“The Signora had no business
to do it,” said Miss Bartlett, “no business
at all. She promised us south rooms with a view
close together, instead of which here are north rooms,
looking into a courtyard, and a long way apart.
Oh, Lucy!”
“And a Cockney, besides!”
said Lucy, who had been further saddened by the Signora’s
unexpected accent. “It might be London.”
She looked at the two rows of English people who were
sitting at the table; at the row of white bottles
of water and red bottles of wine that ran between the
English people; at the portraits of the late Queen
and the late Poet Laureate that hung behind the English
people, heavily framed; at the notice of the English
church (Rev. Cuthbert Eager, M. A. Oxon.), that was
the only other decoration of the wall. “Charlotte,
don’t you feel, too, that we might be in London?
I can hardly believe that all kinds of other things
are just outside. I suppose it is one’s
being so tired.”
“This meat has surely been used
for soup,” said Miss Bartlett, laying down her
fork.
“I want so to see the Arno.
The rooms the Signora promised us in her letter would
have looked over the Arno. The Signora had no
business to do it at all. Oh, it is a shame!”
“Any nook does for me,”
Miss Bartlett continued; “but it does seem hard
that you shouldn’t have a view.”
Lucy felt that she had been selfish.
“Charlotte, you mustn’t spoil me:
of course, you must look over the Arno, too. I
meant that. The first vacant room in the front-”
“You must have it,” said Miss Bartlett,
part of whose travelling expenses were paid by Lucy’s
mother-a piece of generosity to which she
made many a tactful allusion.
“No, no. You must have it.”
“I insist on it. Your mother would never
forgive me, Lucy.”
“She would never forgive me.”
The ladies’ voices grew animated,
and-if the sad truth be owned-a
little peevish. They were tired, and under the
guise of unselfishness they wrangled. Some of
their neighbours interchanged glances, and one of
them-one of the ill-bred people whom one
does meet abroad-leant forward over the
table and actually intruded into their argument.
He said:
“I have a view, I have a view.”
Miss Bartlett was startled. Generally
at a pension people looked them over for a day or
two before speaking, and often did not find out that
they would “do” till they had gone.
She knew that the intruder was ill-bred, even before
she glanced at him. He was an old man, of heavy
build, with a fair, shaven face and large eyes.
There was something childish in those eyes, though
it was not the childishness of senility. What
exactly it was Miss Bartlett did not stop to consider,
for her glance passed on to his clothes. These
did not attract her. He was probably trying to
become acquainted with them before they got into the
swim. So she assumed a dazed expression when he
spoke to her, and then said - “A view?
Oh, a view! How delightful a view is!”
“This is my son,” said
the old man; “his name’s George. He
has a view too.”
“Ah,” said Miss Bartlett,
repressing Lucy, who was about to speak.
“What I mean,” he continued,
“is that you can have our rooms, and we’ll
have yours. We’ll change.”
The better class of tourist was shocked
at this, and sympathized with the new-comers.
Miss Bartlett, in reply, opened her mouth as little
as possible, and said “Thank you very much indeed;
that is out of the question.”
“Why?” said the old man, with both fists
on the table.
“Because it is quite out of the question, thank
you.”
“You see, we don’t like
to take-” began Lucy. Her cousin
again repressed her.
“But why?” he persisted.
“Women like looking at a view; men don’t.”
And he thumped with his fists like a naughty child,
and turned to his son, saying, “George, persuade
them!”
“It’s so obvious they
should have the rooms,” said the son. “There’s
nothing else to say.”
He did not look at the ladies as he
spoke, but his voice was perplexed and sorrowful.
Lucy, too, was perplexed; but she saw that they were
in for what is known as “quite a scene,”
and she had an odd feeling that whenever these ill-bred
tourists spoke the contest widened and deepened till
it dealt, not with rooms and views, but with-well,
with something quite different, whose existence she
had not realized before. Now the old man attacked
Miss Bartlett almost violently - Why should she
not change? What possible objection had she?
They would clear out in half an hour.
