Mrs. Ballinger is one of the ladies who pursue Culture in bands, as
though it were dangerous to meet alone. To this end she had founded the
Lunch Club, an association composed of herself and several other
indomitable huntresses of erudition. The Lunch Club, after three or four
winters of lunching and debate, had acquired such local distinction that
the entertainment of distinguished strangers became one of its accepted
functions; in recognition of which it duly extended to the celebrated
"Osric Dane," on the day of her arrival in Hillbridge, an invitation to
be present at the next meeting.
The Club was to meet at Mrs. Ballinger's. The other members, behind
her back, were of one voice in deploring her unwillingness to cede her
rights in favor of Mrs. Plinth, whose house made a more impressive
setting for the entertainment of celebrities; while, as Mrs. Leveret
observed, there was always the picture-gallery to fall back on.
Mrs. Plinth made no secret of sharing this view. She had always
regarded it as one of her obligations to entertain the Lunch Club's
distinguished guests. Mrs. Plinth was almost as proud of her obligations
as she was of her picture-gallery; she was in fact fond of implying that
the one possession implied the other, and that only a woman of her
wealth could afford to live up to a standard as high as that which she
had set herself. An all-round sense of duty, roughly adaptable to
various ends, was, in her opinion, all that Providence exacted of the
more humbly stationed; but the power which had predestined Mrs. Plinth
to keep footmen clearly intended her to maintain an equally specialized
staff of responsibilities. It was the more to be regretted that Mrs.
Ballinger, whose obligations to society were bounded by the narrow scope
of two parlour-maids, should have been so tenacious of the right to
entertain Osric Dane.
The question of that lady's reception had for a month past
profoundly moved the members of the Lunch Club. It was not that they
felt themselves unequal to the task, but that their sense of the
opportunity plunged them into the agreeable uncertainty of the lady who
weighs the alternatives of a well-stocked wardrobe. If such subsidiary
members as Mrs. Leveret were fluttered by the thought of exchanging
ideas with the author of "The Wings of Death," no forebodings of the
kind disturbed the conscious adequacy of Mrs. Plinth, Mrs. Ballinger and
Miss Van Vluyck. "The Wings of Death" had, in fact, at Miss Van Vluyck's
suggestion, been chosen as the subject of discussion at the last club
meeting, and each member had thus been enabled to express her own
opinion or to appropriate whatever seemed most likely to be of use in
the comments of the others. Mrs. Roby alone had abstained from profiting
by the opportunity thus offered; but it was now openly recognised that,
as a member of the Lunch Club, Mrs. Roby was a failure. "It all comes,"
as Miss Van Vluyck put it, "of accepting a woman on a man's estimation."
Mrs. Roby, returning to Hillbridge from a prolonged sojourn in exotic
regions -- the other ladies no longer took the trouble to remember where
-- had been emphatically commended by the distinguished biologist,
Professor Foreland, as the most agreeable woman he had ever met; and the
members of the Lunch Club, awed by an encomium that carried the weight
of a diploma, and rashly assuming that the Professor's social sympathies
would follow the line of his scientific bent, had seized the chance of
annexing a biological member. Their disillusionment was complete. At
Miss Van Vluyck's first off-hand mention of the pterodactyl Mrs. Roby
had confusedly murmured: "I know so little about metres --" and after
that painful betrayal of incompetence she had prudently withdrawn from
farther participation in the mental gymnastics of the club.
"I suppose she flattered him," Miss Van Vluyck summed up --"or else
it's the way she does her hair."
The dimensions of Miss Van Vluyck's dining-room having restricted
the membership of the club to six, the non-conductiveness of one member
was a serious obstacle to the exchange of ideas, and some wonder had
already been expressed that Mrs. Roby should care to live, as it were,
on the intellectual bounty of the others. This feeling was augmented by
the discovery that she had not yet read "The Wings of Death." She owned
to having heard the name of Osric Dane; but that -- incredible as it
appeared -- was the extent of her acquaintance with the celebrated
novelist. The ladies could not conceal their surprise, but Mrs.
Ballinger, whose pride in the club made her wish to put even Mrs. Roby
in the best possible light, gently insinuated that, though she had not
had time to acquaint herself with "The Wings of Death," she must at
least be familiar with its equally remarkable predecessor, "The Supreme
Instant."
Mrs. Roby wrinkled her sunny brows in a conscientious effort of
memory, as a result of which she recalled that, oh, yes, she had seen
the book at her brother's, when she was staying with him in Brazil, and
had even carried it off to read one day on a boating party; but they had
all got to shying things at each other in the boat, and the book had
gone overboard, so she had never had the chance --
The picture evoked by this anecdote did not advance Mrs. Roby's
credit with the club, and there was a painful pause, which was broken by
Mrs. Plinth's remarking: "I can understand that, with all your other
pursuits, you should not find much time for reading; but I should have
thought you might at least have got up 'The Wings of Death' before
Osric Dane's arrival."
Mrs. Roby took this rebuke good-humouredly. She had meant, she
owned to glance through the book; but she had been so absorbed in a
novel of Trollope's that --
"No one reads Trollope now," Mrs. Ballinger interrupted impatiently.
Mrs. Roby looked pained. "I'm only just beginning," she confessed.
"Amusement," said Mrs. Plinth sententiously, "is hardly what I look
for in my choice of books."
"Oh, certainly, 'The Wings of Death' is not amusing," ventured Mrs.
Leveret, whose manner of putting forth an opinion was like that of an
obliging salesman with a variety of other styles to submit if his first
selection does not suit.
"Was it meant to be?" enquired Mrs. Plinth, who was fond of
asking questions that she permitted no one but herself to answer.
