<h2><SPAN name="page84"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>XIV</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">He</span> wrote his frank letter to Mrs.
Montgomery, who punctually answered it, mentioning an hour at
which he might present himself in the Second Avenue. She
lived in a neat little house of red brick, which had been freshly
painted, with the edges of the bricks very sharply marked out in
white. It has now disappeared, with its companions, to make
room for a row of structures more majestic. There were
green shutters upon the windows, without slats, but pierced with
little holes, arranged in groups; and before the house was a
diminutive yard, ornamented with a bush of mysterious character,
and surrounded by a low wooden paling, painted in the same green
as the shutters. The place looked like a magnified
baby-house, and might have been taken down from a shelf in a
toy-shop. Dr. Sloper, when he went to call, said to
himself, as he glanced at the objects I have enumerated, that
Mrs. Montgomery was evidently a thrifty and self-respecting
little person—the modest proportions of her dwelling seemed
to indicate that she was of small stature—who took a
virtuous satisfaction in keeping herself tidy, and had resolved
that, since she might not be splendid, she would at least be
immaculate. She received him in a little parlour, which was
precisely the parlour he had expected: a small unspeckled bower,
ornamented with a desultory foliage of tissue-paper, and with
clusters of glass drops, amid which—to carry out the
analogy—the temperature of the leafy season was maintained
by means of a cast-iron stove, emitting a dry blue flame, and
smelling strongly of varnish. The walls were embellished
with engravings swathed in pink gauze, and the tables ornamented
with volumes of extracts from the poets, usually bound in black
cloth stamped with florid designs in jaundiced gilt. The
Doctor had time to take cognisance of these details, for Mrs.
Montgomery, whose conduct he pronounced under the circumstances
inexcusable, kept him waiting some ten minutes before she
appeared. At last, however, she rustled in, smoothing down
a stiff poplin dress, with a little frightened flush in a
gracefully-rounded cheek.</p>
<p>She was a small, plump, fair woman, with a bright, clear eye,
and an extraordinary air of neatness and briskness. But
these qualities were evidently combined with an unaffected
humility, and the Doctor gave her his esteem as soon as he had
looked at her. A brave little person, with lively
perceptions, and yet a disbelief in her own talent for social, as
distinguished from practical, affairs—this was his rapid
mental <i>résumé</i> of Mrs. Montgomery, who, as he
saw, was flattered by what she regarded as the honour of his
visit. Mrs. Montgomery, in her little red house in the
Second Avenue, was a person for whom Dr. Sloper was one of the
great men, one of the fine gentlemen of New York; and while she
fixed her agitated eyes upon him, while she clasped her mittened
hands together in her glossy poplin lap, she had the appearance
of saying to herself that he quite answered her idea of what a
distinguished guest would naturally be. She apologised for
being late; but he interrupted her.</p>
<p>“It doesn’t matter,” he said; “for
while I sat here I had time to think over what I wish to say to
you, and to make up my mind how to begin.”</p>
<p>“Oh, do begin!” murmured Mrs. Montgomery.</p>
<p>“It is not so easy,” said the Doctor,
smiling. “You will have gathered from my letter that
I wish to ask you a few questions, and you may not find it very
comfortable to answer them.”</p>
<p>“Yes; I have thought what I should say. It is not
very easy.”</p>
<p>“But you must understand my situation—my state of
mind. Your brother wishes to marry my daughter, and I wish
to find out what sort of a young man he is. A good way to
do so seemed to be to come and ask you; which I have proceeded to
do.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery evidently took the situation very seriously;
she was in a state of extreme moral concentration. She kept
her pretty eyes, which were illumined by a sort of brilliant
modesty, attached to his own countenance, and evidently paid the
most earnest attention to each of his words. Her expression
indicated that she thought his idea of coming to see her a very
superior conception, but that she was really afraid to have
opinions on strange subjects.</p>
<p>“I am extremely glad to see you,” she said, in a
tone which seemed to admit, at the same time, that this had
nothing to do with the question.</p>
<p>The Doctor took advantage of this admission. “I
didn’t come to see you for your pleasure; I came to make
you say disagreeable things—and you can’t like
that. What sort of a gentleman is your brother?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery’s illuminated gaze grew vague, and began
to wander. She smiled a little, and for some time made no
answer, so that the Doctor at last became impatient. And
her answer, when it came, was not satisfactory. “It
is difficult to talk about one’s brother.”</p>
<p>“Not when one is fond of him, and when one has plenty of
good to say.”</p>
<p>“Yes, even then, when a good deal depends on it,”
said Mrs. Montgomery.</p>
<p>“Nothing depends on it, for you.”</p>
<p>“I mean for—for—” and she
hesitated.</p>
<p>“For your brother himself. I see!”</p>
<p>“I mean for Miss Sloper,” said Mrs.
