Roman Fever Edith Wharton (1862-1937)
From the table at which they had been lunching two American
ladies of ripe but well-cared-for middle age moved across the lofty terrace of
the Roman restaurant and, leaning on its parapet, looked first at each other,
and then down on the outspread glories of the Palatine and the Forum, with the
same expression of vague but benevolent approval.
As they leaned there a girlish voice echoed up gaily from
the stairs leading to the court below. "Well, come along, then," it
cried, not to them but to an invisible companion, "and let's leave the
young things to their knitting," and a voice as fresh laughed back:
"Oh, look here, Babs, not actually knitting—" "Well, I mean
figuratively," rejoined the first. "After all, we haven't left our
poor parents much else to do.. . ." At that point the turn of the stairs
engulfed the dialogue.
The two ladies looked at each other again, this time with a
tinge of smiling embarrassment, and the smaller and paler one shook her head
and colored slightly.
"Barbara!" she murmured, sending an unheard
rebuke after the mocking voice in the stairway.
The other lady, who was fuller, and higher in color, with a
small determined nose supported by vigorous black eyebrows, gave a good-humored
laugh. "That's what our daughters think of us."
Her companion replied by a deprecating gesture. "Not
of us individually. We must remember that. It's just the collective modern idea
of Mothers. And you see—" Half guiltily she drew from her handsomely
mounted black handbag a twist of crimson silk run through by two fine knitting
needles. "One never knows," she murmured. "The new system has
certainly given us a good deal of time to kill; and sometimes I get tired just
looking—even at this." Her gesture was now addressed to the stupendous
scene at their feet.
The dark lady laughed again, and they both relapsed upon
the view, contemplating it in silence, with a sort of diffused serenity which
might have been borrowed from the spring effulgence of the Roman skies. The
luncheon hour was long past, and the two had their end of the vast terrace to
themselves. At its opposite extremity a few groups, detained by a lingering
look at the outspread city, were gathering up guidebooks and fumbling for tips.
The last of them scattered, and the two ladies were alone on the air-washed
height.
"Well, I don't see why we shouldn't just stay
here," said Mrs. Slade, the lady of the high color and energetic brows.
Two derelict basket chairs stood near, and she pushed them into the angle of
the parapet, and settled herself in one, her gaze upon the Palatine.
"After all, it's still the most beautiful view in the world."
"It always will be, to me," assented her friend
Mrs. Ansley, with so slight a stress on the "me" that Mrs. Slade,
though she noticed it, wondered if it were not merely accidental, like the
random underlinings of old-fashioned letter writers.
"Grace Ansley was always old-fashioned," she
thought; and added aloud, with a retrospective smile: "It's a view we've
both been familiar with for a good many years. When we first met here we were
younger than our girls are now. You remember!"
"Oh, yes, I remember," murmured Mrs. Ansley, with
the same undefinable stress—"There's that head-waiter wondering," she
interpolated. She was evidently far less sure than her companion of herself and
of her rights in the world.
"I'll cure him of wondering," said Mrs. Slade,
stretching her hand toward a bag as discreetly opulent-looking as Mrs.
Ansley's. Signing to the headwaiter, she explained that she and her friend were
old lovers of Rome, and would like to spend the end of the afternoon looking
down on the view—that is, if it did not disturb the service! The headwaiter,
bowing over her gratuity, assured her that the ladies were most welcome, and
would be still more so if they would condescend to remain for dinner. A full
moon night, they would remember....
Mrs. Slade's black brows drew together, as though
references to the moon were out of place and even unwelcome. But she smiled
away her frown as the headwaiter retreated. "Well, why not! We might do
worse. There's no knowing, I suppose, when the girls will be back. Do you even
know back from where? I don't!"
Mrs. Ansley again colored slightly. "I think those
young Italian aviators we met at the Embassy invited them to fly to Tarquinia
for tea. I suppose they'll want to wait and fly back by moonlight."
"Moonlight—moonlight! What a part it still plays. Do
you suppose they're as sentimental as we were?"
"I've come to the conclusion that I don't in the least
know what they are," said Mrs. Ansley. "And perhaps we didn't know
much more about each other."
"No, perhaps we didn't."
