THE success of Pimpernel Schley in
London was great and immediate, and preceded her appearance
upon the stage. To some people, who thought they
knew their London, it was inexplicable. Miss Schley
was pretty and knew how to dress. These facts,
though of course denied by some, as all facts in London
are, were undeniable. But Miss Schley had nothing
to say. She was not a brilliant talker, as so
many of her countrywomen are. She was not vivacious
in manner, except on rare occasions. She was not
interested in all the questions of the day. She
was not-a great many things. But she
was one thing.
She was exquisitely sly.
Her slyness was definite and pervasive.
In her it took the place of wit. It took the
place of culture. It even took the place of vivacity.
It was a sort of maid-of-all-work in her personality
and never seemed to tire. The odd thing was that
it did not seem to tire others. They found it
permanently piquant. Men said of Miss Schley,
“She’s a devilish clever little thing.
She don’t say much, but she’s up to every
move on the board.” Women were impressed
by her. There was something in her supreme and
snowy composure that suggested inflexible will.
Nothing ever put her out or made her look as if she
were in a false position.
London was captivated by the abnormal
combination of snow and slyness which she presented
to it, and began at once to make much of her.
At one time the English were supposed
to be cold; and rather gloried in the supposition.
But recently a change has taken place in the national
character-at any rate as exhibited in London.
Rigidity has gone out of fashion. It is condemned
as insular, and unless you are cosmopolitan nowadays
you are nothing, or worse than nothing. The smart
Englishwoman is beginning to be almost as restless
as a Neapolitan. She is in a continual flutter
of movement, as if her body were threaded with trembling
wires. She uses a great deal of gesture.
She is noisy about nothing. She is vivacious
at all costs, and would rather suggest hysteria than
British phlegm.
Miss Schley’s calm was therefore
in no danger of being drowned in any pervasive calm
about her. On the contrary, it stood out.
It became very individual. Her composed speechlessness
in the midst of uneasy chatter-the Englishwoman
is seldom really self-possessed-carried
with it a certain dignity which took the place of
breeding. She was always at her ease, and to
be always at your ease makes a deep impression upon
London, which is full of self-consciousness.
She began to be the fashion at once.
A great lady, who had a passion for supplying smart
men with what they wanted, saw that they were going
to want Miss Schley and promptly took her up.
Other women followed suit. Miss Schley had a
double triumph. She was run after by women as
well as by men. She got her little foot in everywhere,
and in no time. Her personal character was not
notoriously bad. The slyness had taken care of
that. But even if it had been, if only the papers
had not been too busy in the matter, she might have
had success. Some people do whose names have
figured upon the evening bills exposed at the street
corners. Hers had not and was not likely to.
It was her art to look deliberately pure and good,
and to suggest, in a way almost indefinable and very
perpetual, that she could be anything and everything,
and perhaps had been, under the perfumed shadow of
the rose. The fact that the suggestion seemed
to be conveyed with intention was the thing that took
corrupt old London’s fancy and made Miss Schley
a pet.
Her name of Pimpernel was not against her.
Men liked it for its innocence, and
laughed as they mentioned it in the clubs, as who
should say:
“We know the sort of Pimpernel we mean.”
Miss Schley’s social success
brought her into Lady Holme’s set, and people
noticed, what Lady Holme had been the first to notice,
the faint likeness between them. Lady Holme was
not exquisitely sly. Her voice was not like a
choir-boy’s; her manner was not like the manner
of an image; her eyes were not for ever cast down.
Even her characteristic silence was far less perpetual
than the equally characteristic silence of Miss Schley.
But men said they were the same colour. What men
said women began to think, and it was not an assertion
wholly without foundation. At a little distance
there was an odd resemblance in the one white face
and fair hair to the other. Miss Schley’s
way of moving, too, had a sort of reference to Lady
Holme’s individual walk. There were several
things characteristic of Lady Holme which Miss Schley
seemed to reproduce, as it were, with a sly exaggeration.
Her hair was similar, but paler, her whiteness more
dead, her silence more perpetual, her composure more
enigmatically serene, her gait slower, with diminished
steps.
It was all a little like an imitation,
with just a touch of caricature added.
One or two friends remarked upon it
to Lady Holme, who heard them very airily.
“Are we alike?” she said.
