Her relation with her wonderful friend
had, however, in becoming a new one, begun to shape
itself almost wholly on breaches and omissions.
Something had dropped out altogether, and the question
between them, which time would answer, was whether
the change had made them strangers or yokefellows.
It was as if at last, for better or worse, they were,
in a clearer, cruder air, really to know each other.
Fleda wondered how Mrs. Gereth had escaped hating
her: there were hours when it seemed that such
a feat might leave after all a scant margin for future
accidents. The thing indeed that now came out
in its simplicity was that even in her shrunken state
the lady of Ricks was larger than her wrongs.
As for the girl herself, she had made up her mind
that her feelings had no connection with the case.
It was her pretension that they had never yet emerged
from the seclusion into which, after her friend’s
visit to her at her sister’s, we saw them precipitately
retire: if she should suddenly meet them in straggling
procession on the road it would be time enough to
deal with them. They were all bundled there together,
likes with dislikes and memories with fears; and she
had for not thinking of them the excellent reason
that she was too occupied with the actual. The
actual was not that Owen Gereth had seen his necessity
where she had pointed it out; it was that his mother’s
bare spaces demanded all the tapestry that the recipient
of her bounty could furnish. There were moments
during the month that followed when Mrs. Gereth struck
her as still older and feebler, and as likely to become
quite easily amused.
At the end of it, one day, the London
paper had another piece of news: “Mr. and
Mrs. Owen Gereth, who arrived in town last week, proceed
this morning to Paris.” They exchanged
no word about it till the evening, and none indeed
would then have been uttered had not Mrs. Gereth irrelevantly
broken out: “I dare say you wonder why I
declared the other day with such assurance that he
wouldn’t live with her. He apparently is
living with her.”
“Surely it’s the only proper thing for
him to do.”
“They’re beyond me I give it
up,” said Mrs. Gereth.
“I don’t give it up I never
did,” Fleda returned.
“Then what do you make of his aversion to her?”
“Oh, she has dispelled it.”
Mrs. Gereth said nothing for a minute.
“You’re prodigious in your choice of terms!”
she then simply ejaculated.
But Fleda went luminously on; she
once more enjoyed her great command of her subject:
“I think that when you came to see me at Maggie’s
you saw too many things, you had too many ideas.”
“You had none,” said Mrs. Gereth:
“you were completely bewildered.”
“Yes, I didn’t quite understand but
I think I understand now. The case is simple
and logical enough. She’s a person who’s
upset by failure and who blooms and expands with success.
There was something she had set her heart upon, set
her teeth about the house exactly as she
had seen it.”
“She never saw it at all, she never looked at
it!” cried Mrs. Gereth.
“She doesn’t look with
her eyes; she looks with her ears. In her own
way she had taken it in; she knew, she felt when it
had been touched. That probably made her take
an attitude that was extremely disagreeable. But
the attitude lasted only while the reason for it lasted.”
“Go on I can bear
it now,” said Mrs. Gereth. Her companion
had just perceptibly paused.
“I know you can, or I shouldn’t
dream of speaking. When the pressure was removed
she came up again. From the moment the house was
once more what it had to be, her natural charm reasserted
itself.”
“Her natural charm!” Mrs. Gereth could
barely articulate.
“It’s very great; everybody
thinks so; there must be something in it. It
operated as it had operated before. There’s
no need of imagining anything very monstrous.
Her restored good humor, her splendid beauty, and
Mr. Owen’s impressibility and generosity sufficiently
cover the ground. His great bright sun came out!”
“And his great bright passion
for another person went in. Your explanation
would doubtless be perfection if he didn’t love
you.”
Fleda was silent a little. “What
do you know about his ‘loving’ me?”
“I know what Mrs. Brigstock herself told me.”
“You never in your life took her word for any
other matter.”
“Then won’t yours do?”
Mrs. Gereth demanded. “Haven’t I had
it from your own mouth that he cares for you?”
Fleda turned pale, but she faced her
companion and smiled. “You confound, Mrs.
Gereth, you mix things up. You’ve only had
it from my own mouth that I care for him!”
It was doubtless in contradictious
allusion to this (which at the time had made her simply
drop her head as in a strange, vain reverie) that
Mrs. Gereth, a day or two later, said to Fleda:
“Don’t think I shall be a bit affected
if I’m here to see it when he comes again to
make up to you.”