Her friend gave her a shy glance. "I never should have
supposed you were sentimental, Alida."
"Well, perhaps I wasn't." Mrs. Slade drew her
lids together in retrospect; and for a few moments the two ladies, who had been
intimate since childhood, reflected how little they knew each other. Each one,
of course, had a label ready to attach to the other's name; Mrs. Delphin Slade,
for instance, would have told herself, or anyone who asked her, that Mrs.
Horace Ansley, twentyfive years ago, had been exquisitely lovely—no, you
wouldn't believe it, would you! though, of course, still charming,
distinguished.... Well, as a girl she had been exquisite; far more beautiful
than her daughter, Barbara, though certainly Babs, according to the new
standards at any rate, was more effective—had more edge, as they say. Funny
where she got it, with those two nullities as parents. Yes; Horace Ansley
was—well, just the duplicate of his wife. Museum specimens of old New York.
Good-looking, irreproachable, exemplary. Mrs. Slade and Mrs. Ansley had lived
opposite each other—actually as well as figuratively—for years. When the
drawing-room curtains in No. 20 East Seventy-third Street were renewed, No. 23,
across the way, was always aware of it. And of all the movings, buyings,
travels, anniversaries, illnesses—the tame chronicle of an estimable pair.
Little of it escaped Mrs. Slade. But she had grown bored with it by the time
her husband made his big coup in Wall Street, and when they bought in upper
Park Avenue had already begun to think: "I'd rather live opposite a
speakeasy for a change; at least one might see it raided." The idea of
seeing Grace raided was so amusing that (before the move) she launched it at a
woman's lunch. It made a hit, and went the rounds—she sometimes wondered if it
had crossed the street, and reached Mrs. Ansley. She hoped not, but didn't much
mind. Those were the days when respectability was at a discount, and it did the
irreproachable no harm to laugh at them a little.
A few years later, and not many months apart, both ladies
lost their husbands. There was an appropriate exchange of wreaths and
condolences, and a brief renewal of intimacy in the half shadow of their
mourning; and now, after another interval, they had run across each other in
Rome, at the same hotel, each of them the modest appendage of a salient
daughter. The similarity of their lot had again drawn them together, lending
itself to mild jokes, and the mutual confession that, if in old days it must
have been tiring to "keep up" with daughters, it was now, at times, a
little dull not to.
No doubt, Mrs. Slade reflected, she felt her unemployment
more than poor Grace ever would. It was a big drop from being the wife of
Delphin Slade to being his widow. She had always regarded herself (with a
certain conjugal pride) as his equal in social gifts, as contributing her full
share to the making of the exceptional couple they were: but the difference
after his death was irremediable. As the wife of the famous corporation lawyer,
always with an international case or two on hand, every day brought its
exciting and unexpected obligation: the impromptu entertaining of eminent
colleagues from abroad, the hurried dashes on legal business to London, Paris
or Rome, where the entertaining was so handsomely reciprocated; the amusement
of hearing in her wakes: "What, that handsome woman with the good clothes
and the eyes is Mrs. Slade—the Slade's wife! Really! Generally the wives of
celebrities are such frumps."
Yes; being the Slade's widow was a dullish business after
that. In living up to such a husband all her faculties had been engaged; now
she had only her daughter to live up to, for the son who seemed to have
inherited his father's gifts had died suddenly in boyhood. She had fought
through that agony because her husband was there, to be help ed and to help ;
now, after the father's death, the thought of the boy had become unbearable.
There was nothing left but to mother her daughter; and dear Jenny was such a
perfect daughter that she needed no excessive mothering. "Now with Babs
Ansley I don't know that I should be so quiet," Mrs. Slade sometimes
halfenviously reflected; but Jenny, who was younger than her brilliant friend,
was that rare accident, an extremely pretty girl who somehow made youth and
prettiness seem as safe as their absence. It was all perplexing—and to Mrs.
Slade a little boring. She wished that Jenny would fall in love—with the wrong
man, even; that she might have to be watched, out-maneuvered, rescued. And
instead, it was Jenny who watched her mother, kept her out of drafts, made sure
that she had taken her tonic...
Mrs. Ansley was much less articulate than her friend, and
her mental portrait of Mrs. Slade was slighter, and drawn with fainter touches.
