<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<p>Mr. Mudge had lately been so occupied with their famous “plans”
that he had neglected for a while the question of her transfer; but
down at Bournemouth, which had found itself selected as the field of
their recreation by a process consisting, it seemed, exclusively of
innumerable pages of the neatest arithmetic in a very greasy but most
orderly little pocket-book, the distracting possible melted away—the
fleeting absolute ruled the scene. The plans, hour by hour, were
simply superseded, and it was much of a rest to the girl, as she sat
on the pier and overlooked the sea and the company, to see them evaporate
in rosy fumes and to feel that from moment to moment there was less
left to cipher about. The week proves blissfully fine, and her
mother, at their lodgings—partly to her embarrassment and partly
to her relief—struck up with the landlady an alliance that left
the younger couple a great deal of freedom. This relative took
her pleasure of a week at Bournemouth in a stuffy back-kitchen and endless
talks; to that degree even that Mr. Mudge himself—habitually inclined
indeed to a scrutiny of all mysteries and to seeing, as he sometimes
admitted, too much in things—made remarks on it as he sat on the
cliff with his betrothed, or on the decks of steamers that conveyed
them, close-packed items in terrific totals of enjoyment, to the Isle
of Wight and the Dorset coast.</p>
<p>He had a lodging in another house, where he had speedily learned
the importance of keeping his eyes open, and he made no secret of his
suspecting that sinister mutual connivances might spring, under the
roof of his companions, from unnatural sociabilities. At the same
time he fully recognised that as a source of anxiety, not to say of
expense, his future mother-in law would have weighted them more by accompanying
their steps than by giving her hostess, in the interest of the tendency
they considered that they never mentioned, equivalent pledges as to
the tea-caddy and the jam-pot. These were the questions—these
indeed the familiar commodities—that he had now to put into the
scales; and his betrothed had in consequence, during her holiday, the
odd and yet pleasant and almost languid sense of an anticlimax.
She had become conscious of an extraordinary collapse, a surrender to
stillness and to retrospect. She cared neither to walk nor to
sail; it was enough for her to sit on benches and wonder at the sea
and taste the air and not be at Cocker’s and not see the counter-clerk.
She still seemed to wait for something—something in the key of
the immense discussions that had mapped out their little week of idleness
on the scale of a world-atlas. Something came at last, but without
perhaps appearing quite adequately to crown the monument.</p>
<p>Preparation and precaution were, however, the natural flowers of
Mr. Mudge’s mind, and in proportion as these things declined in
one quarter they inevitably bloomed elsewhere. He could always,
at the worst, have on Tuesday the project of their taking the Swanage
boat on Thursday, and on Thursday that of their ordering minced kidneys
on Saturday. He had moreover a constant gift of inexorable enquiry
as to where and what they should have gone and have done if they hadn’t
been exactly as they were. He had in short his resources, and
his mistress had never been so conscious of them; on the other hand
they never interfered so little with her own. She liked to be
as she was—if it could only have lasted. She could accept
even without bitterness a rigour of economy so great that the little
fee they paid for admission to the pier had to be balanced against other
delights. The people at Ladle’s and at Thrupp’s had
<i>their</i> ways of amusing themselves, whereas she had to sit and
hear Mr. Mudge talk of what he might do if he didn’t take a bath,
or of the bath he might take if he only hadn’t taken something
else. He was always with her now, of course, always beside her;
she saw him more than “hourly,” more than ever yet, more
even than he had planned she should do at Chalk Farm. She preferred
to sit at the far end, away from the band and the crowd; as to which
she had frequent differences with her friend, who reminded her often
that they could have only in the thick of it the sense of the money
they were getting back. That had little effect on her, for she
got back her money by seeing many things, the things of the past year,
fall together and connect themselves, undergo the happy relegation that
transforms melancholy and misery, passion and effort, into experience
and knowledge.</p>
<p>She liked having done with them, as she assured herself she had practically
done, and the strange thing was that she neither missed the procession
now nor wished to keep her place for it. It had become there,
in the sun and the breeze and the sea-smell, a far-away story, a picture
of another life. If Mr. Mudge himself liked processions, liked
them at Bournemouth and on the pier quite as much as at Chalk Farm or
anywhere, she learned after a little not to be worried by his perpetual
counting of the figures that made them up. There were dreadful
women in particular, usually fat and in men’s caps and write shoes,
whom he could never let alone—not that she cared; it was not the
great world, the world of Cocker’s and Ladle’s and Thrupp’s,
but it offered an endless field to his faculties of memory, philosophy,
and frolic. She had never accepted him so much, never arranged
so successfully for making him chatter while she carried on secret conversations.
This separate commerce was with herself; and if they both practised
a great thrift she had quite mastered that of merely spending words
enough to keep him imperturbably and continuously going.</p>
<p>He was charmed with the panorama, not knowing—or at any rate
not at all showing that he knew—what far other images peopled
her mind than the women in the navy caps and the shop-boys in the blazers.
His observations on these types, his general interpretation of the show,
brought home to her the prospect of Chalk Farm. She wondered sometimes
that he should have derived so little illumination, during his period,
from the society at Cocker’s. But one evening while their
holiday cloudlessly waned he gave her such a proof of his quality as
might have made her ashamed of her many suppressions. He brought
out something that, in all his overflow, he had been able to keep back
till other matters were disposed of. It was the announcement that
he was at last ready to marry—that he saw his way. A rise
at Chalk Farm had been offered him; he was to be taken into the business,
bringing with him a capital the estimation of which by other parties
constituted the handsomest recognition yet made of the head on his shoulders.
Therefore their waiting was over—it could be a question of a near
date. They would settle this date before going back, and he meanwhile
had his eye on a sweet little home. He would take her to see it
on their first Sunday.</p>
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