The Golden Bowl - Henry James [223]
‘You mean you were so at your ease on Monday – the night you dined with us?’
‘I was very happy then,’ said Maggie.
‘Yes – we thought you so gay and so brilliant.’ Fanny felt it feeble, but she went on. ‘We were so glad you were happy.’
Maggie stood a moment, at first only looking at her. ‘You thought me all right, eh?’
‘Surely, dearest; we thought you all right.’
‘Well, I dare say it was natural; but in point of fact I never was more wrong in my life. For all the while if you please this was brewing.’
Mrs Assingham indulged, as nearly as possible to luxury, her vagueness. ‘ “This” –?’
‘That!’ replied the Princess, whose eyes, her companion now saw, had turned to an object on the chimney-piece of the room, of which, among so many precious objects – the Ververs, wherever they might be, always revelled peculiarly in matchless old mantel ornaments – her visitor hadn’t taken heed.
‘Do you mean the gilt cup?’
‘I mean the gilt cup.’
The piece now recognised by Fanny as new to her own vision was a capacious bowl, of old-looking, rather strikingly yellow gold, mounted by a short stem on an ample foot which held a central position above the fireplace, where, to allow it the better to show, a clearance had been made of other objects, notably of the Louis-Seize clock that accompanied the candelabra. This latter trophy ticked at present on the marble slab of a commode that exactly matched it in splendour and style. Mrs Assingham took it, the bowl, as a fine thing; but the question was obviously not of its intrinsic value, and she kept off from it, admiring it at a distance. ‘But what has that to do –?’
‘It has everything. You’ll see.’ With which again however for the moment Maggie attached to her strange wide eyes. ‘He knew her before – before I had ever seen him.’
‘ “He” knew –?’ But Fanny, while she cast about her for the links she missed, could only echo it.
‘Amerigo knew Charlotte – more than I ever dreamed.’
Fanny felt then it was stare for stare. ‘But surely you always knew they had met.’
‘I didn’t understand. I knew