"Alida Slade's awfully brilliant; but not as brilliant as she
thinks," would have summed it up; though she would have added, for the
enlightenment of strangers, that Mrs. Slade had been an extremely dashing girl;
much more so than her daughrer, who was pretty, of course, and clever in a way,
but had none of her mother's—well, "vividness," someone had once
called it. Mrs. Ansley would take up current words like this, and cite them in
quotation marks, as unheard-of audacities. No; Jenny was not like her mother.
Sometimes Mrs. Ansley thought Alida Slade was disappointed; on the whole she
had had a sad life. Full of failures and mistakes; Mrs. Ansley had always been
rather sorry for her....
So these two ladies visualized each other, each through the
wrong end of her little telescope.
II
For a long time they continued to sit side by side without
speaking. It seemed as though, to both, there was a relief in laying down their
somewhat futile activities in the presence of the vast Memento Mori which faced
them. Mrs. Slade sat quite still, her eyes fixed on the golden slope of the
Palace of the Caesars, and after a while Mrs. Ansley ceased to fidget with her
bag, and she too sank into meditation. Like many intimate friends, the two
ladies had never before had occasion to be silent together, and Mrs. Ansley was
slightly embarrassed by what seemed, after so many years, a new stage in their
intimacy, and one with which she did not yet know how to deal.
Suddenly the air was full of that deep clangor of bells
which periodically covers Rome with a roof of silver. Mrs. Slade glanced at her
wristwatch. "Five o'clock already," she said, as though surprised.
Mrs. Ansley suggested interrogatively: "There's bridge
at the Embassy at five." For a long time Mrs. Slade did not answer. She
appeared to be lost in contemplation, and Mrs. Ansley thought the remark had
escaped her. But after a while she said, as if speaking out of a dream:
"Bridge, did you say! Not unless you want to.... But I don't think I will,
you know."
"Oh, no," Mrs. Ansley hastened to assure her.
"I don't care to at all. It's so lovely here; and so full of old memories,
as you say." She settled herself in her chair, and almost furtively drew
forth her knitting. Mrs. Slade took sideways note of this activity, but her own
beautifully cared-for hands remained motionless on her knee.
"I was just thinking," she said slowly,
"what different things Rome stands for to each generation of travelers. To
our grandmothers, Roman fever; to our mothers, sentimental dangers—how we used
to be guarded!—to our daughters, no more dangers than the middle of Main
Street. They don't know it—but how much they're missing!"
The long golden light was beginning to pale, and Mrs.
Ansley lifted her knitting a little closer to her eyes. "Yes, how we were
guarded"
"I always used to think," Mrs. Slade continued,
"that our mothers had a much more difficult job than our grandmothers.
When Roman fever stalked the streets it must have been comparatively easy to
gather in the girls at the danger hour; but when you and I were young, with
such beauty calling us, and the spice of disobedience thrown in, and no worse
risk than catching cold during the cool hour after sunset, the mothers used to
be put to it to keep us in—didn't they!"
She turned again toward Mrs. Ansley, but the latter had
reached a delicate point in her knitting. "One, two, three—slip two; yes,
they must have been," she assented, without looking up.
Mrs. Slade's eyes rested on her with a deepened attention.
"She can knit—in the face of this!
How like her.... "
Mrs. Slade leaned back, brooding, her eyes ranging from the
ruins which faced her to the long green hollow of the Forum, the fading glow of
the church fronts beyond it, and the outlying immensity of the Colosseum.
Suddenly she thought: "It's all very well to say that our girls have done
away with sentiment and moonlight. But if Babs Ansley isn't out to catch that
young aviator—the one who's a Marchese—then I don't know anything. And Jenny
has no chance beside her. I know that too. I wonder if that's why Grace Ansley
likes the two girls to go everywhere together! My poor Jenny as a foil—!"
Mrs. Slade gave a hardly audible laugh, and at the sound Mrs. Ansley dropped
her knitting.
"Yes—?"
"I—oh, nothing. I was only thinking how your Babs
carries everything before her. That Campolieri boy is one of the best matches
in Rome. Don't look so innocent, my dear—you know he is. And I was wondering,
ever so respectfully, you understand... wondering how two such exemplary
characters as you and Horace had managed to produce anything quite so
dynamic." Mrs. Slade laughed again, with a touch of asperity.
