Tonight George began a jubilant warfare
upon his Aunt Fanny, opening the campaign upon his
return home at about eleven o’clock. Fanny
had retired, and was presumably asleep, but George,
on the way to his own room, paused before her door,
and serenaded her in a full baritone:
“As I walk along the
Boy de Balong
With my independent
air,
The people all declare,
‘He must be a
millionaire!’
Oh, you hear them sigh,
and wish to die,
And see them wink the
other eye.
At the man that broke
the bank at Monte Carlo!”
Isabel came from George’s room,
where she had been reading, waiting for him.
“I’m afraid you’ll disturb your father,
dear. I wish you’d sing more, though in
the daytime! You have a splendid voice.”
“Good-night, old lady!”
“I thought perhaps I Didn’t
you want me to come in with you and talk a little?”
“Not to-night. You go to bed. Good-night,
old lady!”
He kissed her hilariously, entered
his room with a skip, closed his door noisily; and
then he could be heard tossing things about, loudly
humming “The Man that Broke the Bank at Monte
Carlo.”
Smiling, his mother knelt outside
his door to pray; then, with her “Amen,”
pressed her lips to the bronze door-knob; and went
silently to her own apartment.
After breakfasting in bed, George
spent the next morning at his grandfather’s
and did not encounter his Aunt Fanny until lunch, when
she seemed to be ready for him.
“Thank you so much for the serenade,
George!” she said. “Your poor father
tells me he’d just got to sleep for the first
time in two nights, but after your kind attentions
he lay awake the rest of last night.”
“Perfectly true,” Mr. Minafer said grimly.
“Of course, I didn’t know,
sir,” George hastened to assure him. “I’m
awfully sorry. But Aunt Fanny was so gloomy and
excited before I went out, last evening, I thought
she needed cheering up.”
“I!” Fanny jeered.
“I was gloomy? I was excited? You mean
about that engagement?”
“Yes. Weren’t you?
I thought I heard you worrying over somebody’s
being engaged. Didn’t I hear you say you’d
heard Mr. Eugene Morgan was engaged to marry some
pretty little seventeen-year-old girl?”
Fanny was stung, but she made a brave
effort. “Did you ask Lucy?” she said,
her voice almost refusing the teasing laugh she tried
to make it utter. “Did you ask her when
Fred Kinney and she ”
“Yes. That story wasn’t
true. But the other one ” Here
he stared at Fanny, and then affected dismay.
“Why, what’s the matter with your face,
Aunt Fanny? It seems agitated!”
“Agitated!” Fanny said
disdainfully, but her voice undeniably lacked steadiness.
“Agitated!”
“Oh, come!” Mr. Minafer
interposed. “Let’s have a little peace!”
“I’m willing,” said
George. “I don’t want to see poor
Aunt Fanny all stirred up over a rumour I just this
minute invented myself. She’s so excitable about
certain subjects it’s hard to control
her.” He turned to his mother. “What’s
the matter with grandfather?”
“Didn’t you see him this morning?”
Isabel asked.
“Yes. He was glad to see
me, and all that, but he seemed pretty fidgety.
Has he been having trouble with his heart again?”
“Not lately. No.”
“Well, he’s not himself.
I tried to talk to him about the estate; it’s
disgraceful it really is the
way things are looking. He wouldn’t listen,
and he seemed upset. What’s he upset over?”
Isabel looked serious; however, it
was her husband who suggested gloomily, “I suppose
the Major’s bothered about this Sydney and Amelia
business, most likely.”
“What Sydney and Amelia business?” George
asked.
“Your mother can tell you, if
she wants to,” Minafer said. “It’s
not my side of the family, so I keep off.”
“It’s rather disagreeable
for all of us, Georgie,” Isabel began. “You
see, your Uncle Sydney wanted a diplomatic position,
and he thought brother George, being in Congress,
could arrange it. George did get him the offer
of a South American ministry, but Sydney wanted a European
ambassadorship, and he got quite indignant with poor
George for thinking he’d take anything smaller and
he believes George didn’t work hard enough for
him. George had done his best, of course, and
now he’s out of Congress, and won’t run
again so there’s Sydney’s idea
of a big diplomatic position gone for good. Well,
Sydney and your Aunt Amelia are terribly disappointed,
and they say they’ve been thinking for years
that this town isn’t really fit to live in ’for
a gentleman,’ Sydney says and it
is getting rather big and dirty. So they’ve
sold their house and decided to go abroad to live
permanently; there’s a villa near Florence they’ve
often talked of buying. And they want father to
let them have their share of the estate now, instead
of waiting for him to leave it to them in his will.”
