LETTERS
On the thirteenth day after the flight
from Capri, Edward Spence, leaving the villa for his
afternoon walk, encountered the postman and received
from him three letters. One was addressed to Ross
Mallard, Esq., care of Edward Spence, Esq.; another,
to Mrs. Spence; the third, to Mrs. Baske. As
he reascended the stairs, somewhat more quickly than
his wont, Spence gave narrow attention to the handwriting
on the envelopes. He found Eleanor where he had
left her a few minutes before, at the piano, busy
with a difficult passage of Brahms. She looked
round in surprise, and on seeing the letters started
up eagerly.
“Do you know Elgar’s hand?”
Spence asked. “These two from London are
his, I should imagine. This for you is from Mrs.
Lessingham, isn’t it?”
“Yes; I think this is the news,
at last,” said Eleanor, inspecting Mrs. Baske’s
letter, not without feminine emotion. “I’ll
take it to her. Shall you go over with the other?”
“He’ll be here after dinner;
the likelihood is that I shouldn’t find him.”
“Occasionally very
occasionally you lack tact, my husband.
He would hardly care to open this and read it in our
presence.”
“More than occasionally, my
dear girl, you remind me of the woman whose price
is above rubies. I’ll go over and leave
it for him at once. Just to show the male superiority,
however, I shall be careful to make my walk a few
minutes longer than usual a thing of which
you would be quite incapable whilst the contents of
Miriam’s letter were unknown to you.”
Alone again, Eleanor sent the letter
to Miriam’s room by a servant, and with uncertain
fingers broke the envelope of that addressed to herself.
Already she had heard once from Mrs. Lessingham, who
ten days ago left Naples to join certain friends in
Rome; the first hurried glance over the present missive
showed that it contained no intelligence. She
had scarcely begun to read it attentively, when the
door opened and Miriam came in.
Her face was pale with agitation,
and her eyes had the strangest light in them; to one
who knew nothing of the circumstances, she would have
appeared exultant. Eleanor could not but gaze
at her intently.
“From Reuben!”
“Yes.” Miriam suppressed
her voice, and held out the sheet of note-paper, which
fluttered. “Read it.”
The body of the letter was as follows:
“I hope we have caused you no
anxiety; from the first moment when our departure
was known, you must have understood that we had resolved
to put an end to useless delay. We travelled
to London as brother and sister, and to-day have become
man and wife. The above will be our address for
a short time; we have not yet decided where we shall
ultimately live.
“By this same post I write to
Mallard, addressed to him at the villa. I hope
he has had the good sense to wait quietly for news.
“Cecily sends her love to you though
she half fears that you will reject it. I cannot
see why you should. We have done the only sensible
thing, and of course in a month or two it will be just
the same, to everybody concerned, as if we had been
married in the most foolish way that respectability
can contrive. Let us hear from you very soon,
dear sister. We talk much of you, and hope to
have many a bright day with you yet more
genuinely happy than that we spent in tracking out
old Tiberius.”
Eleanor looked up, and again was struck
with the singular light in her cousin’s eyes.
“Well, it only tells us what
we anticipated. Of course he made false declarations.
If Mr. Mallard were really as grim as he sometimes
looks, the result to both of them might be unpleasant.”
“But the marriage could not
be undone?” Miriam asked quickly.
“Oh no. Scarcely desirable that it should
be.”
Miriam took the letter, and in a few
minutes went back again to her room.
At nine o’clock in the evening,
the Spences, who sat alone, received the foreseen
visit from Mallard. They welcomed him silently.
As he sat down, he had a smile on his face; he drew
a letter deliberately from his pocket, and, without
preface, began to read it aloud, still in a deliberate
manner.
“Let me first of all make a
formal announcement. We have this morning been
married by registrar’s licence. We intend
to live for a few weeks at this present address, where
we have taken some furnished rooms until better arrangements
can be made. I lose no time in writing to you,
for of course there is business between us that you
will desire to transact as soon as may be.
“In obtaining the licence, I
naturally gave false information regarding Cecily’s
age; this was an inevitable consequence of the step
we had taken. You know my opinions on laws and
customs: for the multitude they are necessary,
and an infraction of them by the average man is, logically
enough, called a sin against society; for Cecily and
myself, in relation to such a matter as our becoming
man and wife, the law is idle form. Personally,
I could have wished to dispense with the absurdity
altogether, but, as things are, this involves an injustice
to a woman. I told my falsehoods placidly, for
they were meaningless in my eyes. I have the
satisfaction of knowing that you cannot, without inconsistency,
find fault with me.
