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The Age of Innocence--Edith Wharton [28]

By Root 6759 0
Avenue was seldom opened, and when they came to town they received in it only their most intimate friends.

‘‘I wish you would go with me, Newland,’’ his mother said, suddenly pausing at the door of the Brown coupé. ‘‘Louisa is fond of you; and of course it’s on account of dear May that I’m taking this step—and also because, if we don’t all stand together, there’ll be no such thing as society left.’’

7

MRS. HENRY VAN DER LUYDEN listened in silence to her cousin Mrs. Archer’s narrative.

It was all very well to tell yourself in advance that Mrs. van der Luyden was always silent, and that, though noncommittal by nature and training, she was very kind to the people she really liked. Even personal experience of these facts was not always a protection from the chill that descended on one in the high-ceilinged, white-walled Madison Avenue drawing room, with the pale brocaded armchairs so obviously uncovered for the occasion, and the gauze still veiling the ormolu mantel ornaments and the beautiful old carved frame of Gainsborough’s ‘‘Lady Angelica du Lac.’’

Mrs. van der Luyden’s portrait by Huntington (in black velvet and Venetian point) faced that of her lovely ancestress. It was generally considered ‘‘as fine as a Cabanel,’’and, though twenty years had elapsed since its execution, was still ‘‘a perfect likeness.’’ Indeed, the Mrs. van der Luyden who sat beneath it listening to Mrs. Archer might have been the twin sister of the fair and still youngish woman drooping against a gilt armchair before a green rep curtain. Mrs. van der Luyden still wore black velvet and Venetian point when she went into society—or rather (since she never dined out) when she threw open her own doors to receive it. Her fair hair, which had faded without turning grey, was still parted in flat, overlapping points on her forehead, and the straight nose that divided her pale blue eyes was only a little more pinched about the nostrils than when the portrait had been painted. She always, indeed, struck Newland Archer as having been rather gruesomely preserved in the airless atmosphere of a perfectly irreproachable existence, as bodies caught in glaciers keep for years a rosy life-in-death.

Like all his family, he esteemed and admired Mrs. van der Luyden; but he found her gentle, bending sweetness less approachable than the grimness of some of his mother’s old aunts, fierce spinsters who said ‘‘No’’ on principle before they knew what they were going to be asked.

Mrs. van der Luyden’s attitude said neither yes nor no, but always appeared to incline to clemency till her thin lips, wavering into the shadow of a smile, made the almost invariable reply: ‘‘I shall first have to talk this over with my husband.’’

She and Mr. van der Luyden were so exactly alike that Archer often wondered how, after forty years of the closest conjugality, two such merged identities ever separated themselves enough for anything as controversial as a talking over. But as neither had ever reached a decision without prefacing it by this mysterious conclave, Mrs. Archer and her son, having set forth their case, waited resignedly for the familiar phrase.

Mrs. van der Luyden, however, who had seldom surprised anyone, now surprised them by reaching her long hand toward the bell rope.

‘‘I think,’’ she said, ‘‘I should like Henry to hear what you have told me.’’

A footman appeared, to whom she gravely added: ‘‘If Mr. van der Luyden has finished reading the newspaper, please ask him to be kind enough to come.’’

She said ‘‘reading the newspaper’’ in the tone in which a minister’s wife might have said ‘‘presiding at a cabinet meeting,’’ not from any arrogance of mind, but because the habit of a lifetime, and the attitude of her friends and relations, had led her to consider Mr. van der Luyden’s least gesture as having an almost sacerdotal importance.

Her promptness of action showed that she considered the case as pressing as Mrs. Archer; but, lest she should be thought to have committed herself in advance, she added, with the sweetest look: ‘‘Henry always enjoys seeing you, dear Adeline;

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