“I daresay, but you mustn’t expect me to
see it. One never knows the sort of impression
one produces on the world. I think Miss Schley
a very attractive little creature, and as to her social
gifts, I bow to them.”
“But she has none,” cried
Mrs. Wolfstein, who was one of those who had drawn
Lady Holme’s attention to the likeness.
“How can you say so? Everyone is at her
feet.”
“Her feet, perhaps. They
are lovely. But she has no gifts. That’s
why she gets on. Gifted people are a drug in
the market. London’s sick of them.
They worry. Pimpernel’s found that out and
gone in for the savage state. I mean mentally
of course.”
“Her mind dwells in a wigwam,”
said Lady Manby. “And wears glass beads
and little bits of coloured cloth.”
“But her acting?” asked
Lady Holme, with careless indifference.
“Oh, that’s improper but
not brilliant,” said Mrs. Wolfstein. “The
American critics says it’s beneath contempt.”
“But not beneath popularity, I suppose?”
said Lady Holme.
“No, she’s enormously
popular. Newspaper notices don’t matter
to Pimpernel. Are you going to ask her to your
house? You might. She’s longing to
come. Everybody else has, and she knew you first.”
Lady Holme began to realise why she
could never like Mrs. Wolfstein. The latter would
try to manage other people’s affairs.
“I had no idea she would care
about it,” she answered, rather coldly.
“My dear-an American!
And your house! You’re absurdly modest.
She’s simply pining to come. May I tell
her to?”
“I should prefer to invite her
myself,” said Lady Holme, with a distinct touch
of hauteur which made Mrs. Wolfstein smile maliciously.
When Lady Holme was alone she realised
that she had, half unconsciously, meant that Miss
Schley should find that there was at any rate one house
in London whose door did not at once fly open to welcome
her demure presence. But now? She certainly
did not intend to be a marked exception to a rule
that was apparently very general. If people were
going to talk about her exclusion of Miss Schley,
she would certainly not exclude her. She asked
herself why she wished to, and said to herself that
Miss Schley’s slyness bored her. But she
knew that the real reason of the secret hostility
she felt towards the American was the fact of their
resemblance to each other. Until Miss Schley appeared
in London she-Viola Holme-had
been original both in her beauty and in her manner
of presenting it to the world. Miss Schley was
turning her into a type.
It was too bad. Any woman would have disliked
it.
She wondered whether Miss Schley recognised
the likeness. But of course people had spoken
to her about it. Mrs. Wolfstein was her bosom
friend. The Jewess had met her first at Carlsbad
and, with that terrible social flair which often dwells
in Israel, had at once realised her fitness for a
London success and resolved to “get her over.”
Women of the Wolfstein species are seldom jealously
timorous of the triumphs of other women. A certain
coarse cleverness, a certain ingrained assurance and
unconquerable self-confidence keeps them hardy.
And they generally have a noble reliance on the power
of the tongue. Being incapable of any fear of
Miss Schley, Mrs. Wolfstein, ever on the look-out for
means of improving her already satisfactory position
in the London world, saw one in the vestal virgin
and resolved to launch her in England. She was
delighted with the result. Miss Schley had already
added several very desirable people to the Wolfstein
visiting-list. In return “Henry” had
“put her on to” one or two very good things
in the City. Everything would be most satisfactory
if only Lady Holme were not tiresome about the Cadogan
Square door.
“She hates you, Pimpernel,”
said Mrs. Wolfstein to her friend.
“Why?” drawled Miss Schley.
“You know why perfectly well.
You reproduce her looks. I’m perfectly
certain she’s dreading your first night.
She’s afraid people will begin to think that
extraordinary colourless charm she and you possess
stagey. Besides, you have certain mannerisms-you
don’t imitate her, Pimpernel?”
The pawnbroking expression was remarkably
apparent for a moment in Mrs. Wolfstein’s eyes.
“I haven’t started to yet.”
“Yet?”
“Well, if she don’t ask me to number thirty-eight-’tis
thirty-eight?”
“Forty-two.”
“Forty-two Cadogan Square, I
might be tempted. I came out as a mimic, you
know, at Corsher and Byall’s in Philadelphia.”
Miss Schley gazed reflectively upon
the brown carpet of Mrs. Wolfstein’s boudoir.
“Folks said I wasn’t bad,” she added
meditatively.
“I think I ought to warn Viola,” said
Mrs. Wolfstein.
