The Little French Girl
PART III
CHAPTER IV
It was in the last fortnight of the holidays that a letter,
once more, came from Lady Mary asking, as if only
a few weeks had elapsed since the last time of asking,
if Alix could not now come and stay with them at
Cresswell Abbey.
The letter was again addressed to Mrs. Bradley and
again arrived at breakfast-time so that she read it
aloud to the assembled family.
“You’ll have to go this time, Alix,” said Giles, with
an air of fatherly authority.
“Where’s the ‘have’ about it, Giles?” Ruth inquired,
helping herself to mustard with her kedgeree.
“She’ll go if she likes, I suppose; and not otherwise.
For my part I don’t see why she should be at the beck
and call of Lady Hamble, or whatever her name is.
She’s forgotten Alix for long enough.”
“What’s to the point is that she’s remembered her
for long enough,” said Giles, “and that Alix has remembered
her. Of course, you’re going, Alix.”
“Alix will be bored stiff among all those swells,”
cried Rosemary; “and, besides, she’ll miss the Eustaces’
dance. Do refuse, Alix.”
“But I do not think they will bore me,” said Alix.
“I should like to go.”
It was arranged that Giles was to motor her to
Hampshire; the cross-country journey was too difficult
by train, and while the map was brought and
spread out over the jam-pots and butter-dishes and
they all made suggestions as to the best route, Alix
had time to wonder why, despite her assertion, her old
eagerness about Cresswell Abbey and Lady Mary was
much faded. Was it that she had grown fonder of
Heathside? Yes; undoubtedly; but that was not the
reason. It was not to lose Heathside to pay Cresswell
Abbey a visit. But, with a new, unwonted shyness,
she shrank from the thought of the environment that
had, in Lady Mary herself, so reminded her of Maman.
Maman would want her to go. She would want it
more than Giles did; and did he not want it because he
knew that it would be Maman’s desire for her? It was
almost to suspect them of planning it for her and it
affected her with almost a sense of grief to see his dark
head bent above Ruth’s golden one while, so earnestly,
he scanned the road that was to lead her away from
them. Did he—with Maman to help him—believe
that it would lead to an English marriage for her? The
blood rose faintly in her cheeks as she sat there, silent.
But her disquiet was even deeper than this. She had
no longer her old sense of security. It was Giles’s
presence that lent her what security she had and he
would not be at Cresswell Abbey.
She was very silent on the morning they set out for
their long drive. It was nearly mid-day, yet the hoar
frost still made the woods thick and white against the
sky, and the twigs were like antlers in their mossy
branching outlines. When they passed into the open
country the buffs and cinnamons and mole-colours of
the fields and uplands were all powdered to paleness.
The beauty of the day was like a promise, but Alix
felt it like a farewell.
“You’ll be back in the fortnight at most, you know,”
said Giles. He saw that she was sad and said it to reassure
her.
“But of course I shall not stay for a fortnight, Giles,”
she said.
“Lady Mary didn’t fix any time; but I do hope you’ll
stay for as long as she asks you,” Giles returned. She
made no reply. That, of course, was what Maman
would wish him to say to her.
They found the way longer than they had computed,
and Alix was very hungry by the time they reached
the little market-town where they were to lunch. It
was disappointing to find the mutton so tough, and the
untidy and decorated young person who waited on
them brought the cabbage and potatoes with such a
languid mien that they seemed to be almost a concession
to special greed.
“I think the cooks in your provincial inns have no
pride in their calling,” Alix observed, refraining from a
very yellow custard pudding while Giles doggedly attacked
bread and cheese. “It is a pity; for pride in
one’s calling gives a zest to life, does it not?”
“Good Lord, Alix! Don’t rub it in!” Giles exclaimed,
for the mutton had been very tough.
It was already four o’clock when they entered the
lodge gates of Cresswell Abbey. The road through the
park wound upwards and one saw the ample, happy
house with the dropping sun yellowing its windows as
it looked out over a southern aspect. Built of pale grey
stone and thickly lichened with rosettes of gold, it
belonged to an England almost intimate still in its associations.