“He won’t do that,”
the girl replied. Then she added, smiling:
“But if he should be guilty of such bad taste,
it wouldn’t be nice of you not to be disgusted.”
“I’m not talking of disgust;
I’m talking of its opposite,” said Mrs.
Gereth.
“Of its opposite?”
“Why, of any reviving pleasure
that one might feel in such an exhibition. I
shall feel none at all. You may personally take
it as you like; but what conceivable good will it
do?”
Fleda wondered. “To me, do you mean?”
“Deuce take you, no! To
what we don’t, you know, by your wish, ever talk
about.”
“The old things?” Fleda
considered again. “It will do no good of
any sort to anything or any one. That’s
another question I would rather we shouldn’t
discuss, please,” she gently added.
Mrs. Gereth shrugged her shoulders.
“It certainly isn’t worth it!”
Something in her manner prompted her
companion, with a certain inconsequence, to speak
again. “That was partly why I came back
to you, you know that there should be the
less possibility of anything painful.”
“Painful?” Mrs. Gereth stared. “What
pain can I ever feel again?”
“I meant painful to myself,” Fleda, with
a slight impatience, explained.
“Oh, I see.” Her
friend was silent a minute. “You use sometimes
such odd expressions. Well, I shall last a little,
but I sha’n’t last forever.”
“You’ll last quite as long ”
Here Fleda suddenly hesitated.
Mrs. Gereth took her up with a cold
smile that seemed the warning of experience against
hyperbole. “As long as what, please?”
The girl thought an instant; then
met the difficulty by adopting, as an amendment, the
same tone. “As any danger of the ridiculous.”
That did for the time, and she had
moreover, as the months went on, the protection of
suspended allusions. This protection was marked
when, in the following November, she received a letter
directed in a hand at which a quick glance sufficed
to make her hesitate to open it. She said nothing,
then or afterwards; but she opened it, for reasons
that had come to her, on the morrow. It consisted
of a page and a half from Owen Gereth, dated from
Florence, but with no other preliminary. She knew
that during the summer he had returned to England with
his wife, and that after a couple of months they had
again gone abroad. She also knew, without communication,
that Mrs. Gereth, round whom Ricks had grown submissively
and indescribably sweet, had her own interpretation
of her daughter-in-law’s share in this second
migration. It was a piece of calculated insolence a
stroke odiously directed at showing whom it might
concern that now she had Poynton fast she was perfectly
indifferent to living there. The Morning Post,
at Ricks, had again been a resource: it was stated
in that journal that Mr. and Mrs. Owen Gereth proposed
to spend the winter in India. There was a person
to whom it was clear that she led her wretched husband
by the nose. Such was the light in which contemporary
history was offered to Fleda until, in her own room,
late at night, she broke the seal of her letter.
“I want you, inexpressibly,
to have, as a remembrance, something of mine something
of real value. Something from Poynton is what
I mean and what I should prefer. You know everything
there, and far better than I what’s best and
what isn’t. There are a lot of differences,
but aren’t some of the smaller things the most
remarkable? I mean for judges, and for what they’d
bring. What I want you to take from me, and to
choose for yourself, is the thing in the whole house
that’s most beautiful and precious. I mean
the ‘gem of the collection,’ don’t
you know? If it happens to be of such a sort
that you can take immediate possession of it carry
it right away with you so much the better.
You’re to have it on the spot, whatever it is.
I humbly beg of you to go down there and see.
The people have complete instructions: they’ll
act for you in every possible way and put the whole
place at your service. There’s a thing
mamma used to call the Maltese cross and that I think
I’ve heard her say is very wonderful. Is
that the gem of the collection? Perhaps
you would take it, or anything equally convenient.
Only I do want you awfully to let it be the very pick
of the place. Let me feel that I can trust you
for this. You won’t refuse if you will think
a little what it must be that makes me ask.”
Fleda read that last sentence over
more times even than the rest; she was baffled she
couldn’t think at all of what it might be.
This was indeed because it might be one of so many
things. She made for the present no answer; she
merely, little by little, fashioned for herself the
form that her answer should eventually wear. There
was only one form that was possible the
form of doing, at her time, what he wished. She
would go down to Poynton as a pilgrim might go to a
shrine, and as to this she must look out for her chance.
She lived with her letter, before any chance came,
a month, and even after a month it had mysteries for
her that she couldn’t meet. What did it
mean, what did it represent, to what did it correspond
in his imagination or his soul? What was behind
it, what was beyond it, what was, in the deepest depth,
within it? She said to herself that with these
questions she was under no obligation to deal.
