<h2><SPAN name="page146"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>XXIII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">If</span> Morris Townsend was not to be
included in this journey, no more was Mrs. Penniman, who would
have been thankful for an invitation, but who (to do her justice)
bore her disappointment in a perfectly ladylike manner.
“I should enjoy seeing the works of Raphael and the
ruins—the ruins of the Pantheon,” she said to Mrs.
Almond; “but, on the other hand, I shall not be sorry to be
alone and at peace for the next few months in Washington
Square. I want rest; I have been through so much in the
last four months.” Mrs. Almond thought it rather
cruel that her brother should not take poor Lavinia abroad; but
she easily understood that, if the purpose of his expedition was
to make Catherine forget her lover, it was not in his interest to
give his daughter this young man’s best friend as a
companion. “If Lavinia had not been so foolish, she
might visit the ruins of the Pantheon,” she said to
herself; and she continued to regret her sister’s folly,
even though the latter assured her that she had often heard the
relics in question most satisfactorily described by Mr.
Penniman. Mrs. Penniman was perfectly aware that her
brother’s motive in undertaking a foreign tour was to lay a
trap for Catherine’s constancy; and she imparted this
conviction very frankly to her niece.</p>
<p>“He thinks it will make you forget Morris,” she
said (she always called the young man “Morris” now);
“out of sight, out of mind, you know. He thinks that
all the things you will see over there will drive him out of your
thoughts.”</p>
<p>Catherine looked greatly alarmed. “If he thinks
that, I ought to tell him beforehand.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman shook her head. “Tell him
afterwards, my dear! After he has had all the trouble and
the expense! That’s the way to serve
him.” And she added, in a softer key, that it must be
delightful to think of those who love us among the ruins of the
Pantheon.</p>
<p>Her father’s displeasure had cost the girl, as we know,
a great deal of deep-welling sorrow—sorrow of the purest
and most generous kind, without a touch of resentment or rancour;
but for the first time, after he had dismissed with such
contemptuous brevity her apology for being a charge upon him,
there was a spark of anger in her grief. She had felt his
contempt; it had scorched her; that speech about her bad taste
made her ears burn for three days. During this period she
was less considerate; she had an idea—a rather vague one,
but it was agreeable to her sense of injury—that now she
was absolved from penance, and might do what she chose. She
chose to write to Morris Townsend to meet her in the Square and
take her to walk about the town. If she were going to
Europe out of respect to her father, she might at least give
herself this satisfaction. She felt in every way at present
more free and more resolute; there was a force that urged
her. Now at last, completely and unreservedly, her passion
possessed her.</p>
<p>Morris met her at last, and they took a long walk. She
told him immediately what had happened—that her father
wished to take her away. It would be for six months, to
Europe; she would do absolutely what Morris should think
best. She hoped inexpressibly that he would think it best
she should stay at home. It was some time before he said
what he thought: he asked, as they walked along, a great many
questions. There was one that especially struck her; it
seemed so incongruous.</p>
<p>“Should you like to see all those celebrated things over
there?”</p>
<p>“Oh no, Morris!” said Catherine, quite
deprecatingly.</p>
<p>“Gracious Heaven, what a dull woman!” Morris
exclaimed to himself.</p>
<p>“He thinks I will forget you,” said Catherine:
“that all these things will drive you out of my
mind.”</p>
<p>“Well, my dear, perhaps they will!”</p>
<p>“Please don’t say that,” Catherine answered
gently, as they walked along. “Poor father will be
disappointed.”</p>
<p>Morris gave a little laugh. “Yes, I verily believe
that your poor father will be disappointed! But you will
have seen Europe,” he added humorously. “What a
take-in!”</p>
<p>“I don’t care for seeing Europe,” Catherine
said.</p>
<p>“You ought to care, my dear. And it may mollify
your father.”</p>
<p>Catherine, conscious of her obstinacy, expected little of
this, and could not rid herself of the idea that in going abroad
and yet remaining firm, she should play her father a trick.
“Don’t you think it would be a kind of
deception?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Doesn’t he want to deceive you?” cried
Morris. “It will serve him right! I really
think you had better go.”</p>
<p>“And not be married for so long?”</p>
<p>“Be married when you come back. You can buy your
wedding clothes in Paris.” And then Morris, with
great kindness of tone, explained his view of the matter.
