Archer
sat silent, with the sense of clinging to the edge of a sliding precipice. The
discovery that he had been excluded from a share in these negotiations, and even
from the knowledge that they were on foot, caused him a surprise hardly dulled
by the acuter wonder of what he was learning. He saw in a flash that if the
family had ceased to consult him it was because some deep tribal instinct
warned them that he was no longer on their side; and he recalled, with a start
of comprehension, a remark of May's during their drive home from Mrs. Manson
Mingott's on the day of the Archery Meeting: "Perhaps, after all, Ellen
would be happier with her husband."
Even
in the tumult of new discoveries Archer remembered his indignant exclamation,
and the fact that since then his wife had never named Madame Olenska to him.
Her careless allusion had no doubt been the straw held up to see which way the
wind blew; the result had been reported to the family, and thereafter Archer
had been tacitly omitted from their counsels. He admired the tribal discipline
which made May bow to this decision. She would not have done so, he knew, had
her conscience protested; but she probably shared the family view that Madame
Olenska would be better off as an unhappy wife than as a separated one, and
that there was no use in discussing the case with Newland, who had an awkward
way of suddenly not seeming to take the most fundamental things for granted.
Archer
looked up and met his visitor's anxious gaze. "Don't you know,
Monsieur--is it possible you don't know--that the family begin to doubt if they
have the right to advise the Countess to refuse her husband's last
proposals?"
"The
proposals you brought?"
"The
proposals I brought."
It
was on Archer's lips to exclaim that whatever he knew or did not know was no
concern of M. Riviere's; but something in the humble and yet courageous
tenacity of M. Riviere's gaze made him reject this conclusion, and he met the
young man's question with another. "What is your object in speaking to me
of this?"
He
had not to wait a moment for the answer. "To beg you, Monsieur--to beg you
with all the force I'm capable of--not to let her go back.--Oh, don't let
her!" M. Riviere exclaimed.
Archer
looked at him with increasing astonishment. There was no mistaking the
sincerity of his distress or the strength of his determination: he had
evidently resolved to let everything go by the board but the supreme need of
thus putting himself on record. Archer considered.
"May
I ask," he said at length, "if this is the line you took with the
Countess Olenska?"
M.
Riviere reddened, but his eyes did not falter. "No, Monsieur: I accepted
my mission in good faith. I really believed--for reasons I need not trouble you
with--that it would be better for Madame Olenska to recover her situation, her
fortune, the social consideration that her husband's standing gives her."
"So
I supposed: you could hardly have accepted such a mission otherwise."
"I
should not have accepted it."
"Well,
then--?" Archer paused again, and their eyes met in another protracted
scrutiny.
"Ah,
Monsieur, after I had seen her, after I had listened to her, I knew she was
better off here."
"You
knew--?"
"Monsieur,
I discharged my mission faithfully: I put the Count's arguments, I stated his
offers, without adding any comment of my own. The Countess was good enough to
listen patiently; she carried her goodness so far as to see me twice; she
considered impartially all I had come to say. And it was in the course of these
two talks that I changed my mind, that I came to see things differently."
"May
I ask what led to this change?"
"Simply
seeing the change in HER," M. Riviere replied.
"The
change in her? Then you knew her before?"
The
young man's colour again rose. "I used to see her in her husband's house.
I have known Count Olenski for many years. You can imagine that he would not
have sent a stranger on such a mission."
Archer's
gaze, wandering away to the blank walls of the office, rested on a hanging
calendar surmounted by the rugged features of the President of the United
States. That such a conversation should be going on anywhere within the
millions of square miles subject to his rule seemed as strange as anything that
the imagination could invent.
"The
change--what sort of a change?"
"Ah,
Monsieur, if I could tell you!" M. Riviere paused. "Tenez--the
discovery, I suppose, of what I'd never thought of before: that she's an
American. And that if you're an American of HER kind--of your kind--things that
are accepted in certain other societies, or at least put up with as part of a
general convenient give-andtake --become unthinkable, simply unthinkable. If
Madame Olenska's relations understood what these things were, their opposition
to her returning would no doubt be as unconditional as her own; but they seem
to regard her husband's wish to have her back as proof of an irresistible
longing for domestic life." M. Riviere paused, and then added:
"Whereas it's far from being as simple as that."
