The Comic Muse, though able to look
after her own interests, did not disdain the assistance
of Mr. Vyse. His idea of bringing the Emersons
to Windy Corner struck her as decidedly good, and
she carried through the negotiations without a hitch.
Sir Harry Otway signed the agreement, met Mr. Emerson,
who was duly disillusioned. The Miss Alans were
duly offended, and wrote a dignified letter to Lucy,
whom they held responsible for the failure. Mr.
Beebe planned pleasant moments for the new-comers,
and told Mrs. Honeychurch that Freddy must call on
them as soon as they arrived. Indeed, so ample
was the Muse’s equipment that she permitted
Mr. Harris, never a very robust criminal, to droop
his head, to be forgotten, and to die.
Lucy-to descend from bright
heaven to earth, whereon there are shadows because
there are hills-Lucy was at first plunged
into despair, but settled after a little thought that
it did not matter the very least. Now that she
was engaged, the Emersons would scarcely insult her
and were welcome into the neighbourhood. And
Cecil was welcome to bring whom he would into the
neighbourhood. Therefore Cecil was welcome to
bring the Emersons into the neighbourhood. But,
as I say, this took a little thinking, and-so
illogical are girls-the event remained rather
greater and rather more dreadful than it should have
done. She was glad that a visit to Mrs. Vyse
now fell due; the tenants moved into Cissie Villa
while she was safe in the London flat.
“Cecil-Cecil darling,”
she whispered the evening she arrived, and crept into
his arms.
Cecil, too, became demonstrative.
He saw that the needful fire had been kindled in Lucy.
At last she longed for attention, as a woman should,
and looked up to him because he was a man.
“So you do love me, little thing?” he
murmured.
“Oh, Cecil, I do, I do! I don’t know
what I should do without you.”
Several days passed. Then she
had a letter from Miss Bartlett. A coolness had
sprung up between the two cousins, and they had not
corresponded since they parted in August. The
coolness dated from what Charlotte would call “the
flight to Rome,” and in Rome it had increased
amazingly. For the companion who is merely uncongenial
in the mediaeval world becomes exasperating in the
classical. Charlotte, unselfish in the Forum,
would have tried a sweeter temper than Lucy’s,
and once, in the Baths of Caracalla, they had doubted
whether they could continue their tour. Lucy
had said she would join the Vyses-Mrs. Vyse
was an acquaintance of her mother, so there was no
impropriety in the plan and Miss Bartlett had replied
that she was quite used to being abandoned suddenly.
Finally nothing happened; but the coolness remained,
and, for Lucy, was even increased when she opened
the letter and read as follows. It had been forwarded
from Windy Corner.
“Tunbridge Wells,
“September.
“Dearest Lucia,
“I have news of you at last!
Miss Lavish has been bicycling in your parts, but
was not sure whether a call would be welcome.
Puncturing her tire near Summer Street, and it being
mended while she sat very woebegone in that pretty
churchyard, she saw to her astonishment, a door open
opposite and the younger Emerson man come out.
He said his father had just taken the house.
He said he did not know that you lived in the
neighbourhood (?). He never suggested giving Eleanor
a cup of tea. Dear Lucy, I am much worried, and
I advise you to make a clean breast of his past behaviour
to your mother, Freddy, and Mr. Vyse, who will forbid
him to enter the house, etc. That was a
great misfortune, and I dare say you have told them
already. Mr. Vyse is so sensitive. I remember
how I used to get on his nerves at Rome. I am
very sorry about it all, and should not feel easy
unless I warned you.
“Believe me,
“Your anxious and loving cousin,
“Charlotte.”
Lucy was much annoyed, and replied as follows:
“Beauchamp Mansions, S.W.
“Dear Charlotte,
“Many thanks for your warning.
When Mr. Emerson forgot himself on the mountain, you
made me promise not to tell mother, because you said
she would blame you for not being always with me.
I have kept that promise, and cannot possibly tell
her now. I have said both to her and Cecil that
I met the Emersons at Florence, and that they are respectable
people-which I do think-and the
reason that he offered Miss Lavish no tea was probably
that he had none himself. She should have tried
at the Rectory. I cannot begin making a fuss
at this stage. You must see that it would be
too absurd. If the Emersons heard I had complained
of them, they would think themselves of importance,
which is exactly what they are not. I like the
old father, and look forward to seeing him again.
As for the son, I am sorry for him when we meet, rather
than for myself. They are known to Cecil, who
is very well and spoke of you the other day.