“Well, I suppose that’s
fair enough,” George said. “That is,
in case he intended to leave them a certain amount
in his will.”
“Of course that’s understood,
Georgie. Father explained his will to us long
ago; a third to them, and a third to brother George,
and a third to us.”
Her son made a simple calculation
in his mind. Uncle George was a bachelor, and
probably would never marry; Sydney and Amelia were
childless. The Major’s only grandchild appeared
to remain the eventual heir of the entire property,
no matter if the Major did turn over to Sydney a third
of it now. And George had a fragmentary vision
of himself, in mourning, arriving to take possession
of a historic Florentine villa he saw himself
walking up a cypress-bordered path, with ancient carven
stone balustrades in the distance, and servants in
mourning livery greeting the new signore. “Well,
I suppose it’s grandfather’s own affair.
He can do it or not, just as he likes. I don’t
see why he’d mind much.”
“He seemed rather confused and
pained about it,” Isabel said. “I
think they oughtn’t to urge it. George
says that the estate won’t stand taking out
the third that Sydney wants, and that Sydney and Amelia
are behaving like a couple of pigs.” She
laughed, continuing, “Of course I don’t
know whether they are or not: I never have understood
any more about business myself than a little pig would!
But I’m on George’s side, whether he’s
right or wrong; I always was from the time we were
children: and Sydney and Amelia are hurt with
me about it, I’m afraid. They’ve stopped
speaking to George entirely. Poor father Family
rows at his time of life.”
George became thoughtful. If
Sydney and Amelia were behaving like pigs, things
might not be so simple as at first they seemed to be.
Uncle Sydney and Aunt Amelia might live an awful long
while, he thought; and besides, people didn’t
always leave their fortunes to relatives. Sydney
might die first, leaving everything to his widow, and
some curly-haired Italian adventurer might get round
her, over there in Florence; she might be fool enough
to marry again or even adopt somebody!
He became more and more thoughtful,
forgetting entirely a plan he had formed for the continued
teasing of his Aunt Fanny; and, an hour after lunch,
he strolled over to his grandfather’s, intending
to apply for further information, as a party rightfully
interested.
He did not carry out this intention,
however. Going into the big house by a side entrance,
he was informed that the Major was upstairs in his
bedroom, that his sons Sydney and George were both
with him, and that a serious argument was in progress.
“You kin stan’ right in de middle dat
big, sta’y-way,” said Old Sam, the ancient
negro, who was his informant, “an’ you
kin heah all you a-mind to wivout goin’ on up
no fudda. Mist’ Sydney an’ Mist’
Jawge talkin’ louduh’n I evuh heah nobody
ca’y on in nish heah house! Quollin’,
honey, big quollin’!”
“All right,” said George
shortly. “You go on back to your own part
of the house, and don’t make any talk.
Hear me?”
“Yessuh, yessuh,” Sam
chuckled, as he shuffled away. “Plenty talkin’
wivout Sam! Yessuh!”
George went to the foot of the great
stairway. He could hear angry voices overhead those
of his two uncles and a plaintive murmur,
as if the Major tried to keep the peace. Such
sounds were far from encouraging to callers, and George
decided not to go upstairs until this interview was
over. His decision was the result of no timidity,
nor of a too sensitive delicacy. What he felt
was, that if he interrupted the scene in his grandfather’s
room, just at this time, one of the three gentlemen
engaging in it might speak to him in a peremptory manner
(in the heat of the moment) and George saw no reason
for exposing his dignity to such mischances.
Therefore he turned from the stairway, and going quietly
into the library, picked up a magazine but
he did not open it, for his attention was instantly
arrested by his Aunt Amelia’s voice, speaking
in the next room. The door was open and George
heard her distinctly.
“Isabel does? Isabel!”
she exclaimed, her tone high and shrewish. “You
needn’t tell me anything about Isabel Minafer,
I guess, my dear old Frank Bronson! I know her
a little better than you do, don’t you think?”
George heard the voice of Mr. Bronson
replying a voice familiar to him as that
of his grandfather’s attorney-in-chief and chief
intimate as well. He was a contemporary of the
Major’s, being over seventy, and they had been
through three years of the War in the same regiment.
Amelia addressed him now, with an effect of angry
mockery, as “my dear old Frank Bronson”;
but that (without the mockery) was how the Amberson
family almost always spoke of him: “dear
old Frank Bronson.” He was a hale, thin
old man, six feet three inches tall, and without a
stoop.
