The day before we started for Rechamp
his spirits flew up again, and that night he became
confidential. “You’ve been such a
friend to me that there are certain things seeing
what’s ahead of us that I should like
to explain”; and, noticing my surprise, he went
on: “I mean about my people. The state
of mind in my milieu must be so remote from
anything you’re used to in your happy country....
But perhaps I can make you understand....”
I saw that what he wanted was to talk
to me of the girl he was engaged to. Mlle.
Malo, left an orphan at ten, had been the ward of a
neighbour of the Rechamps’, a chap with an old
name and a starred chateau, who had lost almost everything
else at baccarat before he was forty, and had repented,
had the gout and studied agriculture for the rest of
his life. The girl’s father was a rather
brilliant painter, who died young, and her mother,
who followed him in a year or two, was a Pole:
you may fancy that, with such antecedents, the girl
was just the mixture to shake down quietly into French
country life with a gouty and repentant guardian.
The Marquis de Corvenaire that was his name brought
her down to his place, got an old maid sister to come
and stay, and really, as far as one knows, brought
his ward up rather decently.
Now and then she used to be driven
over to play with the young Rechamps, and Jean remembered
her as an ugly little girl in a plaid frock, who used
to invent wonderful games and get tired of playing
them just as the other children were beginning to
learn how. But her domineering ways and searching
questions did not meet with his mother’s approval,
and her visits were not encouraged. When she
was seventeen her guardian died and left her a little
money. The maiden sister had gone dotty, there
was nobody to look after Yvonne, and she went to Paris,
to an aunt, broke loose from the aunt when she came
of age, set up her studio, travelled, painted, played
the violin, knew lots of people; and never laid eyes
on Jean de Rechamp till about a year before the war,
when her guardian’s place was sold, and she
had to go down there to see about her interest in
the property.
The old Rechamps heard she was coming,
but didn’t ask her to stay. Jean drove
over to the shut-up chateau, however, and found Mlle.
Malo lunching on a corner of the kitchen table.
She exclaimed: “My little Jean!”
flew to him with a kiss for each cheek, and made him
sit down and share her omelet.... The ugly little
girl had shed her chrysalis and you may
fancy if he went back once or twice!
Mlle. Malo was staying at the
chateau all alone, with the farmer’s wife to
come in and cook her dinner: not a soul in the
house at night but herself and her brindled sheep
dog. She had to be there a week, and Jean suggested
to his people to ask her to Rechamp. But at Rechamp
they hesitated, coughed, looked away, said the sparerooms
were all upside down, and the valet-de-chambre
laid up with the mumps, and the cook short-handed till
finally the irrepressible grandmother broke out:
“A young girl who chooses to live alone probably
prefers to live alone!”
There was a deadly silence, and Jean
did not raise the question again; but I can imagine
his blue eyes getting obstinate.
Soon after Mlle. Malo’s
return to Paris he followed her and began to frequent
the Passy studio. The life there was unlike anything
he had ever seen or conceived as possible,
short of the prairies. He had sampled the usual
varieties of French womankind, and explored most of
the social layers; but he had missed the newest, that
of the artistic-emancipated. I don’t know
much about that set myself, but from his descriptions
I should say they were a good deal like intelligent
Americans, except that they don’t seem to keep
art and life in such water-tight compartments.
But his great discovery was the new girl. Apparently
he had never before known any but the traditional type,
which predominates in the provinces, and still persists,
he tells me, in the last fastnesses of the Faubourg
St. Germain. The girl who comes and goes as she
pleases, reads what she likes, has opinions about what
she reads, who talks, looks, behaves with the independence
of a married woman and yet has kept the
Diana-freshness think how she must have
shaken up such a man’s inherited view of things!
Mlle. Malo did far more than make Rechamp fall
in love with her: she turned his world topsy-turvey,
and prevented his ever again squeezing himself into
his little old pigeon-hole of prejudices.
Before long they confessed their love just
like any young couple of Anglo-Saxons and
Jean went down to Rechamp to ask permission to marry
her. Neither you nor I can quite enter into the
state of mind of a young man of twenty-seven who has
knocked about all over the globe, and been in and
out of the usual sentimental coils and who
has to ask his parents’ leave to get married!
Don’t let us try: it’s no use.
We should only end by picturing him as an incorrigible
ninny. But there isn’t a man in France
who wouldn’t feel it his duty to take that step,
as Jean de Rechamp did. All we can do is to accept
the premise and pass on.
Well Jean went down and
asked his father and his mother and his old grandmother
if they would permit him to marry Mlle. Malo;
and they all with one voice said they wouldn’t.
There was an uproar, in fact; and the old grandmother
contributed the most piercing note to the concert.
Marry Mlle. Malo! A young girl who lived
alone! Travelled! Spent her time with foreigners with
musicians and painters! A young girl! Of course,
if she had been a married woman that is,
a widow much as they would have preferred
a young girl for Jean, or even, if widow it had to
be, a widow of another type still, it was
conceivable that, out of affection for him, they might
have resigned themselves to his choice. But a
young girl bring such a young girl to Rechamp!
Ask them to receive her under the same roof with their
little Simone, their innocent Alain....
