But a little while, and all that I
had just witnessed in such vivid dumb-show might have
seemed to me in truth some masque; so smooth had it
been, and voiceless, coming and going like a devised
fancy. And after the last of the players was
gone from the stage, leaving the white cloth, and
the silver, and the cups, and the groups of chairs
near the pleasant arbor, I watched the deserted garden
whence the sunlight was slowly departing, and it seemed
to me more than ever like some empty and charming
scene in a playhouse, to which the comedians would
in due time return to repeat their delicate pantomime.
But these were mental indulgences, with which I sat
playing until the sight of my interrupted letter to
Aunt Carola on the table before me brought the reality
of everything back into my thoughts; and I shook my
head over Miss Eliza. I remembered that hand
of hers, lying in despondent acquiescence upon her
lap, as the old lady sat in her best dress, formally
and faithfully accepting the woman whom her nephew
John had brought upon them as his bride-elect-formally
and faithfully accepting this distasteful person,
and thus atoning as best she could to her beloved nephew
for the wrong that her affection had led her to do
him in that ill-starred and inexcusable tampering
with his affairs.
But there was my letter waiting. I took my pen, and
finished what I had to say about the negro and the injustice we had done to him,
as well as to our own race, by the Fifteenth Amendment. I wrote:-
“I think Northerners must often
seem to these people strangely obtuse in their attitude.
And they deserve such opinion, since all they need
to do is come here and see for themselves what the
War did to the South.
“You may have a perfectly just
fight with a man and beat him rightly; but if you
are able to go on with your work next day, while his
health is so damaged that for a long while he limps
about as a cripple, you must not look up from your
busy thriving and reproach him with his helplessness,
and remind him of its cause; nor must you be surprised
that he remembers the fight longer than you have time
for. I know that the North meant to be magnanimous,
that the North was magnanimous, that the spirit of
Grant at Appomattox filled many breasts; and I know
that the magnanimity was not met by those who led
the South after Lee’s retirement, and before
reconstruction set in, and that the Fifteenth Amendment
was brought on by their own doings - when have
two wrongs made a right? And to place the negro
above these people was an atrocity. You cannot
expect them to inquire very industriously how magnanimous
this North meant to be, when they have suffered at
her hands worse, far worse, than France suffered from
Germany’s after 1870.
“I do think there should be
a different spirit among some of the later-born, but
I have come to understand even the slights and suspicions
from which I here and there suffer, since to their
minds, shut in by circumstance, I’m always a
‘Yankee.’
“We are prosperous; and prosperity
does not bind, it merely assembles people-at
dinners and dances. It is adversity that binds-beside
the gravestone, beneath the desolated roof. Could
you come here and see what I have seen, the retrospect
of suffering, the long, lingering convalescence, the
small outlook of vigor to come, and the steadfast
sodality of affliction and affection and fortitude,
your kind but unenlightened heart would be wrung,
as mine has been, and is being, at every turn.”
After I had posted this reply to Aunt Carola, I had some
fears that my pen had run away with me, and that she might now descend upon me
with that reproof which she knew so well how to exercise in cases of disrespect.
But there was actually a certain pathos in her mildness when it came. She
felt it her duty to go over a good deal of history first, but:-
“I do not understand the present
generation,” she finished, “and I suppose
that I was not meant to.”
The little sigh in these words did
great credit to Aunt Carola.
This vindication off my mind, and
relieved by it of the more general thoughts about
Kings Port and the South, which the pantomime of Kings
Port’s forced capitulation to Hortense had raised
in me, I returned to the personal matters between
that young woman and John, and Charley. How much
did Charley know? How much would Charley stand?
How much would John stand, if he came to know?
Well, the scene in the garden now
helped me to answer these questions much better than
I could have answered them before its occurrence.
With one fact-the great fact of love-established,
it was not difficult to account for at least one or
two of the several things that puzzled me. There
could be no doubt that Hortense loved John Mayrant,
loved him beyond her own control. When this love
had begun, made no matter. Perhaps it began on
the bridge, when the money was torn, and Eliza La
Heu had appeared. The Kings Port version of Hortense’s
indifference to John before the event of the phosphates
might well enough be true. It might even well
enough be true that she had taken him and his phosphates
at Newport for lack of anything better at hand, and
because she was sick of disappointed hopes. In
this case, Charley’s subsequent appearance as
something very much better (if the phosphates were
to fail) would perfectly explain the various postponements
of the wedding.
