It"s just been brought in."
He said that he would have tea with her. She did not actually help him up the stairs, but as, with skill impaired, he swung himself from step to step, the touch of her tactful and ready hand was upon his arm, a caress rather than a sustainment. Pa.s.sing the hand through his arm, she led him into the drawing-room.
Owen looked about him. He stood for a long moment in the door and looked. He then allowed himself a cautious, side-long glance at Gwendolen. Her eyes, unaware in their bland complacency, had followed his and rested upon her room.
"Oh, yes, I"d forgotten that you hadn"t seen my new drawing-room," she said. "We"ve had great changes."
Even in his horror, for it was hardly less, he was touched to realize that Gwendolen was thinking far less of her drawing-room than of him.
She might have forgotten that it had changed, had he not so helplessly displayed his amazement.
"Yes, indeed," he said. He limped to the fire and sank heavily into the deep, black satin easy-chair drawn before it. He leaned his elbow on his knee and rested his head on his hand, and as he did so he observed that before the fire stood a mahogany footstool with a bead-worked top.
"You are tired, dear Owen. Do you feel ill?" Gwendolen hovered above his chair.
"I do feel a little giddy," he confessed. "I"m not all right yet, I see."
He raised his head. It was to face the mantelpiece, with its oval, gilt mirror and crystal l.u.s.tres and gilt-and-marble clock. No, there were not doves and a nest upon it. This was a finer clock than the one with the doves, and the l.u.s.tres were larger, and the flowers that stood between were mauve orchids. Gwendolen always went astray over her flowers.
"Here is tea," she said, seating herself at a little mahogany table with bowed and decorated legs. "Of course you"re bound to feel tired, dear Owen, after your journey. Tea will be the very thing for you."
He turned now a furtive eye along the wall. Flower-pieces, dim, flat, old flower-pieces and arid steel-engravings and tall pieces of mahogany furniture with marble vases upon them--no mistakes had been made here, for if the vases were not urns, they were of marble and in their places.
"How do you like it in this phase?" Gwendolen asked him, tactfully turning from the question of his weakness. "I love it myself, I own, though of course Chislebridge thinks I"ve lost my wits. To tell you the truth, Owen, I was tired of beauty. One may come to that. One may feel,"
said Gwendolen, pouring out the tea, "that one needs a discipline. This room is my discipline, and after it I know that I shall find self-indulgence almost vulgar."
No; his mind was working to and fro between the present and the past with the rapidity and accuracy of a shuttle threading an intricate pattern--no, he had never mentioned to Gwendolen that late autumnal visit of his to Chislebridge eighteen months ago. Had that been because to mention it and the transformation he had been the first to witness in Mrs. Waterlow"s drawing-room would have been, in a sense, to give Gwendolen a warning? And had he not, in his deepening affection for her, conceived her to be above the need of such warnings? Yes; for though he had been glad to recover his ideal of young Mrs. Waterlow, though he had been more than willing that Gwendolen should occupy the slightly ridiculous and humiliating position that he had imagined to be Mrs.
Waterlow"s, he had never for a moment imagined that Gwendolen"s disingenuous docility would go as far as this. So many people might love red lacquer and old gla.s.s with a clear conscience, once they had been brought to see them; but who, with a clear conscience, could love black satin furniture and marble vases?
"It is a very singular room," he found at last, in comment upon her information. "How--and when--did you come to think of it?" He heard the hollow sound of his own voice; but Gwendolen remained unaware. The fact of her stupidity cast a merciful veil of pitifulness over her.
"I hardly know," she said, handing him his tea and happy in her theme.
"These things are in the air at a given time--reactions, repulsions, wearinesses--I think. It grew bit by bit; I"ve brought it to this state only since my return from the Riviera. The idea came to me, oh, long ago--long before your illness. Alec Chambers is perfectly entranced with it, and vows it is the most beautiful--yes, beautiful--room in existence. It is witty as well as beautiful, he says, and he is going to paint it for the New English Art Club. Rooms have a curious influence upon me, you know, Owen. I really do feel," said Gwendolen busying herself hospitably with his little plate and hot, b.u.t.tered toast, "that I"ve grown cleverer since living in this one."