Montgomery. The Doctor liked this; it had the accent of
sincerity. “Exactly; that’s the point. If
my poor girl should marry your brother, everything—as
regards her happiness—would depend on his being a good
fellow. She is the best creature in the world, and she
could never do him a grain of injury. He, on the other
hand, if he should not be all that we desire, might make her very
miserable. That is why I want you to throw some light upon
his character, you know. Of course you are not bound to do
it. My daughter, whom you have never seen, is nothing to
you; and I, possibly, am only an indiscreet and impertinent old
man. It is perfectly open to you to tell me that my visit
is in very bad taste and that I had better go about my
business. But I don’t think you will do this; because
I think we shall interest you, my poor girl and I. I am
sure that if you were to see Catherine, she would interest you
very much. I don’t mean because she is interesting in
the usual sense of the word, but because you would feel sorry for
her. She is so soft, so simple-minded, she would be such an
easy victim! A bad husband would have remarkable facilities
for making her miserable; for she would have neither the
intelligence nor the resolution to get the better of him, and yet
she would have an exaggerated power of suffering. I
see,” added the Doctor, with his most insinuating, his most
professional laugh, “you are already interested!”</p>
<p>“I have been interested from the moment he told me he
was engaged,” said Mrs. Montgomery.</p>
<p>“Ah! he says that—he calls it an
engagement?”</p>
<p>“Oh, he has told me you didn’t like it.”</p>
<p>“Did he tell you that I don’t like
<i>him</i>?”</p>
<p>“Yes, he told me that too. I said I couldn’t
help it!” added Mrs. Montgomery.</p>
<p>“Of course you can’t. But what you can do is
to tell me I am right—to give me an attestation, as it
were.” And the Doctor accompanied this remark with
another professional smile.</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery, however, smiled not at all; it was obvious
that she could not take the humorous view of his appeal.
“That is a good deal to ask,” she said at last.</p>
<p>“There can be no doubt of that; and I must, in
conscience, remind you of the advantages a young man marrying my
daughter would enjoy. She has an income of ten thousand
dollars in her own right, left her by her mother; if she marries
a husband I approve, she will come into almost twice as much more
at my death.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery listened in great earnestness to this splendid
financial statement; she had never heard thousands of dollars so
familiarly talked about. She flushed a little with
excitement. “Your daughter will be immensely
rich,” she said softly.</p>
<p>“Precisely—that’s the bother of
it.”</p>
<p>“And if Morris should marry her,
he—he—” And she hesitated timidly.</p>
<p>“He would be master of all that money? By no
means. He would be master of the ten thousand a year that
she has from her mother; but I should leave every penny of my own
fortune, earned in the laborious exercise of my profession, to
public institutions.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery dropped her eyes at this, and sat for some
time gazing at the straw matting which covered her floor.</p>
<p>“I suppose it seems to you,” said the Doctor,
laughing, “that in so doing I should play your brother a
very shabby trick.”</p>
<p>“Not at all. That is too much money to get
possession of so easily, by marrying. I don’t think
it would be right.”</p>
<p>“It’s right to get all one can. But in this
case your brother wouldn’t be able. If Catherine
marries without my consent, she doesn’t get a penny from my
own pocket.”</p>
<p>“Is that certain?” asked Mrs. Montgomery, looking
up.</p>
<p>“As certain as that I sit here!”</p>
<p>“Even if she should pine away?”</p>
<p>“Even if she should pine to a shadow, which isn’t
probable.”</p>
<p>“Does Morris know this?”</p>
<p>“I shall be most happy to inform him!” the Doctor
exclaimed.</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery resumed her meditations, and her visitor, who