We expect to be married in January.
“Miss Lavish cannot have told
you much about me, for I am not at Windy Corner at
all, but here. Please do not put ‘Private’
outside your envelope again. No one opens my
letters.
“Yours affectionately,
“L. M. Honeychurch.”
Secrecy has this disadvantage:
we lose the sense of proportion; we cannot tell whether
our secret is important or not. Were Lucy and
her cousin closeted with a great thing which would
destroy Cecil’s life if he discovered it, or
with a little thing which he would laugh at? Miss
Bartlett suggested the former. Perhaps she was
right. It had become a great thing now.
Left to herself, Lucy would have told her mother and
her lover ingenuously, and it would have remained a
little thing. “Emerson, not Harris”;
it was only that a few weeks ago. She tried to
tell Cecil even now when they were laughing about some
beautiful lady who had smitten his heart at school.
But her body behaved so ridiculously that she stopped.
She and her secret stayed ten days
longer in the deserted Metropolis visiting the scenes
they were to know so well later on. It did her
no harm, Cecil thought, to learn the framework of
society, while society itself was absent on the golf-links
or the moors. The weather was cool, and it did
her no harm. In spite of the season, Mrs. Vyse
managed to scrape together a dinner-party consisting
entirely of the grandchildren of famous people.
The food was poor, but the talk had a witty weariness
that impressed the girl. One was tired of everything,
it seemed. One launched into enthusiasms only
to collapse gracefully, and pick oneself up amid sympathetic
laughter. In this atmosphere the Pension Bertolini
and Windy Corner appeared equally crude, and Lucy saw
that her London career would estrange her a little
from all that she had loved in the past.
The grandchildren asked her to play the piano.
She played Schumann. “Now
some Beethoven” called Cecil, when the querulous
beauty of the music had died. She shook her head
and played Schumann again. The melody rose, unprofitably
magical. It broke; it was resumed broken, not
marching once from the cradle to the grave. The
sadness of the incomplete-the sadness that
is often Life, but should never be Art-throbbed
in its disjected phrases, and made the nerves of the
audience throb. Not thus had she played on the
little draped piano at the Bertolini, and “Too
much Schumann” was not the remark that Mr. Beebe
had passed to himself when she returned.
When the guests were gone, and Lucy
had gone to bed, Mrs. Vyse paced up and down the drawing-room,
discussing her little party with her son. Mrs.
Vyse was a nice woman, but her personality, like many
another’s, had been swamped by London, for it
needs a strong head to live among many people.
The too vast orb of her fate had crushed her; and she
had seen too many seasons, too many cities, too many
men, for her abilities, and even with Cecil she was
mechanical, and behaved as if he was not one son,
but, so to speak, a filial crowd.
“Make Lucy one of us,”
she said, looking round intelligently at the end of
each sentence, and straining her lips apart until she
spoke again. “Lucy is becoming wonderful-wonderful.”
“Her music always was wonderful.”
“Yes, but she is purging off
the Honeychurch taint, most excellent Honeychurches,
but you know what I mean. She is not always quoting
servants, or asking one how the pudding is made.”
“Italy has done it.”
“Perhaps,” she murmured,
thinking of the museum that represented Italy to her.
“It is just possible. Cecil, mind you marry
her next January. She is one of us already.”
“But her music!” he exclaimed.
“The style of her! How she kept to Schumann
when, like an idiot, I wanted Beethoven. Schumann
was right for this evening. Schumann was the
thing. Do you know, mother, I shall have our
children educated just like Lucy. Bring them up
among honest country folks for freshness, send them
to Italy for subtlety, and then-not till
then-let them come to London. I don’t
believe in these London educations-”
He broke off, remembering that he had had one himself,
and concluded, “At all events, not for women.”
“Make her one of us,”
repeated Mrs. Vyse, and processed to bed.
As she was dozing off, a cry-the
cry of nightmare-rang from Lucy’s
room. Lucy could ring for the maid if she liked
but Mrs. Vyse thought it kind to go herself.
She found the girl sitting upright with her hand on
her cheek.
“I am so sorry, Mrs. Vyse-it is these
dreams.”
“Bad dreams?”
“Just dreams.”
The elder lady smiled and kissed her,
saying very distinctly - “You should have
heard us talking about you, dear. He admires you
more than ever. Dream of that.”
Lucy returned the kiss, still covering
one cheek with her hand. Mrs. Vyse recessed to
bed. Cecil, whom the cry had not awoke, snored.
Darkness enveloped the flat.