Owen, while she talked and while he drank his tea, had been more frankly looking about him. Flagrant as was the plagiarism, Gwendolen, as before, had protected herself by a more ill.u.s.trious achievement. It was a stately, not a staid room; it carried the idea higher, and thereby missed it. It was not an amusing room, nor witty, to any one who had seen the original. It was impressive, oppressive, almost forbidding.
Gwendolen, for one thing, had had more s.p.a.ce to fill. The navete of mere flower-pieces would not furnish her walls, and she had lapsed into sheer ugliness with the large and admirably accurate steel-engravings.
Caution, too, had been mistakenly exercised here and there; the black satin furniture had no antimaca.s.sars and the centre-table no ornament except a vase of orchids and calf-bound books.
Owen felt no indignation; he would always remain too fond of Gwendolen, too tolerant of her folly, to feel indignant with her; it was with a mild but final irony that he brought his eyes back at last to his unconscious and hapless cousin. And he wondered how far Gwendolen had gone, how far she could be made to go. "There"s only one thing that it lacks," he said. "Shall I tell you?"
"Oh, _do_" she urged, beaming over her tea. "You know how much I value your taste."
"Oh, I haven"t much taste," said Owen, "I"ve never gone in for having taste. And doesn"t your room prove that taste is a mistake if indulged too far? It"s more a sense of literary fitness I allude to. Yours is meant to be a soulless room, isn"t it? That"s your intention?"
"Exactly," said Gwendolen, with eager apprehension; "that is just it--a soulless room. One is sick of souls, just as one is sick of beauty."
"Exactly," Owen echoed her. "But, since you have here a travesty of beauty, what you need to complete your idea is a travesty of soul. You need a centre that draws it all into focus. You need something that, alas! you might have had, and have lost for ever. The white paG.o.da, Gwendolen, that Mrs. Waterlow found. Your room needs that, and only that, to make it perfect."
He spoke in his flat, weak invalid"s voice, but he was wondering, almost with ardour, if Gwendolen, this touchstone applied, would suspect or remember and, from penitence or caution, redeem herself by a confession.
For a moment, only a moment, she looked at him very earnestly; and he was aware that he hoped that she was going to redeem herself--hoped it almost ardently, not for his own sake--those sober hopes were dead for ever--but for the sake of the past and what it had really held of fondness and sympathy and essential respect.
Gwendolen looked at him earnestly; it was as though a dim suspicion crossed her; and then, poor thing! she put it aside. Yes, he was very sorry for her as he listened to her.
"Owen, that is clever of you," she said, "but very, very clever. That is precisely what I"ve been saying to myself ever since the idea came to me. I can"t forgive myself for that piece of stupidity--my only one, I will say, in regard to such recognitions and perceptions. I may be a stupid woman about a great many things, but I"m not stupid about rooms.
The horror of Aunt Pickthorne"s room dulled my eyes so that in all truth I can say that I never saw that paG.o.da. And from the moment I"ve had my idea I"ve moaned--but literally moaned--over having lost it. Of course it is what the room needs, and all that it needs--the travesty of a soul standing on that mahogany table."
"Yes, the centre-table is the place for it," said Owen.
"It _is_ clever of you to feel it just as I do, Owen, dear," she went on. "The paG.o.da was meant for this room and for this room only; for, you know, I didn"t think Cicely Waterlow at all happily inspired in placing it as she had."
"As she had?" He rapped the question out with irrepressible quickness.
"Yes, among all that rather trashy lacquer and gla.s.s in that rather gimcrackery little drawing-room of hers. The paG.o.da looked there, what it had always looked in Aunt Pickthorne"s room--a gimcrack itself."
"Looked?" he repeated. "How does it look now? How has she placed it now?"
And, for the first time in all their intercourse, he saw that Gwendolen was suddenly confused. He had hardly trapped her. She had set the trap herself, and inadvertently had walked into it. A faint colour rose to her cheek. She dropped for a moment her eyes upon the fire. Then, covering her self-consciousness with a show of smiling vivacity, she knelt to poke the logs, saying:
"I don"t know, I really don"t know, Owen. Cicely is always changing her room, you know. She is very quick at feeling what"s in the air--as quick as I am really--and I haven"t seen her for ages. She has gone to live in London--oh, yes, didn"t you know? Yes, she came into a little money over a year ago, and she and old Mrs. Waterlow have taken a house in Chelsea, and are coming back to Chislebridge only for two or three months in every year. They are very fond of Chislebridge. So I haven"t an idea of what her drawing-room is like now."