She was peculiarly intimate with people
of distinction when they weren’t there.
Miss Schley looked as if she had not heard. She
often did when anything of importance to her was said.
It was important to her to be admitted to Lady Holme’s
house. Everybody went there. It was one of
the very smartest houses in London, and since everybody
knew that she had been introduced to Lady Holme, since
half the world was comparing their faces and would
soon begin to compare their mannerisms-well,
it would be better that she should not be forced into
any revival of her Philadelphia talents.
Mrs. Wolfstein did not warn Lady Holme.
She was far too fond of being amused to do anything
so short-sighted. Indeed, from that moment she
was inclined to conspire to keep the Cadogan Square
door shut against her friend. She did not go
so far as that; for she had a firm faith in Pimpernel’s
cuteness and was aware that she would be found out.
But she remained passive and kept her eyes wide open.
Miss Schley was only going to act
for a month in London. Her managers had taken
a theatre for her from the first of June till the first
of July. As she was to appear in a play she had
already acted in all over the States, and as her American
company was coming over to support her, she had nothing
to do in the way of preparation. Having arrived
early in the year, she had nearly three months of
idleness to enjoy. Her conversation with Mrs.
Wolfstein took place in the latter days of March.
And it was just at this period that Lady Holme began
seriously to debate whether she should, or should
not, open her door to the American. She knew
Miss Schley was determined to come to her house.
She knew her house was one of those to which any woman
setting out on the conquest of London would wish to
come. She did not want Miss Schley there, but
she resolved to invite her if peopled talked too much
about her not being invited. And she wished to
be informed if they did. One day she spoke to
Robin Pierce about it. Lord Holme’s treatment
of Carey had not yet been applied to him. They
met at a private view in Bond Street, given by a painter
who was adored by the smart world, and, as yet, totally
unknown in every other circle. The exhibition
was of portraits of beautiful women, and all the beautiful
women and their admirers crowded the rooms. Both
Lady Holme and Miss Schley had been included among
the sitters of the painter, and-was it
by chance or design?-their portraits hung
side by side upon the brown-paper-covered walls.
Lady Holme was not aware of this when she caught Robin’s
eye through a crevice in the picture hats and called
him to her with a little nod.
“Is there tea?”
“Yes. In the last room.”
“Take me there. Oh, there’s
Ashley Greaves. Avoid him, like a dear, till
I’ve looked at something.”
Ashley Greaves was the painter.
There was nothing of the Bohemian about him.
He looked like a heavy cavalry officer as he stood
in the centre of the room talking to a small, sharp-featured
old lady in a poke bonnet.
“He’s safe. Lady Blower’s got
hold of him.”
“Poor wretch! She ought to have a keeper.
Strong tea, Robin.”
They found a settee in a corner walled
in by the backs of tea-drinking beauties.
“I want to ask you something,”
said Lady Holme, confidentially. “You go
about and hear what they’re saying.”
“And greater nonsense it seems each new season.”
“Nonsense keeps us alive.”
“Is it the oxygen self-administered by an almost
moribund society?”
“It’s the perfume that
prevents us from noticing the stuffiness of the room.
But, Robin, tell me-what is the nonsense
of now?”
“Religious, political, theatrical, divorce court
or what, Lady Holme?”
He looked at her with a touch of mischief
in his dark face, which told her, and was meant to
tell her, that he was on the alert, and had divined
that she had a purpose in thus pleasantly taking possession
of him.
“Oh, the people-nonsense. You
know perfectly what I mean.”
“Whom are they chattering about
most at the moment? You’ll be contemptuous
if I tell you.”
“It’s a woman, then?”
“When isn’t it?”
“Do I know her?”
“Slightly.”
“Well?”
“Miss Schley.”
“Really?”
Lady Holme’s voice sounded perfectly
indifferent and just faintly surprised. There
was no hint of irritation in it.
“And what are they saying about
Miss Schley?” she added, sipping her tea and
glancing about the crowded room.
“Oh, many things, and among
the many one that’s more untrue than all the
rest put together.”
“What’s that?”
“It’s too absurd. I don’t think
I’ll tell you.”
“But why not? If it’s too absurd
it’s sure to be amusing.”
“I don’t think so.”
His voice sounded almost angry.
“Tell me, Robin.”