It would be a good thing that she should go; it would put them
completely in the right. It would show they were reasonable
and willing to wait. Once they were so sure of each other,
they could afford to wait—what had they to fear? If
there was a particle of chance that her father would be
favourably affected by her going, that ought to settle it; for,
after all, Morris was very unwilling to be the cause of her being
disinherited. It was not for himself, it was for her and
for her children. He was willing to wait for her; it would
be hard, but he could do it. And over there, among
beautiful scenes and noble monuments, perhaps the old gentleman
would be softened; such things were supposed to exert a
humanising influence. He might be touched by her
gentleness, her patience, her willingness to make any sacrifice
but <i>that</i> one; and if she should appeal to him some day, in
some celebrated spot—in Italy, say, in the evening; in
Venice, in a gondola, by moonlight—if she should be a
little clever about it and touch the right chord, perhaps he
would fold her in his arms and tell her that he forgave
her. Catherine was immensely struck with this conception of
the affair, which seemed eminently worthy of her lover’s
brilliant intellect; though she viewed it askance in so far as it
depended upon her own powers of execution. The idea of
being “clever” in a gondola by moonlight appeared to
her to involve elements of which her grasp was not active.
But it was settled between them that she should tell her father
that she was ready to follow him obediently anywhere, making the
mental reservation that she loved Morris Townsend more than
ever.</p>
<p>She informed the Doctor she was ready to embark, and he made
rapid arrangements for this event. Catherine had many
farewells to make, but with only two of them are we actively
concerned. Mrs. Penniman took a discriminating view of her
niece’s journey; it seemed to her very proper that Mr.
Townsend’s destined bride should wish to embellish her mind
by a foreign tour.</p>
<p>“You leave him in good hands,” she said, pressing
her lips to Catherine’s forehead. (She was very fond
of kissing people’s foreheads; it was an involuntary
expression of sympathy with the intellectual part.)
“I shall see him often; I shall feel like one of the
vestals of old, tending the sacred flame.”</p>
<p>“You behave beautifully about not going with us,”
Catherine answered, not presuming to examine this analogy.</p>
<p>“It is my pride that keeps me up,” said Mrs.
Penniman, tapping the body of her dress, which always gave forth
a sort of metallic ring.</p>
<p>Catherine’s parting with her lover was short, and few
words were exchanged.</p>
<p>“Shall I find you just the same when I come back?”
she asked; though the question was not the fruit of
scepticism.</p>
<p>“The same—only more so!” said Morris,
smiling.</p>
<p>It does not enter into our scheme to narrate in detail Dr.
Sloper’s proceedings in the eastern hemisphere. He
made the grand tour of Europe, travelled in considerable
splendour, and (as was to have been expected in a man of his high
cultivation) found so much in art and antiquity to interest him,
that he remained abroad, not for six months, but for
twelve. Mrs. Penniman, in Washington Square, accommodated
herself to his absence. She enjoyed her uncontested
dominion in the empty house, and flattered herself that she made
it more attractive to their friends than when her brother was at
home. To Morris Townsend, at least, it would have appeared
that she made it singularly attractive. He was altogether
her most frequent visitor, and Mrs. Penniman was very fond of
asking him to tea. He had his chair—a very easy one
at the fireside in the back parlour (when the great mahogany
sliding-doors, with silver knobs and hinges, which divided this
apartment from its more formal neighbour, were closed), and he
used to smoke cigars in the Doctor’s study, where he often
spent an hour in turning over the curious collections of its
absent proprietor. He thought Mrs. Penniman a goose, as we
know; but he was no goose himself, and, as a young man of
luxurious tastes and scanty resources, he found the house a
perfect castle of indolence. It became for him a club with
a single member. Mrs. Penniman saw much less of her sister
than while the Doctor was at home; for Mrs. Almond had felt moved
to tell her that she disapproved of her relations with Mr.
Townsend. She had no business to be so friendly to a young
man of whom their brother thought so meanly, and Mrs. Almond was
surprised at her levity in foisting a most deplorable engagement
upon Catherine.</p>
<p>“Deplorable?” cried Lavinia. “He will
make her a lovely husband!”</p>
<p>“I don’t believe in lovely husbands,” said
Mrs. Almond; “I only believe in good ones. If he
marries her, and she comes into Austin’s money, they may
get on. He will be an idle, amiable, selfish, and doubtless
tolerably good-natured fellow. But if she doesn’t get
the money and he finds himself tied to her, Heaven have mercy on
her! He will have none. He will hate her for his
disappointment, and take his revenge; he will be pitiless and
cruel. Woe betide poor Catherine! I recommend you to
talk a little with his sister; it’s a pity Catherine
can’t marry <i>her</i>!”</p>
<p>Mrs. Penniman had no appetite whatever for conversation with
Mrs. Montgomery, whose acquaintance she made no trouble to
cultivate; and the effect of this alarming forecast of her
niece’s destiny was to make her think it indeed a thousand
pities that Mr. Townsend’s generous nature should be
embittered. Bright enjoyment was his natural element, and
how could he be comfortable if there should prove to be nothing
to enjoy? It became a fixed idea with Mrs. Penniman that he
should yet enjoy her brother’s fortune, on which she had
acuteness enough to perceive that her own claim was small.</p>
<p>“If he doesn’t leave it to Catherine, it certainly
won’t be to leave it to me,” she said.</p>
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