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CHAPTER 9
In Mrs. Peniston's youth, fashion had returned to town in October; therefore on
the tenth day of the month the blinds of her Fifth Avenue residence were drawn up,
and the eyes of the Dying Gladiator in
bronze who occupied the drawing-room window resumed their survey of that deserted
thoroughfare.
The first two weeks after her return represented to Mrs. Peniston the domestic
equivalent of a religious retreat.
She "went through" the linen and blankets in the precise spirit of the penitent
exploring the inner folds of conscience; she sought for moths as the stricken soul
seeks for lurking infirmities.
The topmost shelf of every closet was made to yield up its secret, cellar and coal-bin
were probed to their darkest depths and, as a final stage in the lustral rites, the
entire house was swathed in penitential white and deluged with expiatory soapsuds.
It was on this phase of the proceedings that Miss Bart entered on the afternoon of
her return from the Van Osburgh wedding.
The journey back to town had not been calculated to soothe her nerves.
Though Evie Van Osburgh's engagement was still officially a secret, it was one of
which the innumerable intimate friends of the family were already possessed; and the
trainful of returning guests buzzed with allusions and anticipations.
Lily was acutely aware of her own part in this drama of innuendo: she knew the exact
quality of the amusement the situation evoked.
The crude forms in which her friends took their pleasure included a loud enjoyment of
such complications: the zest of surprising destiny in the act of playing a practical
joke.
Lily knew well enough how to bear herself in difficult situations.
She had, to a shade, the exact manner between victory and defeat: every
insinuation was shed without an effort by the bright indifference of her manner.
But she was beginning to feel the strain of the attitude; the reaction was more rapid,
and she lapsed to a deeper self-disgust.
As was always the case with her, this moral repulsion found a physical outlet in a
quickened distaste for her surroundings.
She revolted from the complacent ugliness of Mrs. Peniston's black walnut, from the
slippery gloss of the vestibule tiles, and the mingled odour of sapolio and furniture-
polish that met her at the door.
The stairs were still carpetless, and on the way up to her room she was arrested on
the landing by an encroaching tide of soapsuds.
Gathering up her skirts, she drew aside with an impatient gesture; and as she did
so she had the odd sensation of having already found herself in the same situation
but in different surroundings.
It seemed to her that she was again descending the staircase from Selden's
rooms; and looking down to remonstrate with the dispenser of the soapy flood, she found
herself met by a lifted stare which had
once before confronted her under similar circumstances.
It was the char-woman of the Benedick who, resting on crimson elbows, examined her
with the same unflinching curiosity, the same apparent reluctance to let her pass.
On this occasion, however, Miss Bart was on her own ground.
"Don't you see that I wish to go by? Please move your pail," she said sharply.
The woman at first seemed not to hear; then, without a word of excuse, she pushed
back her pail and dragged a wet floor-cloth across the landing, keeping her eyes fixed
on Lily while the latter swept by.
It was insufferable that Mrs. Peniston should have such creatures about the house;
and Lily entered her room resolved that the woman should be dismissed that evening.
Mrs. Peniston, however, was at the moment inaccessible to remonstrance: since early
morning she had been shut up with her maid, going over her furs, a process which formed
the culminating episode in the drama of household renovation.
In the evening also Lily found herself alone, for her aunt, who rarely dined out,
had responded to the summons of a Van Alstyne cousin who was passing through
town.
The house, in its state of unnatural immaculateness and order, was as dreary as
a tomb, and as Lily, turning from her brief repast between shrouded sideboards,
wandered into the newly-uncovered glare of
the drawing-room she felt as though she were buried alive in the stifling limits of
Mrs. Peniston's existence. She usually contrived to avoid being at
home during the season of domestic renewal.
On the present occasion, however, a variety of reasons had combined to bring her to
town; and foremost among them was the fact that she had fewer invitations than usual
for the autumn.
She had so long been accustomed to pass from one country-house to another, till the
close of the holidays brought her friends to town, that the unfilled gaps of time
confronting her produced a sharp sense of waning popularity.
It was as she had said to Selden--people were tired of her.
