The Emancipated. George Gissing

The Emancipated - George Gissing


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thought, for his clothes, though of the kind a gentleman would wear in travelling, had seen their best days, and the waistcoat even lacked one of its buttons; his black necktie was knotted into an indescribable shape, and the ends hung loose.

      Him Mrs. Spence at once presented to her cousin as "Mr. Mallard." He bowed ungracefully; then, with a manner naturally frank but constrained by obvious shyness, took the hand Miriam held to him.

      "We are scarcely strangers, Mr. Mallard," she said in a self-possessed tone, regarding him with steady eyes.

      "Miss Doran has spoken of you frequently on the journey," he replied, knitting his brows into a scowl as he smiled and returned her look. "Your illness made her very anxious. You are much better, I hope?"

      "Much, thank you."

      Allowance made for the difference of quality in their voices, Mrs. Baske and Mallard resembled each other in speech. They had the same grave note, the same decision.

      "They must be very tired after their journey," Miriam added, seating herself.

      "Miss Doran seems scarcely so at all; but Mrs. Lessingham is rather over-wearied, I'm afraid."

      "Why didn't you break the journey at Florence or Rome?" asked Mrs. Spence.

      "I proposed it, but other counsels prevailed. All through Italy Miss Doran was distracted between desire to get to Naples and misery at not being able to see the towns we passed. At last she buried herself in the 'Revue des Deux Mondes,' and refused even to look out of the window."

      "I suppose we may go and see her in the morning?" said Miriam.

      "My express instructions are," replied Mallard, "that you are on no account to go. They will come here quite early. Miss Doran begged hard to come with me now, but I wouldn't allow it."

      "Is it the one instance in which your authority has prevailed?" inquired Spence. "You seem to declare it in a tone of triumph."

      "Well," replied the other, with a grim smile, leaning forward in his chair, "I don't undertake to lay down rules for the young lady of eighteen as I could for the child of twelve. But my age and sobriety of character still ensure me respect."

      He glanced at Mrs. Baske, and their eyes met. Miriam smiled rather coldly, but continued to observe him after he had looked away again.

      "You met them at Genoa?" she asked presently, in her tone of habitual reserve.

      "Yes. I came by sea from London, and had a couple of days to wait for their arrival from Paris."

      "And I suppose you also are staying at Mrs. Gluck's?"

      "Oh no! I have a room at old quarters of mine high up in the town, Vico Brancaccio. I shall only be in Naples a few days."

      "How's that?" inquired Spence.

      "I'm going to work at Amalfi and Paestum."

      "Then, as usual, we shall see nothing of you," said Mrs. Spence. "Pray, do you dine at Mrs. Gluck's this evening?"

      "By no means."

      "May we, then, have the pleasure of your company? There is no need to go back to Vico Brancaccio. I am sure Mrs. Baske will excuse you the torture of uniform."

      With a sort of grumble, the invitation was accepted. A little while after, Spence proposed to his friend a walk before sunset.

      "Yes; let us go up the hill," said Mallard, rising abruptly. "I need movement after the railway."

      They left the villa, and Mallard grew less restrained in his conversation.

      "How does Mrs. Baske answer to your expectations?" Spence asked him.

      "I had seen her photograph, you know."

      "Where?"

      "Her brother showed it me—one taken at the time of her marriage."

      "What is Elgar doing at present?"

      "It's more than a year since we crossed each other," Mallard replied. "He was then going to the devil as speedily as can in reason be expected of a man. I happened to encounter him one morning at Victoria Station, and he seemed to have just slept off a great deal of heavy drinking. Told me he was going down to Brighton to see about selling a houseful of furniture there—his own property. I didn't inquire how or why he came possessed of it. He is beyond help, I imagine. When he comes to his last penny, he'll probably blow his brains out; just the fellow to do that kind of thing."

      "I suppose he hasn't done it already? His sister has heard nothing of him for two years at least, and this account of yours is the latest I have received."

      "I should think he still lives, He would be sure to make a coup de theatre of his exit."

      "Poor lad!" said the elder man, with feeling. "I liked him."

      "Why, so did I; and I wish it had been in my scope to keep him in some kind of order. Yes, I liked him much. And as for brains, why, I have scarcely known a man who so impressed me with a sense of his ability. But you could see that he was doomed from his cradle. Strongly like his sister in face."

      "I'm afraid the thought of him troubles her a good deal."

      "She looks ill."

      "Yes; we are uneasy about her," said Spence. Then, with a burst of impatience: "There's no getting her mind away from that pestilent Bartles. What do you think she is projecting now? It appears that the Dissenters of Bartles are troubled concerning their chapel; it isn't large enough. So Miriam proposes to pull down her own house, and build them a chapel on the site, of course at her own expense. The ground being her freehold, she can unfortunately do what she likes with it; the same with her personal property. The thing has gone so far that a Manchester firm of architects have prepared plans; they are lying about in her room here."

      Mallard regarded the speaker with humorous wonder.

      "And the fact is," pursued Spence, "that such an undertaking as this will impoverish her. She is not so wealthy as to be able to lay out thousands of pounds and leave her position unaltered."

      "I suppose she lives only for her religious convictions?"

      "I don't profess to understand her. Her character is not easily sounded. But no doubt she has the puritanical spirit in a rather rare degree. I daily thank the fates that my wife grew up apart from that branch of the family. Of all the accursed—But this is an old topic; better not to beat one's self uselessly."

      "A Puritan at Naples," mused Mallard. "The situation is interesting."

      "Very. But then she doesn't really live in Naples. From the first day she has shown herself bent on resisting every influence of the place. She won't admit that the climate benefits her; she won't allow an expression of interest in anything Italian to escape her. I doubt whether we shall ever get her even to Pompeii. One afternoon I persuaded her to walk up here with me, and tried to make her confess that this view was beautiful. She grudged making any such admission. It is her nature to distrust the beautiful."

      "To be sure. That is the badge of her persuasion."

      "Last Sunday we didn't know whether to compassionate her or to be angry with her. The Bradshaws are at Mrs. Gluck's. You know them by name, I think? There again, an interesting study, in a very different way. Twice in the day she shut herself up with them in their rooms, and they held a dissident service. The hours she spent here were passed in the solitude of her own room, lest she should witness our profane enjoyment of the fine weather. Eleanor refrained from touching the piano, and at meals kept the gravest countenance, in mere kindness. I doubt whether that is right. It isn't as though we were dealing with a woman whose mind is hopelessly—immatured; she is only a girl still, and I know she has brains if she could be induced to use them."

      "Mrs. Baske has a remarkable face, it seems to me," said Mallard.

      "It enrages me to talk of the matter."

      They were now on the road which runs along


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