"Assuredly not."
"Assuredly not -- that is what I was going to say," assented Mrs.
Leveret, hastily rolling up her opinion and reaching for another. "It
was meant to -- to elevate."
Miss Van Vluyck adjusted her spectacles as though they were the
black cap of condemnation. "I hardly see," she interposed, "how a book
steeped in the bitterest pessimism can be said to elevate, however much
it may instruct."
"I meant, of course, to instruct," said Mrs. Leveret, flurried by
the unexpected distinction between two terms which she had supposed to
be synonymous. Mrs. Leveret's enjoyment of the Lunch Club was frequently
marred by such surprises; and not knowing her own value to the other
ladies as a mirror for their mental complacency she was sometimes
troubled by a doubt of her worthiness to join in their debates. It was
only the fact of having a dull sister who thought her clever that saved
her from a sense of hopeless inferiority.
"Do they get married in the end?" Mrs. Roby interposed.
"They -- who?" the Lunch Club collectively exclaimed.
"Why, the girl and man. It's a novel, isn't it? I always think
that's the one thing that matters. If they're parted it spoils my dinner."
Mrs. Plinth and Mrs. Ballinger exchanged scandalised glances, and
the latter said: "I should hardly advise you to read 'The Wings of
Death,' in that spirit. For my part, when there are so many books that
one has to read, I wonder how any one can find time for those that are
merely amusing."
"The beautiful part of it," Laura Glyde murmured, "is surely just
this -- that no one can tell how 'The Wings of Death' ends. Osric
Dane, overcome by the dread significance of her own meaning, has
mercifully veiled it -- perhaps even from herself -- as Apelles, in
representing the sacrifice of Iphigenia, veiled the face of Agamemnon."
"What's that? Is it poetry?" whispered Mrs. Leveret nervously to
Mrs. Plinth, who, disdaining a definite reply, said coldly: "You should
look it up. I always make it a point to look things up." Her tone added
--"though I might easily have it done for me by the footman."
"I was about to say," Miss Van Vluyck resumed, "that it must always
be a question whether a book can instruct unless it elevates."
"Oh --" murmured Mrs. Leveret, now feeling herself hopelessly astray.
"I don't know," said Mrs. Ballinger, scenting in Miss Van Vluyck's
tone a tendency to depreciate the coveted distinction of entertaining
Osric Dane; "I don't know that such a question can seriously be raised
as to a book which has attracted more attention among thoughtful people
than any novel since 'Robert Elsmere.'"
"Oh, but don't you see," exclaimed Laura Glyde, "that it's just the
dark hopelessness of it all -- the wonderful tone-scheme of black on
black -- that makes it such an artistic achievement? It reminded me so
when I read it of Prince Rupert's maniere noire . . . the book is
etched, not painted, yet one feels the colour values so intensely . . ."
"Who is he?" Mrs. Leveret whispered to her neighbour. "Some one
she's met abroad?"
"The wonderful part of the book," Mrs. Ballinger conceded, "is that
it may be looked at from so many points of view. I hear that as a study
of determinism Professor Lupton ranks it with 'The Data of Ethics.'"
"I'm told that Osric Dane spent ten years in preparatory studies
before beginning to write it," said Mrs. Plinth. "She looks up
everything -- verifies everything. It has always been my principle, as
you know. Nothing would induce me, now, to put aside a book before I'd
finished it, just because I can buy as many more as I want."
"And what do you think of 'The Wings of Death'?" Mrs. Roby
abruptly asked her.
It was the kind of question that might be termed out of order, and
the ladies glanced at each other as though disclaiming any share in such
a breach of discipline. They all knew that there was nothing Mrs. Plinth
so much disliked as being asked her opinion of a book. Books were
written to read; if one read them what more could be expected? To be
questioned in detail regarding the contents of a volume seemed to her as
great an outrage as being searched for smuggled laces at the Custom
House. The club had always respected this idiosyncrasy of Mrs. Plinth's.
Such opinions as she had were imposing and substantial: her mind, like
her house, was furnished with monumental "pieces" that were not meant to
be suddenly disarranged; and it was one of the unwritten rules of the
Lunch Club that, within her own province, each member's habits of
thought should be respected. The meeting therefore closed with an
increased sense, on the part of the other ladies, of Mrs. Roby's
hopeless unfitness to be one of them.
Mrs. Leveret, on the eventful day, had arrived early at Mrs.
Ballinger's, her volume of Appropriate Allusions in her pocket.
It always flustered Mrs. Leveret to be late at the Lunch Club: she
liked to collect her thoughts and gather a hint, as the others
assembled, of the turn the conversation was likely to take. To-day,
however, she felt herself completely at a loss; and even the familiar
contact of Appropriate Allusions, which stuck into her as she sat down,
failed to give her any reassurance. It was an admirable little volume,
compiled to meet all the social emergencies; so that, whether on the
occasion of Anniversaries, joyful or melancholy (as the classification
ran), of Banquets, social or municipal, or of Baptisms, Church of
England or sectarian, its student need never be at a loss for a
pertinent reference. Mrs. Leveret, though she had for years devoutly
conned its pages, valued it, however, rather for its moral support than
for its practical services; for though in the privacy of her own room
she commanded an army of quotations, these invariably deserted her at
the critical moment, and the only line she retained -- Canst thou draw
out Leviathan with a hook? -- was one she had never yet found the
occasion to apply.
To-day she felt that even the complete mastery of the volume would
hardly have insured her self-possession; for she thought it probable,
even if she DID, in some miraculous way, remember an Allusion, it would
be only to find that Osric Dane used a different volume (Mrs. Leveret
was convinced that literary people always carried them), and would
consequently not recognise her quotations.
