saw several things more, things odd enough in the
light of the fact that at the moment some accident
of grouping brought them face to face he was still
merely fumbling with the idea that any contact between
them in the past would have had no importance.
If it had had no importance he scarcely knew why
his actual impression of her should so seem to have
so much; the answer to which, however, was that in
such a life as they all appeared to be leading for
the moment one could but take things as they came.
He was satisfied, without in the least being able
to say why, that this young lady might roughly have
ranked in the house as a poor relation; satisfied
also that she was not there on a brief visit, but was
more or less a part of the establishment—almost
a working, a remunerated part. Didn’t she
enjoy at periods a protection that she paid for by
helping, among other services, to show the place and
explain it, deal with the tiresome people, answer
questions about the dates of the building, the styles
of the furniture, the authorship of the pictures,
the favourite haunts of the ghost? It wasn’t
that she looked as if you could have given her shillings—it
was impossible to look less so. Yet when she
finally drifted toward him, distinctly handsome, though
ever so much older—older than when he had
seen her before—it might have been as an
effect of her guessing that he had, within the couple
of hours, devoted more imagination to her than to
all the others put together, and had thereby penetrated
to a kind of truth that the others were too stupid
for. She
was there on harder terms than
any one; she was there as a consequence of things
suffered, one way and another, in the interval of years;
and she remembered him very much as she was remembered—only
a good deal better.
By the time they at last thus came to speech they
were alone in one of the rooms—remarkable
for a fine portrait over the chimney-place—out
of which their friends had passed, and the charm of
it was that even before they had spoken they had practically
arranged with each other to stay behind for talk.
The charm, happily, was in other things too—partly
in there being scarce a spot at Weatherend without
something to stay behind for. It was in the
way the autumn day looked into the high windows as
it waned; the way the red light, breaking at the close
from under a low sombre sky, reached out in a long
shaft and played over old wainscots, old tapestry,
old gold, old colour. It was most of all perhaps
in the way she came to him as if, since she had been
turned on to deal with the simpler sort, he might,
should he choose to keep the whole thing down, just
take her mild attention for a part of her general business.
As soon as he heard her voice, however, the gap was
filled up and the missing link supplied; the slight
irony he divined in her attitude lost its advantage.
He almost jumped at it to get there before her.
“I met you years and years ago in Rome.