He looked at her quickly with a warm light in his
dark eyes.
“If you only knew how I-”
“Hush! Go on about Miss Schley.”
“They’re saying that she’s
wonderfully like you, and that-have some
more tea?”
“That ?”
“That you hate it.”
Lady Holme smiled, as if she were very much entertained.
“But why should I hate it?”
“I don’t know. But women invent reasons
for everything.”
“What have they invented for this?”
“Oh-well-that
you like to-I can’t tell you it all,
really. But in substance it comes to this!
They are saying, or implying-”
“Implication is the most subtle of the social
arts.”
“It’s the meanest-implying
that all that’s natural to you, that sets you
apart from others, is an assumption to make you stand
out from the rest of the crowd, and that you hate
Miss Schley because she happens to have assumed some
of the same characteristics, and so makes you seem
less unique than you did before.”
Lady Holme said nothing for a moment. Then she
remarked:
“I’m sure no woman said ‘less unique.’”
“Why not?”
“Now did anyone? Confess!”
“What d’you suppose they did say?”
“More commonplace.”
He could not help laughing.
“As if you were ever commonplace!”
he exclaimed, rather relieved by her manner.
“That’s not the question.
But then Miss Schley’s said to be like me not
only in appearance but in other ways? Are we really
so Siamese?”
“I can’t see the faintest beginning of
a resemblance.”
“Ah, now you’re falling into exaggeration
in the other direction.”
“Well, not in realities.
Perhaps in one or two trifling mannerisms-I
believe she imitates you deliberately.”
“I think I must ask her to the house.”
“Why should you?”
“Well, perhaps you might tell me.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Aren’t people saying
that the reason I don’t ask her is because I
am piqued at the supposed resemblance between us?”
“Oh, people will say anything.
If we are to model our lives according to their ridiculous
ideas-”
“Well, but we do.”
“Unless we follow the dictates of our own natures,
our own souls.”
He lowered his voice almost to a whisper.
“Be yourself, be the woman who
sings, and no one-not even a fool-will
ever say again that you resemble a nonentity like Miss
Schley. You see-you see now that even
socially it is a mistake not to be your real self.
You can be imitated by a cute little Yankee who has
neither imagination nor brains, only the sort of slyness
that is born out of the gutter.”
“My dear Robin, remember where we are.
You-a diplomatist!”
She put her finger to her lips and got up.
“We must look at something or Ashley Greaves
will be furious.”
They made their way into the galleries,
which were almost impassable. In the distance
Lady Holme caught sight of Miss Schley with Mrs. Wolfstein.
They were surrounded by young men. She looked
hard at the American’s pale face, saying to
herself, “Is that like me? Is that like
me?” Her conversation with Robin Pierce had
made her feel excited. She had not shown it.
She had seemed, indeed, almost oddly indifferent.
But something combative was awake within her.
She wondered whether the American was consciously
imitating her. What an impertinence! But
Miss Schley was impertinence personified. Her
impertinence was her raison d’etre.
Without it she would almost cease to be. She would
at any rate be as nothing.
Followed by Robin, Lady Holme made
her way slowly towards the Jewess and the American.
They were now standing together before
the pictures, and had been joined by Ashley Greaves,
who was beginning to look very warm and expressive,
despite his cavalry moustache. Their backs were
towards the room, and Lady Holme and Robin drew near
to them without being perceived. Mrs. Wolfstein
had a loud voice and did not control it in a crowd.
On the contrary, she generally raised it, as if she
wished to be heard by those whom she was not addressing.
“Sargent invariably brings out
the secret of his sitters,” she was saying to
Ashley Greaves as Lady Holme and Robin came near and
stood for an instant wedged in by people, unable to
move forward or backward. “You’ve
brought out the similarities between Pimpernel and
Lady Holme. I never saw anything so clever.
You show us not only what we all saw but what we all
passed over though it was there to see. There
is an absurd likeness, and you’ve blazoned it.”
Robin stole a glance at his companion.
Ashley Greaves said, in a thin voice that did not
accord with his physique:
“My idea was to indicate the
strong link there is between the English woman and
the American woman. If I may say so, these two
portraits, as it were, personify the two countries,
and-er-and-er-”
His mind appeared to give way.
He strove to continue, to say something memorable,
conscious of his conspicuous and central position.