Archer
looked back to the President of the United States, and then down at his desk
and at the papers scattered on it. For a second or two he could not trust
himself to speak. During this interval he heard M. Riviere's chair pushed back,
and was aware that the young man had risen. When he glanced up again he saw
that his visitor was as moved as himself.
"Thank
you," Archer said simply.
"There's
nothing to thank me for, Monsieur: it is I, rather--" M. Riviere broke
off, as if speech for him too were difficult. "I should like,
though," he continued in a firmer voice, "to add one thing. You asked
me if I was in Count Olenski's employ. I am at this moment: I returned to him,
a few months ago, for reasons of private necessity such as may happen to any
one who has persons, ill and older persons, dependent on him. But from the
moment that I have taken the step of coming here to say these things to you I
consider myself discharged, and I shall tell him so on my return, and give him
the reasons. That's all, Monsieur."
M.
Riviere bowed and drew back a step.
"Thank
you," Archer said again, as their hands met.
XXVI.
Every
year on the fifteenth of October Fifth Avenue opened its shutters, unrolled its
carpets and hung up its triple layer of window-curtains.
By
the first of November this household ritual was over, and society had begun to
look about and take stock of itself. By the fifteenth the season was in full
blast, Opera and theatres were putting forth their new attractions,
dinner-engagements were accumulating, and dates for dances being fixed. And
punctually at about this time Mrs. Archer always said that New York was very
much changed.
Observing
it from the lofty stand-point of a nonparticipant, she was able, with the help
of Mr. Sillerton Jackson and Miss Sophy, to trace each new crack in its
surface, and all the strange weeds pushing up between the ordered rows of
social vegetables. It had been one of the amusements of Archer's youth to wait
for this annual pronouncement of his mother's, and to hear her enumerate the
minute signs of disintegration that his careless gaze had overlooked. For New
York, to Mrs. Archer's mind, never changed without changing for the worse; and
in this view Miss Sophy Jackson heartily concurred.
Mr.
Sillerton Jackson, as became a man of the world, suspended his judgment and
listened with an amused impartiality to the lamentations of the ladies. But
even he never denied that New York had changed; and Newland Archer, in the winter
of the second year of his marriage, was himself obliged to admit that if it had
not actually changed it was certainly changing.
These
points had been raised, as usual, at Mrs. Archer's Thanksgiving dinner. At the
date when she was officially enjoined to give thanks for the blessings of the
year it was her habit to take a mournful though not embittered stock of her
world, and wonder what there was to be thankful for. At any rate, not the state
of society; society, if it could be said to exist, was rather a spectacle on
which to call down Biblical imprecations-- and in fact, every one knew what the
Reverend Dr. Ashmore meant when he chose a text from Jeremiah (chap. ii., verse
25) for his Thanksgiving sermon. Dr. Ashmore, the new Rector of St. Matthew's, had
been chosen because he was very "advanced": his sermons were
considered bold in thought and novel in language. When he fulminated against
fashionable society he always spoke of its "trend"; and to Mrs.
Archer it was terrifying and yet fascinating to feel herself part of a
community that was trending.
"There's
no doubt that Dr. Ashmore is right: there IS a marked trend," she said, as
if it were something visible and measurable, like a crack in a house.
"It
was odd, though, to preach about it on Thanksgiving," Miss Jackson opined;
and her hostess drily rejoined: "Oh, he means us to give thanks for what's
left."
Archer
had been wont to smile at these annual vaticinations of his mother's; but this
year even he was obliged to acknowledge, as he listened to an enumeration of
the changes, that the "trend" was visible.
"The
extravagance in dress--" Miss Jackson began. "Sillerton took me to
the first night of the Opera, and I can only tell you that Jane Merry's dress
was the only one I recognised from last year; and even that had had the front
panel changed. Yet I know she got it out from Worth only two years ago, because
my seamstress always goes in to make over her Paris dresses before she wears
them."
"Ah,
Jane Merry is one of US," said Mrs. Archer sighing, as if it were not such
an enviable thing to be in an age when ladies were beginning to flaunt abroad
their Paris dresses as soon as they were out of the Custom House, instead of
letting them mellow under lock and key, in the manner of Mrs. Archer's
contemporaries.
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