They would welcome her in a new character, but as Miss Bart they knew her by heart.
She knew herself by heart too, and was sick of the old story.
There were moments when she longed blindly for anything different, anything strange,
remote and untried; but the utmost reach of her imagination did not go beyond picturing
her usual life in a new setting.
She could not figure herself as anywhere but in a drawing-room, diffusing elegance
as a flower sheds perfume.
Meanwhile, as October advanced she had to face the alternative of returning to the
Trenors or joining her aunt in town.
Even the desolating dulness of New York in October, and the soapy discomforts of Mrs.
Peniston's interior, seemed preferable to what might await her at Bellomont; and with
an air of heroic devotion she announced her
intention of remaining with her aunt till the holidays.
Sacrifices of this nature are sometimes received with feelings as mixed as those
which actuate them; and Mrs. Peniston remarked to her confidential maid that, if
any of the family were to be with her at
such a crisis (though for forty years she had been thought competent to see to the
hanging of her own curtains), she would certainly have preferred Miss Grace to Miss
Lily.
Grace Stepney was an obscure cousin, of adaptable manners and vicarious interests,
who "ran in" to sit with Mrs. Peniston when Lily dined out too continuously; who played
bezique, picked up dropped stitches, read
out the deaths from the Times, and sincerely admired the purple satin drawing-
room curtains, the Dying Gladiator in the window, and the seven-by-five painting of
Niagara which represented the one artistic excess of Mr. Peniston's temperate career.
Mrs. Peniston, under ordinary circumstances, was as much bored by her
excellent cousin as the recipient of such services usually is by the person who
performs them.
She greatly preferred the brilliant and unreliable Lily, who did not know one end
of a crochet-needle from the other, and had frequently wounded her susceptibilities by
suggesting that the drawing-room should be "done over."
But when it came to hunting for missing napkins, or helping to decide whether the
backstairs needed re-carpeting, Grace's judgment was certainly sounder than Lily's:
not to mention the fact that the latter
resented the smell of beeswax and brown soap, and behaved as though she thought a
house ought to keep clean of itself, without extraneous assistance.
Seated under the cheerless blaze of the drawing-room chandelier--Mrs. Peniston
never lit the lamps unless there was "company"--Lily seemed to watch her own
figure retreating down vistas of neutral-
tinted dulness to a middle age like Grace Stepney's.
When she ceased to amuse Judy Trenor and her friends she would have to fall back on
amusing Mrs. Peniston; whichever way she looked she saw only a future of servitude
to the whims of others, never the
possibility of asserting her own eager individuality.
A ring at the door-bell, sounding emphatically through the empty house,
roused her suddenly to the extent of her boredom.
It was as though all the weariness of the past months had culminated in the vacuity
of that interminable evening.
If only the ring meant a summons from the outer world--a token that she was still
remembered and wanted!
After some delay a parlour-maid presented herself with the announcement that there
was a person outside who was asking to see Miss Bart; and on Lily's pressing for a
more specific description, she added:
"It's Mrs. Haffen, Miss; she won't say what she wants."
Lily, to whom the name conveyed nothing, opened the door upon a woman in a battered
bonnet, who stood firmly planted under the hall-light.
The glare of the unshaded gas shone familiarly on her pock-marked face and the
reddish baldness visible through thin strands of straw-coloured hair.
Lily looked at the char-woman in surprise.
"Do you wish to see me?" she asked. "I should like to say a word to you, Miss."
The tone was neither aggressive nor conciliatory: it revealed nothing of the
speaker's errand.
Nevertheless, some precautionary instinct warned Lily to withdraw beyond ear-shot of
the hovering parlour-maid.
She signed to Mrs. Haffen to follow her into the drawing-room, and closed the door
when they had entered. "What is it that you wish?" she enquired.
The char-woman, after the manner of her kind, stood with her arms folded in her
shawl. Unwinding the latter, she produced a small
parcel wrapped in dirty newspaper.
"I have something here that you might like to see, Miss Bart."
She spoke the name with an unpleasant emphasis, as though her knowing it made a
part of her reason for being there.
To Lily the intonation sounded like a threat.