Mrs. Leveret's sense of being adrift was intensified by the
appearance of Mrs. Ballinger's drawing-room. To a careless eye its
aspect was unchanged; but those acquainted with Mrs. Ballinger's way of
arranging her books would instantly have detected the marks of recent
perturbation. Mrs. Ballinger's province, as a member of the Lunch Club,
was the Book of the Day. On that, whatever it was, from a novel to a
treatise on experimental psychology, she was confidently,
authoritatively "up." What became of last year's books, or last week's
even; what she did with the "subjects" she had previously professed with
equal authority; no one had ever yet discovered. Her mind was an hotel
where facts came and went like transient lodgers, without leaving their
address behind, and frequently without paying for their board. It was
Mrs. Ballinger's boast that she was "abreast with the Thought of the
Day," and her pride that this advanced position should be expressed by
the books on her drawing-room table. These volumes, frequently renewed,
and almost always damp from the press, bore names generally unfamiliar
to Mrs. Leveret, and giving her, as she furtively scanned them, a
disheartening glimpse of new fields of knowledge to be breathlessly
traversed in Mrs. Ballinger's wake. But today a number of
maturer-looking volumes were adroitly mingled with the primeurs of the
press -- Karl Marx jostled Professor Bergson, and the "Confessions of
St. Augustine" lay beside the last work on "Mendelism"; so that even to
Mrs. Leveret's fluttered perceptions it was clear that Mrs. Ballinger
didn't in the least know what Osric Dane was likely to talk about, and
had taken measures to be prepared for anything. Mrs. Leveret felt like a
passenger on an ocean steamer who is told that there is no immediate
danger, but that she had better put on her life-belt.
It was a relief to be roused from these forebodings by Miss Van
Vluyck's arrival.
"Well, my dear," the new-comer briskly asked her hostess, "what
subjects are we to discuss to-day?"
Mrs. Ballinger was furtively replacing a volume of Wordsworth by a
copy of Verlaine. "I hardly know," she said somewhat nervously. "Perhaps
we had better leave that to circumstances."
"Circumstances?" said Miss Van Vluyck drily. "That means, I
suppose, that Laura Glyde will take the floor as usual, and we shall be
deluged with literature."
Philanthropy and statistics were Miss Van Vluyck's province, and
she naturally resented any tendency to divert their guest's attention
from these topics.
"Literature?" she protested in a tone of remonstrance. "But this is
perfectly unexpected. I understood we were to talk of Osric Dane's novel."
Mrs. Ballinger winced at the discrimination, but let it pass. "We
can hardly make that our chief subject -- at least not too
intentionally," she suggested. "Of course we can let our talk drift in
that direction; but we ought to have some other topic as an
introduction, and that is what I wanted to consult you about. The fact
is, we know so little of Osric Dane's tastes and interests that it is
difficult to make any special preparation."
"It may be difficult," said Mrs. Plinth with decision, "but it is
absolutely necessary. I know what that happy-go-lucky principle leads
to. As I told one of my nieces the other day, there are certain
emergencies for which a lady should always be prepared. It's in shocking
taste to wear colours when one pays a visit of condolence, or a last
year's dress when there are reports that one's husband is on the wrong
side of the market; and so it is with conversation. All I ask is that I
should know beforehand what is to be talked about; then I feel sure of
being able to say the proper thing."
"I quite agree with you," Mrs. Ballinger anxiously assented; "but --"
And at that instant, heralded by the fluttered parlour-maid, Osric
Dane appeared upon the threshold.
Mrs. Leveret told her sister afterward that she had known at a
glance what was coming. She saw that Osric Dane was not going to meet
them half way. That distinguished personage had indeed entered with an
air of compulsion not calculated to promote the easy exercise of
hospitality. She looked as though she were about to be photographed for
a new edition of her books.
The desire to propitiate a divinity is generally in inverse ratio
to its responsiveness, and the sense of discouragement produced by Osric
Dane's entrance visibly increased the Lunch Club's eagerness to please
her. Any lingering idea that she might consider herself under an
obligation to her entertainers was at once dispelled by her manner: as
Mrs. Leveret said afterward to her sister, she had a way of looking at
you that made you feel as if there was something wrong with your hat.
This evidence of greatness produced such an immediate impression on the
ladies that a shudder of awe ran through them when Mrs. Roby, as their
hostess led the great personage into the dining-room, turned back to
whisper to the others: "What a brute she is!"
The hour about the table did not tend to correct this verdict. It
was passed by Osric Dane in the silent deglutition of Mrs. Ballinger's
menu, and by the members of the Club in the emission of tentative
platitudes which their guest seemed to swallow as perfunctorily as the
successive courses of the luncheon.
Mrs. Ballinger's deplorable delay in fixing a topic had thrown the
Club into a mental disarray which increased with the return to the
drawing-room, where the actual business of discussion was to open. Each
lady waited for the other to speak; and there was a general shock of
disappointment when their hostess opened the conversation by the
painfully commonplace inquiry: "Is this your first visit to Hillbridge?"
Even Mrs. Leveret was conscious that this was a bad beginning; and
a vague impulse of deprecation made Miss Glyde interject: "It is a very
small place indeed."
Mrs. Plinth bristled. "We have a great many representative people,"
she said, in the tone of one who speaks for her order.
Osric Dane turned to her thoughtfully. "What do they represent?"
she asked.
Mrs. Plinth's constitutional dislike to being questioned was
intensified by her sense of unpreparedness; and her reproachful glance
passed the question on to Mrs. Ballinger.