So I was able to answer my questions
to myself thus - How much did Charley know?-Just
what he could see for himself, and what he had most
likely heard from Newport gossip. He could have
heard of an old engagement, made purely for money’s
sake, and of recent delays created by the lady; and
he could see the gentleman-an impossible
husband from a Wall Street standpoint!-to
whom Hortense was evidently tempering her final refusal
by indulgently taking an interest in helping along
his phosphate fortune. Charley would not refuse
to lend her his aid in this estimable benevolence;
nor would it occur to Charley’s sensibilities
how such benevolence would be taken by John if John
were not “taken” himself. Yes, Charley
was plainly fooled, and fooled the more readily because
he had the old version of the truth. How should
he suspect there was a revised version? How should
he discover that passion had now changed sides, that
it was now John who allowed himself to be loved?
The signs of this did not occur before his eyes.
Of course, Charley would not stay fooled forever;
the hours of that were numbered,-but their
number was quite beyond my guessing!
How much would Charley stand?
He would stand a good deal, because the measure of
his toleration was the measure of his desire for Hortense;
and it was plain that he wanted her very much indeed.
But how much would John stand? How soon would
his “fire-eating” traditions produce a
“difficulty”? Why had they not done
this already? Well, the garden had in some way
helped me to frame a fairly reasonable answer for this
also. Poor Hortense had become as powerless to
woo John to warmth as poor Venus had been with Adonis;
and passion, in changing sides, had advanced the boy’s
knowledge. He knew now the difference between
the embraces of his lady when she had merely wanted
his phosphates, and these other caresses now that,
she wanted him. In his ceaseless search for some
possible loophole of escape, his eye could not have
overlooked the chance that lay in Charley, and he
was far too canny to blast his forlorn hope.
He had probably wondered what had changed the nature
of Hortense’s caresses, and the adventure of
the torn money could scarce have failed to suggest
itself to the mind of a youth who, little as he had
trodden the ways of the world, evidently possessed
some lively instincts regarding the nature of women.
To batter Charley as he had battered Juno’s
nephew, might result in winding the arms of Hortense
around his own neck more tightly than ever.
Why Hortense should keep Charley “on”
any longer, was what I could least fathom, but I trusted
her to have excellent reasons for anything that she
did. “It’s sure to be quite simple,
once you know it,” I told myself; and the near
future proved me to be right.
Thus I laid most of my enigmas
to rest; there was but one which now and then awakened
still. Were Hortense a raw girl of eighteen, I
could easily grant that the “fire-eater”
in John would be sure to move her. But Hortense
had travelled many miles away from the green forests
of romance; her present fields were carpeted, not
with grass and flowers, but with Oriental mats and
rugs, and it was electric lights, not the moon and
stars, that shone upon her highly seasoned nights.
No, torn money and all, it was not appropriate in
a woman of her experience; and so I still found myself
inquiring in the words of Beverly Rodgers, “But
what can she want him for?”
The next time that I met Mrs. Gregory
St. Michael it was on my way to join the party at
the old church, which Mrs. Weguelin was going to show
them. The card-case was in her hand, and the sight
of it prompted me to allude to Hortense Rieppe.
“I find her beauty growing upon me?” I
declared.
Mrs. Gregory did not deny the beauty,
although she spoke with reserve at first. “It
is to be said that she knows how to write a suitable
note,” the lady also admitted.
She didn’t tell me what the
note was about, naturally; but I could imagine with
what joy in the exercise of her art Hortense had constructed
that communication which must have accompanied the
prompt return of the card-case.
Then Mrs. Gregory’s tongue became
downright. “Since you’re able to see
so much of her, why don’t you tell her to marry
that little steam-yacht gambler? I’m sure
he’s dying to, and he’s just the thing
for her?”
“Ah,” I returned, “Love
so seldom knows what’s just the thing for marriage.”
“Then your precocity theory
falls,” declared Mrs. St. Michael. And as
she went away from me along the street, I watched her
beautiful stately walk; for who could help watching
a sight so good?
Charley, then, was no secret to John’s
people. Was John still a secret to Charley?
Could Hortense possibly have managed this? I hoped
for a chance to observe the two men with her during
the visit of Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael and her party
to the church.
This party was already assembled when
I arrived upon the spot appointed. In the street,
a few paces from the church, stood Bohm and Charley
and Kitty and Gazza, with Beverly Rodgers, who, as
I came near, left them and joined me.
