Henry James: Complete Stories 1864-1874 (58 page)

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Authors: Henry James

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BOOK: Henry James: Complete Stories 1864-1874
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Page 339
It was very interesting as well as very eulogistic, and Lyon could see that he was a very nice old man, to have endeared himself so to a son who was evidently not a gusher. At last he got uphe said he must go to bed if he wished to be fresh for his work in the morning. To which his host replied, Then you must take your candle; the lights are out; I don't keep my servants up.
In a moment Lyon had his glimmering taper in hand, and as he was leaving the room (he did not disturb the others with a good-night; they were absorbed in the lemon-squeezer and the soda-water cork) he remembered other occasions on which he had made his way to bed alone through a darkened country-house; such occasions had not been rare, for he was almost always the first to leave the smoking-room. If he had not stayed in houses conspicuously haunted he had, none the less (having the artistic temperament), sometimes found the great black halls and staircases rather creepy: there had been often a sinister effect, to his imagination, in the sound of his tread in the long passages or the way the winter moon peeped into tall windows on landings. It occurred to him that if houses without supernatural pretensions could look so wicked at night, the old corridors of Stayes would certainly give him a sensation. He didn't know whether the proprietors were sensitive; very often, as he had said to Colonel Capadose, people enjoyed the impeachment. What determined him to speak, with a certain sense of the risk, was the impression that the Colonel told queer stories. As he had his hand on the door he said to Arthur Ashmore, I hope I shan't meet any ghosts.
Any ghosts?
You ought to have somein this fine old part.
We do our best, but
que voulez-vous?
said Mr. Ashmore. I don't think they like the hot-water pipes.
They remind them too much of their own climate? But haven't you a haunted roomat the end of my passage?
Oh, there are storieswe try to keep them up.
I should like very much to sleep there, Lyon said.
Well, you can move there to-morrow if you like.
Perhaps I had better wait till I have done my work.
Very good; but you won't work there, you know. My father will sit to you in his own apartments.
 
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Oh, it isn't that; it's the fear of running away, like that gentleman three days ago.
Three days ago? What gentleman? Mr. Ashmore asked.
The one who got urgent letters at breakfast and fled by the 10.20. Did he stand more than one night?
I don't know what you are talking about. There was no such gentlemanthree days ago.
Ah, so much the better, said Lyon, nodding good-night and departing. He took his course, as he remembered it, with his wavering candle, and, though he encountered a great many gruesome objects, safely reached the passage out of which his room opened. In the complete darkness it seemed to stretch away still further, but he followed it, for the curiosity of the thing, to the end. He passed several doors with the name of the room painted upon them, but he found nothing else. He was tempted to try the last doorto look into the room of evil fame; but he reflected that this would be indiscreet, since Colonel Capadose handled the brushas a
raconteur
with such freedom. There might be a ghost and there might not; but the Colonel himself, he inclined to think, was the most mystifying figure in the house.
II
Lyon found Sir David Ashmore a capital subject and a very comfortable sitter into the bargain. Moreover he was a very agreeable old man, tremendously puckered but not in the least dim; and he wore exactly the furred dressing-gown that Lyon would have chosen. He was proud of his age but ashamed of his infirmities, which however he greatly exaggerated and which did not prevent him from sitting there as submissive as if portraiture in oils had been a branch of surgery. He demolished the legend of his having feared the operation would be fatal, giving an explanation which pleased our friend much better. He held that a gentleman should be painted but once in his lifethat it was eager and fatuous to be hung up all over the place. That was good for women, who made a pretty wall-pattern; but the male face didn't lend itself to decorative repetition. The proper time for the likeness was at the last,
 
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when the whole man was thereyou got the totality of his experience. Lyon could not reply that that period was not a real compendiumyou had to allow so for leakage; for there had been no crack in Sir David's crystallisation. He spoke of his portrait as a plain map of the country, to be consulted by his children in a case of uncertainty. A proper map could be drawn up only when the country had been travelled. He gave Lyon his mornings, till luncheon, and they talked of many things, not neglecting, as a stimulus to gossip, the people in the house. Now that he did not go out, as he said, he saw much less of the visitors at Stayes: people came and went whom he knew nothing about, and he liked to hear Lyon describe them. The artist sketched with a fine point and did not caricature, and it usually befell that when Sir David did not know the sons and daughters he had known the fathers and mothers. He was one of those terrible old gentlemen who are a repository of antecedents. But in the case of the Capadose family, at whom they arrived by an easy stage, his knowledge embraced two, or even three, generations. General Capadose was an old crony, and he remembered his father before him. The general was rather a smart soldier, but in private life of too speculative a turnalways sneaking into the City to put his money into some rotten thing. He married a girl who brought him something and they had half a dozen children. He scarcely knew what had become of the rest of them, except that one was in the Church and had found prefermentwasn't he Dean of Rockingham? Clement, the fellow who was at Stayes, had some military talent; he had served in the East, he had married a pretty girl. He had been at Eton with his son, and he used to come to Stayes in his holidays. Lately, coming back to England, he had turned up with his wife again; that was before hethe old manhad been put to grass. He was a taking dog, but he had a monstrous foible.
A monstrous foible? said Lyon.
He's a thumping liar.
Lyon's brush stopped short, while he repeated, for somehow the formula startled him, A thumping liar?
You are very lucky not to have found it out.
Well, I confess I have noticed a romantic tinge
 