"Why," said that lady, glancing in turn at the other members, "as a
community I hope it is not too much to say that we stand for culture."
"And for sociology, I trust," snapped Miss Van Vluyck.
"We have a standard," said Mrs. Plinth, feeling herself suddenly
secure on the vast expanse of a generalisation: and Mrs. Leveret,
thinking there must be room for more than one on so broad a statement,
took courage to murmur: "Oh, certainly; we have a standard."
"The object of our little club," Mrs. Ballinger continued, "is to
concentrate the highest tendencies of Hillbridge -- to centralise and
focus its complex intellectual effort."
This was felt to be so happy that the ladies drew an almost audible
breath of relief.
"We aspire," the President went on, "to stand for what is highest
in art, literature and ethics."
Osric Dane again turned to her. "What ethics?" she asked.
A tremor of apprehension encircled the room. None of the ladies
required any preparation to pronounce on a question of morals; but when
they were called ethics it was different. The club, when fresh from the
"Encyclopaedia Britannica," the "Reader's Handbook" or Smith's
"Classical Dictionary," could deal confidently with any subject; but
when taken unawares it had been known to define agnosticism as a heresy
of the Early Church and Professor Froude as a distinguished histologist;
and such minor members as Mrs. Leveret still secretly regarded ethics as
something vaguely pagan.
Even to Mrs. Ballinger, Osric Dane's question was unsettling, and
there was a general sense of gratitude when Laura Glyde leaned forward
to say, with her most sympathetic accent: "You must excuse us, Mrs.
Dane, for not being able, just at present, to talk of anything but 'The
Wings of Death.'"
"Yes," said Miss Van Vluyck, with a sudden resolve to carry the war
into the enemy's camp. "We are so anxious to know the exact purpose you
had in mind in writing your wonderful book."
"You will find," Mrs. Plinth interposed, "that we are not
superficial readers."
"We are eager to hear from you," Miss Van Vluyck continued, "if the
pessimistic tendency of the book is an expression of your own
convictions or --"
"Or merely," Miss Glyde hastily thrust in, "a sombre background
brushed in to throw your figures into more vivid relief. Are you not
primarily plastic?"
"I have always maintained," Mrs. Ballinger interposed, "that you
represent the purely objective method --"
Osric Dane helped herself critically to coffee. "How do you define
objective?" she then inquired.
There was a flurried pause before Laura Glyde intensely murmured:
"In reading you we don't define, we feel."
Osric Dane smiled. "The cerebellum," she remarked, "is not
infrequently the seat of the literary emotions." And she took a second
lump of sugar.
The sting that this remark was vaguely felt to conceal was almost
neutralised by the satisfaction of being addressed in such technical
language.
"Ah, the cerebellum," said Miss Van Vluyck complacently. "The Club
took a course in psychology last winter."
There was an agonising pause, during which each member of the Club
secretly deplored the distressing inefficiency of the others. Only Mrs.
Roby went on placidly sipping her chartreuse. At last Mrs. Ballinger
said, with an attempt at a high tone: "Well, really, you know, it was
last year that we took psychology, and this winter we have been so
absorbed in --"
She broke off, nervously trying to recall some of the Club's
discussions; but her faculties seemed to be paralysed by the petrifying
stare of Osric Dane. What had the club been absorbed in lately? Mrs.
Ballinger, with a vague purpose of gaining time, repeated slowly: "We've
been so intensely absorbed in --"
Mrs. Roby put down her liqueur glass and drew near the group with a
smile.
A thrill ran through the other members. They exchanged confused
glances, and then, with one accord, turned a gaze of mingled relief and
interrogation on their unexpected rescuer. The expression of each
denoted a different phase of the same emotion. Mrs. Plinth was the first
to compose her features to an air of reassurance: after a moment's hasty
adjustment her look almost implied that it was she who had given the
word to Mrs. Ballinger.
"Xingu, of course!" exclaimed the latter with her accustomed
promptness, while Miss Van Vluyck and Laura Glyde seemed to be plumbing
the depths of memory, and Mrs. Leveret, feeling apprehensively for
Appropriate Allusions, was somehow reassured by the uncomfortable
pressure of its bulk against her person.
Osric Dane's change of countenance was no less striking than that
of her entertainers. She too put down her coffee-cup, but with a look of
distinct annoyance: she too wore, for a brief moment, what Mrs. Roby
afterward described as the look of feeling for something in the back of
her head; and before she could dissemble these momentary signs of
weakness, Mrs. Roby, turning to her with a deferential smile, had said:
"And we've been so hoping that to-day you would tell us just what you
think of it."
Osric Dane received the homage of the smile as a matter of course;
but the accompanying question obviously embarrassed her, and it became
clear to her observers that she was not quick at shifting her facial
scenery. It was as though her countenance had so long been set in an
expression of unchallenged superiority that the muscles had stiffened,
and refused to obey her orders.
"Xingu --" she murmured, as if seeking in her turn to gain time.
Mrs. Roby continued to press her. "Knowing how engrossing the
subject is, you will understand how it happens that the Club has let
everything else go to the wall for the moment. Since we took up Xingu I
might almost say -- were it not for your books -- that nothing else
seems to us worth remembering."
Osric Dane's stern features were darkened rather than lit up by an
uneasy smile. "I am glad to hear there is one exception," she gave out
between narrowed lips.
"Oh, of course," Mrs. Roby said prettily; "but as you have shown us
that -- so very naturally! -- you don't care to talk about your own
things, we really can't let you off from telling us exactly what you
think about Xingu; especially," she added, with a persuasive smile, "as
some people say that one of your last books was simply saturated with it."