“Oh, she’s somewhere off
with her fire-eater,” responded Beverly to my
immediate inquiry for Hortense. “Do you
think she was asked, old man?”
Probably not, I thought. “But
she goes so well with the rest,” I suggested.
Beverly gave his chuckle. “She
goes where she likes. She’ll meet us here
when we’re finished, I’m pretty sure.”
“Why such certainty?”
“Well, she has to attend to Charley, you know!”
Mrs. Weguelin, it appeared, had met the party here by the
church, but had now gone somewhere in the immediate neighborhood to find out why
the gate was not opened to admit us, and to hasten the unpunctual custodian of
the keys. I had not looked for precisely such a party as Mrs. Weguelins
invitation had gathered, nor could I imagine that she had fully understood
herself what she was gathering; and this I intimated to Beverly Rodgers,
saying:-
“Do you suppose, my friend,
that she suspected the feather of the birds you flock
with?”
Beverly took it lightly. “Hang
it, old boy, of course everybody can’t be as
nice as I am!” But he took it less lightly before
it was over.
We stood chatting apart, he and I,
while Bohm and Charley and Kitty and Gazza walked
across the street to the window of a shop, where old
furniture was for sale at a high price; and it grew
clearer to me what Beverly had innocently brought
upon Mrs. Weguelin, and how he had brought it.
The little quiet, particular lady had been pleased
with his visit, and pleased with him. His good
manners, his good appearance, his good English-trained
voice, all these things must have been extremely to
her taste; and then-more important than
they-did she not know about his people?
She had inquired, he told me, with interest about two
of his uncles, whom she had last seen in 1858.
“She’s awfully the right sort,”
said Beverly. Yes, I saw well how that visit must
have gone - the gentle old lady reviving in Beverly’s
presence, and for the sake of being civil to him,
some memories of her girlhood, some meetings with those
uncles, some dances with them; and generally shedding
from her talk and manner the charm of some sweet old
melody-and Beverly, the facile, the appreciative,
sitting there with her at a correct, deferential angle
on his chair, admirably sympathetic and in good form,
and playing the old school. (He had no thought to
deceive her; the old school was his by right, and
genuinely in his blood, he took to it like a duck to
the water.) How should Mrs. Weguelin divine that he
also took to the nouveau jeu to the tune
of Bohm and Charley and Kitty and Gazza? And so,
to show him some attention, and because she couldn’t
ask him to a meal, why, she would take him over the
old church, her colonial forefathers’; she would
tell him the little legends about them; he was precisely
the young man to appreciate such things-and
she would be pleased if he would also bring the friends
with whom he was travelling.
I looked across the street at Bohm
and Charley and Kitty and Gazza. They were now
staring about them in all their perfection of stare:
small Charley in a sleek slate-colored suit, as neat
as any little barber; Bohm, massive, portentous, his
strong shoes and gloves the chief note in his dress,
and about his whole firm frame a heavy mechanical strength,
a look as of something that did something rapidly
and accurately when set going-cut or cracked
or ground or smashed something better and faster than
it had ever been cut or cracked or ground or smashed
before, and would take your arms and legs off if you
didn’t stand well back from it; it was only
in Bohm’s eye and lips that you saw he wasn’t
made entirely of brass and iron, that champagne and
shoulders decolletes received a punctual share of
his valuable time. And there was Kitty, too, just
the wife for Bohm, so soon as she could divorce her
husband, to whom she had united herself before discovering
that all she married him for, his old Knickerbocker
name, was no longer in the slightest degree necessary
for social acceptance; while she could feed people,
her trough would be well thronged. Kitty was
neat, Kitty was trig, Kitty was what Beverly would
call “swagger “; her skilful tailor-made
clothes sheathed her closely and gave her the excellent
appearance of a well-folded English umbrella; it was
in her hat that she had gone wrong-a beautiful
hat in itself, one which would have wholly become
Hortense; but for poor Kitty it didn’t do at
all. Yes, she was a well folded English umbrella,
only the umbrella had for its handle the head of a
bulldog or the leg of a ballet-dancer. And these
were the Replacers whom Beverly’s clear-sighted
eyes saw swarming round the temple of his civilization,
pushing down the aisles, climbing over the backs of
the benches, walking over each other’s bodies,
and seizing those front seats which his family had
sat in since New York had been New York; and so the
wise fellow very prudently took every step that would
insure the Replacers’ inviting him to occupy
one of his own chairs. I had almost forgotten
little Gazza, the Italian nobleman, who sold old furniture
to new Americans. Gazza was not looking at the
old furniture of Kings Port, which must have filled
his Vatican soul with contempt; he was strolling back
and forth in the street, with his head in the air,
humming, now loudly, now softly “La-la, la-la,
E quando a la predica in chiesa
siederia, la-la-la-la;” and I thought to myself
that, were I the Pope, I should kick him into the
Tiber.
When Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael came
back with the keys and their custodian, Bohm was listening
to the slow, clear words of Charley, in which he evidently
found something that at length interested him-a
little. Bohm, it seemed, did not often speak himself:
possibly once a week. His way was to let other
people speak to him when there were signs in his face
that he was hearing anything which they said, it was
a high compliment to them, and of course Charley could
command Bohm’s ear; for Charley, although he
was as neat as any barber, and let Hortense walk on
him because he looked beyond that, and purposed to
get her, was just as potent in the financial world
as Bohm, could bring a borrowing empire to his own
terms just as skillfully as could Bohm; was, in short,
a man after Bohm’s own-I had almost
said heart - the expression is so obstinately
embedded in our language! Bohm, listening, and
Charley, talking, had neither of them noticed Mrs.
Weguelin’s arrival; they stood ignoring her,
while she waited, casting a timid eye upon them.
But Beverly, suddenly perceiving this, and begging
her pardon for them, brought the party together, and
we moved in among the old graves.
“Ah!” said Gazza, bending
to read the quaint words cut upon one of them, as
we stopped while the door at the rear of the church
was being opened, “French!”
“It was the mother-tongue of
these colonists,” Mrs. Weguelin explained to
him.
“Ah! like Canada!” cried
Gazza. “But what a pretty bit is that!”
And he stood back to admire a little glimpse, across
a street, between tiled roofs and rusty balconies,
of another church steeple. “Almost, one
would say, the Old World,” Gazza declared.
“Our world is not new,”
said Mrs. Weguelin; and she passed into the church.
Kings Port holds many sacred nooks,
many corners, many vistas, that should deeply stir
the spirit and the heart of all Americans who know
and love their country. The passing traveller
may gaze up at certain windows there, and see History
herself looking out at him, even as she looks out
of the windows of Independence Hall in Philadelphia.
There are also other ancient buildings in Kings Port,
where History is shut up, as in a strong-box,-such
as that stubborn old octagon, the powder-magazine
of Revolutionary times, which is a chest holding proud
memories of blood and war. And then there are
the three churches. Not strong-boxes, these,
but shrines, where burn the venerable lamps of faith.
And of these three houses of God, that one holds the
most precious flame, the purest light, which treasures
the holy fire that came from France. The English
colonists, who sat in the other two congregations,
came to Carolina’s soil to better their estate;
but it was for liberty of soul, to lift their ardent
and exalted prayer to God as their own conscience bade
them, and not as any man dictated, that those French
colonists sought the New World. No Puritan splendor
of independence and indomitable courage outshines
theirs. They preached a word as burning as any
that Plymouth or Salem ever heard. They were
but a handful, yet so fecund was their marvelous zeal
that they became the spiritual leaven of their whole
community. They are less known than Plymouth and
Salem, because men of action, rather than men of letters,
have sprung from the loins of the South; but there
they stand, a beautiful beacon, shining upon the coasts
of our early history. Into their church, then,
into the shrine where their small lamp still burns,
their devout descendant, Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael
led our party, because in her eyes Kings Port could
show nothing more precious and significant. There
had been nothing to warn her that Bohm and Charley
were Americans who neither knew nor loved their country,
but merely Americans who knew their country’s
wealth and loved to acquire every penny of it that
they could.
And so, following the steps of our
delicate and courteous guide, we entered into the
dimness of the little building; and Mrs. Weguelin’s
voice, lowered to suit the sanctity which the place
had for her, began to tell us very quietly and clearly
the story of its early days.
I knew it, or something of it, from
books; but from this little lady’s lips it took
on a charm and graciousness which made it fresh to
me. I listened attentively, until I felt, without
at first seeing the cause, that dulling of enjoyment,
that interference with the receptive attention, which
comes at times to one during the performance of music
when untimely people come in or go out. Next,
I knew that our group of listeners was less compact;
and then, as we moved from the first point in the
church to a new one, I saw that Bohm and Charley were
dropping behind, and I lingered, with the intention
of bringing them closer.