A Gainsborough lady, when it was but newly
built, might, Alix thought, have come strolling out
on the terrace, the white fur of her little silk jacket
turned up about her ears, and a white dog, half
Spitz, half Pomeranian, trotting by her side. There
was nothing of the splendour or romance of antiquity
about it, and Alix, as she saw it, a vision of haughty
Montarel hovering at the back of her mind, was a little
disappointed. But it was impossible to think of English
people living at Montarel. How different this
kind-eyed butler from Mélanie in her savates; how
different the firelit hall, filled with the scent of pot-pourri
and burning logs, from the gaunt cobwebby
spaces of Montarel! A wide staircase turned to an
upper landing from the hall, and on the turn, with
an ascending row of Chinese paintings behind him,
a young man in hunting-dress was standing, looking
down at them, as they were ushered in, with soft,
bright, interested eyes. A group of people, half shut
in by a high Chinese screen of red and gold, sat round
the fire and from an open door came the sound of a
piano playing a reckless jazz tune. Alix felt her sadness
dispelled by a sweet stealing sense of excitement.
And now Lady Mary was again before her, looking
older than she had remembered her—and that was
perhaps because another woman, radiantly young, sat
knitting by the fire—but showing the remembered
bright softness, and she was drawing them both forward
and saying to Giles: “Oh, but of course you
must stay—oh, not only to tea; for the night. It’s so
far. It’s so cold. It’s so late. Indeed, you must.—Jerry
will lend you everything.”
Jerry came down the stairs. He had auburn hair and
auburn eyes and thick upturned auburn lashes. He
was, of course, Lady Mary’s son, and Alix was aware
that during this little interval it had been at herself
that he had been looking. She saw herself standing
there as he must see her. The soft little grey travelling-hat
came down over her eyebrows; the big, soft
collar of her coat went up about her ears; there was not
much of her face to be seen; but, for perhaps the first
time in her young life, she knew—and the knowledge,
mingling with the warm scent of the pot-pourri, the
lurching, imbecile gaiety of the music, deepened her
sense of excitement—that she held herself beautifully,
and that as far as clothes were concerned she had no
cause for disquiet.
“I am dark and she is fair,” this was the thought
that passed through her mind as she felt herself observed
not only by Jerry, but also by the radiant lady
at the fireside; “but I am even younger than she is,
and, I imagine, more unusual.”
“Yes, do stay,” said Jerry, looking now at Giles and
smiling as if he were specially glad to see him.
Poor dear Giles! How gaunt and shabby and shy he
looked among them all; rather, thought Alix, like a
rook softly entreated by a flock of doves. They cooed
about him; Lady Mary with her soft dark eyes, and
Jerry, and a kind elderly gentleman who had advanced
from the hearth, the “Times” held behind him, and
who, apparently, was Lady Mary’s husband. Even
the butler seemed to be one of the flock, and he
gently withdrew Giles’s greatcoat and carried it away
as if the question were settled before Giles had had
time, as she knew, to gather his wits together.
“You will. That’s splendid,” said Jerry, though
Giles had not said that he would. “Let’s have tea at
once, Mummy; they’ll want it as much as I do, and
I’ll change after.”
Lady Mary, taking Alix by the hand, as though she
might feel, as a foreigner, strange in a strange country,
led her upstairs to a bright sweet room where rose-clotted
chintzes were drawn back from the bed and
windows and flowers stood on the writing- and dressing-tables
and enticing bottles with little labels round
their necks on the wash-hand stand.
“Debenham will get you everything. Ask her for
anything you want,” said Lady Mary, introducing the
elderly maid who entered with hot water. “You can
find your way down? We’re having tea in the drawing-room,
just out of the hall. And then you must have
a little rest. Some young people are coming over after
dinner to dance. Are you fond of dancing?”
“Fonder than of anything, I think,” said Alix; and
Lady Mary, smiling, said “Good.”
When she was left alone and had taken off her hat
and washed, and combed her hair, Alix stood before the
glass and looked at herself attentively. She looked
well after the long drive. It had not been really cold,
though her lips were a little pale. She bit them to
make the colour come, and wondered, bending closer,
whether she should powder her face. She had never yet
used the box of powder, teinte Rachel, in her dressing-case,
though Maman had told her that she might
do so if she thought it advisable. The radiant lady
used liquid powder; Alix had seen that at once, and her
lips were reddened artificially. Alix decided that she
would leave herself alone. “It goes better with my
hair; one colour all over like that; and the right colour,”
she reflected, while the spicy elation ran still more
warmly through her veins. Maman had chosen with
her, at a specially favourite little shop in the rue du
Faubourg Saint-Honoré, the jumper of palest blue and
grey, patterned like a fritillary; and the string of dull
brown beads and the blue skirt and the grey shoes and
stockings all went perfectly with it. “I am bien; très
bien,” she thought; and as she went down the passage
and crossed the landing and looked down into the firelit
hall with its flowers and screens and great blazing
logs, she felt herself so strangely Maman’s child. It
was as if she knew, for the first time in her life, an elation
that Maman had often felt.