"You have found something belonging to me?" she asked, extending her hand.
Mrs. Haffen drew back.
"Well, if it comes to that, I guess it's mine as much as anybody's," she returned.
Lily looked at her perplexedly.
She was sure, now, that her visitor's manner conveyed a threat; but, expert as
she was in certain directions, there was nothing in her experience to prepare her
for the exact significance of the present scene.
She felt, however, that it must be ended as promptly as possible.
"I don't understand; if this parcel is not mine, why have you asked for me?"
The woman was unabashed by the question.
She was evidently prepared to answer it, but like all her class she had to go a long
way back to make a beginning, and it was only after a pause that she replied: "My
husband was janitor to the Benedick till
the first of the month; since then he can't get nothing to do."
Lily remained silent and she continued: "It wasn't no fault of our own, neither: the
agent had another man he wanted the place for, and we was put out, bag and baggage,
just to suit his fancy.
I had a long sickness last winter, and an operation that ate up all we'd put by; and
it's hard for me and the children, Haffen being so long out of a job."
After all, then, she had come only to ask Miss Bart to find a place for her husband;
or, more probably, to seek the young lady's intervention with Mrs. Peniston.
Lily had such an air of always getting what she wanted that she was used to being
appealed to as an intermediary, and, relieved of her vague apprehension, she
took refuge in the conventional formula.
"I am sorry you have been in trouble," she said.
"Oh, that we have, Miss, and it's on'y just beginning.
If on'y we'd 'a got another situation--but the agent, he's dead against us.
It ain't no fault of ours, neither, but---- "
At this point Lily's impatience overcame her.
"If you have anything to say to me----" she interposed.
The woman's resentment of the rebuff seemed to spur her lagging ideas.
"Yes, Miss; I'm coming to that," she said.
She paused again, with her eyes on Lily, and then continued, in a tone of diffuse
narrative: "When we was at the Benedick I had charge of some of the gentlemen's
rooms; leastways, I swep' 'em out on Saturdays.
Some of the gentlemen got the greatest sight of letters: I never saw the like of
it.
Their waste-paper baskets 'd be fairly brimming, and papers falling over on the
floor. Maybe havin' so many is how they get so
careless.
Some of 'em is worse than others. Mr. Selden, Mr. Lawrence Selden, he was
always one of the carefullest: burnt his letters in winter, and tore 'em in little
bits in summer.
But sometimes he'd have so many he'd just bunch 'em together, the way the others did,
and tear the lot through once--like this."
While she spoke she had loosened the string from the parcel in her hand, and now she
drew forth a letter which she laid on the table between Miss Bart and herself.
As she had said, the letter was torn in two; but with a rapid gesture she laid the
torn edges together and smoothed out the page.
A wave of indignation swept over Lily.
She felt herself in the presence of something vile, as yet but dimly
conjectured--the kind of vileness of which people whispered, but which she had never
thought of as touching her own life.
She drew back with a motion of disgust, but her withdrawal was checked by a sudden
discovery: under the glare of Mrs. Peniston's chandelier she had recognized
the hand-writing of the letter.
It was a large disjointed hand, with a flourish of masculinity which but slightly
disguised its rambling weakness, and the words, scrawled in heavy ink on pale-tinted
notepaper, smote on Lily's ear as though she had heard them spoken.
At first she did not grasp the full import of the situation.
She understood only that before her lay a letter written by Bertha Dorset, and
addressed, presumably, to Lawrence Selden.
There was no date, but the blackness of the ink proved the writing to be comparatively
recent.
The packet in Mrs. Haffen's hand doubtless contained more letters of the same kind--a
dozen, Lily conjectured from its thickness.
The letter before her was short, but its few words, which had leapt into her brain
before she was conscious of reading them, told a long history--a history over which,
for the last four years, the friends of the
writer had smiled and shrugged, viewing it merely as one among the countless "good
situations" of the mundane comedy.
Now the other side presented itself to Lily, the volcanic nether side of the
surface over which conjecture and innuendo glide so lightly till the first fissure
turns their whisper to a shriek.