"Perhaps it"s like yours," Owen suggested. "The one I saw was rather like yours, I remember."
Gwendolen opened kind and repudiating eyes.
"Do you think so, Owen? Like mine? Oh, only in one or two superficial little things. She hadn"t a Chinese screen or a lacquer cabinet or a piece of Chinese painting to bless herself with, poor little Cicely! No, indeed, Owen; I don"t think it would be at all fair to say that Cicely copied me. These things are in the air."
Before he left Chislebridge he asked Gwendolen for Mrs. Waterlow"s London address, and observed that she did not flinch in giving it to him. He inferred from this that Mrs. Waterlow"s black satin suite had not left Chislebridge and that Gwendolen knew that she had nothing to fear from a London visit. Would she indeed fear anything from any visit?
Her placid self-deception was so profound that it would be difficult to draw a line fairly between skilful fraud and instinctive self-protection. Gwendolen, without doubt, conceived herself completely protected. She would never suspect him of suspecting her.
He felt, when he got back to London, a certain reluctance in going to see Mrs. Waterlow. It was not only that he shrank from reading in old Mrs. Waterlow"s malicious eyes the recognition of his discovery; in regard to young Mrs. Waterlow there was another shrinking that was almost one of shyness. She had been wronged, grossly wronged, by some one to whom he must show the semblance of loyalty, and the consciousness of her wrongs affected him deeply. A fortnight pa.s.sed before he made his way one afternoon to Chelsea, a fortnight in which the main consciousness that filled his sense of renewal was that of his merciful escape. Mrs. Waterlow"s house was in St. Leonard"s Terrace, one of the narrow, old houses that face the expanse of the Royal Hospital Gardens.
The spring sun, as he limped along, was s.h.i.+ning upon their facades--dull, old brick and dim, white paint-like slabs of ancient wedding-cake with frosted edging.
After all the expense of his illness, he was very poor in these days, and had come with difficulty in a "bus. As he opened the gate and went into the flagged garden, where white tulips grew, he glanced up and saw young Mrs. Waterlow standing looking out at the drawing-room window. Her eyes met his in surprise, they had not seen each other for so long a time; then, as lifting his hat he smiled at her, he thought he saw in them a sudden pity and gravity. He did of course look so much more battered than when she had last seen him. The nice, middle-aged maid let him in--he was glad of that--and, as he followed her up the narrow staircase, with its white, panelled walls, he wondered which drawing-room it was to be, and felt his heart sink strangely at the thought that perhaps, after all, Mrs. Waterlow had transplanted her discipline to London.
But, no; like a soft gush of sunlight, like bells and clear, running water, the first room greeted him in a medley of untraceable a.s.sociations. It was the first room, with the delicate cane-seated chairs and settees, the red lacquer and the gla.s.s, all looking lovelier than ever against the panelled white, all brighter, sweeter, happier than in the rather dim room on the ground floor in Chislebridge. And touches of green, like tiny flakes of vivid flame, went through it in the leaves of the white azaleas that filled the jars and vases. He saw it all, and he saw, as Mrs. Waterlow came toward him, that the white paG.o.da stood on its former little black lacquer table in one of the windows.
Mrs. Waterlow shook his hand and her eyes examined him.
"You have been ill. I was so sorry to hear," she said.
"Yes, I"ve been wretchedly ill; for years now, it seems," he replied.
They sat down before the fire. Old Mrs. Waterlow, she told him, was away on a visit to Chislebridge, from which she was to return that evening at six o"clock. It was only four. He had two hours before him, and he felt that in them he was to be very happy. They talked and talked. He saw that she liked him and expected him to stay on and talk. All the magic and elation and sense of discovery and adventure was with him as on their first encounter. She knew him, he found, so much better than he could have guessed. She had read everything he had written. She appreciated so finely; she even, with a further advance to acknowledged friends.h.i.+p, criticized, with the precision and delicacy expressed in all that she did. And the fact that she liked him so much, that she was already so much his friend, gave him his right to let her see how much he liked her. The two hours were not only happy; they were the happiest he had ever known.
The clock had hardly struck six when old Mrs. Waterlow"s cab drove up.
"Don"t go; mamma will so like to see you," said Mrs. Waterlow. "She so enjoyed that little visit you paid her over a year ago, you know."