilities here. I have a sister, a widow, from
whom I have been separated for a long time, and to whom I am
almost everything. I shouldn’t like to say to her
that I must leave her. She rather depends upon me, you
see.”</p>
<p>“Ah, that’s very proper; family feeling is very
proper,” said Dr. Sloper. “I often think there
is not enough of it in our city. I think I have heard of
your sister.”</p>
<p>“It is possible, but I rather doubt it; she lives so
very quietly.”</p>
<p>“As quietly, you mean,” the Doctor went on, with a
short laugh, “as a lady may do who has several young
children.”</p>
<p>“Ah, my little nephews and nieces—that’s the
very point! I am helping to bring them up,” said
Morris Townsend. “I am a kind of amateur tutor; I
give them lessons.”</p>
<p>“That’s very proper, as I say; but it is hardly a
career.”</p>
<p>“It won’t make my fortune!” the young man
confessed.</p>
<p>“You must not be too much bent on a fortune,” said
the Doctor. “But I assure you I will keep you in
mind; I won’t lose sight of you!”</p>
<p>“If my situation becomes desperate I shall perhaps take
the liberty of reminding you!” Morris rejoined, raising his
voice a little, with a brighter smile, as his interlocutor turned
away.</p>
<p>Before he left the house the Doctor had a few words with Mrs.
Almond.</p>
<p>“I should like to see his sister,” he said.
“What do you call her? Mrs. Montgomery. I
should like to have a little talk with her.”</p>
<p>“I will try and manage it,” Mrs. Almond
responded. “I will take the first opportunity of
inviting her, and you shall come and meet her. Unless,
indeed,” Mrs. Almond added, “she first takes it into
her head to be sick and to send for you.”</p>
<p>“Ah no, not that; she must have trouble enough without
that. But it would have its advantages, for then I should
see the children. I should like very much to see the
children.”</p>
<p>“You are very thorough. Do you want to catechise
them about their uncle!”</p>
<p>“Precisely. Their uncle tells me he has charge of
their education, that he saves their mother the expense of
school-bills. I should like to ask them a few questions in
the commoner branches.”</p>
<p>“He certainly has not the cut of a schoolmaster!”
Mrs. Almond said to herself a short time afterwards, as she saw
Morris Townsend in a corner bending over her niece, who was
seated.</p>
<p>And there was, indeed, nothing in the young man’s
discourse at this moment that savoured of the pedagogue.</p>
<p>“Will you meet me somewhere to-morrow or next
day?” he said, in a low tone, to Catherine.</p>
<p>“Meet you?” she asked, lifting her frightened
eyes.</p>
<p>“I have something particular to say to you—very
particular.”</p>
<p>“Can’t you come to the house? Can’t
you say it there?”</p>
<p>Townsend shook his head gloomily. “I can’t
enter your doors again!”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Townsend!” murmured Catherine. She
trembled as she wondered what had happened, whether her father
had forbidden it.</p>
<p>“I can’t in self-respect,” said the young
man. “Your father has insulted me.”</p>
<p>“Insulted you!”</p>
<p>“He has taunted me with my poverty.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you are mistaken—you misunderstood
him!” Catherine spoke with energy, getting up from
her chair.</p>
<p>“Perhaps I am too proud—too sensitive. But
would you have me otherwise?” he asked tenderly.</p>
<p>“Where my father is concerned, you must not be
sure. He is full of goodness,” said Catherine.</p>
<p>“He laughed at me for having no position! I took
it quietly; but only because he belongs to you.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said Catherine; “I
don’t know what he thinks. I am sure he means to be
kind. You must not be too proud.”</p>
<p>“I will be proud only of you,” Morris
answered. “Will you meet me in the Square in the
afternoon?”</p>
<p>A great blush on Catherine’s part had been the answer to
the declaration I have just quoted. She turned away,
heedless of his question.</p>
<p>“Will you meet me?” he repeated. “It
is very quiet there; no one need see us—toward
dusk?”</p>
<p>“It is you who are unkind, it is you who laugh, when you
say such things as that.”</p>
<p>“My dear girl!” the young man murmured.</p>
<p>“You know how little there is in me to be proud
of. I am ugly and stupid.”</p>
<p>Morris greeted this remark with an ardent murmur, in which she
recognised nothing articulate but an assurance that she was his
own dearest.</p>
<p>But she went on. “I am not even—I am not
even—” And she paused a moment.</p>
<p>“You are not what?”</p>
<p>“I am not even brave.”</p>
<p>“Ah, then, if you are afraid, what shall we
do?”</p>
<p>She hesitated a while; then at last—“You must come
to the house,” she said; “I am not afraid of
that.”</p>
<p>“I would rather it were in the Square,” the young
man urged. “You know how empty it is, often. No
one will see us.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care who sees us! But leave me
now.”</p>
<p>He left her resignedly; he had got what he wanted.
Fortunately he was ignorant that half an hour later, going home
with her father and feeling him near, the poor girl, in spite of
her sudden declaration of courage, began to tremble again.
Her father said nothing; but she had an idea his eyes were fixed
upon her in the darkness. Mrs. Penniman also was silent;
Morris Townsend had told her that her niece preferred,
unromantically, an interview in a chintz-covered parlour to a
sentimental tryst beside a fountain sheeted with dead leaves, and
she was lost in wonderment at the oddity—almost the
perversity—of the choice.</p>
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