But his intellect, possibly over-heated and suffering
from lack of air, declined to back him up, and left
him murmuring rather hopelessly:
“The one nation-er-and
the other-yes-the give and take-the
give and take. You see my meaning? Yes,
yes.”
Miss Schley said nothing. She
looked at Lady Holme’s portrait and at hers
with serenity, and seemed quite unconscious of the
many eyes fastened upon her.
“You feel the strong link, I
hope, Pimpernel?” said Mrs. Wolfstein, with
her most violent foreign accent. “Hands
across the Herring Pond!”
“Mr. Greaves has been too cute
for words,” she replied. “I wish Lady
Holme could cast her eye on them.”
She looked up at nothing, with a sudden
air of seeing something interesting that was happening
along way off.
“Philadelphia!” murmured
Mrs. Wolfstein, with an undercurrent of laughter.
It was very like Lady Holme’s
look when she was singing. Robin Pierce saw it
and pressed his lips together. At this moment
the crowd shifted and left a gap through which Lady
Holme immediately glided towards Ashley Greaves.
He saw her and came forward to meet her with eagerness,
holding out his hand, and smiling mechanically with
even more than his usual intention.
“What a success!” she said.
“If it is, your portrait makes it so.”
“And where is my portrait?”
Robin Pierce nipped in the bud a rather
cynical smile. The painter wiped his forehead
with a white silk handkerchief.
“Can’t you guess? Look where the
crowd is thickest.”
The people had again closed densely round the two
pictures.
“You are an artist in more ways
than one, I’m afraid,” said Lady Holme.
“Don’t turn my head more than the heat
has.”
The searching expression, that indicated
the strong desire to say something memorable, once
more contorted the painter’s face.
“He who would essay to fix beauty
on canvas,” he began, in a rather piercing voice,
“should combine two gifts.”
He paused and lifted his upper lip
two or three times, employing his under-jaw as a lever.
“Yes?” said Lady Holme, encouragingly.
“The gift of the brush which
perpetuates and the gift of-er-gift
of the-”
His intellect once more retreated
from him into some distant place and left him murmuring:
“Beauty demands all, beauty
demands all. Yes, yes! Sacrifice! Sacrifice!
Isn’t it so?”
He tugged at his large moustache,
with an abrupt assumption of the cavalry officer’s
manner, which he doubtless deemed to be in accordance
with his momentary muddle-headedness.
“And you give it what it wants
most-the touch of the ideal. It blesses
you. Can we get through?”
She had glanced at Robin while she
spoke the first words. Ashley Greaves, with an
expression of sudden relief, began very politely to
hustle the crowd, which yielded to his persuasive shoulders,
and Lady Holme found herself within looking distance
of the two portraits, and speaking distance of Mrs.
Wolfstein and Miss Schley. She greeted them with
a nod that was more gay and friendly than her usual
salutations to women, which often lacked bonhomie.
Mrs. Wolfstein’s too expressive face lit up.
“The sensation is complete!” she exclaimed
loudly.
“Hope you’re well,”
murmured Miss Schley, letting her pale eyes rest on
Lady Holme for about a quarter of a second, and then
becoming acutely attentive to vacancy.
Lady Holme was now in front of the
pictures. She looked at Miss Schley’s portrait
with apparent interest, while Mrs. Wolfstein looked
at her with an interest that was maliciously real.
“Well?” said Mrs. Wolfstein. “Well?”
“There’s an extraordinary
resemblance!” said Lady Holme. “It’s
wonderfully like.”
“Even you see it! Ashley, you ought to
be triumphant-”
“Wonderfully like-Miss
Schley,” added Lady Holme, cutting gently through
Mrs. Wolfstein’s rather noisy outburst.
She turned to the American.
“I have been wondering whether
you won’t come in one day and see my little
home. Everyone wants you, I know, but if you have
a minute some Wednesday-”
“I’ll be delighted.”
“Next Wednesday, then?”
“Thanks. Next Wednesday.”
“Cadogan Square-the
red book will tell you. But I’ll send cards.
I must be running away now.”
When she had gone, followed by Robin,
Mrs. Wolfstein said to Miss Schley:
“She’s been conquered by fear of Philadelphia.”
“Wait till I give her Noo York,” returned
the American, placidly.
It seemed that Lady Holme’s
secret hostility to Miss Schley was returned by the
vestal virgin.