There was an explanation of them that, for practical
purposes, would do as well as another: he had
found in his marriage a happiness so much greater
than, in the distress of his dilemma, he had been able
to take heart to believe, that he now felt he owed
her a token of gratitude for having kept him in the
straight path. That explanation, I say, she could
throw off; but no explanation in the least mattered:
what determined her was the simple strength of her
impulse to respond. The passion for which what
had happened had made no difference, the passion that
had taken this into account before as well as after,
found here an issue that there was nothing whatever
to choke. It found even a relief to which her
imagination immensely contributed. Would she act
upon his offer? She would act with secret rapture.
To have as her own something splendid that he had
given her, of which the gift had been his signed desire,
would be a greater joy than the greatest she had supposed
to be left to her, and she felt that till the sense
of this came home she had even herself not known what
burned in her successful stillness. It was an
hour to dream of and watch for; to be patient was to
draw out the sweetness. She was capable of feeling
it as an hour of triumph, the triumph of everything
in her recent life that had not held up its head.
She moved there in thought in the great
rooms she knew; she should be able to say to herself
that, for once at least, her possession was as complete
as that of either of the others whom it had filled
only with bitterness. And a thousand times yes her
choice should know no scruple: the thing she
should go down to take would be up to the height of
her privilege. The whole place was in her eyes,
and she spent for weeks her private hours in a luxury
of comparison and debate. It should be one of
the smallest things because it should be one she could
have close to her; and it should be one of the finest
because it was in the finest he saw his symbol.
She said to herself that of what it would symbolize
she was content to know nothing more than just what
her having it would tell her. At bottom she inclined
to the Maltese cross with the added reason
that he had named it. But she would look again
and judge afresh; she would on the spot so handle
and ponder that there shouldn’t be the shade
of a mistake.
Before Christmas she had a natural
opportunity to go to London; there was her periodical
call upon her father to pay as well as a promise to
Maggie to redeem. She spent her first night in
West Kensington, with the idea of carrying out on
the morrow the purpose that had most of a motive.
Her father’s affection was not inquisitive, but
when she mentioned to him that she had business in
the country that would oblige her to catch an early
train, he deprecated her excursion in view of the
menace of the weather. It was spoiling for a storm;
all the signs of a winter gale were in the air.
She replied that she would see what the morning might
bring; and it brought, in fact, what seemed in London
an amendment. She was to go to Maggie the next
day, and now that she had started her eagerness had
become suddenly a pain. She pictured her return
that evening with her trophy under her cloak; so that
after looking, from the doorstep, up and down the
dark street, she decided, with a new nervousness,
and sallied forth to the nearest place of access to
the “Underground.” The December dawn
was dolorous, but there was neither rain nor snow;
it was not even cold, and the atmosphere of West Kensington,
purified by the wind, was like a dirty old coat that
had been bettered by a dirty brush. At the end
of almost an hour, in the larger station, she had
taken her place in a third-class compartment; the
prospect before her was the run of eighty minutes to
Poynton. The train was a fast one, and she was
familiar with the moderate measure of the walk to
the park from the spot at which it would drop her.
Once in the country, indeed, she saw
that her father was right: the breath of December
was abroad with a force from which the London labyrinth
had protected her. The green fields were black,
the sky was all alive with the wind; she had, in her
anxious sense of the elements, her wonder at what
might happen, a reminder of the surmises, in the old
days of going to the Continent, that used to worry
her on the way, at night, to the horrid cheap crossings
by long sea. Something, in a dire degree, at
this last hour, had begun to press on her heart:
it was the sudden imagination of a disaster, or at
least of a check, before her errand was achieved.
When she said to herself that something might happen
she wanted to go faster than the train. But nothing
could happen save a dismayed discovery that, by some
altogether unlikely chance, the master and mistress
of the house had already come back. In that case
she must have had a warning, and the fear was but
the excess of her hope. It was every one’s
being exactly where every one was that lent the quality
to her visit. Beyond lands and seas and alienated
forever, they in their different ways gave her the
impression to take as she had never taken it.
At last it was already there, though the darkness of
the day had deepened; they had whizzed past Chater Chater,
which was the station before the right one. Off
in that quarter was an air of wild rain, but there
shimmered straight across it a brightness that was
the color of the great interior she had been haunting.