Lily knew that there is nothing society resents so much as having given its
protection to those who have not known how to profit by it: it is for having betrayed
its connivance that the body social punishes the offender who is found out.
And in this case there was no doubt of the issue.
The code of Lily's world decreed that a woman's husband should be the only judge of
her conduct: she was technically above suspicion while she had the shelter of his
approval, or even of his indifference.
But with a man of George Dorset's temper there could be no thought of condonation--
the possessor of his wife's letters could overthrow with a touch the whole structure
of her existence.
And into what hands Bertha Dorset's secret had been delivered!
For a moment the irony of the coincidence tinged Lily's disgust with a confused sense
of triumph.
But the disgust prevailed--all her instinctive resistances, of taste, of
training, of blind inherited scruples, rose against the other feeling.
Her strongest sense was one of personal contamination.
She moved away, as though to put as much distance as possible between herself and
her visitor.
"I know nothing of these letters," she said; "I have no idea why you have brought
them here." Mrs. Haffen faced her steadily.
"I'll tell you why, Miss.
I brought 'em to you to sell, because I ain't got no other way of raising money,
and if we don't pay our rent by tomorrow night we'll be put out.
I never done anythin' of the kind before, and if you'd speak to Mr. Selden or to Mr.
Rosedale about getting Haffen taken on again at the Benedick--I seen you talking
to Mr. Rosedale on the steps that day you come out of Mr. Selden's rooms----"
The blood rushed to Lily's forehead. She understood now--Mrs. Haffen supposed
her to be the writer of the letters.
In the first leap of her anger she was about to ring and order the woman out; but
an obscure impulse restrained her. The mention of Selden's name had started a
new train of thought.
Bertha Dorset's letters were nothing to her--they might go where the current of
chance carried them! But Selden was inextricably involved in
their fate.
Men do not, at worst, suffer much from such exposure; and in this instance the flash of
divination which had carried the meaning of the letters to Lily's brain had revealed
also that they were appeals--repeated and
therefore probably unanswered--for the renewal of a tie which time had evidently
relaxed.
Nevertheless, the fact that the correspondence had been allowed to fall
into strange hands would convict Selden of negligence in a matter where the world
holds it least pardonable; and there were
graver risks to consider where a man of Dorset's ticklish balance was concerned.
If she weighed all these things it was unconsciously: she was aware only of
feeling that Selden would wish the letters rescued, and that therefore she must obtain
possession of them.
Beyond that her mind did not travel.
She had, indeed, a quick vision of returning the packet to Bertha Dorset, and
of the opportunities the restitution offered; but this thought lit up abysses
from which she shrank back ashamed.
Meanwhile Mrs. Haffen, prompt to perceive her hesitation, had already opened the
packet and ranged its contents on the table.
All the letters had been pieced together with strips of thin paper.
Some were in small fragments, the others merely torn in half.
Though there were not many, thus spread out they nearly covered the table.
Lily's glance fell on a word here and there--then she said in a low voice: "What
do you wish me to pay you?"
Mrs. Haffen's face reddened with satisfaction.
It was clear that the young lady was badly frightened, and Mrs. Haffen was the woman
to make the most of such fears.
Anticipating an easier victory than she had foreseen, she named an exorbitant sum.
But Miss Bart showed herself a less ready prey than might have been expected from her
imprudent opening.
She refused to pay the price named, and after a moment's hesitation, met it by a
counter-offer of half the amount. Mrs. Haffen immediately stiffened.
Her hand travelled toward the outspread letters, and folding them slowly, she made
as though to restore them to their wrapping.
"I guess they're worth more to you than to me, Miss, but the poor has got to live as
well as the rich," she observed sententiously.
Lily was throbbing with fear, but the insinuation fortified her resistance.
"You are mistaken," she said indifferently.
"I have offered all I am willing to give for the letters; but there may be other
ways of getting them."
Mrs. Haffen raised a suspicious glance: she was too experienced not to know that the
traffic she was engaged in had perils as great as its rewards, and she had a vision
of the elaborate machinery of revenge which
a word of this commanding young lady's might set in motion.
