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"What had it been, his idea?" the old man, however, simply repeated.
Mitchy's confession at this seemed to explain his previous evasion. "We shall never know."
Mr. Longdon hesitated. "He won't tell YOU?"
"Me?" Mitchy had a pause. "Less than any one."
Many things they had not spoken had already pa.s.sed between them, and something evidently, to the sense of each, pa.s.sed during the moment that followed this. "While you were abroad," Mr. Longdon presently asked, "did you hear from him?"
"Never. And I wrote nothing."
"Like me," said Mr. Longdon. "I've neither written nor heard."
"Ah but with you it will be different." Mr. Longdon, as if with the outbreak of an agitation hitherto controlled, had turned abruptly away and, with the usual swing of his gla.s.s, begun almost wildly to wander.
"You WILL hear."
"I shall be curious."
"Oh but what Nanda wants, you know, is that you shouldn't be too much so."
Mr. Longdon thoughtfully rambled. "Too much--?"
"To let him off, as we were saying, easily."
The elder man for a while said nothing more, but he at last came back.
"She'd like me actually to give him something?"
"I dare say!"
"Money?"
Mitchy smiled. "A handsome present." They were face to face again with more mute interchange. "She doesn't want HIM to have lost--!"
Mr. Longdon, however, on this, once more broke off while Mitchy's eyes followed him. "Doesn't it give a sort of measure of what she may feel--?"
He had paused, working it out again with the effect of his friend's returning afresh to be fed with his light. "Doesn't what give it?"
"Why the fact that we still like him."
Mr. Longdon stared. "Do YOU still like him?"
"If I didn't how should I mind--?" But on the utterance of it Mitchy fairly pulled up.
His companion, after another look, laid a mild hand on his shoulder.
"What is it you mind?"
"From HIM? Oh nothing!" He could trust himself again. "There are people like that--great cases of privilege."
"He IS one!" Mr. Longdon mused.
"There it is. They go through life somehow guaranteed. They can't help pleasing."
"Ah," Mr. Longdon murmured, "if it hadn't been for that--!"
"They hold, they keep every one," Mitchy went on. "It's the sacred terror."
The companions for a little seemed to stand together in this element; after which the elder turned once more away and appeared to continue to walk in it. "Poor Nanda!" then, in a far-off sigh, came across from him to Mitchy. Mitchy on this turned vaguely round to the fire, into which he remained gazing till he heard again Mr. Longdon's voice. "I knew it of course after all. It was what I came up to town for. That night, before you went abroad, at Mrs. Grendon's--"
"Yes?"--Mitchy was with him again.
"Well, made me see the future. It was then already too late."
Mitchy a.s.sented with emphasis. "Too late. She was spoiled for him."
If Mr. Longdon had to take it he took it at least quietly, only saying after a time: "And her mother ISN'T?"
"Oh yes. Quite."
"And does Mrs. Brook know it?"
"Yes, but doesn't mind. She resembles you and me. She 'still likes'
him."
"But what good will that do her?"
Mitchy sketched a shrug. "What good does it do US?"
Mr. Longdon thought. "We can at least respect ourselves."
"CAN we?" Mitchy smiled.
"And HE can respect us," his friend, as if not hearing him, went on.
Mitchy seemed almost to demur. "He must think we're 'rum.'"
"Well, Mrs. Brook's worse than rum. He can't respect HER."
"Oh that will be perhaps," Mitchy laughed, "what she'll get just most out of!" It was the first time of Mr. Longdon's showing that even after a minute he had not understood him; so that as quickly as possible he pa.s.sed to another point. "If you do anything may I be in it?"
"But what can I do? If it's over it's over."
"For HIM, yes. But not for her or for you or for me."
"Oh I'm not for long!" the old man wearily said, turning the next moment to the door, at which one of the footmen had appeared.
"Mrs. Brookenham's compliments, please sir," this messenger articulated, "and Miss Brookenham is now alone."
"Thanks--I'll come up."