Mrs. Ansley's hands lay inert across her needles. She
looked straight out at the great accumulated wreckage of passion and splendor
at her feet. But her small profile was almost expressionless. At length she
said, "I think you overrate Babs, my dear."
Mrs. Slade's tone grew easier. "No; I don't. I
appreciate her. And perhaps envy you. Oh, my girl's perfect; if I were a
chronic invalid I'd—well, I think I'd rather be in Jenny's hands. There must be
times... but there! I always wanted a brilliant daughter... and never quite
understood why I got an angel instead."
Mrs. Ansley echoed her laugh in a faint murmur. "Babs
is an angel too."
"Of course—of course! But she's got rainbow wings.
Well, they're wandering by the sea with their young men; and here we sit... and
it all brings back the past a little too acutely."
Mrs. Ansley had resumed her knitting. One might almost have
imagined (if one had known her less well, Mrs. Slade reflected) that, for her
also, too many memories rose from the lengthening shadows of those august
ruins. But no; she was simply absorbed in her work. What was there for her to
worry about! She knew that Babs would almost certainly come back engaged to the
extremely eligible Campolieri. "And she'll sell the New York house, and
settle down near them in Rome, and never be in their way... she's much too
tactful. But she'll have an excellent cook, and just the right people in for
bridge and cocktails... and a perfectly peacefuI old age among her
grandchildren."
Mrs. Slade broke off this prophetic flight with a recoil of
self-disgust. There was no one of whom she had less right to think unkindly
than of Grace Ansley. Would she never cure herself of envying her! Perhaps she
had begun too long ago.
She stood up and leaned against the parapet, filling her
troubled eyes with the tranquilizing magic of the hour. But instead of
tranquilizing her the sight seemed to increase her exasperation. Her gaze
turned toward the Colosseum. Already its golden flank was drowned in purple
shadow, and above it the sky curved crystal clear, without light or color. It
was the moment when afternoon and evening hang balanced in midheaven.
Mrs. Slade turned back and laid her hand on her friend's
arm. The gesture was so abrupt that Mrs. Ansley looked up, startled.
"The sun's set. You're not afraid, my dear?"
"Afraid—?"
"Of Roman fever or pneumonia! I remember how ill you
were that winter. As a girl you had a very delicate throat, hadn't you?"
"Oh, we're all right up here. Down below, in the
Forum, it does get deathly cold, all of a sudden... but not here."
"Ah, of course you know because you had to be so
careful." Mrs. Slade turned back to the parapet. She thought: "I must
make one more effort not to hate her." Aloud she said: "Whenever I
look at the Forum from up here, I remember that story about a great-aunt of
yours, wasn't she? A dreadfully wicked great-aunt?"
"Oh, yes; Great-aunt Harriet. The one who was supposed
to have sent her young sister out to the Forum after sunset to gather a
nightblooming flower for her album. All our great-aunts and grandmothers used
to have albums of dried flowers."
Mrs. Slade nodded. "But she really sent her because
they were in love with the same man—"
"Well, that was the family tradition. They said Aunt
Harriet confessed it years afterward. At any rate, the poor little sister
caught the fever and died. Mother used to frighten us with the story when we
were children."
"And you frightened me with it, that winter when you
and I were here as girls. The winter I was engaged to Delphin."
Mrs. Ansley gave a faint laugh. "Oh, did I! Really
frightened you? I don't believe you're easily frightened."
"Not often; but I was then. I was easily frightened
because I was too happy. I wonder if you know what that means?"
"I—yes... " Mrs. Ansley faltered.
"Well, I suppose that was why the story of your wicked
aunt made such an impression on me. And I thought: 'There's no more Roman
fever, but the Forum is deathly cold after sunset— especially after a hot day.
And the Colosseum's even colder and damper.'"
"The Colosseum—?"
"Yes. It wasn't easy to get in, after the gates were
locked for the night. Far from easy. Still, in those days it could be managed;
it was managed, often. Lovers met there who couldn't meet elsewhere. You knew
that?"
"I—I daresay. I don't remember."