She applied the corner of her shawl to her eyes, and murmured through it that no good
came of bearing too *** the poor, but that for her part she had never been mixed
up in such a business before, and that on
her honour as a Christian all she and Haffen had thought of was that the letters
mustn't go any farther.
Lily stood motionless, keeping between herself and the char-woman the greatest
distance compatible with the need of speaking in low tones.
The idea of bargaining for the letters was intolerable to her, but she knew that, if
she appeared to weaken, Mrs. Haffen would at once increase her original demand.
She could never afterward recall how long the duel lasted, or what was the decisive
stroke which finally, after a lapse of time recorded in minutes by the clock, in hours
by the precipitate beat of her pulses, put
her in possession of the letters; she knew only that the door had finally closed, and
that she stood alone with the packet in her hand.
She had no idea of reading the letters; even to unfold Mrs. Haffen's dirty
newspaper would have seemed degrading. But what did she intend to do with its
contents?
The recipient of the letters had meant to destroy them, and it was her duty to carry
out his intention.
She had no right to keep them--to do so was to lessen whatever merit lay in having
secured their possession.
But how destroy them so effectually that there should be no second risk of their
falling in such hands?
Mrs. Peniston's icy drawing-room grate shone with a forbidding lustre: the fire,
like the lamps, was never lit except when there was company.
Miss Bart was turning to carry the letters upstairs when she heard the opening of the
outer door, and her aunt entered the drawing-room.
Mrs. Peniston was a small plump woman, with a colourless skin lined with trivial
wrinkles.
Her grey hair was arranged with precision, and her clothes looked excessively new and
yet slightly old-fashioned.
They were always black and tightly fitting, with an expensive glitter: she was the kind
of woman who wore jet at breakfast.
Lily had never seen her when she was not cuirassed in shining black, with small
tight boots, and an air of being packed and ready to start; yet she never started.
She looked about the drawing-room with an expression of minute scrutiny.
"I saw a streak of light under one of the blinds as I drove up: it's extraordinary
that I can never teach that woman to draw them down evenly."
Having corrected the irregularity, she seated herself on one of the glossy purple
arm-chairs; Mrs. Peniston always sat on a chair, never in it.
Then she turned her glance to Miss Bart.
"My dear, you look tired; I suppose it's the excitement of the wedding.
Cornelia Van Alstyne was full of it: Molly was there, and Gerty Farish ran in for a
minute to tell us about it.
I think it was odd, their serving melons before the CONSOMME: a wedding breakfast
should always begin with CONSOMME. Molly didn't care for the bridesmaids'
dresses.
She had it straight from Julia Melson that they cost three hundred dollars apiece at
Celeste's, but she says they didn't look it.
I'm glad you decided not to be a bridesmaid; that shade of salmon-pink
wouldn't have suited you."
Mrs. Peniston delighted in discussing the minutest details of festivities in which
she had not taken part.
Nothing would have induced her to undergo the exertion and fatigue of attending the
Van Osburgh wedding, but so great was her interest in the event that, having heard
two versions of it, she now prepared to extract a third from her niece.
Lily, however, had been deplorably careless in noting the particulars of the
entertainment.
She had failed to observe the colour of Mrs. Van Osburgh's gown, and could not even
say whether the old Van Osburgh Sevres had been used at the bride's table: Mrs.
Peniston, in short, found that she was of
more service as a listener than as a narrator.
"Really, Lily, I don't see why you took the trouble to go to the wedding, if you don't
remember what happened or whom you saw there.
When I was a girl I used to keep the MENU of every dinner I went to, and write the
names of the people on the back; and I never threw away my cotillion favours till
after your uncle's death, when it seemed
unsuitable to have so many coloured things about the house.
I had a whole closet-full, I remember; and I can tell to this day what balls I got
them at.
Molly Van Alstyne reminds me of what I was at that age; it's wonderful how she
notices.
She was able to tell her mother exactly how the wedding-dress was cut, and we knew at
once, from the fold in the back, that it must have come from Paquin."
Mrs. Peniston rose abruptly, and, advancing to the ormolu clock surmounted by a
helmeted Minerva, which throned on the chimney-piece between two malachite vases,
passed her lace handkerchief between the helmet and its visor.