“But there was nothing in it,”
I heard Charley’s slow monologue continuing
behind me to the silent Bohm. “We could
have bought the Parsons road at that time. ‘Gentlemen,’
I said to them, ’what is there for us in tide-water
at Kings Port? ’”
It was not to be done, and I rejoined Mrs. Weguelin and those
of the party who were making some show of attention to her quiet little
histories and explanations; and Kittys was the next voice which I heard ring
out-
“Oh, you must never let it fall
to pieces! It’s the cunningest little fossil
I’ve seen in the South.”
“So,” said Charley behind
me, “we let the other crowd buy their strategic
point; and I guess they know they got a gold brick.”
I moved away from the financiers,
I endeavored not to hear their words; and in this
much I was successful; but their inappropriate presence
had got, I suppose upon my nerves; at any rate, go
where I would in the little church, or attend as I
might and did to what Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael said
about the tablets, and whatever traditions their inscriptions
suggested to her, that quiet, low, persistent banker’s
voice of Charley’s pervaded the building like
a draft of cold air. Once, indeed, he addressed
Mrs. Weguelin a question. She was telling Beverly
(who followed her throughout, protectingly and charmingly,
with his most devoted attention and his best manner)
the honorable deeds of certain older generations of
a family belonging to this congregation, some of whose
tombs outside had borne French inscriptions.
“My mother’s family,” said Mrs.
Weguelin.
“And nowadays,” inquired
Beverly, “what do they find instead of military
careers?”
“There are no more of us nowadays;
they-they were killed in the war.”
And immediately she smiled, and with
her hand she made a light gesture, as if to dismiss
this subject from mutual embarrassment and pain.
“I might have known better,”
murmured the understanding Beverly.
But Charley now had his question.
“How many, did you say?”
“How many?” Mrs. Weguelin did not quite
understand him.
“Were killed?” explained Charley.
Again there was a little pause before
Mrs. Weguelin answered, “My four brothers met
their deaths.”
Charley was interested. “And
what was the percentage of fatality in their regiments?”
“Oh,” said Mrs. Weguelin,
“we did not think of it in that way.”
And she turned aside.
“Charley,” said Kitty,
with some precipitancy, “do make Mr. Bohm look
at the church!” and she turned after Mrs. Weguelin.
“It is such a gem!”
But I saw the little lady try to speak
and fail, and then I noticed that she was leaning
against a window-sill.
Beverly Rodgers also noticed this,
and he hastened to her.
“Thank you,” she returned
to his hasty question, “I am quite well.
If you are not tired of it, shall we go on?”
“It is such a gem!” repeated
Kitty, throwing an angry glance at Charley and Bohm.
And so we went on.
Yes, Kitty did her best to cover it
up; Kitty, as she would undoubtedly have said herself,
could see a few things. But nobody could cover
it up, though Beverly was now vigilant in his efforts
to do so. Indeed, Replacers cannot be covered
up by human agency; they bulge, they loom, they stare,
they dominate the road of life, even as their automobiles
drive horses and pedestrians to the wall. Bohm,
roused from his financial torpor by Kitty’s
sharp command, did actually turn his eyes upon the
church, which he had now been inside for some twenty
minutes without noticing. Instinct and long training
had given his eye, when it really looked at anything,
a particular glance-the glance of the Replacer-which
plainly calculated - “Can this be made worth
money to me?” and which died instantly to a
glaze of indifference on seeing that no money could
be made. Bohm’s eye, accordingly, waked
and then glazed. Manners, courtesy, he did not
need, not yet; he had looked at them with his Replacer
glance, and, seeing no money in them, had gone on looking
at railroads, and mines, and mills,-and
bare shoulders, and bottles. Should manners and
courtesy come, some day, to mean money to him, then
he could have them, in his fashion, so that his admirers
and his apologists should alike declare of him, “A
rough diamond, but consider what he has made of himself!”
“After what, did you say?”
This was the voice of Gazza, addressing Mrs. Weguelin
St. Michael. It must be said of Gazza that he,
too, made a certain presence of interest in the traditions
of Kings Port.
“After the revocation of the
Edict of Nantes,” replied Mrs. Weguelin.