“I doubt your knowing Isabel,”
he said stiffly. “You speak of her as you
do because she sides with her brother George, instead
of with you and Sydney.”
“Pooh!” Aunt Amelia was
evidently in a passion. “You know what’s
been going on over there, well enough, Frank Bronson!”
“I don’t even know what you’re talking
about.”
“Oh, you don’t? You
don’t know that Isabel takes George’s side
simply because he’s Eugene Morgan’s best
friend?”
“It seems to me you’re
talking pure nonsense,” said Bronson sharply.
“Not impure nonsense, I hope!”
Amelia became shrill. “I
thought you were a man of the world: don’t
tell me you’re blind! For nearly two years
Isabel’s been pretending to chaperone Fanny
Minafer with Eugene, and all the time she’s been
dragging that poor fool Fanny around to chaperone her
and Eugene! Under the circumstances, she knows
people will get to thinking Fanny’s a pretty
slim kind of chaperone, and Isabel wants to please
George because she thinks there’ll be less talk
if she can keep her own brother around, seeming to
approve. ‘Talk!’ She’d better
look out! The whole town will be talking, the
first thing she knows! She ”
Amelia stopped, and stared at the
doorway in a panic, for her nephew stood there.
She kept her eyes upon his white face
for a few strained moments, then, regaining her nerve,
looked away and shrugged her shoulders.
“You weren’t intended
to hear what I’ve been saying, George,”
she said quietly. “But since you seem to ”
“Yes, I did.”
“So!” She shrugged her
shoulders again. “After all, I don’t
know but it’s just as well, in the long run.”
He walked up to where she sat.
“You you ” he said
thickly. “It seems it seems
to me you’re you’re pretty common!”
Amelia tried to give the impression
of an unconcerned person laughing with complete indifference,
but the sounds she produced were disjointed and uneasy.
She fanned herself, looking out of the open window
near her. “Of course, if you want to make
more trouble in the family than we’ve already
got, George, with your eavesdropping, you can go and
repeat ”
Old Bronson had risen from his chair
in great distress. “Your aunt was talking
nonsense because she’s piqued over a business
matter, George,” he said. “She doesn’t
mean what she said, and neither she nor any one else
gives the slightest credit to such foolishness no
one in the world!”
George gulped, and wet lines shone
suddenly along his lower eyelids. “They they’d
better not!” he said, then stalked out of the
room, and out of the house. He stamped fiercely
across the stone slabs of the front porch, descended
the steps, and halted abruptly, blinking in the strong
sunshine.
In front of his own gate, beyond the
Major’s broad lawn, his mother was just getting
into her victoria, where sat already his Aunt
Fanny and Lucy Morgan. It was a summer fashion-picture:
the three ladies charmingly dressed, delicate parasols
aloft; the lines of the victoria graceful as
those of a violin; the trim pair of bays in glistening
harness picked out with silver, and the serious black
driver whom Isabel, being an Amberson, dared even
in that town to put into a black livery coat, boots,
white breeches, and cockaded hat. They jingled
smartly away, and, seeing George standing on the Major’s
lawn, Lucy waved, and Isabel threw him a kiss.
But George shuddered, pretending not
to see them, and stooped as if searching for something
lost in the grass, protracting that posture until
the victoria was out of hearing. And ten
minutes later, George Amberson, somewhat in the semblance
of an angry person plunging out of the Mansion, found
a pale nephew waiting to accost him.
“I haven’t time to talk, Georgie.”
“Yes, you have. You’d better!”
“What’s the matter, then?”
His namesake drew him away from the
vicinity of the house. “I want to tell
you something I just heard Aunt Amelia say, in there.”
“I don’t want to hear
it,” said Amberson. “I’ve been
hearing entirely too much of what ’Aunt Amelia,
says, lately.”
“She says my mother’s
on your side about this division of the property because
you’re Eugene Morgan’s best friend.”
“What in the name of heaven
has that got to do with your mother’s being
on my side?”
“She said ”
George paused to swallow. “She said ”
He faltered.
“You look sick,” said
his uncle; and laughed shortly. “If it’s
because of anything Amelia’s been saying, I
don’t blame you! What else did she say?”
George swallowed again, as with nausea,
but under his uncle’s encouragement he was able
to be explicit. “She said my mother wanted
you to be friendly to her about Eugene Morgan.
She said my mother had been using Aunt Fanny as a
chaperone.”
Amberson emitted a laugh of disgust.
