The Enchanted April eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Enchanted April.

The Enchanted April eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Enchanted April.

It was enough to root anybody.  Lady Caroline shaking hands with what evidently, if he had had clothes on, would have been Mrs. Wilkins’s husband, and both of them conversing just as if—­

Then Scrap became away of Mrs. Fisher.  She turned to her at once.  “Do let me,” she said gracefully, “introduce Mr. Mellersh-Wilkins.  He has just come.  This,” she added, turning to Mr. Wilkins, “is Mrs. Fisher.”

And Mr. Wilkins, nothing if not courteous, reacted at once to the conventional formula.  First he bowed to the elderly lady in the doorway, then he crossed over to her, his wet feet leaving footprints as he went, and having got to her he politely held out his hand.

“It is a pleasure,” said Mr. Wilkins in his carefully modulated voice, “to meet a friend of my wife’s.”

Scrap melted away down into the garden.

Chapter 15

The strange effect of this incident was that when they met that evening at dinner both Mrs. Fisher and Lady Caroline had a singular feeling of secret understanding with Mr. Wilkins.  He could not be to them as other men.  He could not be to them as he would have been if they had met him in his clothes.  There was a sense of broken ice; they felt at once intimate and indulgent; almost they felt to him as nurses do—­as those feel who have assisted either patients or young children at their baths.  They were acquainted with Mr. Wilkins’s legs.

What Mrs. Fisher said to him that morning in her first shock will never be known, but what Mr. Wilkins said to her in reply, when reminded by what she was saying of his condition, was so handsome in its apology, so proper in its confusion, that she had ended by being quite sorry for him and completely placated.  After all, it was an accident, and nobody could help accidents.  And when she saw him next at dinner, dressed, polished, spotless as to linen and sleek as to hair, she felt this singular sensation of a secret understanding with him and, added to it, of a kind of almost personal pride in his appearance, now that he was dressed, which presently extended in some subtle way to an almost personal pride in everything he said.

There was no doubt whatever in Mrs. Fisher’s mind that a man was infinitely preferable as a companion to a woman.  Mr. Wilkins’s presence and conversation at once raised the standard of the dinner-table from that of a bear garden—­yes, a bear garden—­to that of a civilized social gathering.  He talked as men talk, about interesting subjects, and, though most courteous to Lady Caroline, showed no traces of dissolving into simpers and idiocy whenever he addressed her.  He was, indeed, precisely as courteous to Mrs. Fisher herself; and when for the first time at that table politics were introduced, he listened to her with the proper seriousness on her exhibiting a desire to speak, and treated her opinions with the attention they deserved.  He appeared to think much as she did about Lloyd George, and in regard to literature he was equally sound.  In fact there was real conversation, and he liked nuts.  How he could have married Mrs. Wilkins was a mystery.

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The Enchanted April from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.