It was an it, then -- the assurance sped like fire through the
parched minds of the other members. In their eagerness to gain the least
little clue to Xingu they almost forgot the joy of assisting at the
discomfiture of Mrs. Dane.
The latter reddened nervously under her antagonist's direct
assault. "May I ask," she faltered out in an embarrassed tone, "to which
of my books you refer?"
Mrs. Roby did not falter. "That's just what I want you to tell us;
because, though I was present, I didn't actually take part."
"Present at what?" Mrs. Dane took her up; and for an instant the
trembling members of the Lunch Club thought that the champion Providence
had raised up for them had lost a point. But Mrs. Roby explained herself
gaily: "At the discussion, of course. And so we're dreadfully anxious to
know just how it was that you went into the Xingu."
There was a portentous pause, a silence so big with incalculable
dangers that the members with one accord checked the words on their
lips, like soldiers dropping their arms to watch a single combat between
their leaders. Then Mrs. Dane gave expression to their inmost dread by
saying sharply: "Ah -- you say the Xingu, do you?"
Mrs. Roby smiled undauntedly. "It is a shade pedantic, isn't it?
Personally, I always drop the article; but I don't know how the other
members feel about it."
The other members looked as though they would willingly have
dispensed with this deferential appeal to their opinion, and Mrs. Roby,
after a bright glance about the group, went on: "They probably think, as
I do, that nothing really matters except the thing itself -- except Xingu."
No immediate reply seemed to occur to Mrs. Dane, and Mrs. Ballinger
gathered courage to say: "Surely every one must feel that about Xingu."
Mrs. Plinth came to her support with a heavy murmur of assent, and
Laura Glyde breathed emotionally: "I have known cases where it has
changed a whole life."
"It has done me worlds of good," Mrs. Leveret interjected, seeming
to herself to remember that she had either taken it or read it in the
winter before.
"Of course," Mrs. Roby admitted, "the difficulty is that one must
give up so much time to it. It's very long."
"I can't imagine," said Miss Van Vluyck tartly, "grudging the time
given to such a subject."
"And deep in places," Mrs. Roby pursued; (so then it was a book!)
"And it isn't easy to skip."
"Ah, it's dangerous to, in Xingu. Even at the start there are
places where one can't. One must just wade through."
"I should hardly call it wading ," said Mrs. Ballinger
sarcastically.
Mrs. Roby sent her a look of interest. "Ah -- you always found it
went swimmingly?"
Mrs. Ballinger hesitated. "Of course there are difficult passages,"
she conceded modestly.
"Yes; some are not at all clear -- even," Mrs. Roby added, "if one
is familiar with the original."
"As I suppose you are?" Osric Dane interposed, suddenly fixing her
with a look of challenge.
Mrs. Roby met it by a deprecating smile. "Oh, it's really not
difficult up to a certain point; though some of the branches are very
little known, and it's almost impossible to get at the source."
"Have you ever tried?" Mrs. Plinth enquired, still distrustful of
Mrs. Roby's thoroughness.
Mrs. Roby was silent for a moment; then she replied with lowered
lids: "No -- but a friend of mine did; a very brilliant man; and he told
me it was best for women -- not to . . ."
A shudder ran around the room. Mrs. Leveret coughed so that the
parlour-maid, who was handing the cigarettes, should not hear; Miss Van
Vluyck's face took on a nauseated expression, and Mrs. Plinth looked as
if she were passing some one she did not care to bow to. But the most
remarkable result of Mrs. Roby's words was the effect they produced on
the Lunch Club's distinguished guest. Osric Dane's impassive features
suddenly melted to an expression of the warmest human sympathy, and
edging her chair toward Mrs. Roby's she asked: "Did he really? And --
did you find he was right?"
Mrs. Ballinger, in whom annoyance at Mrs. Roby's unwonted
assumption of prominence was beginning to displace gratitude for the aid
she had rendered, could not consent to her being allowed, by such
dubious means, to monopolise the attention of their guest. If Osric Dane
had not enough self-respect to resent Mrs. Roby's flippancy, at least
the Lunch Club would do so in the person of its President.
Mrs. Ballinger laid her hand on Mrs. Roby's arm. "We must not
forget," she said with a frigid amiability, "that absorbing as Xingu is
to US, it may be less interesting to --"
"Oh, no, on the contrary, I assure you," Osric Dane energetically
intervened.
" -- to others," Mrs. Ballinger finished firmly; "and we must not
allow our little meeting to end without persuading Mrs. Dane to say a
few words to us on a subject which, to-day, is much more present in all
our thoughts. I refer, of course, to 'The Wings of Death.'"
The other members, animated by various degrees of the same
sentiment, and encouraged by the humanised mien of their redoubtable
guest, repeated after Mrs. Ballinger: "Oh, yes, you really must talk
to us a little about your book."
Osric Dane's expression became as bored, though not as haughty, as
when her work had been previously mentioned. But before she could
respond to Mrs. Ballinger's request, Mrs. Roby had risen from her seat,
and was pulling her veil down over her frivolous nose.
"I'm so sorry," she said, advancing toward her hostess with
outstretched hand, "but before Mrs. Dane begins I think I'd better run
away. Unluckily, as you know, I haven't read her books, so I should be
at a terrible disadvantage among you all; and besides, I've an
engagement to play bridge."
If Mrs. Roby had simply pleaded her ignorance of Osric Dane's works
as a reason for withdrawing, the Lunch Club, in view of her recent
prowess, might have approved such evidence of discretion; but to couple
this excuse with the brazen announcement that she was foregoing the
privilege for the purpose of joining a bridgeparty, was only one more
instance of her deplorable lack of discrimination.