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Oh, it isn't always romantic. He'll lie about the time of day, about the name of his hatter. It appears there are people like that.
Well, they are precious scoundrels, Lyon declared, his voice trembling a little with the thought of what Everina Brant had done with herself.
Oh, not always, said the old man. This fellow isn't in the least a scoundrel. There is no harm in him and no bad intention; he doesn't steal nor cheat nor gamble nor drink; he's very kindhe sticks to his wife, is fond of his children. He simply can't give you a straight answer.
Then everything he told me last night, I suppose, was mendacious: he delivered himself of a series of the stiffest statements. They stuck, when I tried to swallow them, but I never thought of so simple an explanation.
No doubt he was in the vein, Sir David went on. It's a natural peculiarityas you might limp or stutter or be left-handed. I believe it comes and goes, like intermittent fever. My son tells me that his friends usually understand it and don't haul him upfor the sake of his wife.
Oh, his wifehis wife! Lyon murmured, painting fast.
I daresay she's used to it.
Never in the world, Sir David. How can she be used to it?
Why, my dear sir, when a woman's fond!And don't they mostly handle the long bow themselves? They are connoisseursthey have a sympathy for a fellow-performer.
Lyon was silent a moment; he had no ground for denying that Mrs. Capadose was attached to her husband. But after a little he rejoined: Oh, not this one! I knew her years agobefore her marriage; knew her well and admired her. She was as clear as a bell.
I like her very much, Sir David said, but I have seen her back him up.
Lyon considered Sir David for a moment, not in the light of a model. Are you very sure?
The old man hesitated; then he answered, smiling, You're in love with her.
Very likely. God knows I used to be!
She must help him outshe can't expose him.
She can hold her tongue, Lyon remarked.
 
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Well, before you probably she will.
That's what I am curious to see. And Lyon added, privately, Mercy on us, what he must have made of her! He kept this reflection to himself, for he considered that he had sufficiently betrayed his state of mind with regard to Mrs. Capadose. None the less it occupied him now immensely, the question of how such a woman would arrange herself in such a predicament. He watched her with an interest deeply quickened when he mingled with the company; he had had his own troubles in life, but he had rarely been so anxious about anything as he was now to see what the loyalty of a wife and the infection of an example would have made of an absolutely truthful mind. Oh, he held it as immutably established that whatever other women might be prone to do she, of old, had been perfectly incapable of a deviation. Even if she had not been too simple to deceive she would have been too proud; and if she had not had too much conscience she would have had too little eagerness. It was the last thing she would have endured or condonedthe particular thing she would not have forgiven. Did she sit in torment while her husband turned his somersaults, or was she now too so perverse that she thought it a fine thing to be striking at the expense of one's honour? It would have taken a wondrous alchemyworking backwards, as it wereto produce this latter result. Besides these two alternatives (that she suffered tortures in silence and that she was so much in love that her husband's humiliating idiosyncrasy seemed to her only an added richnessa proof of life and talent), there was still the possiblity that she had not found him out, that she took his false pieces at his own valuation. A little reflection rendered this hypothesis untenable; it was too evident that the account he gave of things must repeatedly have contradicted her own knowledge. Within an hour or two of his meeting them Lyon had seen her confronted with that perfectly gratuitous invention about the profit they had made off his early picture. Even then indeed she had not, so far as he could see, smarted, andbut for the present he could only contemplate the case.
Even if it had not been interfused, through his uneradicated tenderness for Mrs. Capadose, with an element of suspense, the question would still have presented itself to him as a very
 
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curious problem, for he had not painted portraits during so many years without becoming something of a psychologist. His inquiry was limited for the moment to the opportunity that the following three days might yield, as the Colonel and his wife were going on to another house. It fixed itself largely of course upon the Colonel toothis gentleman was such a rare anomaly. Moreover it had to go on very quickly. Lyon was too scrupulous to ask other people what they thought of the businesshe was too afraid of exposing the woman he once had loved. It was probable also that light would come to him from the talk of the rest of the company: the Colonel's queer habit, both as it affected his own situation and as it affected his wife, would be a familiar theme in any house in which he was in the habit of staying. Lyon had not observed in the circles in which he visited any marked abstention from comment on the singularities of their members. It interfered with his progress that the Colonel hunted all day, while he plied his brushes and chatted with Sir David; but a Sunday intervened and that partly made it up. Mrs. Capadose fortunately did not hunt, and when his work was over she was not inaccessible. He took a couple of longish walks with her (she was fond of that), and beguiled her at tea into a friendly nook in the hall. Regard her as he might he could not make out to himself that she was consumed by a hidden shame; the sense of being married to a man whose word had no worth was not, in her spirit, so far as he could guess, the canker within the rose. Her mind appeared to have nothing on it but its own placid frankness, and when he looked into her eyes (deeply, as he occasionally permitted himself to do), they had no uncomfortable consciousness. He talked to her again and still again of the dear old daysreminded her of things that he had not (before this reunion) the least idea that he remembered. Then he spoke to her of her husband, praised his appearance, his talent for conversation, professed to have felt a quick friendship for him and asked (with an inward audacity at which he trembled a little) what manner of man he was. What manner? said Mrs. Capadose. Dear me, how can one describe one's husband? I like him very much.
Ah, you have told me that already! Lyon exclaimed, with exaggerated ruefulness.

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