Miss Bartlett, though skilled in the
delicacies of conversation, was powerless in the presence
of brutality. It was impossible to snub any one
so gross. Her face reddened with displeasure.
She looked around as much as to say, “Are you
all like this?” And two little old ladies, who
were sitting further up the table, with shawls hanging
over the backs of the chairs, looked back, clearly
indicating “We are not; we are genteel.”
“Eat your dinner, dear,”
she said to Lucy, and began to toy again with the
meat that she had once censured.
Lucy mumbled that those seemed very odd people opposite.
“Eat your dinner, dear.
This pension is a failure. To-morrow we will
make a change.”
Hardly had she announced this fell
decision when she reversed it. The curtains at
the end of the room parted, and revealed a clergyman,
stout but attractive, who hurried forward to take
his place at the table, cheerfully apologizing for
his lateness. Lucy, who had not yet acquired
decency, at once rose to her feet, exclaiming:
“Oh, oh! Why, it’s Mr. Beebe!
Oh, how perfectly lovely! Oh, Charlotte, we must
stop now, however bad the rooms are. Oh!”
Miss Bartlett said, with more restraint:
“How do you do, Mr. Beebe?
I expect that you have forgotten us - Miss Bartlett
and Miss Honeychurch, who were at Tunbridge Wells when
you helped the Vicar of St. Peter’s that very
cold Easter.”
The clergyman, who had the air of
one on a holiday, did not remember the ladies quite
as clearly as they remembered him. But he came
forward pleasantly enough and accepted the chair into
which he was beckoned by Lucy.
“I am so glad to see you,”
said the girl, who was in a state of spiritual starvation,
and would have been glad to see the waiter if her
cousin had permitted it. “Just fancy how
small the world is. Summer Street, too, makes
it so specially funny.”
“Miss Honeychurch lives in the
parish of Summer Street,” said Miss Bartlett,
filling up the gap, “and she happened to tell
me in the course of conversation that you have just
accepted the living-
“Yes, I heard from mother so
last week. She didn’t know that I knew you
at Tunbridge Wells; but I wrote back at once, and I
said - ’Mr. Beebe is-’”
“Quite right,” said the
clergyman. “I move into the Rectory at Summer
Street next June. I am lucky to be appointed to
such a charming neighbourhood.”
“Oh, how glad I am! The
name of our house is Windy Corner.” Mr.
Beebe bowed.
“There is mother and me generally,
and my brother, though it’s not often we get
him to ch - The church is rather
far off, I mean.”
“Lucy, dearest, let Mr. Beebe eat his dinner.”
“I am eating it, thank you, and enjoying it.”
He preferred to talk to Lucy, whose
playing he remembered, rather than to Miss Bartlett,
who probably remembered his sermons. He asked
the girl whether she knew Florence well, and was informed
at some length that she had never been there before.
It is delightful to advise a newcomer, and he was
first in the field. “Don’t neglect
the country round,” his advice concluded.
“The first fine afternoon drive up to Fiesole,
and round by Settignano, or something of that sort.”
“No!” cried a voice from
the top of the table. “Mr. Beebe, you are
wrong. The first fine afternoon your ladies must
go to Prato.”
“That lady looks so clever,”
whispered Miss Bartlett to her cousin. “We
are in luck.”
And, indeed, a perfect torrent of
information burst on them. People told them what
to see, when to see it, how to stop the electric trams,
how to get rid of the beggars, how much to give for
a vellum blotter, how much the place would grow upon
them. The Pension Bertolini had decided, almost
enthusiastically, that they would do. Whichever
way they looked, kind ladies smiled and shouted at
them. And above all rose the voice of the clever
lady, crying - “Prato! They must go
to Prato. That place is too sweetly squalid for
words. I love it; I revel in shaking off the
trammels of respectability, as you know.”
The young man named George glanced
at the clever lady, and then returned moodily to his
plate. Obviously he and his father did not do.