The ladies were disposed, however, to feel that her departure-now
that she had performed the sole service she was ever likely to render
them -- would probably make for greater order and dignity in the
impending discussion, besides relieving them of the sense of
self-distrust which her presence always mysteriously produced. Mrs.
Ballinger therefore restricted herself to a formal murmur of regret, and
the other members were just grouping themselves comfortably about Osric
Dane when the latter, to their dismay, started up from the sofa on which
she had been deferentially enthroned.
"Oh wait -- do wait, and I'll go with you!" she called out to Mrs.
Roby; and, seizing the hands of the disconcerted members, she
administered a series of farewell pressures with the mechanical haste of
a railway-conductor punching tickets.
"I'm so sorry -- I'd quite forgotten --" she flung back at them
from the threshold; and as she joined Mrs. Roby, who had turned in
surprise at her appeal, the other ladies had the mortification of
hearing her say, in a voice which she did not take the pains to lower:
"If you'll let me walk a little way with you, I should so like to ask
you a few more questions about Xingu . . ."
The incident had been so rapid that the door closed on the departing
pair before the other members had had time to understand what was
happening. Then a sense of the indignity put upon them by Osric Dane's
unceremonious desertion began to contend with the confused feeling that
they had been cheated out of their due without exactly knowing how or why.
There was an awkward silence, during which Mrs. Ballinger, with a
perfunctory hand, rearranged the skilfully grouped literature at which
her distinguished guest had not so much as glanced; then Miss Van Vluyck
tartly pronounced: "Well, I can't say that I consider Osric Dane's
departure a great loss."
This confession crystallised the fluid resentment of the other
members, and Mrs. Leveret exclaimed: "I do believe she came on purpose
to be nasty!"
It was Mrs. Plinth's private opinion that Osric Dane's attitude
toward the Lunch Club might have been very different had it welcomed her
in the majestic setting of the Plinth drawing-rooms; but not liking to
reflect on the inadequacy of Mrs. Ballinger's establishment she sought a
round-about satisfaction in depreciating her savoir faire.
"I said from the first that we ought to have had a subject ready.
It's what always happens when you're unprepared. Now if we'd only got up
Xingu --"
The slowness of Mrs. Plinth's mental processes was always allowed
for by the Club; but this instance of it was too much for Mrs.
Ballinger's equanimity.
"Xingu!" she scoffed. "Why, it was the fact of our knowing so much
more about it than she did -- unprepared though we were -- that made
Osric Dane so furious. I should have thought that was plain enough to
everybody!"
This retort impressed even Mrs. Plinth, and Laura Glyde, moved by
an impulse of generosity, said: "Yes, we really ought to be grateful to
Mrs. Roby for introducing the topic. It may have made Osric Dane
furious, but at least it made her civil."
"I am glad we were able to show her," added Miss Van Vluyck, "that
a broad and up-to-date culture is not confined to the great intellectual
centres."
This increased the satisfaction of the other members, and they
began to forget their wrath against Osric Dane in the pleasure of having
contributed to her defeat.
Miss Van Vluyck thoughtfully rubbed her spectacles. "What surprised
me most," she continued, "was that Fanny Roby should be so up on Xingu."
This frank admission threw a slight chill on the company, but Mrs.
Ballinger said with an air of indulgent irony: "Mrs. Roby always has the
knack of making a little go a long way; still, we certainly owe her a
debt for happening to remember that she'd heard of Xingu." And this was
felt by the other members to be a graceful way of cancelling once for
all the Club's obligation to Mrs. Roby.
Even Mrs. Leveret took courage to speed a timid shaft of irony: "I
fancy Osric Dane hardly expected to take a lesson in Xingu at Hillbridge!"
Mrs. Ballinger smiled. "When she asked me what we represented-do
you remember? -- I wish I'd simply said we represented Xingu!"
All the ladies laughed appreciatively at this sally, except Mrs.
Plinth, who said, after a moment's deliberation: "I'm not sure it would
have been wise to do so."
Mrs. Ballinger, who was already beginning to feel as if she had
launched at Osric Dane the retort which had just occurred to her, looked
ironically at Mrs. Plinth. "May I ask why?" she enquired.
Mrs. Plinth looked grave. "Surely," she said, "I understood from
Mrs. Roby herself that the subject was one it was as well not to go into
too deeply?"
Miss Van Vluyck rejoined with precision: "I think that applied only
to an investigation of the origin of the -- of the --"; and suddenly she
found that her usually accurate memory had failed her. "It's a part of
the subject I never studied myself," she concluded lamely.
Laura Glyde bent toward them with widened eyes. "And yet it seems
-- doesn't it? -- the part that is fullest of an esoteric fascination?"
"I don't know on what you base that," said Miss Van Vluyck
argumentatively.
"Well, didn't you notice how intensely interested Osric Dane became
as soon as she heard what the brilliant foreigner -- he was a
foreigner, wasn't he? -- had told Mrs. Roby about the origin -- the
origin of the rite -- or whatever you call it?"
Mrs. Plinth looked disapproving, and Mrs. Ballinger visibly
wavered. Then she said in a decisive tone: "It may not be desirable to
touch on the -- on that part of the subject in general conversation;
but, from the importance it evidently has to a woman of Osric Dane's
distinction, I feel as if we ought not to be afraid to discuss it among
ourselves -- without gloves -- though with closed doors, if necessary."
"I'm quite of your opinion," Miss Van Vluyck came briskly to her
support; "on condition, that is, that all grossness of language is
avoided."
"Oh, I'm sure we shall understand without that," Mrs. Leveret
tittered; and Laura Glyde added significantly: "I fancy we can read
between the lines," while Mrs. Ballinger rose to assure herself that the
doors were really closed.
