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The Awkward Age, a novel by Henry James |
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BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER II |
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_ BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK#CHAPTER II
"Of old Van's?" "Oh has HE turned up?" "Half an hour ago, and asking almost in his first breath for Nanda. I "He's not with her now. I've just been with her." "Then he didn't go up?" Mrs. Brook was immensely interested. "He left "Know--how should I know? I left her five minutes ago." "Then he went out without seeing her." Mrs. Brook took it in. "He "Well," said Edward, "it won't be the first mind that has been changed "Do you refer particularly to MY stairs?" she asked with her whimsical "Mr. Longdon's coming to tea with her. She has had a note." "But when did he come to town?" "Last night, I believe. The note, an hour or two ago, announced him-- Mrs. Brook thought again. "I'm glad she is. He's too sweet. By hand!--it "Oh Nanda has often wired to HIM," her father returned. "Then she ought to be ashamed of herself. But how," said Mrs. Brook, "do "Oh I know when we're in a thing like this." "Yet you complain of her want of intimacy with you! It turns out that Edward looked at this charge as he looked at all old friends, without a "Oh but you do," Mrs. Brook declared. "You think you don't, but you get "Yes, and seeing you flare up at it. What I bring out is only what they This limitation offered, however, for Mrs. Brook no difficulty. "Ah but "Well"--and Edward from his chair regarded the fire a while--the "Things that are better?" "Yes--worse. I dare say," he went on, "what I give them--" "Isn't as bad as what I do? Oh we must each do our best. But when I hear "Oh she doesn't go in for what you do," Edward assented. "She's as bleak as a chimney-top when the fire's out, and if it hadn't Her husband's silence seemed to mark for an instant a deference to her "Why we shouldn't have been anywhere." "Well, where are we now? That's what _I_ want to know." Following her own train she had at first no heed for his question. "What HAVE we got?" Edward continued. Again with no ear for his question his wife turned away, only however, Edward Brookenham made no motion. "You don't like better to do it "If I liked better," said Mrs. Brook, "I'd have already done it. The way "Then can't she know it afterwards?" "After Mr. Longdon has gone? The whole point is that she should know it Edward still communed with the fire. "And what's the point of THAT?" Her "What do you call a hurry when I've waited nearly a year? Nanda may know "You mean she'll make haste to tell him?" Mrs. Brook raised her eyes a moment to some upper immensity. "She'll Her husband on the other hand, his legs outstretched, looked straight at "Of the way I so long ago let you know that he had put the matter to Edward gave a still longer space to taking this in. "Poor little thing!" "Does she strike you as so poor," Mrs. Brook asked, "with so awfully "Done by whom?" It was as if she had not heard the question that she spoke again. "She "Really?" Edward's tone was of wonder, but she simply went on: "She has got a man "Well, but if he's the wrong one?" "Do you call Mr. Longdon so very wrong? I wish," she declared with a "I wish very much you had. I wouldn't have taken it like Van." "Oh it took Van," Mrs. Brook replied, "to put THEM where they are." "But where ARE they? That's exactly it. In these three months, for Mrs. Brook turned it over. "Profited which?" "Well, one cares most for one's child." "Then she has become for him what we've most hoped her to be--an object "Is that what you've hoped her to be?" Mrs. Brook was obviously so lucid "That night at Mrs. Grendon's? Well, it's the first time I HAVE asked Mrs. Brook had a silence more pregnant. "It's for being with US that he Edward thought. "With me too?" "Not so much--but still you help." "I thought you thought I didn't--that night." "At Tishy's? Oh you didn't matter," said Mrs. Brook. "Everything, every Edward Brookenham had under the influence of this demonstration But he was out. "No. Mitchy's different." He wondered. "Different?" "Not a help. Quite a drawback." Then as his face told how these WERE Edward's gloom, on this, was not quite blankness, yet it was dense. "Do "Dear no. No better than HE does." "And he doesn't--?" "Oh he hates it." "Of course I haven't asked him," Edward appeared to say more to himself "And of course I haven't," she returned--not at all in this case, There was at last in Edward's gravity a positive pathos. "Sure he won't "Sure Mr. Longdon won't now throw her over." "Of course if it IS sure--" "Well?" "Why, it is. But of course if it isn't--" "Well?" "Why, she won't have anything. Anything but US," he continued to "That's just what I AM working it on. I did nothing till I knew I was "'Safe'?" he ambiguously echoed while on this their eyes met longer. "Safe. I knew he'd stick." "But how did you know Van wouldn't?" "No matter 'how'--but better still. He hasn't stuck." She said it very His eyes for a little followed her. "We don't KNOW, after all, the old "I don't know what you mean by 'we' don't. Nanda does." "But where's the support if she doesn't tell us?" Mrs. Brook, who had faced about, again turned from him. "I hope you "YOU don't?" Edward gloomed. "Never. But I trust her." "Yes," he mused afresh, "one must trust one's child. Does Van?" he then "Does he trust her?" "Does he know anything of the general figure?" She hesitated. "Everything. It's high." "He has told you so?" Mrs. Brook, supremely impatient now, seemed to demur even to the "Then how do we know?" She was weary of explaining. "Because that's just why he hates it." There was no end however, apparently, to what Edward could take. "But "Why, not liking her." Edward kept his back to the fire and his dead eyes on the cornice and "Well, you see it isn't. Mr. Longdon can manage it." "I don't see what the devil's the matter with her," he coldly continued. "Ah that may not prevent--! It's fortunately the source at any rate of "But what the hell IS it?" he drearily demanded. She faltered a little, but she brought it out. "It's ME." "And what's the matter with 'you'?" She made, at this, a movement that drew his eyes to her own, and for a "Is it?" She had her hand on his sleeve, and he looked almost awkward. "Quite the very nicest. Consider that fact well and even if you only Edward kept a queer face, into which this succession of remarks "Mr. Longdon--of late? Oh yes, a deluge, so that her room looks like a "'Why'?" Edward echoed. "Why but that--unless he should send her money-- Mrs. Brook hesitated; then with a little suppressed sigh: "That's it!" But it still held him. "And perhaps he does send her money." "No. Not now." Edward lingered. "Then is he taking it out--?" "In books only?" It was wonderful--with its effect on him now visible-- "And you're not afraid for the future--?" "Of his considering that the books will have worked it off? No. They're Just perceptibly cheered he reached the door, where, however, he had She stared. "What for?" "Why, to ask what the devil he means." "If you should do anything so hideously vulgar," she instantly replied, He was clearly not prepared with an account of his expectations, but he "He didn't. We made up to HIM." "But why in the world--?" "Well," said Mrs. Brook, really to finish, "we were in love with him." "Oh!" Edward jerked. He had by this time opened the door, and the sound Content of BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK: CHAPTER II [Henry James' novel: The Awkward Age] _ |