Chapter 20

Some fortnight after this Madame Merle drove up in a hansom cab to the house in Winchester Square. As she descended from her vehicle she observed, suspended between the dining-room windows, a large, neat, wooden tablet, on whose fresh black ground were inscribed in white paint the words—‘This noble freehold mansion to be sold’; with the name of the agent to whom application should be made. ‘They certainly lose no time,’ said the visitor as, after sounding the big brass knocker, she waited to be admitted; ‘it’s a practical country!’ And within the house, as she ascended to the drawing-room, she perceived numerous signs of abdication; pictures removed from the wall and placed upon sofas, windows undraped and floors laid bare. Mrs Touchett presently received her and intimated in a few words that condolences might be taken for granted.

‘I know what you’re going to say—he was a very good man. But I know it better than any one, because I gave him more chance to show it. In that I think I was a good wife.’ Mrs Touchett added that at the end her husband apparently recognized this fact. ‘He has treated me most liberally,’ she said; ‘I won’t say more liberally that I expected, because I didn’t expect. You know that as a general thing I don’t expect. But he chose, I presume, to recognize the fact that though I lived much abroad and mingled—you may say freely—in foreign life, I never exhibited the smallest preference for any one else.’

‘For any one but yourself,’ Madame Merle mentally observed; but the reflexion was perfectly inaudible.

‘I never sacrificed my husband to another,’ Mrs Touchett continued with her stout curtness.

‘Oh no,’ thought Madame Merle; ‘you never did anything for another!’

There was a certain cynicism in these mute comments which demands an explanation; the more so as they are not in accord either with the view—somewhat superficial perhaps—that we have hitherto enjoyed of Madame Merle’s character or with the literal facts of Mrs Touchett’s history; the more so, too, as Madame Merle had a well-founded conviction that her friend’s last remark was not in the least to be construed as a side-thrust at herself. The truth is that the moment she had crossed the threshold she received an impression that Mr Touchett’s death had had subtle consequences and that these consequences had been profitable to a little circle of persons among whom she was not numbered. Of course it was an event which would naturally have consequences; her imagination had more than once rested upon this fact during her stay at Gardencourt. But it had been one thing to foresee such a matter mentally and another to stand among its massive records. The idea of a distribution of property—she would almost have said of spoils—just now pressed upon her senses and irritated her with a sense of exclusion. I am far from wishing to picture her as one of the hungry mouths or envious hearts of the general herd, but we have already learned of her having desires that had never been satisfied. If she had been questioned, she would of course have admitted—with a fine proud smile—that she had not the faintest claim to a share in Mr Touchett’s relics. ‘There was never anything in the world between us,’ she would have said. ‘There was never that, poor man!’—with a fillip of her thumb and her third finger. I hasten to add, moreover, that if she couldn’t at the present moment keep from quite perversely yearning she was careful not to betray herself. She had after all as much sympathy for Mrs Touchett’s gains as for her losses.

‘He has left me this house,’ the newly-made widow said; ‘but of course I shall not live in it; I’ve a much better one in Florence. The will was opened only three days since, but I’ve already offered the house for sale. I’ve also a share in the bank; but I don’t yet understand if I’m obliged to leave it there. If not I shall certainly take it out. Ralph, of course, has Gardencourt; but I’m not sure that he’ll have means to keep up the place. He’s naturally left very well off, but his father has given away an immense deal of money; there are bequests to a string of third cousins in Vermont. Ralph, however, is very fond of Gardencourt and would be quite capable of living there—in summer—with a maid-of-all-work and a gardener’s boy. There’s one remarkable clause in my husband’s will,’ Mrs Touchett added. ‘He has left my niece a fortune.’

‘A fortune!’ Madame Merle softly repeated.

‘Isabel steps into something like seventy thousand pounds.’


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