was prepared to give time to the affair, asked himself whether,
in spite of her little conscientious air, she was not playing
into her brother’s hands. At the same time he was
half ashamed of the ordeal to which he had subjected her, and was
touched by the gentleness with which she bore it. “If
she were a humbug,” he said, “she would get angry;
unless she be very deep indeed. It is not probable that she
is as deep as that.”</p>
<p>“What makes you dislike Morris so much?” she
presently asked, emerging from her reflexions.</p>
<p>“I don’t dislike him in the least as a friend, as
a companion. He seems to me a charming fellow, and I should
think he would be excellent company. I dislike him,
exclusively, as a son-in-law. If the only office of a
son-in-law were to dine at the paternal table, I should set a
high value upon your brother. He dines capitally. But
that is a small part of his function, which, in general, is to be
a protector and caretaker of my child, who is singularly
ill-adapted to take care of herself. It is there that he
doesn’t satisfy me. I confess I have nothing but my
impression to go by; but I am in the habit of trusting my
impression. Of course you are at liberty to contradict it
flat. He strikes me as selfish and shallow.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery’s eyes expanded a little, and the Doctor
fancied he saw the light of admiration in them. “I
wonder you have discovered he is selfish!” she
exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Do you think he hides it so well?”</p>
<p>“Very well indeed,” said Mrs. Montgomery.
“And I think we are all rather selfish,” she added
quickly.</p>
<p>“I think so too; but I have seen people hide it better
than he. You see I am helped by a habit I have of dividing
people into classes, into types. I may easily be mistaken
about your brother as an individual, but his type is written on
his whole person.”</p>
<p>“He is very good-looking,” said Mrs.
Montgomery.</p>
<p>The Doctor eyed her a moment. “You women are all
the same! But the type to which your brother belongs was
made to be the ruin of you, and you were made to be its handmaids
and victims. The sign of the type in question is the
determination—sometimes terrible in its quiet
intensity—to accept nothing of life but its pleasures, and
to secure these pleasures chiefly by the aid of your complaisant
sex. Young men of this class never do anything for
themselves that they can get other people to do for them, and it
is the infatuation, the devotion, the superstition of others that
keeps them going. These others in ninety-nine cases out of
a hundred are women. What our young friends chiefly insist
upon is that some one else shall suffer for them; and women do
that sort of thing, as you must know, wonderfully
well.” The Doctor paused a moment, and then he added
abruptly, “You have suffered immensely for your
brother!”</p>
<p>This exclamation was abrupt, as I say, but it was also
perfectly calculated. The Doctor had been rather
disappointed at not finding his compact and comfortable little
hostess surrounded in a more visible degree by the ravages of
Morris Townsend’s immorality; but he had said to himself
that this was not because the young man had spared her, but
because she had contrived to plaster up her wounds. They
were aching there, behind the varnished stove, the festooned
engravings, beneath her own neat little poplin bosom; and if he
could only touch the tender spot, she would make a movement that
would betray her. The words I have just quoted were an
attempt to put his finger suddenly upon the place; and they had
some of the success that he looked for. The tears sprang
for a moment to Mrs. Montgomery’s eyes, and she indulged in
a proud little jerk of the head.</p>
<p>“I don’t know how you have found that out!”
she exclaimed.</p>
<p>“By a philosophic trick—by what they call
induction. You know you have always your option of
contradicting me. But kindly answer me a question.
Don’t you give your brother money? I think you ought
to answer that.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I have given him money,” said Mrs.