"You don't remember? You don't remember going to visit
some ruins or other one evening, just after dark, and catching a bad chill! You
were supposed to have gone to see the moonrise. People always said that
expedition was what caused your illness."
There was a moment's silence; then Mrs. Ansley rejoined:
"Did they? It was all so long ago."
"Yes. And you got well again—so it didn't matter. But
I suppose it struck your friends—the reason given for your illness. I
mean—because everybody knew you were so prudent on account of your throat, and
your mother took such care of you.... You had been out late sightseeing, hadn't
you, that night"
"Perhaps I had. The most prudent girls aren't always
prudent. What made you think of it now?"
Mrs. Slade seemed to have no answer ready. But after a
moment she broke out: "Because I simply can't bear it any longer—"
Mrs. Ansley lifted her head quickly. Her eyes were wide and
very pale. "Can't bear what?"
"Why—your not knowing that I've always known why you
went."
"Why I went—?"
"Yes. You think I'm bluffing, don't you? Well, you
went to meet the man I was engaged to—and I can repeat every word of the letter
that took you there."
While Mrs. Slade spoke Mrs. Ansley had risen unsteadily to
her feet. Her bag, her knitting and gloves, slid in a panic-stricken heap to
the ground. She looked at Mrs. Slade as though she were looking at a ghost.
"No, no—don't," she faltered out.
"Why not? Listen, if you don't believe me. 'My one
darling, things can't go on like this. I must see you alone. Come to the
Colosseum immediately after dark tomorrow. There will be somebody to let you
in. No one whom you need fear will suspect'—but perhaps you've forgotten what
the letter said?"
Mrs. Ansley met the challenge with an unexpected composure.
Steadying herself against the chair she looked at her friend, and replied:
"No; I know it by heart too."
"And the signature? 'Only your D.S.' Was that it? I'm
right, am I? That was the letter that took you out that evening after
dark?"
Mrs. Ansley was still looking at her. It seemed to Mrs.
Slade that a slow struggle was going on behind the voluntarily controlled mask
of her small quiet face. "I shouldn't have thought she had herself so well
in hand," Mrs. Slade reflected, almost resentfully. But at this moment
Mrs. Ansley spoke. "I don't know how you knew. I burned that letter at
once."
"Yes; you would, naturally—you're so prudent!"
The sneer was open now. "And if you burned the letter you're wondering how
on earth I know what was in it. That's it, isn't it?"
Mrs. Slade waited, but Mrs. Ansley did not speak.
"Well, my dear, I know what was in that letter because
I wrote it!"
"You wrote it?"
"Yes."
The two women stood for a minute staring at each other in
the last golden light. Then Mrs.
Ansley dropped back into her chair. "Oh," she
murmured, and covered her face with her hands.
Mrs. Slade waited nervously for another word or movement.
None came, and at length she broke out: "I horrify you."
Mrs. Ansley's hands dropped to her knees. The face they
uncovered was streaked with tears. "I wasn't thinking of you. I was
thinking—it was the only letter I ever had from him!"
"And I wrote it. Yes; I wrote it! But I was the girl
he was engaged to. Did you happen to remember that?"
Mrs. Ansley's head drooped again. "I'm not trying to
excuse myself... I remembered... "
"And still you went?"
"Still I went."
Mrs. Slade stood looking down on the small bowed figure at
her side. The flame of her wrath had already sunk, and she wondered why she had
ever thought there would be any satisfaction in inflicting so purposeless a
wound on her friend. But she had to justify herself.
"You do understand? I'd found out—and I hated you,
hated you. I knew you were in love with Delphin—and I was afraid; afraid of
you, of your quiet ways, your sweetness... your... well, I wanted you out of
the way, that's all. Just for a few weeks; just till I was sure of him. So in a
blind fury I wrote that letter... I don't know why I'm telling you now."
"I suppose," said Mrs. Ansley slowly, "it's
because you've always gone on hating me."
"Perhaps. Or because I wanted to get the whole thing
off my mind." She paused. "I'm glad you destroyed the letter. Of
course I never thought you'd die."
Mrs. Ansley relapsed into silence, and Mrs. Slade, leaning
above her, was conscious of a strange sense of isolation, of being cut off from
the warm current of human communion. "You think me a monster!"