“It’s wonderful what tommy-rot a woman
in a state of spite can think of! I suppose you
don’t doubt that Amelia Amberson created this
specimen of tommy-rot herself?”
“I know she did.”
“Then what’s the matter?”
“She said ”
George faltered again. “She said she
implied people were were talking about
it.”
“Of all the damn nonsense!”
his uncle exclaimed. George looked at him haggardly.
“You’re sure they’re not?”
“Rubbish! Your mother’s
on my side about this division because she knows Sydney’s
a pig and always has been a pig, and so has his spiteful
wife. I’m trying to keep them from getting
the better of your mother as well as from getting
the better of me, don’t you suppose? Well,
they’re in a rage because Sydney always could
do what he liked with father unless your mother interfered,
and they know I got Isabel to ask him not to do what
they wanted. They’re keeping up the fight
and they’re sore and Amelia’s
a woman who always says any damn thing that comes into
her head! That’s all there is to it.”
“But she said,” George
persisted wretchedly; “she said there was talk.
She said ”
“Look here, young fellow!”
Amberson laughed good-naturedly. “There
probably is some harmless talk about the way your Aunt
Fanny goes after poor Eugene, and I’ve no doubt
I’ve abetted it myself. People can’t
help being amused by a thing like that. Fanny
was always languishing at him, twenty-odd years ago,
before he left here. Well, we can’t blame
the poor thing if she’s got her hopes up again,
and I don’t know that I blame her, myself, for
using your mother the way she does.”
“How do you mean?”
Amberson put his hand on George’s
shoulder. “You like to tease Fanny,”
he said, “but I wouldn’t tease her about
this, if I were you. Fanny hasn’t got much
in her life. You know, Georgie, just being an
aunt isn’t really the great career it may sometimes
appear to you! In fact, I don’t know of
anything much that Fanny has got, except her feeling
about Eugene. She’s always had it and
what’s funny to us is pretty much life-and-death
to her, I suspect. Now, I’ll not deny that
Eugene Morgan is attracted to your mother. He
is; and that’s another case of ’always
was’; but I know him, and he’s a knight,
George a crazy one, perhaps, if you’ve
read ‘Don Quixote.’ And I think your
mother likes him better than she likes any man outside
her own family, and that he interests her more than
anybody else and ‘always has.’
And that’s all there is to it, except ”
“Except what?” George asked quickly, as
he paused.
“Except that I suspect ”
Amberson chuckled, and began over: “I’ll
tell you in confidence. I think Fanny’s
a fairly tricky customer, for such an innocent old
girl! There isn’t any real harm in her,
but she’s a great diplomatist lots
of cards up her lace sleeves, Georgie! By the
way, did you ever notice how proud she is of her arms?
Always flashing ’em at poor Eugene!” And
he stopped to laugh again.
“I don’t see anything
confidential about that,” George complained.
“I thought ”
“Wait a minute! My idea
is don’t forget it’s a confidential
one, but I’m devilish right about it, young
Georgie! it’s this: Fanny uses
your mother for a decoy duck. She does everything
in the world she can to keep your mother’s friendship
with Eugene going, because she thinks that’s
what keeps Eugene about the place, so to speak.
Fanny’s always with your mother, you see; and
whenever he sees Isabel he sees Fanny. Fanny
thinks he’ll get used to the idea of her being
around, and some day her chance may come! You
see, she’s probably afraid perhaps
she even knows, poor thing! that she wouldn’t
get to see much of Eugene if it weren’t for
Isabel’s being such a friend of his. There!
D’you see?”
“Well I suppose so.”
George’s brow was still dark, however. “If
you’re sure whatever talk there is, is about
Aunt Fanny. If that’s so ”
“Don’t be an ass,”
his uncle advised him lightly, moving away. “I’m
off for a week’s fishing to forget that woman
in there, and her pig of a husband.” (His gesture
toward the Mansion indicated Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Amberson.)
“I recommend a like course to you, if you’re
silly enough to pay any attention to such rubbishings!
Good-bye!”
George was partially reassured, but
still troubled: a word haunted him like the recollection
of a nightmare. “Talk!”
He stood looking at the houses across
the street from the Mansion; and though the sunshine
was bright upon them, they seemed mysteriously threatening.
He had always despised them, except the largest of
them, which was the home of his henchman, Charlie
Johnson. The Johnsons had originally owned a
lot three hundred feet wide, but they had sold all
of it except the meager frontage before the house
itself, and five houses were now crowded into the
space where one used to squire it so spaciously.
