Part 65 (2/2)
Nash indeed was as true as ever to his genius while he lolled on a divan and emitted a series of reflexions that were even more ingenious than opportune. Nick walked up and down the room, and it might have been supposed from his manner that he was impatient for his friend to withdraw. This idea would have been contradicted, however, by the fact that subsequently, after the latter had quitted him, he continued to perambulate. He had grown used to Gabriel and must now have been possessed of all he had to say. That was one's penalty with persons whose main gift was for talk, however inspiring; talk engendered a sense of sameness much sooner than action. The things a man did were necessarily more different from each other than the things he said, even if he went in for surprising you. Nick felt Nash could never surprise him any more save by mere plain perpetration.
He talked of his host's future, talked of Miriam Rooth and of Peter Sherringham, whom he had seen at that young woman's and whom he described as in a predicament delightful to behold. Nick put a question about Peter's predicament and learned, rather to his disappointment, that it consisted only of the fact that he was in love with Miriam. He appealed to his visitor to do better than this, and Nash then added the touch that Sherringham wouldn't be able to have her. ”Oh they've ideas!”
he said when Nick asked him why.
”What ideas? So has he, I suppose.”
”Yes, but they're not the same.”
”Well, they'll nevertheless arrange something,” Nick opined.
”You'll have to help them a bit. She's in love with another man,” Nash went on.
”Do you mean with you?”
”Oh, I'm never another man--I'm always more the wrong one than the man himself. It's you she's after.” And on his friend's asking him what he meant by this Nash added: ”While you were engaged in transferring her image to the tablet of your genius you stamped your own on that of her heart.”
Nick stopped in his walk, staring. ”Ah, what a bore!”
”A bore? Don't you think her formed to please?”
Nick wondered, but didn't conclude. ”I wanted to go on with her--now I can't.”
Nash himself, however, jumped straight to what really mattered. ”My dear fellow, it only makes her handsomer. I wondered what happy turn she had taken.”
”Oh, that's twaddle,” said Nick, turning away. ”Besides, has she told you?”
”No, but her mother has.”
”Has she told her mother?”
”Mrs. Rooth says not. But I've known Mrs. Rooth to say that which isn't.”
”Apply that rule then to the information you speak of.”
”Well, since you press me, I know more,” Gabriel said. ”Miriam knows you're engaged to a wonderful, rich lady; she told me as much, told me she had seen her here. That was enough to set her off--she likes forbidden fruit.”
”I'm not engaged to any lady whatever. I was,” Nick handsomely conceded, ”but we've altered our minds.”
”Ah, what a pity!” his friend wailed.
”Mephistopheles!”--and he stopped again with the point of this.
”Pray then whom do you call Margaret? May I ask if your failure of interest in the political situation is the cause of this change in your personal one?” Nash went on. Nick signified that he mightn't; whereupon he added: ”I'm not in the least devilish--I only mean it's a pity you've altered your minds, since Miriam may in consequence alter hers. She goes from one thing to another. However, I won't tell her.”
”I will then!” Nick declared between jest and earnest.
”Would that really be prudent?” his companion asked more completely in the frolic key.
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