Mrs. Plinth had not yet given her adhesion. "I hardly see," she
began, "what benefit is to be derived from investigating such peculiar
customs --"
But Mrs. Ballinger's patience had reached the extreme limit of
tension. "This at least," she returned; "that we shall not be placed
again in the humiliating position of finding ourselves less up on our
own subjects than Fanny Roby!"
Even to Mrs. Plinth this argument was conclusive. She peered
furtively about the room and lowered her commanding tones to ask: "Have
you got a copy?"
"A -- a copy?" stammered Mrs. Ballinger. She was aware that the
other members were looking at her expectantly, and that this answer was
inadequate, so she supported it by asking another question. "A copy of
what?"
Her companions bent their expectant gaze on Mrs. Plinth, who, in
turn, appeared less sure of herself than usual. "Why, of -- of-the
book," she explained.
"What book?" snapped Miss Van Vluyck, almost as sharply as Osric Dane.
Mrs. Ballinger looked at Laura Glyde, whose eyes were
interrogatively fixed on Mrs. Leveret. The fact of being deferred to was
so new to the latter that it filled her with an insane temerity. "Why,
Xingu, of course!" she exclaimed.
A profound silence followed this direct challenge to the resources
of Mrs. Ballinger's library, and the latter, after glancing nervously
toward the Books of the Day, returned in a deprecating voice: "It's not
a thing one cares to leave about."
"Yes, you did," Miss Van Vluyck insisted; "you spoke of rites; and
Mrs. Plinth said it was a custom."
Miss Glyde was evidently making a desperate effort to reinforce her
statement; but accuracy of detail was not her strongest point. At length
she began in a deep murmur: "Surely they used to do something of the
kind at the Eleusinian mysteries --"
"Oh --" said Miss Van Vluyck, on the verge of disapproval; and Mrs.
Plinth protested: "I understood there was to be no indelicacy!"
Mrs. Ballinger could not control her irritation. "Really, it is too
bad that we should not be able to talk the matter over quietly among
ourselves. Personally, I think that if one goes into Xingu at all --"
"Why -- it's a -- a Thought: I mean a philosophy."
This seemed to bring a certain relief to Mrs. Ballinger and Laura
Glyde, but Miss Van Vluyck said dogmatically: "Excuse me if I tell you
that you're all mistaken. Xingu happens to be a language."
"Certainly. Don't you remember Fanny Roby's saying that there were
several branches, and that some were hard to trace? What could that
apply to but dialects?"
Mrs. Ballinger could no longer restrain a contemptuous laugh.
"Really, if the Lunch Club has reached such a pass that it has to go to
Fanny Roby for instruction on a subject like Xingu, it had almost better
cease to exist!"
"It's really her fault for not being clearer," Laura Glyde put in.
"Oh, clearness and Fanny Roby!" Mrs. Ballinger shrugged. "I daresay
we shall find she was mistaken on almost every point."
As a rule this recurrent suggestion of Mrs. Plinth's was ignored in
the heat of discussion, and only resorted to afterward in the privacy of
each member's home. But on the present occasion the desire to ascribe
their own confusion of thought to the vague and contradictory nature of
Mrs. Roby's statements caused the members of the Lunch Club to utter a
collective demand for a book of reference.
At this point the production of her treasured volume gave Mrs.
Leveret, for a moment, the unusual experience of occupying the centre
front; but she was not able to hold it long, for Appropriate Allusions
contained no mention of Xingu.
"Oh, that's not the kind of thing we want!" exclaimed Miss Van
Vluyck. She cast a disparaging glance over Mrs. Ballinger's assortment
of literature, and added impatiently: "Haven't you any useful books?"
"Of course I have," replied Mrs. Ballinger indignantly; "but I keep
them in my husband's dressing-room."
From this region, after some difficulty and delay, the parlourmaid
produced the W-Z volume of an Encyclopaedia and, in deference to the
fact that the demand for it had come from Miss Van Vluyck, laid the
ponderous tome before her.
There was a moment of painful suspense while Miss Van Vluyck rubbed
her spectacles, adjusted them, and turned to Z; and a murmur of surprise
when she said: "It isn't here."
"I suppose," said Mrs. Plinth, "it's not fit to be put in a book of
reference."
Miss Van Vluyck turned back through the volume, peering
shortsightedly up and down the pages, till she came to a stop and
remained motionless, like a dog on a point.
"Well, have you found it?" Mrs. Ballinger enquired, after a
considerable delay.
"Yes. I've found it," said Miss Van Vluyck in a queer voice.
Mrs. Plinth hastily interposed: "I beg you won't read it aloud if
there's anything offensive."
Miss Van Vluyck, without answering, continued her silent scrutiny.
"Well, what is it?" exclaimed Laura Glyde excitedly.
"DO tell us!" urged Mrs. Leveret, feeling that she would have
something awful to tell her sister.
Miss Van Vluyck pushed the volume aside and turned slowly toward
the expectant group.
"For that matter, Miss Van Vluyck said she had never grudged the
time she'd given it."
Mrs. Plinth interposed: "I made it clear that I knew nothing
whatever of the original."
Mrs. Ballinger broke off the dispute with a groan. "Oh, what does
it all matter if she's been making fools of us? I believe Miss Van
Vluyck's right -- she was talking of the river all the while!"
"How could she? It's too preposterous," Miss Glyde exclaimed.