"I knew it--the parlour-maid never dusts there!" she exclaimed, triumphantly
displaying a minute spot on the handkerchief; then, reseating herself, she
went on: "Molly thought Mrs. Dorset the best-dressed woman at the wedding.
I've no doubt her dress DID cost more than any one else's, but I can't quite like the
idea--a combination of sable and POINT DE MILAN.
It seems she goes to a new man in Paris, who won't take an order till his client has
spent a day with him at his villa at Neuilly.
He says he must study his subject's home life--a most peculiar arrangement, I should
say!
But Mrs. Dorset told Molly about it herself: she said the villa was full of the
most exquisite things and she was really sorry to leave.
Molly said she never saw her looking better; she was in tremendous spirits, and
said she had made a match between Evie Van Osburgh and Percy Gryce.
She really seems to have a very good influence on young men.
I hear she is interesting herself now in that silly Silverton boy, who has had his
head turned by Carry Fisher, and has been gambling so dreadfully.
Well, as I was saying, Evie is really engaged: Mrs. Dorset had her to stay with
Percy Gryce, and managed it all, and Grace Van Osburgh is in the seventh heaven--she
had almost despaired of marrying Evie."
Mrs. Peniston again paused, but this time her scrutiny addressed itself, not to the
furniture, but to her niece.
"Cornelia Van Alstyne was so surprised: she had heard that you were to marry young
Gryce.
She saw the Wetheralls just after they had stopped with you at Bellomont, and Alice
Wetherall was quite sure there was an engagement.
She said that when Mr. Gryce left unexpectedly one morning, they all thought
he had rushed to town for the ring." Lily rose and moved toward the door.
"I believe I AM tired: I think I will go to bed," she said; and Mrs. Peniston, suddenly
distracted by the discovery that the easel sustaining the late Mr. Peniston's crayon-
portrait was not exactly in line with the
sofa in front of it, presented an absent- minded brow to her kiss.
In her own room Lily turned up the gas-jet and glanced toward the grate.
It was as brilliantly polished as the one below, but here at least she could burn a
few papers with less risk of incurring her aunt's disapproval.
She made no immediate motion to do so, however, but dropping into a chair looked
wearily about her.
Her room was large and comfortably- furnished--it was the envy and admiration
of poor Grace Stepney, who boarded; but, contrasted with the light tints and
luxurious appointments of the guest-rooms
where so many weeks of Lily's existence were spent, it seemed as dreary as a
prison.
The monumental wardrobe and bedstead of black walnut had migrated from Mr.
Peniston's bedroom, and the magenta "flock" wall-paper, of a pattern dear to the early
'sixties, was hung with large steel engravings of an anecdotic character.
Lily had tried to mitigate this charmless background by a few frivolous touches, in
the shape of a lace-decked toilet table and a little painted desk surmounted by
photographs; but the futility of the
attempt struck her as she looked about the room.
What a contrast to the subtle elegance of the setting she had pictured for herself--
an apartment which should surpass the complicated luxury of her friends'
surroundings by the whole extent of that
artistic sensibility which made her feel herself their superior; in which every tint
and line should combine to enhance her beauty and give distinction to her leisure!
Once more the haunting sense of physical ugliness was intensified by her mental
depression, so that each piece of the offending furniture seemed to thrust forth
its most aggressive angle.
Her aunt's words had told her nothing new; but they had revived the vision of Bertha
Dorset, smiling, flattered, victorious, holding her up to ridicule by insinuations
intelligible to every member of their little group.
The thought of the ridicule struck deeper than any other sensation: Lily knew every
turn of the allusive jargon which could flay its victims without the shedding of
blood.
Her cheek burned at the recollection, and she rose and caught up the letters.
She no longer meant to destroy them: that intention had been effaced by the quick
corrosion of Mrs. Peniston's words.
Instead, she approached her desk, and lighting a taper, tied and sealed the
packet; then she opened the wardrobe, drew out a despatch-box, and deposited the
letters within it.
As she did so, it struck her with a flash of irony that she was indebted to Gus
Trenor for the means of buying them.