Lucy, in the midst of her success, found time to wish
they did. It gave her no extra pleasure that
any one should be left in the cold; and when she rose
to go, she turned back and gave the two outsiders a
nervous little bow.
The father did not see it; the son
acknowledged it, not by another bow, but by raising
his eyebrows and smiling; he seemed to be smiling across
something.
She hastened after her cousin, who
had already disappeared through the curtains-curtains
which smote one in the face, and seemed heavy with
more than cloth. Beyond them stood the unreliable
Signora, bowing good-evening to her guests, and supported
by ’Enery, her little boy, and Victorier, her
daughter. It made a curious little scene, this
attempt of the Cockney to convey the grace and geniality
of the South. And even more curious was the drawing-room,
which attempted to rival the solid comfort of a Bloomsbury
boarding-house. Was this really Italy?
Miss Bartlett was already seated on
a tightly stuffed arm-chair, which had the colour
and the contours of a tomato. She was talking
to Mr. Beebe, and as she spoke, her long narrow head
drove backwards and forwards, slowly, regularly, as
though she were demolishing some invisible obstacle.
“We are most grateful to you,” she was
saying. “The first evening means so much.
When you arrived we were in for a peculiarly mauvais
quart d’heure.”
He expressed his regret.
“Do you, by any chance, know
the name of an old man who sat opposite us at dinner?”
“Emerson.”
“Is he a friend of yours?”
“We are friendly-as one is in pensions.”
“Then I will say no more.”
He pressed her very slightly, and she said more.
“I am, as it were,” she
concluded, “the chaperon of my young cousin,
Lucy, and it would be a serious thing if I put her
under an obligation to people of whom we know nothing.
His manner was somewhat unfortunate. I hope I
acted for the best.”
“You acted very naturally,”
said he. He seemed thoughtful, and after a few
moments added - “All the same, I don’t
think much harm would have come of accepting.”
“No harm, of course. But we could not be
under an obligation.”
“He is rather a peculiar man.”
Again he hesitated, and then said gently - “I
think he would not take advantage of your acceptance,
nor expect you to show gratitude. He has the
merit-if it is one-of saying
exactly what he means. He has rooms he does not
value, and he thinks you would value them. He
no more thought of putting you under an obligation
than he thought of being polite. It is so difficult-at
least, I find it difficult-to understand
people who speak the truth.”
Lucy was pleased, and said - “I
was hoping that he was nice; I do so always hope that
people will be nice.”
“I think he is; nice and tiresome.
I differ from him on almost every point of any importance,
and so, I expect-I may say I hope-you
will differ. But his is a type one disagrees
with rather than deplores. When he first came
here he not unnaturally put people’s backs up.
He has no tact and no manners-I don’t
mean by that that he has bad manners-and
he will not keep his opinions to himself. We nearly
complained about him to our depressing Signora, but
I am glad to say we thought better of it.”
“Am I to conclude,” said
Miss Bartlett, “that he is a Socialist?”
Mr. Beebe accepted the convenient
word, not without a slight twitching of the lips.
“And presumably he has brought
up his son to be a Socialist, too?”
“I hardly know George, for he
hasn’t learnt to talk yet. He seems a nice
creature, and I think he has brains. Of course,
he has all his father’s mannerisms, and it is
quite possible that he, too, may be a Socialist.”
“Oh, you relieve me,”
said Miss Bartlett. “So you think I ought
to have accepted their offer? You feel I have
been narrow-minded and suspicious?”
“Not at all,” he answered; “I never
suggested that.”
“But ought I not to apologize, at all events,
for my apparent rudeness?”
He replied, with some irritation,
that it would be quite unnecessary, and got up from
his seat to go to the smoking-room.
“Was I a bore?” said Miss
Bartlett, as soon as he had disappeared. “Why
didn’t you talk, Lucy? He prefers young
people, I’m sure. I do hope I haven’t
monopolized him. I hoped you would have him all
the evening, as well as all dinner-time.”
“He is nice,” exclaimed
Lucy. “Just what I remember. He seems
to see good in every one. No one would take him
for a clergyman.”