That vision settled before her in the house
the house was all; and as the train drew up she rose,
in her mean compartment, quite proudly erect with the
thought that all for Fleda Vetch then the house was
standing there.
But with the opening of the door she
encountered a shock, though for an instant she couldn’t
have named it; the next moment she saw it was given
her by the face of the man advancing to let her out,
an old lame porter of the station, who had been there
in Mrs. Gereth’s time and who now recognized
her. He looked up at her so hard that she took
an alarm and before alighting broke out to him:
“They’ve come back?” She had a confused,
absurd sense that even he would know that in this case
she mustn’t be there. He hesitated, and
in the few seconds her alarm had completely changed
its ground: it seemed to leap, with her quick
jump from the carriage, to the ground that was that
of his stare at her. “Smoke?” She
was on the platform with her frightened sniff:
it had taken her a minute to become aware of an extraordinary
smell. The air was full of it, and there were
already heads at the window of the train, looking
out at something she couldn’t see. Some
one, the only other passenger, had got out of another
carriage, and the old porter hobbled off to close
his door. The smoke was in her eyes, but she saw
the station-master, from the end of the platform,
recognize her too and come straight to her. He
brought her a finer shade of surprise than the porter,
and while he was coming she heard a voice at a window
of the train say that something was “a good
bit off a mile from the town.”
That was just what Poynton was. Then her heart
stood still at the white wonder in the station-master’s
face.
“You’ve come down to it, miss, already?”
At this she knew. “Poynton’s on fire?”
“Gone, miss with
this awful gale. You weren’t wired?
Look out!” he cried in the next breath, seizing
her; the train was going on, and she had given a lurch
that almost made it catch her as it passed. When
it had drawn away she became more conscious of the
pervading smoke, which the wind seemed to hurl in
her face.
“Gone?” She was in the man’s
hands; she clung to him.
“Burning still, miss. Ain’t
it quite too dreadful? Took early this morning the
whole place is up there.”
In her bewildered horror she tried to think.
“Have they come back?”
“Back? They’ll be there all day!”
“Not Mr. Gereth, I mean nor his wife?”
“Nor his mother, miss not
a soul of them back. A pack o’ servants
in charge not the old lady’s lot,
eh? A nice job for care-takers! Some rotten
chimley or one of them portable lamps set down in the
wrong place. What has done it is this cruel,
cruel night.” Then as a great wave of smoke
half choked them, he drew her with force to the little
waiting room. “Awkward for you, miss I
see!”
She felt sick; she sank upon a seat,
staring up at him. “Do you mean that great
house is lost?”
“It was near it, I was told,
an hour ago the fury of the flames had got
such a start. I was there myself at six, the very
first I heard of it. They were fighting it then,
but you couldn’t quite say they had got it down.”
Fleda jerked herself up. “Were they saving
the things?”
“That’s just where it
was, miss to get at the blessed things.
And the want of right help it maddened
me to stand and see ’em muff it. This ain’t
a place, like, for anything organized. They don’t
come up to a reel emergency.”
She passed out of the door that opened
toward the village and met a great acrid gust.
She heard a far-off windy roar which, in her dismay,
she took for that of flames a mile away, and which,
the first instant, acted upon her as a wild solicitation.
“I must go there.” She had scarcely
spoken before the same omen had changed into an appalling
check.
Her vivid friend, moreover, had got
before her; he clearly suffered from the nature of
the control he had to exercise. “Don’t
do that, miss you won’t care for
it at all.” Then as she waveringly stood
her ground, “It’s not a place for a young
lady, nor, if you’ll believe me, a sight for
them as are in any way affected.”
Fleda by this time knew in what way
she was affected: she became limp and weak again;
she felt herself give everything up. Mixed with
the horror, with the kindness of the station-master,
with the smell of cinders and the riot of sound, was
the raw bitterness of a hope that she might never
again in life have to give up so much at such short
notice. She heard herself repeat mechanically,
yet as if asking it for the first time: “Poynton’s
gone?”
The man hesitated. “What
can you call it, miss, if it ain’t really saved?”
A minute later she had returned with
him to the waiting-room, where, in the thick swim
of things, she saw something like the disk of a clock.
“Is there an up-train?” she asked.
“In seven minutes.”
She came out on the platform:
everywhere she met the smoke. She covered her
face with her hands. “I’ll go back.”
Henry James’s Books.