He had a bad hour of it; but he held
his own, keeping silent while they screamed, and stiffening
as they began to wobble from exhaustion. Finally
he took his mother apart, and tried to reason with
her. His arguments were not much use, but his
resolution impressed her, and he saw it. As for
his father, nobody was afraid of Monsieur de Rechamp.
When he said: “Never never while
I live, and there is a roof on Rechamp!” they
all knew he had collapsed inside. But the grandmother
was terrible. She was terrible because she was
so old, and so clever at taking advantage of it.
She could bring on a valvular heart attack by just
sitting still and holding her breath, as Jean and his
mother had long since found out; and she always treated
them to one when things weren’t going as she
liked. Madame de Rechamp promised Jean that she
would intercede with her mother-in-law; but she hadn’t
much faith in the result, and when she came out of
the old lady’s room she whispered: “She’s
just sitting there holding her breath.”
The next day Jean himself advanced
to the attack. His grandmother was the most intelligent
member of the family, and she knew he knew it, and
liked him for having found it out; so when he had her
alone she listened to him without resorting to any
valvular tricks. “Of course,” he
explained, “you’re much too clever not
to understand that the times have changed, and manners
with them, and that what a woman was criticised for
doing yesterday she is ridiculed for not doing to-day.
Nearly all the old social thou-shalt-nots have gone:
intelligent people nowadays don’t give a fig
for them, and that simple fact has abolished them.
They only existed as long as there was some one left
for them to scare.” His grandmother listened
with a sparkle of admiration in her ancient eyes.
“And of course,” Jean pursued, “that
can’t be the real reason for your opposing my
marriage a marriage with a young girl you’ve
always known, who has been received here ”
“Ah, that’s it we’ve
always known her!” the old lady snapped him up.
“What of that? I don’t see ”
“Of course you don’t. You’re
here so little: you don’t hear things....”
“What things?”
“Things in the air... that blow
about.... You were doing your military service
at the time....”
“At what time?”
She leaned forward and laid a warning
hand on his arm. “Why did Corvenaire leave
her all that money why?”
“But why not why
shouldn’t he?” Jean stammered, indignant.
Then she unpacked her bag a heap of vague
insinuations, baseless conjectures, village tattle,
all, at the last analysis, based, as he succeeded
in proving, and making her own, on a word launched
at random by a discharged maid-servant who had retailed
her grievance to the cure’s housekeeper.
“Oh, she does what she likes with Monsieur
lé Marquis, the young miss! She knows
how....” On that single phrase the neighbourhood
had raised a slander built of adamant.
Well, I’ll give you an idea
of what a determined fellow Rechamp is, when I tell
you he pulled it down or thought he did.
He kept his temper, hunted up the servant’s
record, proved her a liar and dishonest, cast grave
doubts on the discretion of the cure’s housekeeper,
and poured such a flood of ridicule over the whole
flimsy fable, and those who had believed in it, that
in sheer shamefacedness at having based her objection
on such grounds, his grandmother gave way, and brought
his parents toppling down with her.
All this happened a few weeks before
the war, and soon afterward Mlle. Malo came down
to Rechamp. Jean had insisted on her coming:
he wanted her presence there, as his betrothed, to
be known to the neighbourhood. As for her, she
seemed delighted to come. I could see from Rechamp’s
tone, when he reached this part of his story, that
he rather thought I should expect its heroine to have
shown a becoming reluctance to have stood
on her dignity. He was distinctly relieved when
he found I expected no such thing.
“She’s simplicity itself it’s
her great quality. Vain complications don’t
exist for her, because she doesn’t see them...
that’s what my people can’t be made to
understand....”
I gathered from the last phrase that
the visit had not been a complete success, and this
explained his having let out, when he first told me
of his fears for his family, that he was sure Mlle.
Malo would not have remained at Rechamp if she could
help it. Oh, no, decidedly, the visit was not
a success....
“You see,” he explained
with a half-embarrassed smile, “it was partly
her fault. Other girls as clever, but less how
shall I say? less proud, would have adapted
themselves, arranged things, avoided startling allusions.
She wouldn’t stoop to that; she talked to my
family as naturally as she did to me. You can
imagine for instance, the effect of her saying:
’One night, after a supper at Montmartre, I was
walking home with two or three pals’ .
It was her way of affirming her convictions, and I
adored her for it but I wished she wouldn’t!”
And he depicted, to my joy, the neighbours
rumbling over to call in heraldic barouches (the mothers
alone with embarrassed excuses for not
bringing their daughters), and the agony of not knowing,
till they were in the room, if Yvonne would receive
them with lowered lids and folded hands, sitting by
in a pose de fiancee while the elders talked;
or if she would take the opportunity to air her views
on the separation of Church and State, or the necessity
of making divorce easier. “It’s not,”
he explained, “that she really takes much interest
in such questions: she’s much more absorbed
in her music and painting. But anything her eye
lights on sets her mind dancing as she said
to me once: ’It’s your mother’s
friends’ bonnets that make me stand up for divorce!’”
He broke off abruptly to add: “Good God,
how far off all that nonsense seems!”