“And now I speak as one who
would gladly be on terms of kindness with you.
You know me, Mallard; you must be aware how impossible
it was for me to wait two years. As for Cecily,
her one word, again and again repeated on the journey,
was, ‘How unkind I shall seem to them!’
and I know that it was the seeming disrespect to you
which most of all distressed her. For her sake,
I make it my petition that you will let the past be
past. She cannot yet write to you, but is sad
in the thought of having incurred your displeasure.
Whatever you say to me, let it be said privately;
do not hurt Cecily. I mentioned ’business;
the word and the thing are equally hateful to me.
I most sincerely wish Cecily had nothing, that the
vile question of money might never arise. Herein,
at all events, you will do me justice; I am no fortune-hunter.
“If you come to London, send
a line and appoint a place of meeting. But could
not everything be done through lawyers? You must
judge; but, again I ask it, do not give Cecily more
pain.”
The listeners were smiling gravely.
After a silence, the letter was discussed, especially
its second paragraph. Mallard was informed of
the note which Miriam had received.
“I shall go to-morrow,”
he said, “and ‘transact my business.’
On the whole, it might as well be done through lawyers,
but I had better be in London.”
“And then?” asked Eleanor.
“I shall perhaps go and spend
a week with the people at Sowerby Bridge. But
you shall hear from me.”
“Will you speak to Mrs. Baske?”
“I don’t think it is necessary.
She has expressed no wish that I should?”
“No; but she might like to be
assured that her brother won’t be prosecuted
for perjury.”
“Oh, set her mind at ease!”
“Show Mallard the letter from
Mrs. Lessingham,” said Spence, with a twinkle
of the eyes.
“I will read it to him.”
She did so. And the letter ran thus:
“Still no news? I am uneasy,
though there can be no rational doubt as to what form
the news will take when it comes. The material
interests in question are enough to relieve us from
anxiety. But I wish they would be quick and communicate
with us.
“One reconciles one’s
self to the inevitable, and, for my own part, the
result of my own reflections is that I am something
more than acquiescent. After all, granted that
these two must make choice of each other, was it not
in the fitness of things that they should act as they
have done? For us comfortable folk, life is too
humdrum; ought we not to be grateful to those who
supply us with a strong emotion, and who remind us
that there is yet poetry in the world? I should
apologize for addressing such thoughts to you,
dear Eleanor, for you have still the blessing of a
young heart, and certainly do not lack poetry.
I speak for myself, and after all I am much disposed
to praise these young people for their unconventional
behaviour.
“What if our darkest anticipations
were fulfilled? Beyond all doubt they are now
sincerely devoted to each other, and will remain so
for at least twelve months. Those twelve months
will be worth a life-time of level satisfaction.
We shall be poor creatures in comparison when we utter
our ‘Didn’t I tell you so?’
“Whilst in a confessing mood,
I will admit that I had formed rather a different
idea of Cecily; I was disposed to think of her as the
modern woman who has put unreasoning passion under
her feet, and therefore this revelation was at first
a little annoying to me. But I see now that my
view of her failed by incompleteness. The modern
woman need by no means be a mere embodied intellect;
she will choose to enjoy as well as to understand,
and to enjoy greatly she will sacrifice all sorts of
things that women have regarded as supremely important.
Indeed, I cannot say that I am disappointed in Cecily;
rightly seen, she has justified the system on which
I educated her. My object was to teach her to
think for herself, to be self-reliant. The jeune
fille, according to society’s pattern, is
my abhorrence: an ignorant, deceitful, vain,
immoral creature. Cecily is as unlike that as
possible; she has behaved independently and with sincerity.
I really admire her very much, and hope that her life
may not fall below its beginning.
“Let me hear as soon as a word
reaches you. I am with charming people, and yet
I think longingly of the delightful evenings at Villa
Sannazaro, your music and your talk. You and your
husband have a great place in my heart; you are of
the salt of the earth. Spare me a little affection,
for I am again a lonely woman.”
This letter also was discussed, and
its philosophy appreciated. Mallard spoke little;
he had clasped his hands behind his head, and listened
musingly.
There was no effusion in the leave-taking,
though it might be for a long time. Warm clasping
of hands, but little said.
“A good-bye for me to Mrs. Baske,”
was Mallard’s last word.
And his haggard but composed face
turned from Villa Sannazaro.