Up and down the street, the same transformation had
taken place: every big, comfortable old brick
house now had two or three smaller frame neighbours
crowding up to it on each side, cheap-looking neighbours,
most of them needing paint and not clean and
yet, though they were cheap looking, they had cost
as much to build as the big brick houses, whose former
ample yards they occupied. Only where George stood
was there left a sward as of yore; the great, level,
green lawn that served for both the Major’s
house and his daughter’s. This serene domain unbroken,
except for the two gravelled carriage-drives alone
remained as it had been during the early glories of
the Amberson Addition.
George stared at the ugly houses opposite,
and hated them more than ever; but he shivered.
Perhaps the riffraff living in those houses sat at
the windows to watch their betters; perhaps they dared
to gossip
He uttered an exclamation, and walked
rapidly toward his own front gate. The victoria
had returned with Miss Fanny alone; she jumped out
briskly and the victoria waited.
“Where’s mother?” George asked sharply,
as he met her.
“At Lucy’s. I only
came back to get some embroidery, because we found
the sun too hot for driving. I’m in a hurry.”
But, going into the house with her,
he detained her when she would have hastened upstairs.
“I haven’t time to talk
now, Georgie; I’m going right back. I promised
your mother ”
“You listen!” said George.
“What on earth ”
He repeated what Amelia had said.
This time, however, he spoke coldly, and without the
emotion he had exhibited during the recital to his
uncle: Fanny was the one who showed agitation
during this interview, for she grew fiery red, and
her eyes dilated. “What on earth do you
want to bring such trash to me for?” she demanded,
breathing fast.
“I merely wished to know two
things: whether it is your duty or mine to speak
to father of what Aunt Amelia ”
Fanny stamped her foot. “You
little fool!” she cried. “You awful
little fool!”
“I decline ”
“Decline, my hat! Your father’s a
sick man, and you ”
“He doesn’t seem so to me.”
“Well, he does to me! And
you want to go troubling him with an Amberson family
row! It’s just what that cat would love
you to do!”
“Well, I ”
“Tell your father if you like!
It will only make him a little sicker to think he’s
got a son silly enough to listen to such craziness!”
“Then you’re sure there
isn’t any talk?” Fanny disdained a reply
in words. She made a hissing sound of utter contempt
and snapped her fingers. Then she asked scornfully:
“What’s the other thing you wanted to
know?”
George’s pallor increased.
“Whether it mightn’t be better, under the
circumstances,” he said, “if this family
were not so intimate with the Morgan family at
least for a time. It might be better ”
Fanny stared at him incredulously.
“You mean you’d quit seeing Lucy?”
“I hadn’t thought of that
side of it, but if such a thing were necessary on
account of talk about my mother, I I ”
He hesitated unhappily. “I suggested that
if all of us for a time perhaps
only for a time it might be better if ”
“See here,” she interrupted.
“We’ll settle this nonsense right now.
If Eugene Morgan comes to this house, for instance,
to see me, your mother can’t get up and leave
the place the minute he gets here, can she? What
do you want her to do: insult him? Or perhaps
you’d prefer she’d insult Lucy? That
would do just as well. What is it you’re
up to, anyhow? Do you really love your Aunt Amelia
so much that you want to please her? Or do you
really hate your Aunt Fanny so much that you want to that
you want to ”
She choked and sought for her handkerchief;
suddenly she began to cry.
“Oh, see here,” George
said. “I don’t hate you,” Aunt
Fanny. “That’s silly. I don’t ”
“You do! You do! You
want to you want to destroy the only thing that
I that I ever ” And, unable
to continue, she became inaudible in her handkerchief.
George felt remorseful, and his own
troubles were lightened: all at once it became
clear to him that he had been worrying about nothing.
He perceived that his Aunt Amelia was indeed an old
cat, and that to give her scandalous meanderings another
thought would be the height of folly. By no means
unsusceptible to such pathos as that now exposed before
him, he did not lack pity for Fanny, whose almost spoken
confession was lamentable; and he was granted the
vision to understand that his mother also pitied Fanny
infinitely more than he did. This seemed to explain
everything.
He patted the unhappy lady awkwardly
upon her shoulder. “There, there!”
he said. “I didn’t mean anything.
Of course the only thing to do about Aunt Amelia is
to pay no attention to her. It’s all right,
Aunt Fanny. Don’t cry. I feel a lot
better now, myself. Come on; I’ll drive
back there with you. It’s all over, and
nothing’s the matter. Can’t you cheer
up?”
Fanny cheered up; and presently the
customarily hostile aunt and nephew were driving out
Amberson Boulevard amiably together in the hot sunshine.