7. VII
"Then you do see them?" the girl again asked.
Mrs. Jordan hesitated, and indeed the point had been ambiguous before.
"Do you mean the guests?"
Her young friend, cautious about an undue exposure of innocence, was not
quite sure. "Well--the people who live there."
"Lady Ventnor? Mrs. Bubb? Lord Rye? Dear, yes. Why they like one."
"But does one personally know them?" our young lady went on, since that
was the way to speak. "I mean socially, don't you know?--as you know
me."
"They're not so nice as you!" Mrs. Jordan charmingly cried. "But I
shall see more and more of them."
Ah this was the old story. "But how soon?"
"Why almost any day. Of course," Mrs.
Jordan honestly added, "they're
nearly always out."
"Then why do they want flowers all over?"
"Oh that doesn't make any difference." Mrs. Jordan was not philosophic;
she was just evidently determined it shouldn't make any. "They're
awfully interested in my ideas, and it's inevitable they should meet me
over them."
Her interlocutress was sturdy enough. "What do you call your ideas?"
Mrs. Jordan's reply was fine. "If you were to see me some day with a
thousand tulips you'd discover."
"A thousand?"--the girl gaped at such a revelation of the scale of it;
she felt for the instant fairly planted out. "Well, but if in fact they
never do meet you?" she none the less pessimistically insisted.
"Never? They often do--and evidently quite on purpose. We have grand
long talks."
There was something in our young lady that could still stay her from
asking for a
personal description of these apparitions; that showed too
starved a state. But while she considered she took in afresh the whole
of the clergyman's widow. Mrs. Jordan couldn't help her teeth, and her
sleeves were a distinct rise in the world. A thousand tulips at a
shilling clearly took one further than a thousand words at a penny; and
the betrothed of Mr. Mudge, in whom the sense of the race for life was
always acute, found herself wondering, with a twinge of her easy
jealousy, if it mightn't after all then, for
her also, be better--better
than where she was--to follow some such scent. Where she was was where
Mr. Buckton's elbow could freely enter her right side and the counter-
clerk's breathing--he had something the matter with his nose--pervade her
left ear. It was something to fill an office under Government, and she
knew but too well there were places commoner still than Cocker's; but it
needed no great range of taste to bring home to her the picture of
servitude and promiscuity that she must
present to the eye of
comparative freedom. She was so boxed up with her young men, and
anything like a margin so absent, that it needed more art than she should
ever possess to pretend in the least to compass, with any one in the
nature of an acquaintance--say with Mrs. Jordan herself, flying in, as it
might happen, to wire sympathetically to Mrs. Bubb--an approach to a
relation of elegant privacy. She remembered the day when Mrs. Jordan
had, in fact, by the greatest chance, come in with fifty-three words
for Lord Rye and a five-pound note to change. This had been the dramatic
manner of their reunion--their mutual recognition was so great an event.
The girl could at first only see her from the waist up, besides making
but little of her long telegram to his lordship. It was a strange
whirligig that had converted the clergyman's widow into such a specimen
of the class that went beyond the sixpence.
Nothing of the occasion, all the more, had ever become dim; least of all
the way that,
as her recovered friend looked up from counting, Mrs.
Jordan had just blown, in explanation, through her teeth and through the
bars of the cage: "I
do flowers, you know." Our young woman had
always, with her little finger crooked out, a pretty movement for
counting; and she had not forgotten the small secret advantage, a
sharpness of triumph it might even have been called, that fell upon her
at this moment and avenged her for the incoherence of the message, an
unintelligible enumeration of numbers, colours, days, hours. The
correspondence of people she didn't know was one thing; but the
correspondence of people she did had an aspect of its own for her even
when she couldn't understand it. The speech in which Mrs. Jordan had
defined a position and announced a profession was like a tinkle of
bluebells; but for herself her one idea about flowers was that people had
them at funerals, and her present sole gleam of light was that lords
probably had them most. When she watched, a minute
later, through the
cage, the swing of her visitor's departing petticoats, she saw the sight
from the waist down; and when the counter-clerk, after a mere male
glance, remarked, with an intention unmistakeably low, "Handsome woman!"
she had for him the finest of her chills: "She's the widow of a bishop."
She always felt, with the counter-clerk, that it was impossible
sufficiently to put it on; for what she wished to express to him was the
maximum of her contempt, and that element in her nature was confusedly
stored. "A bishop" was putting it on, but the counter-clerk's approaches
were vile. The night, after this, when, in the fulness of time, Mrs.
Jordan mentioned the grand long talks, the girl at last brought out:
"Should
I see them?--I mean if I
were to give up everything for you."
Mrs. Jordan at this became most arch. "I'd send you to all the
bachelors!"
Our young lady could be reminded by such a remark that she usually struck
her friend as pretty. "Do they have their flowers?"
"Oceans. And they're the most particular." Oh it was a wonderful world.
"You should see Lord Rye's."
"His flowers?"
"Yes, and his letters. He writes me pages on pages--with the most
adorable little drawings and plans. You should see his diagrams!"