“My dear Lucia-
“Well, you know what I mean.
And you know how clergymen generally laugh; Mr. Beebe
laughs just like an ordinary man.”
“Funny girl! How you do
remind me of your mother. I wonder if she will
approve of Mr. Beebe.”
“I’m sure she will; and so will Freddy.”
“I think every one at Windy
Corner will approve; it is the fashionable world.
I am used to Tunbridge Wells, where we are all hopelessly
behind the times.”
“Yes,” said Lucy despondently.
There was a haze of disapproval in
the air, but whether the disapproval was of herself,
or of Mr. Beebe, or of the fashionable world at Windy
Corner, or of the narrow world at Tunbridge Wells,
she could not determine. She tried to locate
it, but as usual she blundered. Miss Bartlett
sedulously denied disapproving of any one, and added
“I am afraid you are finding me a very depressing
companion.”
And the girl again thought - “I
must have been selfish or unkind; I must be more careful.
It is so dreadful for Charlotte, being poor.”
Fortunately one of the little old
ladies, who for some time had been smiling very benignly,
now approached and asked if she might be allowed to
sit where Mr. Beebe had sat. Permission granted,
she began to chatter gently about Italy, the plunge
it had been to come there, the gratifying success
of the plunge, the improvement in her sister’s
health, the necessity of closing the bed-room windows
at night, and of thoroughly emptying the water-bottles
in the morning. She handled her subjects agreeably,
and they were, perhaps, more worthy of attention than
the high discourse upon Guelfs and Ghibellines which
was proceeding tempestuously at the other end of the
room. It was a real catastrophe, not a mere episode,
that evening of hers at Venice, when she had found
in her bedroom something that is one worse than a flea,
though one better than something else.
“But here you are as safe as
in England. Signora Bertolini is so English.”
“Yet our rooms smell,”
said poor Lucy. “We dread going to bed.”
“Ah, then you look into the
court.” She sighed. “If only
Mr. Emerson was more tactful! We were so sorry
for you at dinner.”
“I think he was meaning to be kind.”
“Undoubtedly he was,” said Miss Bartlett.
“Mr. Beebe has just been scolding
me for my suspicious nature. Of course, I was
holding back on my cousin’s account.”
“Of course,” said the
little old lady; and they murmured that one could
not be too careful with a young girl.
Lucy tried to look demure, but could
not help feeling a great fool. No one was careful
with her at home; or, at all events, she had not noticed
it.
“About old Mr. Emerson-I
hardly know. No, he is not tactful; yet, have
you ever noticed that there are people who do things
which are most indelicate, and yet at the same time-beautiful?”
“Beautiful?” said Miss
Bartlett, puzzled at the word. “Are not
beauty and delicacy the same?”
“So one would have thought,”
said the other helplessly. “But things are
so difficult, I sometimes think.”
She proceeded no further into things,
for Mr. Beebe reappeared, looking extremely pleasant.
“Miss Bartlett,” he cried,
“it’s all right about the rooms. I’m
so glad. Mr. Emerson was talking about it in
the smoking-room, and knowing what I did, I encouraged
him to make the offer again. He has let me come
and ask you. He would be so pleased.”
“Oh, Charlotte,” cried
Lucy to her cousin, “we must have the rooms now.
The old man is just as nice and kind as he can be.”
Miss Bartlett was silent.
“I fear,” said Mr. Beebe,
after a pause, “that I have been officious.
I must apologize for my interference.”
Gravely displeased, he turned to go.
Not till then did Miss Bartlett reply - “My
own wishes, dearest Lucy, are unimportant in comparison
with yours. It would be hard indeed if I stopped
you doing as you liked at Florence, when I am only
here through your kindness. If you wish me to
turn these gentlemen out of their rooms, I will do
it. Would you then, Mr. Beebe, kindly tell Mr.
Emerson that I accept his kind offer, and then conduct
him to me, in order that I may thank him personally?”