"I don't know... It was the only letter I had, and you
say he didn't write it"
"Ah, how you care for him still!"
"I cared for that memory," said Mrs. Ansley.
Mrs. Slade continued to look down on her. She seemed
physically reduced by the blow—as if, when she got up, the wind might scatter
her like a puff of dust. Mrs. Slade's jealousy suddenly leaped up again at the
sight. All these years the woman had been living on that letter. How she must
have loved him, to treasure the mere memory of its ashes! The letter of the man
her friend was engaged to. Wasn't it she who was the monster?
"You tried your best to get him away from me, didn't
you? But you failed; and I kept him. That's all."
"Yes. That's all."
"I wish now I hadn't told you. I'd no idea you'd feel
about it as you do; I thought you'd be amused. It all happened so long ago, as
you say; and you must do me the justice to remember that I had no reason to
think you'd ever taken it seriously. How could I, when you were married to
Horace Ansley two months afterward? As soon as you could get out of bed your
mother rushed you off to Florence and married you. People were rather
surprised—they wondered at its being done so quickly; but I thought I knew. I
had an idea you did it out of pique—to be able to say you'd got ahead of
Delphin and me. Kids have such silly reasons for doing the most serious things.
And your marrying so soon convinced me that you'd never really cared."
"Yes. I suppose it would," Mrs. Ansley assented.
The clear heaven overhead was emptied of all its gold. Dusk
spread over it, abruptly darkening the Seven Hills. Here and there lights began
to twinkle through the foliage at their feet. Steps were coming and going on
the deserted terrace—waiters looking out of the doorway at the head of the
stairs, then reappearing with trays and napkins and flasks of wine. Tables were
moved, chairs straightened. A feeble string of electric lights flickered out. A
stout lady in a dustcoat suddenly appeared, asking in broken Italian if anyone
had seen the elastic band which held together her tattered Baedeker. She poked
with her stick under the table at which she had lunched, the waiters assisting.
The corner where Mrs. Slade and Mrs. Ansley sat was still
shadowy and deserted. For a long time neither of them spoke. At length Mrs.
Slade began again: "I suppose I did it as a sort of joke—"
"A joke?"
"Well, girls are ferocious sometimes, you know. Girls
in love especially. And I remember laughing to myself all that evening at the
idea that you were waiting around there in the dark, dodging out of sight,
listening for every sound, trying to get in—of course I was upset when I heard
you were so ill afterward."
Mrs. Ansley had not moved for a long time. But now she
turned slowly toward her companion. "But I didn't wait. He'd arranged
everything. He was there. We were let in at once," she said.
Mrs. Slade sprang up from her leaning position.
"Delphin there! They let you in! Ah, now you're lying!" she burst out
with violence.
Mrs. Ansley's voice grew clearer, and full of surprise.
"But of course he was there. Naturally he came—"
"Came? How did he know he'd find you there? You must
be raving!"
Mrs. Ansley hesitated, as though reflecting. "But I
answered the letter. I told him I'd be there. So he came."
Mrs. Slade flung her hands up to her face. "Oh,
God—you answered! I never thought of your answering.... "
"It's odd you never thought of it, if you wrote the
letter."
"Yes. I was blind with rage."
Mrs. Ansley rose, and drew her fur scarf about her.
"It is cold here. We'd better go.... I'm sorry for you," she said, as
she clasped the fur about her throat.
The unexpected words sent a pang through Mrs. Slade.
"Yes; we'd better go." She gathered up her bag and cloak. "I
don't know why you should be sorry for me," she muttered.
Mrs. Ansley stood looking away from her toward the dusky
mass of the Colosseum. "Well— because I didn't have to wait that
night."
Mrs. Slade gave an unquiet laugh. "Yes, I was beaten
there. But I oughtn't to begrudge it to you, I suppose. At the end of all these
years. After all, I had everything; I had him for twenty-five years. And you
had nothing but that one letter that he didn't write."
Mrs. Ansley was again silent. At length she took a step
toward the door of the terrace, and turned back, facing her companion.
"I had Barbara," she said, and began to move
ahead of Mrs. Slade toward the stairway.
Comments
Post a Comment