They were all in the drawing-room where tea was
being laid, Jerry and Lady Mary and Mr. Hamble,
and two young girls and a young man and an old-young
man, who had evidently been dancing and who
wished to seem much younger than he was.—“I will
avoid dancing with him,” thought Alix. “He is too
stout and he brushes his hair up over his head from behind
so that it shall not be seen how bald he is.”—And
the radiant lady was talking to Giles. Giles stood
with her before the fire and looked dreadfully cross,
and that was because he did not like her. But other
people liked her; a great deal. Her soft locks, now
smooth, now clustering, were of the purest gold and
her eyes of a marvellous blue, and she, too, was undoubtedly
bien, très bien, in her white silk jumper and
her white woollen skirt and string of pearls. But Giles
did not like her. And she did not like Giles, either,
though she was pretending to carry on the kindest of
conversations with a dull young man, and when Jerry
came up to Alix herself the golden-haired lady, smiling
more sweetly than ever upon Giles, saw everything
that passed between them and was not pleased. She
did not care a rap about Giles. What she cared about
was Jerry.
It was characteristic of Alix that the more she saw
and felt, the more silent and aloof did she become. It
might have been a fundamental racial caution in her
blood; the instinct for being sure, first, where you were,
and, second, sure of where you wished to be seen as
being before you made a movement; and as she felt the
pressure of all these strange new realizations—strangest
of all about herself—she knew that she possessed
reserves of courteous convention more than adequate
for any contingencies that might arise at Cresswell
Abbey. Quietly smiling at Jerry, she took the place
Lady Mary indicated to her beside her on the sofa and
saw that the golden-haired lady still watched her while
pretending not to.
The two young girls were guests. They had very
sweet voices that did not mean much. One of them
was pretty, and the stout gentleman with the hair
brushed over his baldness jested with her in a low
voice, but, though he tried so to please her, the pretty
girl, while she ate a great many cakes, looked at him
with eyes that did not find him amusing. Alix felt
with her.
“From Jack,” said the radiant lady, looking up from
a letter; the butler had just brought in the letters.
“What news of Jack?” asked Mr. Hamble. The
golden-haired lady was married to his nephew and her
name was Marigold. Jack, it seemed, was rather enjoying
his job at Singapore. He wrote a long letter,
and Mrs. Hamble’s marvellous eyes became very wistful
while she read, but Alix felt sure that if she had been
reading alone in her own room they would not have
looked like that; hard and indifferent rather.
“My dear, don’t be so silly,” said the other girl to
the young man who was short and robust with a tanned
jolly face. He was a sailor, and Alix liked his face and
felt that with him she would like to dance. They all
knew each other very well and laughed and talked and
she felt they saw her as a very young school-girl, for
Jerry was now talking to Giles about Oxford, and no
one paid any attention to her until Lady Mary began
to ask her about Normandy and then about Beauvais
and Rouen and so on to Chartres, on which the bald
man, whose name was Mr. Fulham and who wrote
books, as if observing her for the first time, asked her
if she knew his friends the marquis and marquise de
Tréville in Normandy and, when she said she did not,
turned to the pretty girl again.
After tea she found herself alone for a little while
with Giles. She felt as if they met after long separation,
so completely had the morning’s sadness dissolved in
the pervading sense of excitement.
“I like it here very much, don’t you?” she said.
“It’s a jolly place,” said Giles. “And they’re all so
nice. I’m glad you like it. I’m glad you’ll be happy
here.”
Giles no longer looked cross, but he looked thoughtful,
and his eyes turned on her once or twice in a
way that made her wonder, with a vague discomfort,
whether he guessed at her excitement.
“I wish you were staying here, too, Giles,” she said.
But this was not quite true. She would be sorry to see
Giles go; even a little frightened; yet if that sense of
excitement were to environ her more closely she would
not care to have Giles observing it.
“Oh, but I don’t belong here at all,” said Giles,
stretching up his arms and locking his hands behind
his head, while his eyes still studied her. “And you do.”
“Why don’t you belong here?” she asked. But she
knew. He was a rook among the doves.
“I haven’t done any of the things they do;—or
very few of them.”
“Neither have I.”
“Oh, yes, you have; far more. Anyway, you’re fitted
for them and I’m not.”
“Do you mean you look down upon them?”
“Of course not. But one has only time for so much
in one’s life and my line is taken.”
“Philosophy and the Banbury Road,” said Alix,
rather sadly musing.
“Yes; philosophy, though not necessarily the Banbury
Road,” said Giles. “And tutoring and being poor.
You couldn’t combine those with dances and hunting;
even if you had the choice; which I haven’t.”