She raised her voice as she spoke;
it was heard all over the drawing-room, and silenced
the Guelfs and the Ghibellines. The clergyman,
inwardly cursing the female sex, bowed, and departed
with her message.
“Remember, Lucy, I alone am
implicated in this. I do not wish the acceptance
to come from you. Grant me that, at all events.”
Mr. Beebe was back, saying rather nervously:
“Mr. Emerson is engaged, but here is his son
instead.”
The young man gazed down on the three
ladies, who felt seated on the floor, so low were
their chairs.
“My father,” he said,
“is in his bath, so you cannot thank him personally.
But any message given by you to me will be given by
me to him as soon as he comes out.”
Miss Bartlett was unequal to the bath.
All her barbed civilities came forth wrong end first.
Young Mr. Emerson scored a notable triumph to the
delight of Mr. Beebe and to the secret delight of Lucy.
“Poor young man!” said
Miss Bartlett, as soon as he had gone.
“How angry he is with his father
about the rooms! It is all he can do to keep
polite.”
“In half an hour or so your
rooms will be ready,” said Mr. Beebe. Then
looking rather thoughtfully at the two cousins, he
retired to his own rooms, to write up his philosophic
diary.
“Oh, dear!” breathed the
little old lady, and shuddered as if all the winds
of heaven had entered the apartment. “Gentlemen
sometimes do not realize-” Her voice
faded away, but Miss Bartlett seemed to understand
and a conversation developed, in which gentlemen who
did not thoroughly realize played a principal part.
Lucy, not realizing either, was reduced to literature.
Taking up Baedeker’s Handbook to Northern Italy,
she committed to memory the most important dates of
Florentine History. For she was determined to
enjoy herself on the morrow. Thus the half-hour
crept profitably away, and at last Miss Bartlett rose
with a sigh, and said:
“I think one might venture now.
No, Lucy, do not stir. I will superintend the
move.”
“How you do do everything,” said Lucy.
“Naturally, dear. It is my affair.”
“But I would like to help you.”
“No, dear.”
Charlotte’s energy! And
her unselfishness! She had been thus all her
life, but really, on this Italian tour, she was surpassing
herself. So Lucy felt, or strove to feel.
And yet-there was a rebellious spirit in
her which wondered whether the acceptance might not
have been less delicate and more beautiful. At
all events, she entered her own room without any feeling
of joy.
“I want to explain,” said
Miss Bartlett, “why it is that I have taken
the largest room. Naturally, of course, I should
have given it to you; but I happen to know that it
belongs to the young man, and I was sure your mother
would not like it.”
Lucy was bewildered.
“If you are to accept a favour
it is more suitable you should be under an obligation
to his father than to him. I am a woman of the
world, in my small way, and I know where things lead
to. However, Mr. Beebe is a guarantee of a sort
that they will not presume on this.”
“Mother wouldn’t mind
I’m sure,” said Lucy, but again had the
sense of larger and unsuspected issues.
Miss Bartlett only sighed, and enveloped
her in a protecting embrace as she wished her good-night.
It gave Lucy the sensation of a fog, and when she
reached her own room she opened the window and breathed
the clean night air, thinking of the kind old man
who had enabled her to see the lights dancing in the
Arno and the cypresses of San Miniato, and the foot-hills
of the Apennines, black against the rising moon.
Miss Bartlett, in her room, fastened
the window-shutters and locked the door, and then
made a tour of the apartment to see where the cupboards
led, and whether there were any oubliettes or
secret entrances. It was then that she saw, pinned
up over the washstand, a sheet of paper on which was
scrawled an enormous note of interrogation. Nothing
more.
“What does it mean?” she
thought, and she examined it carefully by the light
of a candle. Meaningless at first, it gradually
became menacing, obnoxious, portentous with evil.
She was seized with an impulse to destroy it, but
fortunately remembered that she had no right to do
so, since it must be the property of young Mr. Emerson.
So she unpinned it carefully, and put it between two
pieces of blotting-paper to keep it clean for him.
Then she completed her inspection of the room, sighed
heavily according to her habit, and went to bed.