Montgomery.</p>
<p>“And you have not had much to give him?”</p>
<p>She was silent a moment. “If you ask me for a
confession of poverty, that is easily made. I am very
poor.”</p>
<p>“One would never suppose it from your—your
charming house,” said the Doctor. “I learned
from my sister that your income was moderate, and your family
numerous.”</p>
<p>“I have five children,” Mrs. Montgomery observed;
“but I am happy to say I can bring them up
decently.”</p>
<p>“Of course you can—accomplished and devoted as you
are! But your brother has counted them over, I
suppose?”</p>
<p>“Counted them over?”</p>
<p>“He knows there are five, I mean. He tells me it
is he that brings them up.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery stared a moment, and then
quickly—“Oh yes; he teaches them Spanish.”</p>
<p>The Doctor laughed out. “That must take a great
deal off your hands! Your brother also knows, of course,
that you have very little money.”</p>
<p>“I have often told him so!” Mrs. Montgomery
exclaimed, more unreservedly than she had yet spoken. She
was apparently taking some comfort in the Doctor’s
clairvoyancy.</p>
<p>“Which means that you have often occasion to, and that
he often sponges on you. Excuse the crudity of my language;
I simply express a fact. I don’t ask you how much of
your money he has had, it is none of my business. I have
ascertained what I suspected—what I wished.”
And the Doctor got up, gently smoothing his hat.
“Your brother lives on you,” he said as he stood
there.</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery quickly rose from her chair, following her
visitor’s movements with a look of fascination. But
then, with a certain inconsequence—“I have never
complained of him!” she said.</p>
<p>“You needn’t protest—you have not betrayed
him. But I advise you not to give him any more
money.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you see it is in my interest that he should
marry a rich person?” she asked. “If, as you
say, he lives on me, I can only wish to get rid of him, and to
put obstacles in the way of his marrying is to increase my own
difficulties.”</p>
<p>“I wish very much you would come to me with your
difficulties,” said the Doctor. “Certainly, if
I throw him back on your hands, the least I can do is to help you
to bear the burden. If you will allow me to say so, then, I
shall take the liberty of placing in your hands, for the present,
a certain fund for your brother’s support.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery stared; she evidently thought he was jesting;
but she presently saw that he was not, and the complication of
her feelings became painful. “It seems to me that I
ought to be very much offended with you,” she murmured.</p>
<p>“Because I have offered you money? That’s a
superstition,” said the Doctor. “You must let
me come and see you again, and we will talk about these
things. I suppose that some of your children are
girls.”</p>
<p>“I have two little girls,” said Mrs.
Montgomery.</p>
<p>“Well, when they grow up, and begin to think of taking
husbands, you will see how anxious you will be about the moral
character of these gentlemen. Then you will understand this
visit of mine!”</p>
<p>“Ah, you are not to believe that Morris’s moral
character is bad!”</p>
<p>The Doctor looked at her a little, with folded arms.
“There is something I should greatly like—as a moral
satisfaction. I should like to hear you say—‘He
is abominably selfish!’”</p>
<p>The words came out with the grave distinctness of his voice,
and they seemed for an instant to create, to poor Mrs.
Montgomery’s troubled vision, a material image. She
gazed at it an instant, and then she turned away.
“You distress me, sir!” she exclaimed.
“He is, after all, my brother, and his talents, his
talents—” On these last words her voice
quavered, and before he knew it she had burst into tears.</p>
<p>“His talents are first-rate!” said the
Doctor. “We must find a proper field for
them!” And he assured her most respectfully of his
regret at having so greatly discomposed her.
“It’s all for my poor Catherine,” he went
on. “You must know her, and you will see.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Montgomery brushed away her tears, and blushed at having
shed them. “I should like to know your
daughter,” she answered; and then, in an
instant—“Don’t let her marry him!”</p>
<p>Dr. Sloper went away with the words gently humming in his
ears—“Don’t let her marry him!”
They gave him the moral satisfaction of which he had just spoken,
and their value was the greater that they had evidently cost a
pang to poor little Mrs. Montgomery’s family pride.</p>
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