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"I haven't the least idea."
"Don't you know where she is?"
"I suppose she's with Tishy, who has returned to town."
Vanderbank turned this over. "Is that your system now--to ask no questions?"
"Why SHOULD I ask any--when I want her life to be as much as possible like my own? It's simply that the hour has struck, as you know. From the moment she IS down the only thing for us is to live as friends. I think it's so vulgar," Mrs. Brook sighed, "not to have the same good manners with one's children as one has with other people. She asks ME nothing."
"Nothing?" Vanderbank echoed.
"Nothing."
He paused again; after which, "It's very disgusting!" he declared. Then while she took it up as he had taken her word of a moment before, "It's very preposterous," he continued.
Mrs. Brook appeared at a loss. "Do you mean her helping him?"
"It's not of Nanda I'm speaking--it's of him." Vanderbank spoke with a certain impatience. "His being with her in any sort of direct relation at all. His mixing her up with his other beastly affairs."
Mrs. Brook looked intelligent and wan about it, but also perfectly good-humoured. "My dear man, he and his affairs ARE such twaddle!"
Vanderbank laughed in spite of himself. "And does that make it any better?"
Mrs. Brook thought, but presently had a light--she almost smiled with it. "For US!" Then more woefully, "Don't you want Carrie to be saved?"
she asked.
"Why should I? Not a jot. Carrie be hanged!"
"But it's for f.a.n.n.y," Mrs. Brook protested. "If Carrie IS rescued it's a pretext the less for f.a.n.n.y." As the young man looked for an instant rather gloomily vague she softly quavered: "I suppose you don't positively WANT f.a.n.n.y to bolt?"
"To bolt?"
"Surely I've not to remind you at this time of day how Captain Dent-Douglas is always round the corner with the post-chaise, and how tight, on our side, we're all clutching her."
"But why not let her go?"
Mrs. Brook, at this, showed real resentment. "'Go'? Then what would become of us?" She recalled his wandering fancy. "She's the delight of our life."
"Oh!" Vanderbank sceptically murmured.
"She's the ornament of our circle," his companion insisted. "She will, she won't--she won't, she will! It's the excitement, every day, of plucking the daisy over." Vanderbank's attention, as she spoke, had attached itself across the room to Mr. Longdon; it gave her thus an image of the way his imagination had just seemed to her to stray, and she saw a reason in it moreover for her coming up in another place.
"Isn't he rather rich?" She allowed the question all its effect of abruptness.
Vanderbank looked round at her. "Mr. Longdon? I haven't the least idea."
"Not after becoming so intimate? It's usually, with people, the very first thing I get my impression of." There came into her face for another glance at their friend no crudity of curiosity, but an expression more tenderly wistful. "He must have some mysterious box under his bed."
"Down in Suffolk?--a miser's h.o.a.rd? Who knows? I dare say," Vanderbank went on. "He isn't a miser, but he strikes me as careful."
Mrs. Brook meanwhile had thought it out. "Then he has something to be careful of; it would take something really handsome to inspire in a man like him that sort of interest. With his small expenses all these years his savings must be immense. And how could he have proposed to mamma unless he had originally had money?"
If Vanderbank a little helplessly wondered he also laughed. "You must remember your mother refused him."
"Ah but not because there wasn't enough."
"No--I imagine the force of the blow for him was just in the other reason."
"Well, it would have been in that one just as much if that one had been the other." Mrs. Brook was sagacious, though a trifle obscure, and she pursued the next moment: "Mamma was so sincere. The fortune was nothing to her. That shows it was immense."
"It couldn't have been as great as your logic," Vanderbank smiled; "but of course if it has been growing ever since--!"
"I can see it grow while he sits there," Mrs. Brook declared. But her logic had in fact its own law, and her next transition was an equal jump. "It was too lovely, the frankness of your admission a minute ago that I affect him uncannily. Ah don't spoil it by explanations!" she beautifully pleaded: "he's not the first and he won't be the last with whom I shall not have been what they call a combination. The only thing that matters is that I mustn't, if possible, make the case worse. So you must guide me. What IS one to do?"
Vanderbank, now amused again, looked at her kindly. "Be yourself, my dear woman. Obey your fine instincts."
"How can you be," she sweetly asked, "so hideously hypocritical? You know as well as you sit there that my fine instincts are the thing in the world you're most in terror of. 'Be myself?'" she echoed. "What you'd LIKE to say is: 'Be somebody else--that's your only chance.' Well, I'll try--I'll try."
He laughed again, shaking his head. "Don't--don't."
"You mean it's too hopeless? There's no way of effacing the bad impression or of starting a good one?" On this, with a drop of his mirth, he met her eyes, and for an instant, through the superficial levity of their talk, they might have appeared to sound each other. It lasted till Mrs. Brook went on: "I should really like not to lose him."
Vanderbank seemed to understand and at last said: "I think you won't lose him."
"Do you mean you'll help me, Van, you WILL?" Her voice had at moments the most touching tones of any in England, and humble, helpless, affectionate, she spoke with a familiarity of friendship. "It's for the sense of the link with mamma," she explained. "He's simply full of her."
"Oh I know. He's prodigious."
"He has told you more--he comes back to it?" Mrs. Brook eagerly asked.
"Well," the young man replied a trifle evasively, "we've had a great deal of talk, and he's the jolliest old boy possible, and in short I like him."
"I see," said Mrs. Brook blandly, "and he likes you in return as much as he despises me. That makes it all right--makes me somehow so happy for you. There's something in him--what is it?--that suggests the oncle d'Amerique, the eccentric benefactor, the fairy G.o.dmother. He's a little of an old woman--but all the better for it." She hung fire but an instant before she pursued: "What can we make him do for you?"
Vanderbank at this was very blank. "Do for me?"
"How can any one love you," she asked, "without wanting to show it in some way? You know all the ways, dear Van," she breathed, "in which I want to show it."
He might have known them, something suddenly fixed in his face appeared to say, but they were not what was, on this speech of hers, most immediately present to him. "That for instance is the tone not to take with him."
"There you are!" she sighed with discouragement. "Well, only TELL me."
Then as he said nothing: "I must be more like mamma?"
His expression confessed to his feeling an awkwardness. "You're perhaps not quite enough like her."
"Oh I know that if he deplores me as I am now she would have done so quite as much; in fact probably, as seeing it nearer, a good deal more.
She'd have despised me even more than he. But if it's a question," Mrs.
Brook went on, "of not saying what mamma wouldn't, how can I know, don't you see, what she WOULD have said?" Mrs. Brook became as wonderful as if she saw in her friend's face some admiring reflexion of the fine freedom of mind that--in such a connexion quite as much as in any other--she could always show. "Of course I revere mamma just as much as he does, and there was everything in her to revere. But she was none the less in every way a charming woman too, and I don't know, after all, do I? what even she--in their peculiar relation--may not have said to him."