"Listen." Miss Van Vluyck had repossessed herself of the
Encyclopaedia, and restored her spectacles to a nose reddened by
excitement. "'The Xingu, one of the principal rivers of Brazil, rises on
the plateau of Mato Grosso, and flows in a northerly direction for a
length of no less than one thousand one hundred and eighteen miles,
entering the Amazon near the mouth of the latter river. The upper course
of the Xingu is auriferous and fed by numerous branches. Its source was
first discovered in 1884 by the German explorer von den Steinen, after a
difficult and dangerous expedition through a region inhabited by tribes
still in the Stone Age of culture.'"
The ladies received this communication in a state of stupefied
silence from which Mrs. Leveret was the first to rally. "She certainly
did speak of its having branches."
The word seemed to snap the last thread of their incredulity. "And
of its great length," gasped Mrs. Ballinger.
"She said it was awfully deep, and you couldn't skip -- you just
had to wade through," Miss Glyde subjoined.
The idea worked its way more slowly through Mrs. Plinth's compact
resistances. "How could there be anything improper about a river?" she
inquired.
"Why, what she said about the source -- that it was corrupt?"
"Not corrupt, but hard to get at," Laura Glyde corrected. "Some one
who'd been there had told her so. I daresay it was the explorer himself
-- doesn't it say the expedition was dangerous?"
"'Difficult and dangerous,'" read Miss Van Vluyck.
Mrs. Ballinger pressed her hands to her throbbing temples. "There's
nothing she said that wouldn't apply to a river -- to this river!" She
swung about excitedly to the other members. "Why, do you remember her
telling us that she hadn't read 'The Supreme Instant' because she'd
taken it on a boating party while she was staying with her brother, and
some one had 'shied' it overboard-'shied' of course was her own
expression?"
The ladies breathlessly signified that the expression had not
escaped them.
"Well -- and then didn't she tell Osric Dane that one of her books
was simply saturated with Xingu? Of course it was, if some of Mrs.
Roby's rowdy friends had thrown it into the river!"
This surprising reconstruction of the scene in which they had just
participated left the members of the Lunch Club inarticulate. At length
Mrs. Plinth, after visibly labouring with the problem, said in a heavy
tone: "Osric Dane was taken in too."
Mrs. Leveret took courage at this. "Perhaps that's what Mrs. Roby
did it for. She said Osric Dane was a brute, and she may have wanted to
give her a lesson."
Miss Van Vluyck frowned. "It was hardly worth while to do it at our
expense."
"At least," said Miss Glyde with a touch of bitterness, "she
succeeded in interesting her, which was more than we did."
"What chance had we?" rejoined Mrs. Ballinger. "Mrs. Roby
monopolised her from the first. And that, I've no doubt, was her
purpose -- to give Osric Dane a false impression of her own standing in
the Club. She would hesitate at nothing to attract attention: we all
know how she took in poor Professor Foreland."
"She actually makes him give bridge-teas every Thursday," Mrs.
Leveret piped up.
Laura Glyde struck her hands together. "Why, this is Thursday, and
it's there she's gone, of course; and taken Osric with her!"
"And they're shrieking over us at this moment," said Mrs. Ballinger
between her teeth.
This possibility seemed too preposterous to be admitted. "She would
hardly dare," said Miss Van Vluyck, "confess the imposture to Osric Dane."
"I'm not so sure: I thought I saw her make a sign as she left. If
she hadn't made a sign, why should Osric Dane have rushed out after her?"
"Well, you know, we'd all been telling her how wonderful Xingu was,
and she said she wanted to find out more about it," Mrs. Leveret said,
with a tardy impulse of justice to the absent.
This reminder, far from mitigating the wrath of the other members,
gave it a stronger impetus.
"Yes -- and that's exactly what they're both laughing over now,"
said Laura Glyde ironically.
Mrs. Plinth stood up and gathered her expensive furs about her
monumental form. "I have no wish to criticise," she said; "but unless
the Lunch Club can protect its members against the recurrence of such --
such unbecoming scenes, I for one --"
Miss Van Vluyck closed the Encyclopaedia and proceeded to button
herself into her jacket. "My time is really too valuable --" she began.
"I fancy we are all of one mind," said Mrs. Ballinger, looking
searchingly at Mrs. Leveret, who looked at the others.
"I always deprecate anything like a scandal --" Mrs. Plinth continued.
"She has been the cause of one to-day!" exclaimed Miss Glyde.
Mrs. Leveret moaned: "I don't see how she could!" and Miss Van
Vluyck said, picking up her note-book: "Some women stop at nothing."
" -- but if," Mrs. Plinth took up her argument impressively,
"anything of the kind had happened in my house" (it never would have,
her tone implied), "I should have felt that I owed it to myself either
to ask for Mrs. Roby's resignation -- or to offer mine."
"Fortunately for me," Mrs. Plinth continued with an awful
magnanimity, "the matter was taken out of my hands by our President's
decision that the right to entertain distinguished guests was a
privilege vested in her office; and I think the other members will agree
that, as she was alone in this opinion, she ought to be alone in
deciding on the best way of effacing its -- its really deplorable
consequences."
A deep silence followed this unexpected outbreak of Mrs. Plinth's
long-stored resentment.
"I don't see why I should be expected to ask her to resign --" Mrs.
Ballinger at length began; but Laura Glyde turned back to remind her:
"You know she made you say that you'd got on swimmingly in Xingu."
An ill-timed giggle escaped from Mrs. Leveret, and Mrs. Ballinger
energetically continued " -- but you needn't think for a moment that I'm
afraid to!"
The door of the drawing-room closed on the retreating backs of the
Lunch Club, and the President of that distinguished association, seating
herself at her writing-table, and pushing away a copy of "The Wings of
Death" to make room for her elbow, drew forth a sheet of the club's
note-paper, on which she began to write: "My dear Mrs. Roby --"