“Built it in Savannah,”
Charley was saying to Bohm, “or Norfolk.
This is a good place to bury people in, but not money.
Now the phosphate proposition-
Again I dragged my attention by force
away from that quiet, relentless monologue, and listened
as well as I could to Mrs. Weguelin. There had
come to be among us all, I think-Beverly,
Kitty, Gazza, and myself-a joint impulse
to shield her, to cluster about her, to follow her
steps from each little lecture that she finished to
the new point where the next lecture began; and we
did it, performed our pilgrimage to the end; but there
was less and less nature in our performance. I
knew (and it was like a dream which I could not stop)
that we pressed a little too close, that our questions
were a little too eager, that we overprinted our faces
with attention; knowing this did not help, nothing
helped, and we went on to the end, seeing ourselves
doing it; and it must have been that Mrs. Weguelin
saw us likewise. But she was truly admirable in
giving no sign, she came out well ahead; the lectures
were not hurried, one had no sense of points being
skipped to accommodate our unworthiness, it required
a previous familiarity with the church to know (as
I did) that there was, indeed, more and more skipping;
yet the little lady played her part so evenly and
with never a falter of voice nor a change in the gentle
courtesy of her manner, that I do not think-save
for that moment at the window-sill-I could
have been sure what she thought, or how much she noticed.
Her face was always so pale, it may well have been
all imagination with me that she seemed, when we emerged
at last into the light of the street, paler than usual;
but I am almost certain that her hand was trembling
as she stood receiving the thanks of the party.
These thanks were cut a little short by the arrival
of one of the automobiles, and, at the same time, the
appearance of Hortense strolling toward us with John
Mayrant.
Charley had resumed to Bohm, “A
tax of twenty-five cents on the ton is nothing with
deposits of this richness,” when his voice ceased;
and looking at him to see the cause, I perceived that
his eye was on John, and that his polished finger-nail
was running meditatively along his thin mustache.
Hortense took the matter-whatever
the matter was-in hand.
“You haven’t much time,”
she said to Charles, who consulted his watch.
“Who’s coming to see me off?” he
inquired.
“Where’s he going?” I asked Beverly.
“She’s sending him North,”
Beverly answered, and then he spoke with his very
best simple manner to Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael.
“May I not walk home with you after all your
kindness?”
She was going to say no, for she had
had enough of this party; but she looked at Beverly,
and his face and his true solicitude won her; she
said, “Thank you, if you will.” And
the two departed together down the shabby street,
the little veiled lady in black, and Beverly with
his excellent London clothes and his still more excellent
look of respectful, sheltering attention.
And now Bohm pronounced the only utterance that I heard fall
from his lips during his stay in Kings Port. He looked at the church he
had come from, he looked at the neighboring larger church whose columns stood
out at the angle of the street; he looked at the graveyard opposite that, then
at the stale, dusty shop of old furniture, and then up the shabby street, where
no life or movement was to be seen, except the distant forms of Beverly and Mrs.
Weguelin St. Michael. Then from a gold cigar-case, curved to fit his
breast pocket, he took a cigar and lighted it from a gold match-box.
Offering none of us a cigar, he placed the case again in his pocket; and holding
his lighted cigar a moment with two fingers in his strong glove, he spoke:-
“This town’s worse than Sunday.”
Then he got into the automobile.
They all followed to see Charley off, and he addressed
me.
“I shall be glad,” he
said, “if you will make one of a little party
on the yacht next Sunday, when I come back. And
you also,” he added to John.
Both John and I expressed our acceptance
in suitable forms, and the automobile took its way
to the train.
“Your Kings Port streets,”
I said, as we walked back toward Mrs. Trevise’s,
“are not very favorable for automobiles.”
“No,” he returned briefly.
I don’t remember that either of us found more
to say until we had reached my front door, when he
asked, “Will the day after to-morrow suit you
for Udolpho?”
“Whenever you say,” I told him.
“Weather permitting, of course.
But I hope that it will; for after that I suppose
my time will not be quite so free.”
After we had parted it struck me that
this was the first reference to his approaching marriage
that John had ever made in my hearing since that day
long ago (it seemed long ago, at least) when he had
come to the Exchange to order the wedding-cake, and
Eliza La Heu had fallen in love with him at sight.
That, in my opinion, looking back now with eyes at
any rate partially opened, was what Eliza had done.
Had John returned the compliment then, or since?