“Lady Mary cares for the things you do, Giles.
Books and music, and the country. I believe they all
care. I think you would be quite happy with her and
Mr. Hamble and Jerry.”
“Oh, we’d manage for a week-end now and then, no
doubt. He’s a nice boy that Jerry,” Giles added, moving
his arms now, putting his hands in his pockets and
looking with detachment at the foot crossed on his
knee. “Lucky we’re the same size, isn’t it? I shan’t
look too much of an ass in his evening things.”
“He is very nice, I think,” said Alix. “I do not care
much for Joan and Patience Wagstaffe, they seem to
me rather nulle. But the sailor is nice, too, and Mr.
Hamble is so kind. He told me that he would teach me
to play billiards. They seem to find that Mr. Fulham
very clever, but I would not have him however clever
he was. I do not like him. He has a sly face and eats
too much. And is Mrs. Hamble nice, Giles?” Thus
circuitously Alix approached her object. “She is exceedingly
pretty. You had a long talk with her.”
“Oh, no, I didn’t.” Giles laughed suddenly. “She
wasn’t talking with me—only at me; to see what she’d
catch as a rebound.”
After all, it was always delightful to get back to
Giles. After all, no one understood quite as well as
Giles.
“What was she trying to catch?” Alix asked.
“Oh, just who we were, and what we were doing
here, and why in the dickens you weren’t just the quiet
little French girl she’d expected. The funny part of it
was,” said Giles, smiling broadly as he thought of it,
“she didn’t know a bit that I saw what she was after.
Silly ass; thinking herself so gracefully concealed and
all the time as gross and as glaring as possible. She’s
stupid all right,” said Giles. “Though I daresay it
makes one stupid to imagine one’s dealing with a negligible
noodle. You let her alone, Alix. She’s a cat.”
This was very pleasant to Alix.
“She has a false face,” she observed. “I shall certainly
let her alone; for she displeased me from the
first.”
Then Lady Mary came back and sat down and
talked with them, of France again, and of Oxford, and
Professor Cockburn, and then Jerry, having changed
his hunting-clothes for homespun, came and carried
Giles off to billiards, but Lady Mary said she would
keep Alix with her, and, when the two young men were
gone, said: “How dear he is, your Giles; such a delightful
solid mind,” so that Alix flushed with pleasure. She
was glad to have Giles appreciated and it made her
fonder of Lady Mary that she should appreciate him.
Lady Mary then questioned her about Giles and his
family and how she had come to know them, and Alix,
replying, felt herself move along the surfaces prepared
for her by Giles and Maman. She told Lady Mary
about Captain Owen and how great a friend he had
been and of how he had wished her to know his family.
There was nothing else to tell. Lady Mary knew just
what Mrs. Bradley knew.
She was glad to rest for a little while before dinner,
lying in her room on the sofa with a soft cushion
under her head and the firelight softly glowing on her
closed eyelids, until it was time to dress. Debenham
had laid out on the bed the very dress she herself
would have chosen; her prettiest dress, of white and
crystal; and the sense of elation and excitement
mounted in her with thick swift strokes, as of rising
wings, while, before the mirror, Debenham fastened
it for her. Debenham thought her beautiful. Her
quiet, sagacious face, glancing at the reflected figure,
told Alix that she thought so; and Debenham had
seen many pretty young ladies.
When she was left alone, she stood and looked at
herself. Yes; was it true. Beautiful that little head;
beautiful the long, splendid throat, the breast and
arms so white. In the tilted mirror she looked like a
naiad hovering within the thin falling lines of a fountain.
Tiny crystal drops fell along her arms and flowed
from breast to hem. She moved, and liquid lines of
crystal moved with her. Her shoes were of silver and a
fillet of twisted silver and crystal bound her dark hair.
“Dieu que je suis belle!” Alix murmured. She seemed
to float on a sense of buoyant power. She had never
known such happiness.
They all thought her beautiful. She saw that as she
came among them. Jerry was there—he was the first
she saw, looking at her; and the young sailor looked;
and kind Mr. Hamble; Marigold Hamble in pink and
diamonds looked, too, very hard.
“The lovely dress! Paris, of course,” said Lady
Mary, smiling at her as though she were grateful to her
for placing an object so decorative in her drawing-room.
“Paris and Maman,” Alix smiled, and the memory
of Maman rushed over her almost with a smart of
tears. She owed it all to Maman, this transfiguration.
She was not really so beautiful, by daylight. It was
Maman’s magic that enveloped her, and Maman was
not here to see her in it. It was cruel that a stranger,
Lady Mary, should garner Maman’s sheaves.
She saw now that Giles’s large eyes were dwelling
upon her from a distance; but they were not like the
other eyes. They kept their look of thoughtfulness.
He was not seeing her in the magic. He was only seeing
her as herself. It would always be only oneself that
Giles would see. From within her fountain of happiness
she glimmered a little smile over to him—for
Jerry was beside her saying that he was to take her in
to dinner—and in Giles’s answering smile she read
something touched and gentle. She was glad that it
should be so, for Giles might have looked gloomily at
her, seeing her so happy at being beautiful; but he was
only touched; and those gentle eyes of Giles’s seemed
at once to quiet the excitement and to reassure her, as
though he said: “But of course you must be happy,
dear kid.”
The long table in the dining-room, shining under the
candles, was like a lake of bright water all drifted over
with floating knots of flowers. Everything made her
think of gliding, falling water to-night; everything was
beautiful. Jerry was beside her and he was used to
beautiful people. He saw them every day of his life.
He was like André de Valenbois in that. Giles’s very
thoughts about André crossed her mind as she turned
her eyes on the charming face beside her. He, too, was
a person removed from the earthy, primitive aspects
of life; he, too, had only had, always, to choose what
he would have and never to have what he did not
choose. And now—she felt it falling around her, cool
and refreshing as the sense of crystal drops—it was
herself he chose rather than Mrs. Hamble. He did not
look at Mrs. Hamble. He talked and talked, trying to
find out about her all the things that interested him;
her tastes, her prejudices, the colour of her personality.
He talked happily, eagerly, with something of the
ardour of a little boy playing at gardening; that was
the simile that came to Alix while she smiled quietly
at him—a little boy who gathers up armfuls of flowers
and thistles, the lovely and the commonplace together,
and brings them for admiration:—“Beautiful,
isn’t it?” was what he said continually; and he did not
see that there were thistles. He was younger than
André; much younger. She was dimly glad of that, for
something in the likeness she had felt disquieted her.
She liked him better than André, though he had not
André’s fine discrimination. His admirations lay
along the paths of fashion, and the fact that fashion
prided itself on being a pioneer led him into ardours
for the new and the strange soon discarded for the
newer and the stranger. He had an air, Alix saw,
of caring, immensely, that you should sympathize
with him about the latest painter, the latest poet,
the latest composer. He did not really care whether
you sympathized or not; but if you didn’t, you
were negligible for his purposes. She saw that he had
already found Giles negligible; and she wondered
why he did not put her into the same category. Did he
imagine that she possessed and withheld even fresher
appraisals? It was not so and she did not pretend it,
looking at him with her quiet smile and softly shaking
her head now and then. She had never thought of
herself as a person whose appraisals mattered; she had
thought of herself as too much of a child. But perhaps
it was because Jerry found her beautiful that he was
indifferent to her indifference.
After dinner they danced. Many young people arrived
and the tall red Chinese screens in the hall were
put back. There was a piano and two violins and one
of the young men who played had such a gloomy face,
like a French or Italian face—like Jules’ face—that
Alix wished she could talk to him and ask him if he
were a foreigner. But there was no time for talk. She
and Jerry found that their steps went beautifully together.
She danced with him; many times; and with
other young men; and Jerry helped her to evade Mr.
Fulham who, seeing how many partners she had,
wished to be one of them. But with Jerry it was best
of all, and how much more important it was to have
steps that chimed than to care about the same books
and pictures! It seemed to-night, among the flowers,
and lights, and music, the most important of all things;
though once or twice, when she found Giles’s eyes
again, she knew that the sense of ecstasy on which she
floated must have the evanescence of a mirage. Dear
Giles. She made him dance with her and they laughed
together as they went slowly round the hall, for Giles
did not dance well. Afterwards she saw that he talked
with Lady Mary and with Mr. Hamble. He did not
go into the mirage. He only looked on at it.
When Alix fell asleep that night in the firelight, she
dreamed that a cool crystal stream flowed round her
and that she floated on its silver surfaces. Golden
lights lay like a chain of little suns along its margin
and her hands, softly moving in the current, felt rosy
petals pass between their fingers. The throb of dance-music,
sweet, reckless, imbecile, beat in her blood, and
in her ears the sound of Jerry’s voice saying: “Beautiful,
isn’t it?” And Giles’s eyes were there watching
her. In her dream she wanted to tell Giles that she had
nothing to conceal. She tried to tell him, but she felt
the silver stream flowing over her lips and making
them dumb, though they smiled. If Giles looked at
her like that she might begin to blush. But even so
she did not want him gone. While he was there she
was so safe.